The History of
Protestantism |
Chapter 1 | . . . | GENEVA: THE CITY AND ITS
HISTORY. Protestantism finds a New Centre — The Lake Leman — Geneva — Its Site — Its Diminutive Size — Sncers — History of Geneva — Four Names, Julius Caesar, Honorius, Charlemagne, the Reformation, indicate the Four Stages of its History — The Bishop its First Ruler — Intrigues of the Dukes of Savoy — Pope Martin V. takes from the Genevese the right of Electing their Bishop — Exercises it himself — Appoints a Prince of Savoy to be Bishop of Geneva — Its Independence on the point of being Extinguished — New Life — War between the Prince-Bishop and the Citizens — Bonivard — His Picture of the Popes — Berthelier — His Devotion to his Country — Levrier — His Love of Justice — The War Then and Now — Wonderful Preservation of Geneva's Independence — A Higher Liberty Approaching. |
Chapter 2 | . . . | GENEVESE MARTYRS OF
LIBERTY. Berthelier — Apprehended — Beheaded — His Remains publicly Exposed — Bonivard — Banished — Castle of Chillon — Bishop of Geneva Dies — His Remorse — Levrier — His Arrest by the Duke — Carried to the Castle of Bonne — His Execution — What Victories of Brute Force Lead to — Momentary Triumph of the Duke — He Flees from Geneva never to Return — Lessons learned by Genevese Exiles — They Return to Act them out — Geneva's Gates Open towards the Rising Sun. |
Chapter 3 | . . . | THE REFORM COMMENCED IN LAUSANNE AND
ESTABLISHED IN MORAT AND NEUCHATEL. Geneva on the Road to Liberty – Her Advance – There needs the Sword of the Spirit to Conquer her Highest Liberty – Farel – No Second Field of Kappel – Farel goes to Aigle – Acts as Schoolmaster – Begins to Preach – Commotion – Retires from Aigle – Leaves behind him a little Reformed Church – Goes to Morat–Then an Important Town – Eventually won to the Gospel – Attempts Lausanne – Goes to Neuchatel – Crowds flock to his Preaching – Plants the Reformed Faith at Meiry in the neighbouring Jura – Returns to Neuchatel – Carries its Reformation by a Coup. |
Chapter 4 | . . . | TUMULTS – SUCCESSES –
TOLERATION. Second Vote on Religion at Neuchatel – Vallangin – Disgraceful Trick – Popular Tempest – Triumph of Reform – Farel turns his eye toward Geneva – Evangelises at Orbe – Makes a Beginning – First Communion at Orbe – Peter Viret – His Character – Goes to Grandson – A Battle in the Church – The Affair carried to the Conference at Bern – Protestant Bern and Catholic Friburg agree on a Policy of Toleration – Great Success of Farel – He turns toward Geneva. |
Chapter 5 | . . . | FABEL ENTERS GENEVA. Basin of the Rhone – Leman Lake – Grandeur of its Environs – The Region in Former Times a Stronghold of Popery – Geneva – The Duke of Savoy Entreats the Emperor to put him in Possession of it – The Hour Passes – Farel Enters Geneva – Preaches – The Perfect Liberty – The Great Pardon – Beginning of a New Geneva – Terror of the Priests – Farel and Saunier Summoned before the Council – Protected by Letters from Bern – A Tumult – Farel narrowly Escapes Death – Is Sent away from Geneva – Froment Comes in his Room – Begins as Schoolmaster – His New Year's Day Sermon – Popular Agitation – Retires from Geneva |
Chapter 6 | . . . | GENEVA ON THE BRINK OF CIVIL
WAR. First Communion in Geneva – Plot to Massacre all the Converts – Canon Wernli – The Roman Catholics take Arms – The City on the Brink of Civil War – The Battle Averted – Another Storm – Canon Wernli Arms and Rings the Tocsin – He is Slain – Bern Interposes – The Council Permits by Edict the Free Preaching of the Gospel in Geneva – The Pope Commands the Bishop to Return to the City – He Blunders and Retires – Froment Returns – Farel and Viret Arrive in Geneva – Dejection of the Roman Catholics. |
Chapter 7 | . . . | HEROISM OF GENEVA. Conspiracy against Geneva – Detection – Protestants gain Possession of one of the Churches – The Gospel in Geneva – Glories Near but Unseen – An Army of Pilgrims – A Hunting Party – The Game not Caught – Roman Catholic Exodus – The Duke and the Emperor Combine against Geneva – Perils of the City – Heroic Resolution of the Citizens – The Suburbs Demolished – The Citizens Wait the Assault. |
Chapter 8 | . . . | ROME FALLS AND GENEVA RISES. New Foothold for Protestantism – Conditions Necessary in it – Friburg and Bern Abandon Geneva – Resolution of the Citizens – The Bishop Removes his Court – Geneva assumes its own Government – Castle of Peney – Atrocities – Attempt to Poison the Protestant Ministers – Conversion of the Franciscan Monks – Public Disputation – Miracles – Discoveries – Bodies of St. Nazaire etc. – Relics – Souls from Purgatory. |
Chapter 9 | . . . | ESTABLISHMENT OF PROTESTANTISM IN
GENEVA. Symbol of St. Francis – Monstrous Figure in the Dominican Convent – Mass Forbidden by the Council – Interview of Syndics with the Canons, etc. – Edict of the Reformation – Wrath of the Duke of Savoy – Blockades Geneva – Friburg Breaks its Treaty with Geneva – Bern also Forsakes it – The City nearly Taken – Successful Sorties of the Besieged – Bern comes to the Help of the Genevans – The Savoyard Army Retreats – The Duke Deprived of his Kingdom by Francis I. – Geneva Completes its Reformation – Farel and the Council – Sermons – Social Regulations – School – Oath of the Citizens – City Motto – Tablet of Brass – Greatness of the Victory. |
Chapter 10 | . . . | CALVIN ENTERS GENEVA — ITS CIVIL AND
ECCLESIASTICAL CONSTITUTION. Calvin at the Gates of Geneva — Farel Told — Meeting of Farel and Calvin — Is this the Author of the Institutes?—Adjuration — Calvin Remains in Geneva — Commences as Lecturer in the Cathedral — His Confession of Faith — Excommunication — What is it? — Morality the Corner-stone of the New State — Civil Constitution of the Republic — The Council-General — The Council of Two Hundred — The Council of Twenty-five — The Syndics — The Consistory or Church-Court — Distinction between the Civil and Ecclesiastical Powers — Calvin's Ideas on the Relations between Church and State — Guizot's Testimony — Calvin's Ideal in Advance of his Age. |
Chapter 11 | . . . | SUMPTUARY LAWS — CALVIN AND FAREL
BANISHED. Geneva Stands or Falls with its Morality — Code of Morals — Dances, etc. — The Sumptuary Laws Earlier than Calvin's Time — Rise of the Libertine Party — Outcries — Demand for the Abolition of the New Code — The Libertines obtain a Majority in the Council — Bern Interferes adversely — Question of Unleavened BreadsConfusion and Disorders in Geneva — Calvin and Farel Refuse to Dispense the Communion at Easter — Tumult in the Churches — Farel and Calvin Banished by the Council. |
Chapter 12 | . . . | CALVIN AT STRASBURG — ROME DRAWS NEAR TO
GENEVA. Farel at Neuchatel — Calvin at Strasburg — His Labors there — Disorders at Geneva — Calvin's Poverty — Efforts of Rome to Retake Geneva — Cardinal Sadoleto — His Letter to the Genevans — Who shall Reply to it? — Calvin does so — Rising Tide of the Reformation — Ebb of Romanism — Conference between the Protestants and Romanists at Frankfort — Calvin goes thither — No Fruit of the Conference — Calvin and Melancthon's Interviews — Calvin's Confidence in Melancthon — His tender Love for him — Calvin and Luther never Meet — Luther placed amid the Teutonic Peoples, Calvin amid the Latin Nations — Wisdom of this Arrangement. |
Chapter 13 | . . . | ABORTIVE CONFERENCES AT HAGENAU AND
RATISBON. Convention at Hagenau — Attempt to Steal a March on the Protestants — Firmness of the German Princes — Conference at Ratisbon — Perplexities of Charles V. — Cardinal Contarini — Programme — Auspicious Beginning of Conference — Agreement on several Doctrines — The Dead-lock of Transubstantiation — Hopes come to Nothing — Would Conciliation have been a Blessing to Christendom? — It would have given Entombment to Protestantism, and New Life to Atheistic Revolution. |
Chapter 14 | . . . | CALVIN RETURNS TO GENEVA. The Movement must resume its March — Calvin at Strasburg — The Libertines at Geneva — Calvin's Four Persecutors Perish — Tide Turns at Geneva — Deputations to entreat Calvin's Return — The Idea of going back Terrible to him — Bucer's Adjuration — Starts on his Return Journey — Enters Geneva — Reception — Lessons Learned in Exile — Returns Fitter for his Work — Idelette de Bure — His Salary, etc. |
Chapter 15 | . . . | THE ECCLESIASTICAL
ORDINANCES. Assembly in the Cathedral — Calvin's Address — Resolves to Stem the Tide of Moral Ruin — Proposal to the Council — The Ecclesiastical Ordinances Drafted — Voted by the People — His Ecclesiastical Government — Four Orders of Ministers — Two in Reality — The Venerable Company — Election of Pastors — Consistory — Its Functions — The Council Punishes in the Last Resort — The Ecclesiastical Ordinances the Laws of the State — Freely Accepted by the People — Is this the Inquisition over again? — No — A Theocratic Republic established at Geneva — Bungener's Defence of it. |
Chapter 16 | . . . | THE NEW GENEVA. The Ministry — The Weekly Exercise — Visiting — Calvin — His Sermons — Studies — Correspondence — From the Centre Watches the Whole Field — Geneva the Dwelling of a Righteous People — Calvin's Aim to make it a Model City — Character of Calvin's Commentaries— Two Genevas — The Libertines — Geneva becomes the Thermopyke of Christendom. |
Chapter 17 | . . . | CALVIN'S BATTLES WITH THE
LIBERTINES. Pierre Ameaux — His Wife — The Spiritual Libertines — A Public Confession — Jacques Gruet — An Execution — Practical Reforms — Amy Perrin — his Ambition — Francois Favre — Madame Perrin Imprisoned — Rage of the Favre Family — The Law Triumphs — The Disorders Renewed — Calvin's Appearance before the Council — His Magnanimity — Peace Restored — Calvin meanwhile Labours indefatigably — Growing Renown of Geneva — The Favres again "Lift up the Horn " — Perrin made First Syndic — Personal Outrages on Calvin — Comparison between Luther and Calvin in their Sufferings — Sublimity of Calvin — His Wife, Idelette de Bure, Dies. |
Chapter 18 | . . . | CALVIN'S LABORS FOR
UNION. Misfortunes of Protestantism in Germany—Death of Paul III.—Election of Julius III.—The Conclave—Jubilee—The Golden Hammer—Francis I. Dies—Henry II.—He Looks Two Ways at Once—Calvin Turns with Hope to England—Edward VI. on the Throne—What Calvin Judged Necessary for England's Reformation—Scotland—Spain—Philip II.—All Things being Shaken—Calvin's Labors for the Union of the Church— The Eucharist the Point of Division—Zwingli's and Calvin's Views— They are Substantially One—The Consensus Tigurinis—Its Teaching Accepted by Switzerland, France, and England—Germany Stands Aloof—Theodore Beza Arrives at Geneva—His Youth and Studies— Becomes Calvin's Associate in Labor—Distinguished Group around Calvin—Outer and Wider Group—The Man at the Center. |
Chapter 19 | . . . | SERVETUS COMES TO GENEVA AND IS
ARRESTED. Toleration—Servetus's Birth—Genius—Studies—Commission to Reform all Religions—Malignant Attacks on Christianity—Publishes his Restitution of Christianity—Sends the Book to Calvin—Its Doctrine Pantheism—Servetus Condemned to Death at Vienne—Escapes—Comes to Geneva—Is Imprisoned—His Indictment drawn by Calvin— Haughtiness of his Defence—Servetus and Calvin face to face— Indecencies and Blasphemies against Christianity—The Question at Geneva, Shall it be a Pantheistic Republic ruled by Servetus, or a Theocracy ruled by Calvin? |
Chapter 20 | . . . | CALVIN'S VICTORY OVER THE
LIBERTINES. Another Arena—Excommunication—Council Grasps the Ecclesiastical Power—Berthelier Excommunicated—Spiritual Sentence Annulled by the Senate—The Libertines make Common Cause with Servetus—New Indictment against Servetus—Calvin Fighting Two Battles at the Same Time—Communion Sunday—Consistory's Remonstrance with the Council—The Council Changes Nothing in its Decree—Sunday, 3rd September, 1553—A Momentous Issue to be Determined—The Comnmnion-table in St. Peter's—The Libertines Approach—Calvin Debars them—The Reformation Saved—Moral Grandeur of the Act— The Two Beacons—Worms a Triumph over Tyrannical Power—St. Peter's a Triumph over Godless Democracy. |
Chapter 21 | . . . | APPREHENSION AND TRIAL OF
SERVETUS. "Here I stand," etc.—Calvin expects to be Banished—Takes Farewell of his Flock—Servetus—Resume—Servetus asks to Dispute with Calvin— The Magistrates Refuse—Nicholas de la Fontaine—Enters himself as Prosecutor for Calvin—Examination of Servetus—Defended by Berthelier—Calvin comes forward—The Council take the Prosecution into their own hands—Indictment of the Attorney-General—Sedition the Main Charge against Servetus—Servetus pleads for Free Inquiry—His Cause Mixed up with the Libertines'—Boldness of Servetus—Calvin's Struggle with the Council—Shall the Reformer Quit Geneva?—His Influence with the Magistrates at Zero. |
Chapter 22 | . . . | CONDEMNATION AND DEATH OF
SERVETUS. The Swiss Churches Consulted—Servetus Demands Calvin's Impeachment—Answer of the Swiss Churches—Their Verdict Unanimous—Council Condemns Servetus to be Burned—Calvin Intercedes that the Sword be Substituted for the Stake—Sentence Communicated to Servetus—Farel—Interview between Servetus and Calvin—Servetus Summoned to Execution—his Terror—The Procession—View from Champel—Farel's Last Conversation with Servetus—The Pile Kindled—Servetus Dies—Gibbon—Jurisprudence of the Age—No Romanist can Condemn Calvin. |
Chapter 23 | . . . | CALVIN'S CORRESPONDENCE WITH MARTYRS,
REFORMERS, AND MONARCHS. Calvin at the Center- Stages of his Life—His Work Advancing— Missionaries—The "Dispersed in the Isles"—The Martyrs—How Calvin Comforted them—The Collar of the Order of Martyrs—The Five Martyrs of Lyons—Their Behavior at the Stake—Calvin Surveying the Field and the Fallen around him—Counsels Princes—Edward VI.— Calvin's Letter to Somerset on the Reformation of England—Letter to Edward VI.—Archbishop Cranmer—Union—Calvin's Longings for it. |
Chapter 24 | . . . | CALVIN'S MANIFOLD LABORS. Dedication of his Commentaries and Works—Care of the Churches— Poland, etc.—England and Elizabeth—Scotland—John Knox—Similarity between Calvin and Knox—The Secret of their Power—Immense Labors of Calvin—Calvin and Innocent III. Compared and Contrasted. |
Chapter 25 | . . . | FINAL VICTORY AND GLORY OF
GENEVA. The Libertines Renew the Attack—Social Disorders—The Spiritual Supremacy of the Consistory the Key of Calvin's Position—Cannot be Abandoned—Council finally Concedes it—Flank Attack—The Libertines Complain of the Sermons—of the Publications of Calvin—of the Refugees—Fifty Refugees Enrolled as Citizens—Perrin Excites a Tumult—Projected Massacre of the Refugees—Miscarriage of the Attempt—Executions—Perrin Flees—Victory—Glory of Geneva. |
Chapter 26 | . . . | GENEVA AND ITS INFLUENCE IN
EUROPE. Peace of Geneva—Geneva and Calvin become One—Testimony of Knox and others to the Church of Geneva—The Sundays of Geneva—The Libertines and Bern—Bolsec and Castalio—Calvin's Care of the Church of France—Preachers sent to it—Labors in Organising Churches— Calvin Counsels the French Protestants to Eschew Arms—Martyrs, not Soldiers, wanted—Forged Letters— Constitution and Organization of the French Protestant Church—Amazing Growth of Protestantism in France. |
Chapter 27 | . . . | THE ACADEMY OF GENEVA. Foundation of the Academy—Subscriptions—Its Opening—Its Literary Equipment—Its Subsequent Renown—Its Library—What it Suggests— Calvin's Simplicity of Life—Sadoleto Visits him—The Cardinal's Surprise—Calvin's Poverty—His Charity—He Declines the Aid of the Council. |
Chapter 28 | THE SOCLAL AND FAMILY LIFE OF
GENEVA. The Daily Sermon—Its Attractiveness—Daily Life of the Citizen—His Dress—His Table—Development of Wealth—The Refugees—The Benefits they conferred on their Adopted Country—English Names on the Genevan Registers—The Sabbath in Geneva. | |
Chapter 29 | CALVIN'S LAST ILLNESS AND
DEATH Calvin's Painful Maladies—Redoubles his Labors—Last Appearance in the Pulpit—Europe Watches his Death-bed—The Plague breaks out—Its Frightful Ravages—Calvin's Last Participation in the Lord's Supper— Goes for the Last Time to the Senate—He Receives the Senators— Receives the Pastors—Farel Visits him—Sits down at Table for the Last Time with his Brethren—His Last Week—One continued Prayer—His Death—His Burial—His Grave. | |
Chapter 30 | CALVIN'S WORK. Impression made by the News of Calvin's Death—Exultation of Rome— Despondency of the Reformed—Both Mis-calculate—The Reformation is Calvin—Geneva grows still Greater—Luther and Calvin Compared— The Two Reformations One—The Culmination of the German Reformation, the Starting-point of the Genevan—Calvin's Special Service to the Reformation—Theories of Church Government—Luther's Views—Melancthon's—Brentius'—Lambert's—Zwingli's—Calvin Builds on the Foundations of his Predecessors—The Key of his Position—The Two Lessons. |
BOOK
FOURTEENTH
RISE AND ESTABLISHMENT OF PROTESTANTISM AT GENEVA.
CHAPTER 1
Back to
Top
GENEVA: THE CITY AND ITS
HISTORY.
Protestantism finds a New Centre — The Lake Leman — Geneva —
Its Site — Its Diminutive Size — Sncers — History of Geneva — Four Names, Julius
Caesar, Honorius, Charlemagne, the Reformation, indicate the Four Stages of its
History — The Bishop its First Ruler — Intrigues of the Dukes of Savoy — Pope
Martin V. takes from the Genevese the right of Electing their Bishop — Exercises
it himself — Appoints a Prince of Savoy to be Bishop of Geneva — Its
Independence on the point of being Extinguished — New Life — War between the
Prince-Bishop and the Citizens — Bonivard — His Picture of the Popes —
Berthelier — His Devotion to his Country — Levrier — His Love of Justice — The
War Then and Now — Wonderful Preservation of Geneva's Independence — A Higher
Liberty Approaching.
PROTESTANTISM has now received its completed logical
and doctrinal development, and a new and more central position must be found for
it. Before returning to the open stage of the great Empires of France and
Germany, and resuming our narrative of the renovating powers which the
Reformation had called forth, with the great social and political revolutions
which came in its train, we must devote our attention to a city that is about to
become the second metropolis of Protestantism.
In leaving the wide arena
of empire where Protestantism is jostled by dukes, prelates, and emperors, and
moves amid a blaze of State pageantries, and in shutting ourselves up in a
little town whose name history, as yet, had hardly deigned to mention, and whose
diminutive size is all but annihilated by the mighty mountainous masses amid
which it is placed, we make a great transition. But if the stage is narrow, and
if Protestantism is stripped of all that drapery and pomp which make it so
imposing on the wider arena, we shall here have a closer view of the principle
itself, and be the better able to mark its sublimity and power, in the mighty
impulses which from this center it is to send abroad, in order to plant piety
and nourish liberty in other countries.
In the valley which the Jura on
the one side, and the white Alps on the other, enclose within their gigantic
arms, lies the mirror-like Leman. At the point where the Rhone gushes from the
lake a bulging rock bristles up, and, framing in the form of a crescent a little
space along the shore of the Leman, forms a pedestal for the city of Geneva. The
little town looks down upon the placid waters of the lake spread out at its
feet, and beholds its own image mirrored clearly, but not grandly, for
architectural magnificence is not one of the characteristic features of the
city, especially in the times of which we write. A few miles away, on the other
side, another rock shoots up, dark, precipitous, and attaining the dignity of a
mountain — lofty it would seem in any other country, but here it has to compete
with the gigantic piles of the Alps — and, bending crest-like, leans over
Geneva, which it appears to guard. A few acres suffice to give standing-room to
the city. Its population in the days of Calvin numbered only some 12,000, and
even now does not much exceed 40,000. Its cantonal territory is the smallest in
all Switzerland, that of Zug excepted. Its diminutive size provoked the sneer of
the philosopher of Ferney, who could survey it all standing at his door. "When I
dress my peruke," said Voltaire, "I powder the whole republic." The Emperor Paul
sarcastically called the struggles of its citizens "a tempest in a teapot." In
days prior to the utterance of these sarcasms and taunts — that is, in the
latter part of the sixteenth century — this little town excited other emotions
than those of contempt, and was the butt of other assaults than those of
sarcasm. It brought pallor into the face of monarchs. It plucked the scepter
from the grasp of mighty empires, and showed the world that it knew how to
extend and perpetuate its sway by making itself the metropolis of that moral and
spiritual movement which, whatever might be the fate of the city itself, even
should its site become the bare rock it once was, would continue to spread
abroad to all countries, and travel down to all the ages of the
future.
Turning from its site to its history, Geneva dates from before
the Christian era, and is scarcely, if at all, less ancient than that other
city, that takes the proud name of "Eternal," and with which it has been
Geneva's lot, in these last ages, to do battle. Buried amid the dense shadows of
paganism, and afterwards amid the not less dense shadows of Popery, Geneva
remained for ages unknown, and gave no augury to the world of the important part
it was destined to play, at a most eventful epoch, in the history of
nations.
It comes first into view in connection with the great Julius,
who stumbled upon it as he was pursuing his career of northern conquest, and
wrote its name in his Commentaries, where it figures as "the last fortress of
the Allobroges."[1] But the conqueror passed,
and with him passed the light which had touched for a moment this sub-Alpine
stronghold. It fell back again into the darkness. Under Honorius, in the fourth
century, it became a city. It rose into some eminence, and even was possessed of
a little liberty, in the days of Charlemagne. But a better day-spring awaited
Geneva. The rising sun of the Reformation struck full upon it, and this small
town became one of the lights of the world.
But we must glance back, and
see what a long preparation the little city had to undergo for its great
destiny. The dissolution of the Empire of Charlemagne set Geneva free to
consider after what fashion it should govern itself. At this crisis its bishop
stepped forward and claimed, in addition to its spiritual oversight, the right
to exercise its temporal government. The citizens conceded the claim only within
certain limits. Still preserving their liberties, they took the bishop into
partnership with them in the civic jurisdiction. The election of the bishop was
in the hands of the people, and, before permitting him to mount the episcopal
chair, they made him take an oath to preserve their franchises.[2] In the middle of the
thirteenth century the independence of Geneva began to be menaced by the Counts
of Savoy. That ambitious house, which was labouring to exalt itself by absorbing
its neighbors' territory into its own, had cast covetous eyes upon Geneva. It
would round off their dominions; besides, they were sharp-sighted enough to see
that there were certain principles at work in this little Alpine town which made
them uneasy. But neither intrigues nor arms — and the Princes of Savoy employed
both — could prevail to this end. The citizens of Geneva knew how it fared with
them under the staff of their bishop, but they did not know how it might go with
them under the sword of the warrior, and so they stubbornly declined the
protection of their powerful neighbor.
In the fifteenth century, the
Counts of Savoy, now become dukes, still persevering in their attempts to bring
the brave little city under their yoke, besought the aid of a power which
history attests has done more than all the dukes and warriors of Christendom to
extinguish liberty. Duke Amadeus VIII., who had added Piedmont to his hereditary
dominions, as if to exemplify the adage that "ambition grows by what it feeds
on," petitioned Pope Martin V. to vest in him the secular lordship of
Geneva.
The citizens scented what was in the wind, and knowing that "Rome
ought not to lay its paw upon kingdoms," resolved to brave the Pope himself if
need were. Laying their hands upon the Gospels, they exclaimed, "No alienation
of the city or of its territory — this we swear." Amadeus withdrew before the
firm attitude of the Genevese.
Not so the Pope; he continued to prosecute
the intrigue, deeming the little town but a nest of eaglets among crags, which
it were wise betimes to pull down. But, more crafty than the duke, he tried
another tack. Depriving the citizens of the right of electing their bishop,
Martin V. took the nomination into his own hands, and thus opened the way for
quietly transferring the municipal rule of Geneva to the House of Savoy. All he
had now to do was to appoint a Prince of Savoy as its bishop. By-and-by this was
done; and the struggle with the Savoy power was no longer outside the walls
only, it was mainly within. The era that now opened to Geneva was a stormy and
bloody one. Intrigues and rumors of intrigues kept the citizens in perpetual
disquiet. The city saw itself stripped of its privileges and immunities one by
one. Its annual fair was transferred to Lyons, and the crowd of merchants and
traders which had flocked to it from beyond the Alps, from the towns of France,
and from across the Rhine, ceased to be seen. Tales of priestly scandals — for
the union of the two offices in their prince-bishop only helped to develop the
worst qualities of both — passed from mouth to mouth and polluted the very air.
If Geneva was growing weaker, Savoy was growing stronger. The absorption of one
petty principality after another was daily enlarging the dominions of the duke,
which, sweeping past and around Geneva, enclosed it as in a net, with a hostile
land bristling with castles and swarming with foes. It was said that there were
more Savoyards than Genevese who heard the bells of St. Pierre. Such was the
position in which the opening of the sixteenth century found Geneva. This small
but ancient municipality was seemingly on the point of being absorbed in the
dominions of the House of Savoy. Its history appeared to be closed. The vulture
of the Alps, which had hovered above it for centuries, had but to swoop down
upon it and transfix it with his talons.
At that moment a new life
suddenly sprang up in the devoted city. To preserve the remnant of their
franchises was not enough; the citizens resolved to recover what liberties had
been lost. In order to this many battles had to be fought, and much blood spilt.
Leo X., about the same time that he dispatched Tetzel to Germany to sell
indulgences, sent a scion of the House of Savoy to Geneva (1513) as bishop. By
the first the Pope drew forth Luther from his convent, by the second he paved
the way for Calvin. The newly-appointed bishop, known in history as the" Bastard
of Savoy," brought to the episcopal throne of Geneva a body foul with disease,
the fruit of his debaucheries, and a soul yet more foul with deceitful and
bloody passions; but a fit tool for the purpose in hand. The matter had been
nicely arranged between the Pope, the duke, and the Bastard.[3] "John of Savoy swore to
hand over the temporal jurisdiction of the city to the duke, and the Pope swore
he would force the city to submit to the duke, under pain of incurring the
thunders of the Vatican."[4]
From that time
there was ceaseless and bitter war between the citizens of Geneva on one side,
and the duke and the bishop on the other. It is not our business to record the
various fortune of that strife. Now it was the bishop who was besieged in his
palace, and now it was the citizens who were butchered upon their own streets by
the bishop's soldiers. To-day it was the Bastard who was compelled to seek
safety in flight, and to-morow it was some leader of the patriots who was
apprehended, tortured, beheaded, and his ghastly remains hung up to the public
gaze as a warning to others. But if blood was shed, it was blood that leads to
victory. The patriots, who numbered only nine at first, multiplied from year to
year, though from year to year the struggle grew only the bloodier. The Gospel
had not yet entered the gates of Geneva. The struggle so far was for liberty
only, a name then denoting that which was man's noblest birthright after the
Gospel, and which found as its champions men of pure and lofty soul. Wittemberg
and Geneva had not yet become fused; the two liberties had not yet united their
arms.
Among the names that illustrate this struggle, so important from
what was to come after, are the well-known ones of Bonivard, Berthelier, and
Levrier — a distinguished trio, to whom modern liberty owes much, though the
stage on which they figured was a narrow one.
Bonivard was a son of the
Renaissance. A scholar and a man of wit, he drew his inspiration for liberty
from a classic font. From his Priory of St. Victor this accomplished and
liberal-minded man assailed Rome with the shafts of satire. If his erudition was
less profound and his taste less exquisite than that of Erasmus, his courage was
greater. The scholar of Rotterdam flagellated the man in serge, but spared the
man in purple: the Prior of St. Victor dealt equal justice to monk and Pope. He
lashed the ignorance and low vices of the former, but castigated yet more
severely the pride, luxury, and ambition of the latter. He mistrusted the plan
Rome had hit on of regenerating men in tribes and clans, and preferred to have
it done individualy. He thought too that it would be well if his "Holiness"
possessed a little holiness, though that was a marvel he did not expect soon to
see. "I have lived," he said, "to see three Popes. First, Alexander VI. [Borgia]
a sharp fellow, a ne'er-do-weel... a man without conscience, and without God.
Next came Julius II., proud, choleric, studying his bottle more than his
breviary, mad about his Popedom, and having no thought but how he could, subdue
not only the earth, but heaven and hell. Last appeared Leo X., the present Pope,
learned in Greek and Latin, but especially a good musician, a great glutton, a
deep drinker; possessing beautiful pages, whom the Italians style ragazzi ......
above all, don't trust Leo X.'s word; he can dispense others, and surely can
dispense himself."[5]
He brusquely
allegorised the German Reformation thus: "Leo X. and his predecessors," said the
prior, "have always taken the Germans for beasts; pecora campi, they were
called, and rightly too, for these simple Saxons allowed themselves to be
saddled and ridden like asses. The Popes threatened them with cudgelling
(excommunications), enticed them with thistles (indulgences), and so made them
trot to the mill to bring away the meal for them. But having one day loaded the
ass too heavily, Leo made him gib, so that the flour was spilt, and the white
bread lost. That ass is called Martin like all asses, and his surname is Luther,
which signifies enlightener."[6]
The lettered and
gentlemanly Prior of St. Victor had not a little of the cold, sneering,
sceptical spirit that belonged to the Renaissance. He "put on his gloves" when
he came in contact with the citizens of Geneva; they were somewhat too bluff and
outspoken for him; nevertheless he continued steadfastly on their side, and,
with not a few temptations to act a contrary part, proved himself a true friend
of liberty. He was seized with the idea that were he Bishop and Prince of
Geneva, he would have it in his power to liberate his native city. He even set
off to Rome in the hope of realising a project which every one who knew who
Bonivard was, and what Rome was, must have deemed chimerical. It was found at
Rome that he had not the grace for a bishop, and he returned without the mitre.
It was a wonder to many that he was permitted to return at all, and the prior
must have been thankful for his escape.
Berthelier was cast in another
mold. He was the tribune of the people; he talked, laughed, and caroused with
them; he sought especially to surround himself with the youth of Geneva; for
this end he studied their tastes, and entered into all their amusements, but all
the while he was on the watch for fitting occasions of firing them with his own
spirit of hatred of tyranny, and devotion to the public welfare. He was
sagacious, ready, indomitable, and careless of life. He knew what the struggle
was coming to as regarded himself, but he did not bemoan the hard fate awaiting
him, knowing that there was a mysterious and potent power in blood to advance
the cause for which it was shed.
The third of a group, individually so
unlike, yet at one in the cause of their country's ancient freedom, was Levrier.
He was calm, severe, logical; his ideal was justice. He was a judge, and
whatever was not according to law ought to be resisted and overthrown. The
bishop's regime was one continuous perversion of right; it must be brought to an
end: so pleaded Levrier. From time immemorial the men of Geneva had been free:
what right had the Duke of Savoy and his creature, the bishop, to make slaves of
them? Neither the duke nor the bishop was sovereign of Geneva; its true ruler
was its charter of ancient franchises: so said the man of law. The duke feared
the great citizen. Levrier was quiet, but firm; he indulged in no clamor, but he
cherished no fear; he bowed before the majesty of law, and stood erect before
the tyrant:
Such were the men who were now fighting the battle of
liberty at the foot of the Alps in the dawn of modern times. That battle has
varied its form in the course of the centuries. In after-days the contest in
Continental Europe has been to separate the spiritual from the temporal,
relegate each to its own proper domain, and establish between the two such a
poise as shall form a safeguard to freedom; and especially to pluck the sword of
the State from the hands of the ecclesiastical power. But at Geneva, in the
times we write of, the conflict had for its immediate object to prevent a
separation between the two powers. Nevertheless, the battle is the same in both
cases, the same in Geneva 300 years ago as in Europe in 1875. The Genevans had
no love for the man who occupied their episcopal throne; it was no aim of
theirs, in the last resort, to preserve a class of amphibious rulers, neither
prince nor bishop, but the two mixed and confounded, to the immense detriment of
both. The Prince-Bishop of Geneva was, on a small scale, what the Prince-Bishop
of Rome was on a great. But the Genevans preferred having one tyrant to having
two. This was the alternative before them. They knew that should they, at this
hour, strip the bishop of the temporal government, the duke would seize upon it,
and they preferred meanwhile keeping the mitre and the scepter united, in the
hope that they would thus not only shut out the duke, but eventually expel the
prince-bishop.
Marvellous it truly was that so little a city should
escape so many snares, and defy so many armed assaults; for the duke again and
again advanced with his army to take it — nay, upon one occasion, was admitted
within its walls. There were foes enough around it, one would have thought, to
have swept it from off its rock, trod buried it beneath the waves of its lake.
And so would it have happened to Geneva but for the bravery of its sons, who
were resolved that sooner than see it enslaved they would see it razed to the
ground.
Had it been a great empire, its posts, dignities, and titles
might have stimulated and sustained their patriotism; but what recompense in
point of fame or riches could a little obscure town like Geneva offer for the
blood which its citizen-heroes were ready every moment to pour out in defense of
its freedom? A higher power than man had kindled this fire in the hearts of its
citizens. The combatants were fighting, although they knew it not, for a higher
liberty than Geneva had yet tasted. And that liberty was on the road to it. The
snowy peaks around it were even now beginning to kindle with a new day. Voices
were heard crying to the beleaguered and perplexed town, "How beautiful upon the
mountains are the feet of them that bring good tidings; that publish peace!" It
was the purpose of him who putteth down the mighty from their seats, and
exalteth the lowly, to lift this city to equality with the ancient capitals of
Christendom — nay, to place it above them all. For this end would he make empty
the episcopal throne in St. Pierre, that the Gospel might enter and seat itself
upon it. Then would Geneva raise its head in the presence of the ancient and
historic cities of Europe — Rome, Paris, Milan, Venice — with a halo round it
brighter than had ever encircled their brow. It would stand forth a temple of
liberty, in the midst of Christendom, its gates open day and night, to welcome
within its walls, as within an impregnable fortress, the persecuted of all
lands.
CHAPTER 2
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GENEVESE MARTYRS OF
LIBERTY.
Berthelier — Apprehended — Beheaded — His Remains publicly
Exposed — Bonivard — Banished — Castle of Chillon — Bishop of Geneva Dies — His
Remorse — Levrier — His Arrest by the Duke — Carried to the Castle of Bonne —
His Execution — What Victories of Brute Force Lead to — Momentary Triumph of the
Duke — He Flees from Geneva never to Return — Lessons learned by Genevese Exiles
— They Return to Act them out — Geneva's Gates Open towards the Rising
Sun.
BEFORE the day of Geneva's greatness should have
arrived, many of its heroic defenders would be resting in the grave, the road
thither for nearly all of them being by the scaffold. Let us recount the fate of
the more prominent; and, first of all, of Berthelier. One morning, as he was
going to breathe the fresh air outside the walls in his favouite meadow, bathed
by the waters of the Rhone, he was arrested by the duke's soldiers.[1] He bore himself with
calmness and dignity both at his arrest and during the few days now left him of
life. He wrote on the walls of his prison a verse of Scripture, which permits us
to hope that he had cast anchor in another world than that which he was so soon
to leave. His head fell by the hand of the executioner at the foot of Caesar's
Tower, in the isle in the Leman, near the point where the Rhone issues from the
lake.[2] His fellow-citizens beheld
him die, but could not save him. The cruel deed but deepened their purpose of
vengeance. The head of the patriot was fastened up on the bridge of the Arve.
Blackening in the sun it was a ghastly memorial of Savoyard tyranny, and a
thrilling appeal to the compatriots of Berthelier never to submit to the despot
who had no other rewards than this for the noblest of Geneva's sons.
The
fate of Bonivard was less tragic, but has become better known to us, from the
notice bestowed upon him by a great poet. He was deprived of his priory; and
while a scaffold was set up for Berthelier at one extremity of the Leman, a
dungeon was found for Bonivard at the other. The modern tourist, as he passes
along the lovely shores of the lake, beneath the magnificent amphitheatre of
mountains that overhang Vevay, has his attention arrested by the massive and
still entire walls of a castle, surrounded on all sides by the deep waters of
the Leman, save where a draw-bridge joins it to the shore. This is the Castle of
Chillon, the scene of Bonivard's imprisonment, and where the track worn by his
feet in the rocky floor may still be traced, while the ripple of the water,
which rises to the level of the loop-hole in the wall, may be heard when the
wind stirs upon the lake.
At this stage of the drama, the wretched man
who had filled the office of bishop, and had been the duke's co-conspirator in
these attempts upon the liberty of Geneva, died (1522) miserably at Pignerol, on
the southern side of the Alps, on the very frontier of the territory of the
Waldenses. His dying scene was awful and horrible. Around his bed stood only
hirelings. Careless of the agonies he was enduring, their eyes roamed round the
room in quest of valuables, which they might carry off whenever his breath
should depart. The effigies of his victims seemed traced upon the wall of his
chamber. They presented to him a crucifix: he thought it was Berthelier, and
shrieked out. They brought him the last Sacrament: he fancied they were
sprinkling him with blood; his lips, whitened with foam, let fall execrations
and blasphemies. Such is the picture which a Romanist writer draws of his last
hours. But before the dark scene closed something like a ray of light broke in.
He conjured his coadjutor and successor, Pierre de la Baume, not to walk in his
footsteps, but to defend the franchises of Geneva. He saw in the sufferings he
was enduring the punishment of his misdeeds; he implored forgiveness, and hoped
God would pardon him in purgatory.[3]
But Charles III,
Duke of Savoy and Piedmont, still lived, and unwarned by the miserable end of
his accomplice, he continued to prosecute his guilty project.[4] Another martyr of liberty
was now to offer up his life. The man who most embarrassed the duke still lived:
he must be swept from his path. Charles did not believe in patriotism, and
thought to buy Levrier.[5]
The judge spurned
the bribe. Well, the axe will do what gold cannot. He was arrested (Easter,
1524) at the gates of St. Pierre, as he was leaving after hearing morning mass.
"He wore a long camlet robe, probably his judicial gown, and a beautiful velvet
cassock."[6] Mounted hastily upon a
wretched nag, his hands tied behind his back, and his feet fastened below the
belly of his horse, the judge was carried, in the midst of armed men, who jeered
at and called him traitor, to the Castle of Bonne, where the duke was then
residing.
The Castle of Bonne, now a ruin, is some two leagues from
Geneva. It stands in the midst of scenery such as Switzerland only can show. The
panorama presents to the eye an assemblage of valleys, with their carpet-like
covering, foaming torrents, the black mouths of gorges, pines massed upon the
hill-tops, and beyond, afar off, the magnificence of snowy peaks.
The
tragedy enacted in this spot we shall leave D'Aubigne to tell, who has here,
with his usual graphic power, set in the light of day a deed that was done
literally in the darkness. "Shortly," says the historian, "after Bellegrade's"
(the man who pronounced doom) "departure, the confessor entered, discharged his
duty mechanically, uttered the sentence 'Ego to absolvo,' and withdrew, showing
no more sympathy for his victim than the provost had done. Then appeared a man
with a cord: it was the executioner. It was then ten o'clock at night. The
inhabitants of the little town and of the adjacent country were sleeping
soundly, and no one dreamt of the cruel deed that was about to cut short the
life of a man who might have shone in the first rank in a great monarchy. ....
The headsman bound the noble Levrier, armed men surrounded him, and the martyr
of law was conducted slowly to the castle-yard. All nature was dumb, nothing
broke the silence of that funeral procession; Charles's agents moved like
shadows beneath the ancient walls of the castle. The moon, which had not reached
its first quarter, was near setting, and shed only a feeble gleam. It was too
dark to distinguish the beautiful mountains, in the midst of which stood the
towers whence they had dragged their victim; the trees and houses of Bonne were
scarcely visible; one or two torches, carried by the provost's men, alone threw
light upon this cruel scene. On reaching the middle of the castle-yard the
headsman stopped, and the victim also. The ducal satellites silently formed a
circle round them, and the executioner prepared to discharge his office. Levrier
was calm, the peace of a good conscience supported him in this dread
hour.
Alone in the night, in those sublime regions of the Alps,
surrounded by the barbarous figures of the Savoyard mercenaries, standing in
that feudal courtyard which the torches ilumined with a sinister glare, the
heroic champion of the law raised his eyes to heaven, and said, 'By God's grace,
I die without anxiety for the liberty of my country and the authority of St.
Peter!' The grace of God, liberty, authority, these main principles of the
greatness of nations, were his last confession. The words had hardly been
uttered when the executioner swung round his sword, and the head of the citizen
rolled in the castle-yard. Immediately, as if struck with fear, the murderers
respectfully gathered up his remains and placed them in a coffin. 'And his body
was laid in earth in the parish church of Bonne, with the head separate.' At
that moment the moon set, and black darkness hid the stains of blood which
Levrier had left on the court-yard."[7]
Charles of Savoy
did not reflect that the victories of brute force, such as those he was now
winning, but pave the way for moral triumphs. With every head that fell by his
executioners, he deemed himself a stage nearer to the success he panted to
attain. Some illustrious heads had already fallen; so many more, say twenty, or
it might be thirty, and he would be Lord of Geneva; the small but much-coveted
principality would be part of Savoy, and the object so intently pursued by
himself and his ancestors for long years would be realised. The duke was but
practising a deception upon himself. Every head he cut off dug more deeply the
gulf which divided him from the sovereignty of Geneva; every drop of blood he
spilt but strengthened the resolution in the hearts of the patriots that never
should the duke call them his subjects.
Nevertheless, what with stratagem this hour and
violence the next — treachery within Geneva and soldiers and cannon outside of
it — it did seem as if the duke were making way, and the proud little city must,
by-and- by, lay its independence at his feet. In fact, for a moment, Geneva did
succumb. On the 15th of September, 1525, the duke surprised the city with a
numerous host. The patriots had nothing left them but massacre or speedy flight.
Fleeing through woods or mountainous defiles, pursued by Savoyard archers, some
escaped to Bern, others to Friberg. The duke, having entered the city, summoned
a council of such citizens as were still to be found in it, and with the axes of
his halberdiers suspended over their heads, these spiritless and lukewarm men
promised to accept him as their prince.[9] But the vow of allegiance
given in the "Council of Halberds" to-day was revoked on the morrow. The duke
was at first stunned, and next he was terrified, at this sudden revival of
opposition, when he believed it had been trampled out. Influenced by this
mysterious fear, he hastily left Geneva, never again to enter it, and let fall,
after having seemingly secured it, what he and his ancestors had been struggling
for generations to grasp.[10]
The duke had but
scattered the fire, not extinguished it. The parts of Switzerland to which the
patriots had fled were precisely those where the light of the Reformation was
breaking. At Bern and Friburg the exiles of Geneva had an opportunity of
studying higher models of freedom than any they had aforetime come in contact
with. They had been sent to school, and their hearts softened by adversity, were
peculiarly open to the higher teaching now addressed to them. How often in
after-years was the same thing repeated which we see realised in the case of
these early champions of freedom! Were not the patriotic citizens of Spain and
Italy again and again chased to the British shores? And for what end? That there
they might study purer models, be instructed in deeper and sounder principles,
have their views of liberty rectified and enlarged, and on their return to their
own country might temper their zeal with patience, fortify their courage with
wisdom, and so speed the better in their efforts for the emancipation of their
fellow-subjects. Fruitful, indeed, were the months which the Genevese exiles
spent abroad. When they reunited in February, 1526, after the flight of the
duke, a new era returned with them. Their sufferings had elicited the sympathy,
and their characters had won the admiration, of the noblest among the citizens
of the States where they had been sojourning. They recognised the important
bearing upon Swiss liberty of the struggle which Geneva had maintained. It was
the extreme citadel of the Swiss territory towards the south; it barred the
invader's road from the Alps, and it was impossible to withhold from the little
town the need of praise for the chivalry and devotion with which, single-handed,
it had taken its stand at this Swiss Thermopylae, and held it at all
hazards.
But it was not right, they felt, to leave this city longer in
its isolation. For their own sakes, as well as for Geneva's, they must extend
the hand of friendship to it. An alliance [11] offensive and defensive
was formed between the three governments of Bern, Friburg, and Geneva. If the
conflicts of the latter city were not yet ended, it no longer stood alone. By
its side were now two powerful allies. Whoso touched its independence, touched
theirs. If the Gospel had not yet entered Geneva, its gates stood open towards
that quarter of the sky which the rising sun of the Reformation was flooding
with his beams.
CHAPTER 3
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THE REFORM COMMENCED
IN LAUSANNE AND ESTABLISHED IN MORAT AND NEUCHATEL.
Geneva on the
Road to Liberty – Her Advance – There needs the Sword of the Spirit to Conquer
her Highest Liberty – Farel – No Second Field of Kappel – Farel goes to Aigle –
Acts as Schoolmaster – Begins to Preach – Commotion – Retires from Aigle –
Leaves behind him a little Reformed Church – Goes to Morat–Then an Important
Town – Eventually won to the Gospel – Attempts Lausanne – Goes to Neuchatel –
Crowds flock to his Preaching – Plants the Reformed Faith at Meiry in the
neighbouring Jura – Returns to Neuchatel – Carries its Reformation by a
Coup.
GENEVA had gone a long way towards independence. It
had chased the duke across the mountains to return no more. It had formed an
alliance with Bern and Friburg without waiting for the consent of its
prince-bishop; this was in effect to hold his temporal authority null, and to
take the sovereignty into its own hands. Liberty had advanced a stage on its
road. Free Europe had enlarged its area; and that of bond Europe had, to the
same extent, been circumscribed: Rome saw the outposts of Progress so much
nearer her own gates. The Pope beheld bold and spirited citizens ignoring the
scepter of their prince-bishop, converting it into a bauble; and the thought
must have suggested itself to him, might not the day come when his own more
powerful rod would be plucked from his hand, and broken in pieces, like that of
his vassal-bishop in Geneva?
But though on the road, Geneva had not yet
arrived at the goal. She was not yet crowned with the perfect liberty. A
powerful oppressor had her in his grip, namely, Rome. The tyrant, it is true,
had been compelled to relax his hold, but he might tighten his grasp unless
Geneva should succeed in entirely disengaging herself. But she had not yet got
hold of the right weapon for such a battle. Berthelier assailed Rome on the
ground of ancient charters; Bonivard hurled against her the shafts of a revived
learning; Levrier maintained the fight with the sword of justice; but it needed
that a more powerful sword, even that of the Word of the living God, should be
unsheathed, before the tyrant could be wholly discomfited and the victory
completely won. That sword had been unsheathed, and the champions who were
wielding it, advancing in their victorious path, were every day coming nearer
the gates of Geneva. When this new liberty should be enthroned within her, then
would her light break forth as the morning, the black clouds which had so long
hung about her would be scattered, and the tyrants who had plotted her overthrow
would tremble at her name, and stand afar off for fear of that invisible Arm
that guarded her. Let us turn to the movements outside the city, which, without
concert on the part of their originators, fall in with the efforts of the
champions of liberty within it for the complete emancipation of
Geneva.
We have already met Farel. We have seen him, a mere lad,
descending from the mountains of Dauphine, entering himself a pupil in that
renowned seminary of knowledge and orthodoxy, the Sorbonne – contracting a close
friendship with its most illustrious doctor, Lefevre, accompanying him in his
daily visits to the shrines of the metropolis, and kneeling by the side of the
venerable man before the images of the saints. But soon the eyes both of teacher
and pupil were opened; and Farel, transferring that ardor of soul which had
characterised him as a Papist to the side of the Reformation, strove to rescue
others from the frightful abyss of superstition in which he himself had been so
near perishing. Chased from France, as we have already related, he turned his
steps toward Switzerland.
It is the second Reformation in Switzerland
that we are now briefly to sketch. The commencement and progress of the first we
have already traced. Beginning with the preaching of Zwingle in the convent of
Einsiedein, the movement in a little time transferred itself to Zurich; and
thence it rapidly spread to the neighboring towns and cantons in Eastern
Helvetia, extending from Basle on the frontier of Germany on the north, to
Choire on the borders of Italy on the south. The Forest Cantons, however,
continued obedient to Rome. The adherents of the old faith and the champions of
the new met on the bloody field of Kappel. The sword gave the victory to
Romanism. The bravest and best of the citizens of Zurich lay stretched upon the
battle-field. Among the slain was Zwingle. With him, so men said and believed at
the moment, had fallen the Reformation.
In the grave of its most eloquent
preacher and its most courageous defender lay inferred the hopes of Swiss
Protestantism. But though the calamity of Kappel arrested, it did not
extinguish, the movement; on the contrary, it tended eventually to consolidate
and quicken it by impressing upon its friends the necessity of union. In after
years, when Geneva came to occupy the place in the second Helvetian movement
which Zurich had done in the first, the division among the Reformed cantons
which had led to the terrible disaster of 1531 was avoided, and there was no
second field of Kappel.
Arriving in Switzerland (1526), Farel took up his
abode at Aigle, and there commenced that campaign which had for its object to
conquer to Christ a brave and hardy people dwelling amid the glaciers of the
eternal mountains, or in fertile and sunny valleys, or on the shores of smiling
lakes. The darkness of ages overhung the region, but Farel had brought hither
the light. "Taking the name of Ursin," says Ruchat, "and acting the part of
schoolmaster,[1] he mingled, with the
elements of secular instruction, the seeds of Divine knowledge. Through the
minds of the children he gained access to those of the parents; and when he had
gathered a little flock: around him, he threw off his disguise, and announced
himself as 'William Farel,' the minister." Though he had dropped from the clouds
the priests could not have been more affrighted, nor the people more surprised,
than they were at the sudden metamorphosis of the schoolmaster. Farel instantly
mounted the pulpit. His bold look, his burning eye, his voice of thunder, his
words, rapid, eloquent, and stamped with the majesty of truth, reached the
conscience, and increased the number of those in the valley of Aigle who were
already prepared to take the Word of God for their guide. But not by one sermon
can the prejudices of ages be dispelled. The cures were filled with wrath at the
bold intruder, who had entered their quiet valley, had shaken their authority,
till now so secure, and had disturbed beliefs as ancient, and as firmly founded,
the mountaineers believed, as the peaks that overhung their valleys.
The
priests and people raised a great clamor, being supported by the cantonal
officials, in particular by Jacob de Roverea, Lord of Cret, and Syndic of Aigle.
Hearing of the opposition, the Lords of Bern, whose jurisdiction comprehended
Aigle and its neighborhood, sent a commission to Farel empowering him to explain
the Scriptures to the people.[2] The mandate was posted up
on the church doors,[3] but instead of calming the
tempest this intervention of authority only stirred it into fourfold fury. It
would seem as if the Gospel would conquer alone, or not at all. The priests
burned with zeal for the safety of those flocks to whom before they had hardly
ever addressed a word of instruction;[4] the Syndic took their
side, and the placards of the magistrates of Bern were torn down.
"That
cannot be the Gospel of Christ," said the priests, "seeing the preaching of it
does not bring peace, but war." This enlightened logic, of a piece with that
which should accuse the singing of the nightingale in a Swiss valley as the
cause of the descent of the avalanches, convinced the mountaineers. The
inhabitants of the four districts into which the territory of Aigle was divided
– namely, Aigle, Bex, Ollon, and the Ormonds – as one man unsheathed the
sword.[5] The shepherds who fed
their flocks beneath the glaciers of the Diablerets, hearing that the Church was
in danger, rushed like an avalanche to the rescue. The herdsmen of the Savoy
mountains, crossing the Rhone, also hastened to do battle in the good old cause.
Tumults broke out at Box, at Ollon, and other places. Farel saw the tempest
gathering, but remained undismayed. Those who had received the Gospel from him
were prepared to defend him; but were it not better to prevent the effusion of
blood, to which the matter was fast tending, and go and preach the Gospel in
other parts of this lovely but benighted land?
This was the course he
adopted; but, in retiring, he had the satisfaction of thinking that he had
planted the standard of the cross at the foot of the mighty Dent de Morcles, and
that he left behind him men whose eyes had been opened, and who would never
again bow the knee to the idols their fathers had served,[6] Soon thereafter, Aigle and
Bex, by majorities, gave their voices for the Reform; but the parishes that lay
higher up amid the mountains declared that they would abide in the old
faith.
Whither should Farel go next? Looking from the point where the
Rhone, rolling under the sublime peaks of the Dent du Midi and the Dent de
Morelos, pours its discoloured floods into the crystal Leman, one espies, on the
other side of the lake, the vine-clad hill on which Lausanne is seated. In
Popish times this was a city of importance. Its tall cathedral towers soared
aloft on their commanding site, while the lovely region held fast in the yoke of
the Pope slumbered at their feet. Lausanne had a bishop, a college of rich
canons, and a numerous staff of priests. It had besides an annual fair, to which
troops of pilgrims resorted, to pray before the image of "Our Lady," and to buy
indulgences and other trinkets: a traffic that enriched at once the Church and
the towns-people. But though one could hardly stir a step in its streets
without:meeting a "holy man" or a pious pilgrim, the place was a very sink of
corruption.[7] There was need, verily, of
a purifying stream being turned in upon this filthy place. Farel essayed to do
so, but his first attempt was not successful, and he turned away upon another
tack.[8]
Repulsed from
Lausanne, Farel traversed the fertile country which divides the Leman from the
Lake of Neuchatel, and arrived at Morat. This, in our day, insignificant place,
was then a renowned and fortified town. It had sustained three famous sieges,
the first in 1032 against the Emperor Conrad, the second in 1292 against the
Emperor Rodolph of Hapsburg, and the third in 1476 against Charles, last Duke of
Burgundy. Situated between France and Germany, the two languages were spoken
equally in it. Farel brought with him an authorisation from the Lords of Bern
empowering him to preach, not only throughout the extent of their own
territories, but also in that of their allies, provided they gave consent.[9]
Here his preaching
was not without fruit; but the majority of the citizens electing to abide still
by Rome, he retraced his steps, and presented himself a second time before that
episcopal city that overlooks the blue Leman, and which had so recently driven
him from its gates. He was ambitious of subduing this stronghold of darkness to
the Savior. This time he brought with him a letter from the Lords of Bern, who
had jurisdiction in those parts, and naturally wished to see their allies of the
same faith with themselves; but even this failed to procure him liberty to
evangelist in Lausanne. The Council of Sixty read the letter of their
Excellencies of Bern, and civilly replied that "It belonged not to them, but to
the bishop and chapter, to admit preachers into the pulpits." The Council of Two
Hundred also found that they had no power in the matter.[10] Farel had again to depart
and leave those whom he would have led into the pastures of truth to the care of
shepherds who knew so in to feed but were so skillful to fleece their
flocks.
Again turning northwards, he made a short halt at Morat. This
time the victory of the Gospel was complete, and this important town was placed
(1529) in the list of Protestant cities.[11] Farel felt that a mighty
unseen power was travelling with him, opening the understandings, melting the
hearts of men, and he would press on and win other cities and cantons to the
Gospel. He crossed the lovely lake and presented himself in Neuchatel, which had
lately returned under the scepter of its former mistress, Jeanne de Hochberg,
the only daughter and heiress of Philip, Count of Neuchatel, who died in 1503.
[12] She regained in her
widowhood the principality of Neuchatel, which she had lost in the lifetime of
her husband, Louis d'Orleans, Duke of Longueville. No one could enter this city
without having ocular demonstration that religion was the dominant interest in
it – meaning thereby a great cathedral on a conspicuous site, with a full
complement of canons, priests, and monks, who furnished the usual store of
pomps, dramas, indulgences, banquetings, and scandals. In the midst of a
devotion of this sort, Neuchatel was startled by a man of small stature, red
beard, glittering eye, and stentorian voice, who stood up in the market-place,
and announced that he had brought a religion, not from Rome, but from the
Bible.
The men with shaven crowns were struck dumb with astonishment.
When at length they found their voices, they said, "Let us beat out his brains."
"Duck him, duck him," cried others.[13] They fought with such
weapons as they had; their ignorance forbade their opposing doctrine with
doctrine. Farel lifted up his voice above their clamor. His preaching was felt
to be not an idle tale, nor a piece of incomprehensible mysticism, but words of
power – the words of God. Neuchatel was carried by storm.[14] It did not as yet formally
declare for Reform; but it was soon to do so.
Having kindled the fire,
and knowing that all the efforts of the priests would not succeed in
extinguishing it, Farel departed to evangelise in the mountains and valleys
which lie around the smiling waters of Morat and Neuchatel. It was winter
(January, 1530), and cold, hunger, and weariness were his frequent attendants.
Every hour, more-over, he was in peril of his life. The priests perfectly
understood that if they did not make away with him he would make away with
"religion" – that is, with their tithes and offerings, their processions and
orgies. They did all in their power to save "religion." They suspended their
quarrels with one another, they stole some hours from their sleep, they even
stole some hours from the table in their zeal to warn their flocks against the
"wolf," and impress them with a salutary dread of what their fate would be,
should they become his prey. On one occasion, in the Val de Ruz, in the
mountains that overhang the Lake of Neuchatel, the Reformer was seized and
beaten almost to death.[15]
Nothing, however,
could stop him. He would, at times, mount the pulpit while the priest was in the
act of celebrating mass at the altar, and drown the chants of the missal by the
thunder of his eloquence. This boldness had diverse results. Sometimes the old
bigotry would resume its sway, and the audience would pull the preacher
violently out of the pulpit; at other times the arrow of conviction would enter.
The priest would hastily strip himself of stole and chasuble, and cast the
implements of sacrifice from his hands, while the congregation would demolish
the altar, remove the images, and give in their adhesion to the new faith. In
three weeks' time four villages of the region had embraced the Reformed faith.
The first of these was the village of Kertezers, the church of which had been
given in the year 962 to the Abbey of Payerne, by Queen Berthe, wife of Rodolph
II., King of Burgundy, foundress of the abbey. Since that time – that is, during
568 years – the religious of Payerne had been the patrons of that church, the
cure of which was their vicar. As the Reformed were no longer served by him,
they petitioned their superiors at Bern for a Reformed pastor. Their request was
granted, and it was arranged that the Popish cure and the Protestant minister
should divide the stipend between them.[16] The cups, pictures,
marbles, and other valuables of the churches were sold, and therewith were
provided stipends for the pastors, hospitals for the poor and sick, schools for
the youth, and if aught remained it was given to the State.[17] The zeal of the citizens
of Meiry outran their discretion. They overturned the altars and images before
the Reformation had obtained a majority of votes. This furnished occasion to the
Lords of Friburg to complain to those of Bern that their subjects in the Jura
were infringing the settlement that regulated the progress of the Protestant
faith. A few weeks, however, put all right, by giving a majority of votes in
Meiry to the Reformation. Thus did the Gospel cast down the strongholds of
error, and its preacher, in the midst of weakness, was triumphant. The spring
and summer sufficed to establish the Reformed faith in great part of this
region.
The Protestant hero Farel was now advancing to complete his
conquest of Neuchatel. During his absence the Reformation had been fermenting.
He entered the city at the right moment. Despite the opposition of the princess,
of George de Rive, her deputy, and the priests, who sounded the tocsin to rouse
the people, the magistrates, after deliberation, passed a decree opening the
cathedral to the Reformed worship; and the citizens, forming round Farel, and
climbing the hill on which the cathedral stood, placed him in the pulpit,
notwithstanding the resistance of the canons. The solemnity of the crisis hushed
the vast congregation into stillness. Farel's sermon was one of the most
powerful he had ever delivered, and when he closed, lo a mighty wind, felt
though it could not be seen, passed over the people! They all at once cried out,
"We will follow the Protestant religion, both we and our children; and in it
will we live and die."
Having restored the Gospel with its sublime
doctrines and its worship in the spirit, the Neuchatelans felt that they had no
longer need of those symbols by which Popery sets forth its mysteries, and
through which the material worship of its votaries is offered. They proceeded
forthwith to purge the church: they dismantled the altars, broke the images,
tore down the pictures and crucifixes, and carrying them out, cast them down
from the summit of the terrace on which the cathedral stands. At their feet
slept the blue lake, beyond was the fertile champaign, and afar, in the south, a
chain of glittering peaks, with the snowy crown of Mont Blanc rising grandly
over all; but not an eye that day was turned on this glorious panorama. They had
broken from their own and their children's neck an ancient yoke, and were intent
only on obliterating all the signs and instruments of their former slavery. In
perpetual remembrance of this great day, the Neuchatelans inscribed on a pillar
of the cathedral the words – ON THE 23RD OCTOBER, 1530, IDOLATRY WAS OVERTHROWN
AND REMOVED FROM THIS CHURCH BY THE CITIZENS.[18]
CHAPTER 4
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TUMULTS – SUCCESSES –
TOLERATION.
Second Vote on Religion at Neuchatel – Vallangin –
Disgraceful Trick – Popular Tempest – Triumph of Reform – Farel turns his eye
toward Geneva – Evangelises at Orbe – Makes a Beginning – First Communion at
Orbe – Peter Viret – His Character – Goes to Grandson – A Battle in the Church –
The Affair carried to the Conference at Bern – Protestant Bern and Catholic
Friburg agree on a Policy of Toleration – Great Success of Farel – He turns
toward Geneva.
WAS the storm that swept over Neuchatel on the 23rd
of October, and which cleansed its cathedral-church of the emblems of
superstition, a passing gust, or one of those great waves which indicate the
rising of the tide in the spiritual atmosphere? Was it an outburst of
mob-violence, provoked by the greed and tyranny of the priests, or was it the
strong and emphatically expressed resolution of men who knew and loved the
truth? If the former, the idols would again be set up; if the latter, they had
fallen to rise no more. This was tested on the 4th of November following. On
that eventful day the citizens of Neuchatel, climbing the hill on which stood
the governor's castle, hard by the cathedral that still bore traces of the
recent tempest, in altars overturned, niches empty, and images disfigured,
presented themselves before the governor and deputies from Bern. They had
assembled to vote on the question whether Romanism or Protestantism should be
the religion of Neuchatel. A majority of eighteen votes gave the victory to the
Reformation. From that day (November 4, 1530) conscience was free in Neuchatel;
no one was compelled to abandon Popery, but the cathedral was henceforward
appropriated to the Protestant worship, and the Reformation was legally
established.[1]
Vallangin, the town
of next importance in this part of the Jura, followed soon thereafter the
example Neuchatel. The issue here was precipitated by a shameful expedient to
which the Papists had recourse, and which was of a sort that history refuses to
chronicle. It was a fair-day; Antoine Marcourt, the Pastor of Neuchatel, was
preaching in the market-place. A large and attentive congregation was listening
to him, when a revolting spectacle was exhibited which was contrived to affront
the preacher, insult the audience, and drive the Gospel from the place amid
jeers and laughter.
The trick recoiled upon its authors. It was Popery
that had to flee. A sudden gust of indignation shook the crowd. The multitudes
rushed toward the cathedral. Who shall now save the saints? The priests have
unchained winds which it is beyond their power to control. Altar, image, and
monumental statue, all went down before the tempest. The relics were scattered
about. Even the rich oriels, which flecked, with their glorious tints, stone
floor and massive column, were not spared. The edifice, all aglow but a few
moments before with the curious and beautiful picturings of chisel and pencil,
was now a wreck. The popular vengeance was not yet appeased. The furious
multitude was next seen directing its course towards the residences of the
canons. The terrified clerics had already fled to the woods, but if their
persons escaped, their houses were sacked.
By-and-by the storm spent
itself, and calmer feelings returned to the breasts of the citizens. They
ascended the hill on which stood the castle of the Countess of Arberg, who
governed Vallangin, under the suzerainty of Bern. The authorities trembled when
they saw them approach, and were greatly relieved when they learned that they
had come with no more hostile intent than to demand the punishment of the
perpetrators of the outrage. The countess gave orders for the punishment of the
guilty, though she was suspected of connivance in the affair. As to all beyond,
the matter was referred to Bern, and their Excellencies decided that the
townspeople should pay for the works of art which they had destroyed, and that
the countess in return should grant the free profession of the Reformed faith.
The sum in which the citizens were amerced we do not know, but it must have been
large indeed if it did not leave them immense gainers by the exchange.[2]
By a sort of
intuition it was Geneva that Farel all along had in his eye. The victories which
he won, and won with such rapidity and brilliancy, at the foot of the Jura, and
on the shores of its lakes, were but affairs of outposts. They were merely
stepping-stones upon his road, towards the conquest of that heroic little city,
which occupied a site where three great empires touched one another, and where
he longed to plant the Protestant standard. The idea was ever borne in upon his
mind that Geneva had a great part before it, that it was destined to become the
capital of Swiss Protestantism, and, in part, of French and Savoyard
Protestantism also; for its higher destiny he did not dare to forecast.
Therefore he rejoiced in every victory he gained, seeing himself so much the
nearer what he felt must be his crowning conquest. But like a wise general he
would not advance too fast; he would leave behind him no post of the enemy
untaken; he intended that Geneva should be conquered once for all; he would
enter its gates only after he had subdued the country around, and hang out the
banner of the Gospel upon its ramparts when Geneva had become mistress of a
renovated region. And it pleased the Captain whom he served to give him his
desire.
There was a short halt in the march of this spiritual conqueror.
At St. Blaise, on the northern shore of the Lake of Neuchatel, Farel was set
upon by a mob, instigated by the priests, and almost beaten to death. Covered
with bruises, spitting. blood, and so disfigured as scarcely to be recognized by
his friends, he was put into a small boat, carried across the lake, and nursed
at Morat. He had barely recovered his strength when he rose from bed, and set
out for Orbe to evangelise. Orbe was an ancient town at the foot of the Jura, on
the picturesque banks of a stream of the same name. It lay nearer Geneva than
Neuchatel. Watered by rivulets from the mountains, the gardens that surrounded
it were of more than ordinary beauty and luxuriance, but spiritually Orbe was a
wilderness, a "land where no water was." The Reformer would have given it
"living water;" but, unhappily, Orbe, with its numerous priests, its rich
convents, and its famous sisters of St. Claire, some of whom were of royal
lineage, did not thirst for such water. Its good Catholics strove to render
Farel's journey of no avail. With this view they had recourse to expedients,
some of which were tragic, others simply hdicrous. One of them is worth
chronicling for its originality. It was agreed to outmanceuvre the evangelist by
staying away – a masterly policy in the case of a preacher so attractive – but
in one instance the policy was departed from. One day, when Farel entered the
pulpit, a most extraordinary scene presented itself. He beheld three adults only
present, while the church was nearly filled with children – "brats." The latter
lay perfectly flat as if sound asleep. But the moment Farel began to preach they
jumped up, as puppets do when the string is pulled, and began to sing and dance,
to laugh and scream. Farel's voice was completely drowned by the noise. This
scene continued for some time; at length the little ragamuffins made their exit
in an uproar of screaming and howling. Farel was now left in quiet, but with no
one to listen to him. "And this," says a Popish chronicler, "was the first
sermon preached in the town of Orbe."[3]
Nevertheless the
Reformer persevered. Soon a small but select number of converts gathered round
him, some of them of good position in society. On Pentecost, the 28th of May,
Farel celebrated the Lord's Supper, for the first time in Orbe, to a little
congregation of seven. Having preached in the morning, the bread and wine were
placed on the table, and the communicants received them kneeling. Farel demanded
of them whether they forgave one another, and receiving an affirmative reply, he
distributed the elements to them. In the afternoon the Papists entered the
church, and commenced the chanting of mass."[4]
Farel was beginning
to think that Orbe was already won, when unhappily these bright prospects were
suddenly dashed by the indiscreet zeal of one of the evangelists. Thinking to
reform Orbe by a coup de main, this person, with the help of twelve companions,
pulled down one day all the images in its seven churches.[5] The destruction of the
idols but prolonged the reign of idolatry. A reaction set in, and it was not
till twenty years thereafter that Orbe placed itself in the rank of Reformed
cities.
But if Orbe remained Roman it had the honor of giving to the
Reformation one of its loveliest spirits and most persuasive preachers. Peter
Viret was born in this town in 1511. His father was a wool-dresser. Sweet,
studious, and of elevated soul, the son gave himself to the service of the
altar. he was educated at the Sorbonne in Paris, where he remained about three
years.
He attained the peace of the Gospel, like most of the Reformers,
by passing through the waters of anguish; but in his case "the floods" were not
so deep as in that of Luther and Calvin. When he returned to his native city, he
entered the pulpit at the entreaty of Farel, and preached to his townsmen. The
sweetness of his voice, the beauty of his ideas, and the modesty of his manner
held his hearers captive. It was seen that he who distributes to his servants as
he pleases for the edification of his body, the Church, had given to Viret his
special gift. He did not possess the glowing imagery and bmuling ardor of
Luther, nor the fiery energy of Farel, nor the thrilling power of Zwingle, nor
the calm, towering, and all-mastering genius of Calvin; but his preaching,
nevertheless, had a charm which was not found in that of any of those great men.
Clear, tender, persuasive aided by the stircry tones of his voice, and the moral
glow which lighted up his features, its singular fascination and power were
attested, in after-years, by the immense crowds which gathered round him in
Switzerland and the south of France, whenever he stood up to preach. He was
indeed a polished shaft in the hand of the Almighty.[6]
Farel had to fall
back from before Orbe; but if he retreated it was to wage fi'esh combats and to
win new victories. He next visited Grandson, at the western extremity of the
Lake of Neuchatel. The priests, alarmed at his arrival, rose in arms, and drove
him away. Bern now interposed its authority for his protection. Their
Excellencies would compel no one to become a Protestant, but they were
determined to permit the two faiths to be heard, and the citizens to make their
choice between the sermon and the mass. Taking with him Viret, Farel returned to
Grandson, where he was joined by a third, De Glutinis, an evangelist from the
Bernese Jura. They preached Sunday and weekday. The heresy was breaking in like
a torrent.
The priests strove to rear a bulwark against the devastating
flood. They refuted, to the best of their ability, the Protestant sermons. They
called to their aid popular preachers from the neighboring towns, and they
organised processions and sacred chants to invigorate the zeal and piety of
their adherents. The tide, notwithstanding, continued to set in a contrary
direction to that in which they wished to force it to flow. Arming themselves,
they came to church to refute what they heard spoken there, not with arguments,
but with blows. The sacristan threatened Farel with a pistol which he had
concealed under his cloak; another attempted to assassinate Glutinis with a
poignard. The ministers managed to mount the pulpits, but were pulled from them,
thrown down on the floor, trampled upon, beaten, and when their friends rushed
forward to defend them, the two parties fought over their prostrate bodies, and
a regular battle was seen going forward in the church.[7]
But a great good
resulted from these lamentable proceedings. The matter was brought before the
Great Conference, which assembled, as we have previously related, at Bern in
January, 1532. The Swiss were drifting toward a civil war. It was hopeless to
think of conciliating the two parties that divided the nation, but was it
necessary therefore that they should cut one another's throats? Might it not be
possible rather to bear with one another's opinions? This was the device hit
upon. It might appear to Rome, as it still appears to her, an execrable one, but
to the Conference it appeared preferable to the crime and horror of internecine
strife. Thus out of that necessity which is said to be the mother of invention,
came the idea of toleration. We deem the mass idolatry, said Protestant Bern,
but we shall prevent no one going to it. We deem the Protestant sermon heresy,
rejoined Popish Friburg, but we shall give liberty to all who wish to attend it.
Thus on the basis of liberty of worship was the public peace maintained. This
dates in Switzerland from January, 1532. [8] Toleration was adopted as
a policy before it had been accepted as a principle. It was practiced as a
necessity of the State before it had been promulgated as a right of conscience.
It was only when it came to be recognised and claimed in the latter character as
a right founded on a Divine charter – namely, the Word of God – and held
irrespective of the permission or the interdiction of man, that toleration
established inviolably its existence and reign.
In this manner did Farel
carry on the campaign. Every hour he encountered new perils; every day there
awaited him fresh persecutions; but it more than consoled him to think that he
was winning victory after victory. He remembered that similar foes had beset the
path of the first preachers of the Gospel in the cities of Asia Minor at the
beginning of the Christian dispensation, to those which obstructed his own in
the towns and villages of this region. But in the face of that opposition, how
marvellous had his success been – not his, but that of the invisible Power that
was moving before him! Among the towns won to the Gospel – the beginning of his
strength – he could count Neuchatel, and Vallangin, and Morat, and Grandson, and
Aigle, and Bex, and partially Orbe. Every day the fields were growing ripe unto
the harvest; able and zealous laborers were coming to his aid in the reaping of
it. By-and-by he hoped to carry home the last sheaf, in the conversion of the
little town which nestled at the southern extremity of the Leman Lake, to which
his longing eyes were so often turned. What joy would be his, could he pluck it
from the talons of Savoy and the grasp of Rome, and give it to the
Gospel!
CHAPTER 5
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FABEL ENTERS GENEVA.
Basin of the
Rhone – Leman Lake – Grandeur of its Environs – The Region in Former Times a
Stronghold of Popery – Geneva – The Duke of Savoy Entreats the Emperor to put
him in Possession of it – The Hour Passes – Farel Enters Geneva – Preaches – The
Perfect Liberty – The Great Pardon – Beginning of a New Geneva – Terror of the
Priests – Farel and Saunier Summoned before the Council – Protected by Letters
from Bern – A Tumult – Farel narrowly Escapes Death – Is Sent away from Geneva –
Froment Comes in his Room – Begins as Schoolmaster – His New Year's Day Sermon –
Popular Agitation – Retires from Geneva
THERE is no grander valley in Switzerland than the
basin of the Rhone, whose collected floods, confined within smiling shores, form
the Leman. As one looks toward sunrise, he sees on his right the majestic line
of the white Alps; and on his left, the picturesque and verdant Jura. The vast
space which these magnificent chains enclose is variously filled in. Its
grandest feature is the lake. It is blue as the sky, and motionless as a mirror.
Nestling on its shores, or dotting its remoter banks, is many a beautiful villa,
many a picturesque town, almost drowned in the affluent foliage of gardens and
rich vines, which clothe the country that slopes upward in an easy swell toward
the mountains. In the remoter distance the eye ranges over a vast stretch of
pasture-lands and corn-fields, and forests of chestnuts and pine-trees. Above
the dark woods soar the great peaks, as finely robed as the plains, though after
a different manner – not with flowers and verdure, but with glaciers and
snows.
But this fertile and lovely land, at the time we write of, was one
of the strongholds of the Papacy. Cathedrals, abbacies, rich convents, and
famous shrines, which attracted yearly troops of pilgrims, were thickly planted
throughout the valley of the Leman. These were so many fortresses by which Rome
kept the country in subjection. In each of these fortresses was placed a
numerous garrison. Priests and monks swarmed like the locusts. The land was fat,
yet one wonders how it sustained so numerous and ravenous a host. In Geneva
alone there were nine hundred priests. In the other towns and villages around
the lake, and at the foot of the Jura, they were not less numerous in
proportion. Cowls and shorn crowns, frocks and veils, were seen everywhere. This
generation of tonsured men and veiled women formed the "Church;" and the dues
they exacted of the lay population, and the processions, chants, exorcisms, and
blows which they gave them in return, were styled "religion." The man who would
go down into this region of sevenfold blackness, and attack these sons of the
Roman Anak, who here tyrannised so mercilessly over their wretched victims, had
indeed need of a stout heart and a strong faith.
He had need to be clad
in the armor of God in going forth to such a battle. This man was William Farel.
The spiritual campaigns of the sixteenth century produced few such champions.
"His sermons," says D'Aubigne, "were actions quite as much as a battle is." We
have already chronicled what he did in these "wars of the Lord" in the Pays de
Vaud; we are now to be engaged in the narrative of his work in Geneva.
We
have brought down the eventful story of this little city to the time when it
formed an alliance with Bern and Friburg. This brought it a little help in the
battle which it had maintained hitherto single-handed against tremendous odds.
The duke had left it, and placed the Alps between himself and it, but he had not
lost sight of it. Despairing of being able to reduce it by his own power, he
sent a messenger to Charles V. at Augsburg, entreating him to send his soldiers
and put him in possession of Geneva. Most willingly would the emperor have put
these haughty citizens under the feet of the duke, but his own hands were at
that moment too full to attempt any new enterprise. The Lutheran princes of
Germany, as stubborn in their own way as the Genevans were in theirs, were
occasioning Charles a world of anxiety, and he could give the duke nothing but
promises. The emperor's plan, as communicated to the duke's envoy, was first to
"crush the German Protestants, and then bring his mailed hand down on the
Huguenots of Geneva."[1] Geneva meanwhile had
respite. The Treaty of Nuremberg shortly afterwards set Charles V. free on the
side of Germany, and left him at liberty to convert the promises he had made the
duke into deeds. But the hour to strike had now passed; a mightier power than
the emperor had entered Geneva.
Returning from the Waldensian synod in
the valley of Angrogna, in October, 1532, Farel, who was accompanied by Saunter,
could not resist his long-cherished desire of visiting Geneva. His arrival was
made known to the friends of liberty in that city,[2] and the very next day the
elite of the citizens waited on him at his inn, the Tour Perce, on the left bank
of the Rhone. He preached twice, setting forth the glorious Gospel of the grace
of God. The topic of his first address was Holy Scripture, the fountain-head of
all Divine knowledge, in contradistinction to tradition of Fathers, or decree of
Council, and the only authority on earth to which the conscience of man was
subject. This opened the gates of a higher liberty than these men had yet
understood, or aspired to. They had been shedding their blood for their
franchises, but now the Reformer showed them a way by which their souls might
escape from the dark dungeon in which tradition and human authority had
succeeded in shutting them up. The next day Farel proclaimed to them the great
pardon of God – which consisted, according to his exposition, in the absolutely
free forgiveness of sinners bestowed on the footing of an absolutely full and
perfect expiation of human guilt; and this he placed in studious opposition to
the pardon of the Pope, which had to be bought with money or with penances. This
was a still wider opening of the gates of a new world to these men. "This," said
Farel, "is the Gospel; and this, and nothing short of this, is liberty, inasmuch
as it is the enfranchisement of the whole man, body, conscience, and soul."[3] The words of the Reformer
did not fall on dull or indifferent hearts. The generous soil, already watered
with the blood of the martyrs of liberty, now received into its bosom a yet more
precious seed. The Old Geneva passed away, and in its place came a New Geneva,
which the wiles of the Pope should not be able to circumvent, nor the arms of
the emperor to subdue.
The priests learned, with a dismay bordering on
despair, that the man who had passed like a devastating tempest over the Pays de
Vand, his track marked by altars overturned, images demolished, and canons,
monks, and nuns fleeing before him in terror, had come hither also. What was to
be done? Effectual steps must be promptly taken, otherwise all would be lost.
The gods of Geneva would perish as those of Neuchatel had done.[4]
Farel and Saunter
were summoned before the town council.[5] The majority of the
magistrates received them with angry looks, some of them with bitter words; but
happily Farel carried letters from their Excellencies of Bern, with whom Geneva
was in alliance, and whom the councillors feared to offend. The Reformers, thus
protected, after some conference, left the council-chamber
unharmed.
Their acquittal awakened still more the fears of the priests,
and as their fear grew so did their anger. Armed clerics were parading the
streets; there was a great flutter in the convents. "A shabby little preacher,"
said one of the sisters of St. Claire, with a toss of the head, "Master William
Farel, has just arrived."[6] The townspeople were
breaking out in tumults. What next was thought of? An episcopal council met, and
under a pretext of debating the question it summoned the two preachers before
them. Two magistrates accompanied them to see that they returned alive. Some of
the episcopal council had come with arms under their sacerdotal robes. Such was
their notion of a religious discussion. The Reformers were asked by what
authority they preached? Farel replied by quoting the Divine injunction, "Preach
the Gospel to every creature." The meek majesty of the answer only provoked a
sneer. In a few minutes the council became excited; the members started to their
feet; they flung themselves upon the two evangelists; they pulled them about;
they spat upon them, exclaiming, "Come, Farel, you wicked devil, what makes you
go up and down thus? Whence comest thou? What business brings you to our city to
throw us into trouble?" When the noise had a little subsided, Farel made answer
courageously, "I am not a devil; I am sent by God as an ambassador of Jesus
Christ; I preach Christ crucified – dead for our sins – risen again for our
justification; he that believeth upon him hath eternal life; he that believeth
not is condemned." "He blasphemes; he is worthy of death," exclaimed some. "To
the Rhone, to the Rhone!" shouted others; "it were better to drown him in the
Rhone than permit this wicked Lutheran to trouble all the people." "Speak the
words of Christ, not of Caiaphas," replied Farel. This was the signal for a yet
more ferocious outbreak. "Kill the Lutheran hound," exclaimed they. Dom Bergeri,
proctor to the chaplain, cried, "Strike, strike!" They closed round Farel and
Saunier; they took hold of them; they struck at them. One of the Grand Vicar's
servants, who carried an arquebus, levelled it at Farel; he pulled the trigger;
the priming flashed.[7] The clatter of arms under
the vestments of the priests foreboded a tragic issue to the affair; and
doubtless it would speedily have terminated in this melancholy fashion, but for
the vigorous interposition of the two magistrates.[8]
Rescued from the
perils of the episcopal council-hall, worse dangers, if possible, threatened
them outside. A miscellaneous crowd of clerics and laics, armed with clubs and
swords, waited in the street to inflict upon the two heretics the vengeance
which it was just possible they might escape at the hands of the vicar and
canons.[9] When the mob saw them
appear, they brandished their weapons, and raising a frightful noise of hissing
and howling, made ready to rush upon them. It looked as if they were fated to
die upon the spot. At the critical moment a band of halberdiers, headed by the
syndics, came up, and closing their ranks round the two Reformers escorted them,
through the scowling and hooting crowd, to their inn, the Tour Perce. A guard
was stationed at the door all night. Next morning, at an early hour, appeared a
few friends, who taking Farel and Saunter, and leading them to the shore of the
lake, made them embark in a small boat, and, carrying them over the quiet
waters, landed them in the Pays de Vand, at an unfrequented spot between Merges
and Lausanne. Thence Farel and Saunter went on to Grandson. Such was the issue
of Farel's first essay in a city on which his eye and heart had so long rested.
It did not promise much; but he had accomplished more than he at the moment
knew.
In fact, Farel was too powerful, and his name was of too great
prestige, to begin the work. The seeds of such a work must be deposited by a
gentle hand, they must grow up in a still air, and only when they have taken
root may the winds be suffered to blow. Of this Farel seems to have become
sensible, for we find him looking around for a humbler and feebler instrument to
send to Geneva. He cast eyes on the young and not very courageous Froment, and
dispatched him to a city where he himself had almost been torn in pieces.[10] While Froment was on his
way another visitor unexpectedly appeared to the Genevans. A comet blazed forth
in their sky. What did it portend? War, said some; the rising of a Divine light,
said others.[11]
Froment's
appearance was so mean that even the Huguenots, as the friends of liberty and
progress in Geneva were styled, turned their backs upon him. What was he to do?
Froment recalled Farel's example at Aigle, and resolved to turn schoolmaster. He
hired a room at the Croix d'Or, near the Molard, and speedily his fame as a
teacher of youth filled Geneva. The lessons Froment taught the children in the
school, the children taught the parents when they went home. Gradually, and in a
very short while, the class grew into a congregation of adults, the school-room
into a church, and the teacher into an evangelist. Reading out a chapter he
would explain it with simplicity and impressiveness. Thus did he scatter the
seed upon hearts; souls were converted; and the once despised evangelist, who
had been, like a greater missionary, "a root out of a dry ground" to the
Genevans, now saw crowds pressing around him and drinking in his words.[12]
This was in the end
of the year 1532. The work proceeded apace. Among the converts were certain rich
and honorable women: we mention specially Paula, the wife of John Lever, and
Claudine, her sister-in-law. Their conversion made a great sensation in Geneva.
By their means their husbands and many of their acquaintances were drawn to hear
the schoolmaster at the Croix d'Or, and embraced the Gospel. From the Pays de
Vaud, arrived New Testaments, tracts, and controversial works; and these,
distributed among the citizens, opened the eyes of many who had not courage to
go openly to the schoolmaster's sermon. Tradesmen and people of all conditions
enrolled themselves among the disciples. The social principle of Christianity
began to operate; those who were of one faith drew together into one society,
and meeting at stated times in one another's houses, they strove to instruct and
strengthen each other. Such were the early days of the Genevan
Church.
First came faith – faith in the free forgiveness of the Gospel –
next came good works A reformation of manners followed in Geneva. The Reformed
ceased to frequent those fashionable amusements in which they had formerly
delighted. They banished finery from their dress, and luxury from their
banquets. They made no more costly presents to the saints, and the; money thus
saved they bestowed on the poor, and especially the Protestant exiles whom the
rising storms of persecution in France compelled to flee to the gates of Geneva
as to a harbour of refuge. There was hardly a Protestant of note who did not
receive into his house one of these expatriated Christians,[13] and in this way Geneva
learned that hospitality for which it is renowned to this day.
The
congregation of Froment in a few weeks grew too large for the modest limits of
the Croix d'Or. One day a greater concourse than usual assembling at his chapel
door, and pressing in vain for admittance, the cry was raised, "To the Molard!"
To the Molard the crowd marched, carrying with them the preacher. It was New
Year's Day, 1533. The Molard was the market-square, and here, mounted on a
fish-stall – the first public pulpit in Geneva – Froment preached to the
multitude. It was his "New Year's gift," as it has been called. Having prayed,
he began his sermon [14] by announcing that "free
pardon"–the ray from the open heavens which leads the eye upward to the throne
of a Savior – which all the Reformers, treading in the steps of the apostles,
placed in the foreground of their teaching. From this he went on to present to
his hearers the lineaments of the "false prophets" and "idolatrous priests" as
painted in the Old and New Testaments, pointing out the exact verification of
these features in the Romish hierarchy of their own day. Froment's delineations
were so minute, so graphic and fearless, that his hearers saw the prophets of
Baal, and the Pharisees of a corrupt Judaism, living over again in the priests
of their own city. The preacher had become warm with his theme, and the audience
were kindling in sympathy, when a sound of hurrying footsteps was heard behind
them. On turning round a band of armed men was seen entering the square. The
lieutenant of the city, the procurator-fiscal, the soldiers, and a number of
armed priests, exasperated by this public manifestation of the converts, had
come to arrest Froment, and disperse the assembly. Had the preacher been
captured, it is not doubtful what his fate would have been, but the band
returned without their prey. His friends carried him off to a place of hiding.[15]
The agitation of
the citizens and the violence of the priests made the farther prosecution of
Froment's ministry in Geneva hopeless. He withdrew quietly from the city, and
returned to his former charge in the village of Yvonand, at the foot of the
Jura.[16] The foundations of
Protestant Geneva had been laid: greater builders were to rear the
edifice.
CHAPTER 6
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GENEVA ON THE BRINK
OF CIVIL WAR.
First Communion in Geneva – Plot to Massacre all the
Converts – Canon Wernli – The Roman Catholics take Arms – The City on the Brink
of Civil War – The Battle Averted – Another Storm – Canon Wernli Arms and Rings
the Tocsin – He is Slain – Bern Interposes – The Council Permits by Edict the
Free Preaching of the Gospel in Geneva – The Pope Commands the Bishop to Return
to the City – He Blunders and Retires – Froment Returns – Farel and Viret Arrive
in Geneva – Dejection of the Roman Catholics.
THE workman had retired, but the work went on. The
Protestants, now grown to a goodly number, and full of zeal and hope, met in
each other's houses – the catacombs of the young Church, as an old author styles
these meetings. They read the Scriptures in Lefevre's translation; they elected
Guerin, one of the more intelligent and esteemed among them, to "the charge of
the Word," in the room of Froment; and they still further strengthened their
bond of union by partaking together of the Lord's Supper. It occasioned them
some anxiety where they should find a spot sufficiently secluded for the
celebration of the ordinence. The place ultimately made choice of was a little
walled garden near the city gates.[1]
The time of year
was the middle of March. The preparations were simple indeed – a few benches, a
table spread with a white cloth, on which were displayed the bread and wine,
that were to become to these disciples the memorials of Christ's death, and the
token and seal of their interest in its blessings. Guerin took his seat at the
head of the table, and began the service. At that moment the sun, rising over
the Alps, a his first rays upon the little company, an outward emblem of the
real though spiritual presence of that Savior of whom it was foretold –
This seemed to them an auspicious token.[3] The growing numbers and
zeal of the disciples again drew upon them the anger of the priests, and Guerin
had to withdraw and follow Froment into exile at Yvonand.[4] Geneva, like a ship
laboring in a tempestuous sea, was casting out one Protestant laborer after
another, but it could not cast out the Gospel.
Bern next appeared upon
the stage, and demanded that its ally Geneva should grant liberty to the
preaching of the Gospel in it.[5] The friends of the duke
and of Rome – the Mamelukes, as they were called – saw that matters had come to
a crisis. They must extirpate Lutheranism from Geneva, otherwise they should
never be at rest; but Lutheranism they could hope to extirpate not otherwise
than by extirpating all the Lutherans. The council hesitated and procrastinated,
for the majority of its members were still Roman Catholic; but the canons,
priests, and chief partisans of Romanism neither hesitated nor procrastinated.
They met in the Vicar-General's council-hall (Thursday, 27th May, 1533); they
came armed to the teeth, and the issue of their deliberations, which were
conducted by torch-light, was to kill all the Protestants in Geneva without one
exception.[6] The conspirators, raising
their hands, bound themselves by a solemn oath.[7] They now dispersed for a
brief repose, for the plot was to be executed on the day following.
The
morrow came, and the conspirators assembled in the cathedral, to the number of
700. [8] The first to enter was
Canon Wernli. He came clad in armor. He was as devoted a Romanist as he was a
redoubtable warrior. He was a Samson for strength, and could wield his
battle-axe as he might fling about his breviary. In waging war with the hydra of
heresy which had broken into the Roman Catholic fold of Geneva he would strike
once, and would not strike a second time. This zealous priest and valiant
soldier was the real captain of the band, which was ostensibly led by Syndic
Baud, in his "great hat and plume of feathers."
Having marshalled in
front of the high altar of St. Peter's, this troop, which included 300 armed
priests, put itself in motion. With banners displayed, crosses uplifted, axes
and swords brandished, while the great bell of the cathedral sent forth its
startling and ominous peals, it marched down the street of the Perron to the
Molard, and drew up in battle array. Various armed detachments continued to
arrive from other quarters, and their junction ultimately swelled the Roman
Catholic host to about 2,500. They felt sure of victory. Here they stood, their
cannons and arquebuses loaded, awaiting the word for action: and chafing at
those little hindrances which ever and anon occurred to keep them back from
battle, as chafes the war-horse against the bit that curbs his fiery impatience
to plunge into the fight.[9]
This army, drawn up
in order of battle in the Molard, received a singular reinforcement. The wives
and mothers of the Romanists appeared on the scene of action, their aprons
filled with stones, by their side their little children of from twelve to
fourteen, whom they had brought to take part in this holy war and into whose
hands they had put such weapons as they were able to wield. So great was the
zeal of these Amazons against heresy! Meanwhile, what were the Protestants doing
or thinking? At the first alarm they assembled in the house of Baudichon de la
Maisonneuve, one of the most courageous of their leaders. His mansion was
situated on the left bank of the Rhone, some 400 paces from the Molard. The
converts felt how terrible was the crisis, but their hearts were fixed, trusting
on him who holds the tempests and whirlwinds in his hands. He had but to speak,
and that storm would dispel as suddenly as it had gathered. The plan of the
Romanists was to march to Baudichon's house, set fire to it, and massacre the
heretics one by one as they escaped from the flames. The proposal of burning
them came to the ears of the Protestants; their numbers had now considerably
increased; all were well armed and of good courage; they resolved to march out
and stand for their lives. Descending into the street, they drew up five deep in
presence of the enemy.
There was deep stillness. It would be broken the
next moment by the shock of murderous battle. The cannons and arquebuses were
loaded; the halberds grasped; the swords unsheathed; and stones and other
missiles were ready to be poured in to complete the work of death. But it
pleased the Great Disposer to stay the tempest when it seemed on the very point
of bursting.
There chanced at that time to be seven Friburg merchants
sojourning in Geneva.[10] Touched by the lamentable
spectacle of the citizens in arms to shed one another's blood, they came forward
at the critical moment to mediate. "Blessed are the peace-makers." Going first
to the Roman Catholics and then to the Reformed, they represented to the former
how foolish it was to shed their blood "to satisfy the appetite of their
priests,"[11] and pointed out to the
latter how tremendous were the odds that stood arrayed against them. With much
ado they succeeded in calming the passions of both parties. The priests,
however, of whom 160 were in arms, refused to lend an ear to these pacific
counsels. But finding that if they persisted they should have to fight it out by
themselves, they at last came to terms.[12] The insane fury of the
inhabitants having now given place to the natural affections, tears of joy
welcomed fathers and husbands as at night they stepped across the thresholds of
their homes. Terms of pacification were afterwards drawn up which left the
balance inclining somewhat in favor of liberty of conscience. [13]
But soon again
another storm darkened over that city within which two mighty principles were
contending. The magistrates might issue edicts, the leaders of the two parties
might sign pacifications, but settled peace there could be none for Geneva till
the Gospel should have established its sway in the hearts of a majority of its
citizens. On the 4th May, just five weeks after the affair we have narrated,
another tumult broke out. Its instigator was the same bellicose ecclesiastic who
figured so prominently on the 28th March – Canon Wernli. "This good champion of
the faith," as Sister Jeanne, who kept a journal of these occurrences, calls
him, had that morning celebrated, with unusual pomp, the Feast of "The Holy
Winding-sheet," in St. Peter's. "Taking off his sacerdotal robes, he put on his
breast-plate and cuishes, belted his sword to his side, seized his heavy
halberd,"[14] and issued forth to do
battle for the Church. Followed by a party of priests to whose haalds the
arquebus came quite as readily as the breviary, Wernli strode down the Perton to
his old battle-field, the Molard By this time night had fallen; alarming rumors
were propagated through the city, and to add to the terror of the inhabitants,
the tocsin began to ring out its thundering peals. Many on both sides, Roman
Catholics and Reformers, mostly armed, rushed into the street. There Canon
Wernli, unable to distinguish friend from foe in the darkness, was shouting out
to his assailants to come on; but as no one answered the challenge, he fell to
dealing blows right and left among the crowd. Some one slipped behind him, and
espying an opening in his iron coat, thrust his poignard into his body. The
shouts ceased, the tumult gradually subsided, the night passed, and when the
morning broke Canon Wernli was found lying in his armor, on the doorsteps of one
of the houses, stark dead.[15]
If the death of
this Papal champion lessened the dangers of the Reformed within the city, it
multiplied their enemies without. Wernli belonged to a powerful family of the
Popish Canton of Friburg, and ambassadors from that State now appeared at Geneva
demanding the punishment of all concerned in the canon's death – that is, of all
the Reformed. The Reformation seemed about to be sacrificed on the tomb of
Wernli. Protestant Bern instantly stepped forward in its defense. Bern proved
itself the more powerful. Its ambassadors induced the syndics and council, as
the only escape from the chaos that encompassed them, to proclaim liberty to all
to abide by the mass, or to follow Protestantism, as their conscience might
dictate.[16] This decree, which
advanced the landmarks of liberty theoretically, but hardly as yet practically,
brought matters to a head in Geneva.
For some time many eyes had been
watching from abroad the struggle going on in this little town on the shores of
the Leman. The extraordinary bravery and energy of its citizens had invested it
with a charm that rivetted upon it the eye of both friend and foe, and inspired
them with the presentiment that it had a great part to play in the new times
that were opening. It caused many all hour of anxious thought to Clement VII. in
the Vatican. Charles V. could not but wonder that, while so many great kingdoms
owned his sway, this little city resisted his will. He had written to these
haughty burghers peremptorily commanding them to forsake the evil paths of
heresy. They had gone their own way notwithstanding.
Strong measures must
be taken with this rebellious town. Its prince-bishop, Pierre de la Baume, was
absent from Geneva, and had been so for some while. The free manners of the
citizens did not suit him, and he took up his abode at Arbois, on the other side
of the Jura, in a quiet neighborhood, where the wine was good. The prince-bishop
cared for his Church, of course, but he cared also for his dinner; but Geneva
was on the point of being lost; and the Pope, at the risk of spoiling the
bishop's digestion, ordered him, under pain of excommunication, to return
thither, and try his hand at reducing to their obedience his mutinous subjects.
Pierre de la Baume had but little heart for the task, but it was enjoined upon
him under a threat which he trembled to incur, and so, provided with an armed
escort, he returned (lst July, 1533) to Geneva.
He but helped to ruin the
cause he had come to uphold, he would give Lutheranism, not an open execution,
but a secret burial. Accordingly, inviting the chiefs of the Protestant movement
to his palace, no sooner had they entered it than the bishop closed the doors,
threw his guests into irons, and proceeded to dispose of them by consigning one
to this dungeon, and another to that. In this summary proceeding of their bishop
the council saw a flagrant violation of the franchises of Geneva. It was the
attack on liberty, not religion – for three of the four syndics were still Roman
Catholic – that awakened their indignation. The senators produced their ancient
charter, which the bishop had sworn to observe, and claimed the constitutional
right, in which it vested them, of trying all inculpated citizens. The bishop
found himself caught in the trap he had so cunningly set for others. If he
should open his dungeons, he would confess to having sustained a most
humiliating defeat; if he should retain his prisoners in bonds, he would draw
upon his head one of those popular tempests of which he was so greatly afraid.
Choosing the former as the less formidable alternative, he gave up his prisoners
to their lawful judges.
But even this did not restore the bishop's
tranquillity. His guilty imagination was continually conjuring up tumults and
assassinations; and, fleeing when no man pursued, he secretly quitted Geneva,
just fourteen days after he had entered it.[17] He left the cause of Rome
in a worse position than he had found it, and the Pope saw that he had better
have left the craven bishop to enjoy his quiet and his wine at Arbois. When the
shepherd of the flock had fled, what so likely to happen as that the "wolf"
would return? The "wolf" did return. Froment, with a companion by his side,
Alexander Canus, reappeared upon the scene which the bishop had been in such
haste to quit. These evangelists preached in private houses, and when these no
longer sufficed for the crowds that assembled, they proclaimed the "good news"
in the streets. The bishop, who learned what was going on, fulminated a missive
from his quiet asylum, in the hope of driving the destroyer out of the fold he
had deserted. "Why," said the Genevans, "did he not remain and keep the door
closed?" The priests complained to the council, laying the bishop's letter upon
the table. Their remonstrance only served to show that the tide was rising.
"Preach the Gospel," answered the council, "and say nothing that cannot be
proved by Holy Scripture." These words, which are still to be read in the city
registers, made Protestantism a religio licita (a tolerated faith) in Geneva.[18] The bishop, in his own
way, threw oil upon the fire by a second and more energetic letter, forbidding
the preaching in Geneva, secretly or publicly, of "the holy page," of "the holy
Gospel." [19] Further, Furbity, a frothy
and abusive preacher of the Dominican order, was brought to oppose the Reformed.
The violence of his harangues evoked a popular tumult, and the waters of liberty
retreating for a moment from the limits Which they had reached, Froment and
Canus had to retire from Geneva.
But speedily the tide turned, this time
to overpass a long way its furthest limits hitherto. On the 21st December, 1533,
Farel entered the gates of Geneva, not again to leave it till the Reformation
had been consummated in it. The Roman Catholics felt that a life-and-death
struggle had commenced.
The citizens assembled to the sermons of Farel
with helmets on their heads, and arquebuses and halberds in their hands. The
priests, divining the true source of the movement, published from all the
pulpits on the 1st of January, 1534, an order commanding all copies of the
Bible, whether in French or in German, to be burned.[20] For three days and nights
the city was under arms; the one party arming to defend, the other to expel the
Bible. Froment arrived to the help of Farel. There came yet another – Viret, who
joined them in a few weeks. Farel, Viret, Froment – the three most powerful
preachers in the French tongue – are now in Geneva.
These three are an
army. Their weapon is the Word of God. Clad in the panoply of light, and
wielding the sword of the Spirit, these three warriors will do more to batter
down the stronghold of Rome than all that the nine hundred priests in Geneva can
do to uphold it. The knell of the Papacy has sounded in this city; low
responsive wailings begin to be heard along the foot of the Alps and the crest
of the Jura, mourning the approaching fall of an ancient system. The echoes
travel to France, to England, and to Germany, and wherever they come the friends
of the Gospel and of liberty look up, while the adherents of Rome hang their
heads, weighed down by the presentiment of a terrible disaster about to befall
their cause.
CHAPTER 7
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HEROISM OF
GENEVA.
Conspiracy against Geneva – Detection – Protestants gain
Possession of one of the Churches – The Gospel in Geneva – Glories Near but
Unseen – An Army of Pilgrims – A Hunting Party – The Game not Caught – Roman
Catholic Exodus – The Duke and the Emperor Combine against Geneva – Perils of
the City – Heroic Resolution of the Citizens – The Suburbs Demolished – The
Citizens Wait the Assault.
GENEVA had much to dare and to endure during the year
and a half that was yet to elapse before its struggles should be crowned with
victory. Three powerful parties – the prince-bishop, the Duke of Savoy, and
their Excellencies of Friburg – jointly conspired against the liberties of the
brave little town.[1] The bishop secretly
appointed a lieutenant-general to govern in his name, investing him with all the
powers of the State; the duke sent blank warrants to be filled in with the names
of those whom it might be necessary to apprehend and execute, and the Lords of
Friburg were to cooperate with the Mamelukes within the city. All had been
excellently planned; but the blow which the bishop meditated against the State
of Geneva fell upon himself and his accomplices. The plot was discovered; the
agents who were to have executed it suffered the doom of traitors; the bishop,
caught plotting, became nearly as odious to the Roman Catholics as he already
was to the Protestants; and the popular reaction which ensued filled the curule
chairs, at next election, with the friends of the Reform.
The Reformers,
now numerous, and taunted sometimes with worshipping in holes and corners,
resolved no longer to submit to the stigma of being obliged to celebrate their
worship in private houses. They said to the magistrates, "Give us one of the
churches of the city." The Council, wishing to hold the balance even between
them and the Roman Catholics, excused themselves by saying that this was a
matter that lay outside their jurisdiction; but, added they, "you are strong,
and if you are pleased to take one of the churches of your own accord, we cannot
prevent you."
The converts did not delay to act upon the hint. The brave
Baudichon de la Maisonneuve marching at their head, they proceeded to the
Convent of the Rive and appropriated for their use the "Grand Auditory," or
cloister,[2] which might contain from
four to five thousand persons. They rang the bells; the report ran that Farel
was to preach; and crowds from every part of the city came streaming to the
Rive. The monks could only stare. Rising up in his ordinary dress, Farel
preached to the overflowing congregation. That was a day much to be remembered
in Geneva. It needs neither many nor learned words to proclaim the Gospel. It is
a message from the throne of heaven to the guilty children of earth, to this
effect, that God, having sent his Son to suffer in their room, offers them a
free pardon.
The Genevans were amazed to find that the Gospel was so
simple a matter, and could be so soon told. They had been taught from their
cradle that it needed gorgeous cathedrals, blazing tapers, splendidly apparelled
priests, chants, and incense to set it forth, and that wanting mystic rites it
refused to impart its efficacy to the worshipper; now they found that one
attired in a plain dress, and in a single plain sentence, could declare it all.
But that little sentence they found was a ray that revealed to them a whole
world of glory. The chant of the priest had entered the ear only, Farel's words
sunk into the heart: the taper had but flashed its light on the eye, the Gospel
shed its glory on the soul. A moral phenomenon was now accomplished before this
people, analogous to the natural one which often takes place in this same
region. So long as the mists and clouds veil the Alps, these mountains, even to
the men living at their feet, are as if they did not exist.
But let the
clouds lift, or let the breeze make an opening in the mist, and lo! a world of
Alpine grandeurs is suddenly revealed to the eye of the spectator. A moment ago
there hung before him a curtain of dull vapor; now there is seen a glorious
array of mountains, with their gorges, rocks, and pine forests, their snows and
flashing pinnacles. As near, yet as unseen, were the evangelical glories of the
spiritual world to the Genevans. These glories were completely hidden by the
black cloud of ignorance and superstition that hung between them and the Bible.
But the moment that cloud began to be parted by the preaching of the Gospel and
the breath of the Spirit, a new world was disclosed, a world of truth. It stood
out, distinct, palpable, complete, in an affluence of spiritual glory, and a
fullness of moral power, which made the Genevans wonder what blinding influence
it was that had hidden from their eye what was all the time so near, and yet so
entirely unseen.
The Gospel had entered Geneva. The city was taken. How
much the Reformation had gained, and how much Rome had lost, in the conquest of
that little town, future years were to enable men fully to understand. But the
Protestants of Geneva had many efforts and sacrifices yet to undergo if they
would retain the victory which had in reality been won.
Geneva was far
too important a post for the Romanists to let it slip without another great
effort. This was resolved upon. In the middle of May the priests of the
surrounding districts organised a great procession of pilgrims, who knew how to
handle other things than their rosaries. The pious troop appeared at the gates
of Geneva, duly furnished with banners, crosses, and relics; but the citizens,
recollecting the story of the Trojan horse, and fearing that if the pilgrims
entered their devotions might take a militant turn, and the war-cry be raised
for the psalm, refused to admit the devout host. They could pray outside the
walls. So this danger passed away.
The next army that marched to assail
the little town, where the light of the Gospel was burning more brightly every
day, came not in the guise of pilgrims, but of soldiers. The bishop had formed a
new plot. The Romanist Lords of Vaud and Savoy, at the instigation of the bishop
and the duke, had arranged a hunting party for the last day of July, 1534, the
real game which the armed sportsmen meant to run down being the Genevan
Lutheran. The Papists within the city were to act in concert with those without.
Some 300 armed foreigners had been secretly introduced into the town; the keeper
of the artillery had been bribed; the midnight signals agreed upon; and the
bishop, dividing the prey before he had caught it, had confiscated in favor of
his followers the goods of the Genevan heretics. In short, everything had been
done to insure success.
The night came; the peasants of the surrounding
country, having armed themselves, began to move on Geneva, some by land, others
by water. The Bailiff of Chablais and the Baron de Rollo alone led 8,000 men.
The Papists in the city had armed secretly, and were assembling in one another's
houses.[3] The citizens, all save the
accomplices of the bishop, were ignorant of the plot, and many of them had
already gone to rest as usual. All was progressing as the invaders wished. But
that Providence which had been ploughing this field for more than twenty years,
was not to abandon it to the enemy at the very moment when the seed which had
been sown in it was shooting up, and the harvest at hand. A friend of the
Gospel, Jacques Maubuisson,[4] from Dauphine, solicited
an interview with the premier syndic at an early hour of the evening. He was
admitted, and startled the magistrate by telling him that the city was
surrounded with armed men. Instantly the citizens were aroused and got under
arms.
The host outside the walls were meanwhile straining their eyes to
catch through the darkness the first gleam of the torches, which were to be
waved on the tops of the houses of their friends as the signal to begin the
assault. All suddenly a brilliant light shone forth from the summit of the
steeple of St. Peter's. That was the place, the invaders knew, where the
city-watch were usually stationed. It was plain the plot had been discovered.
"We are betrayed! we are betrayed!" they exclaimed; "we shall never enter
Geneva!"[5] Fiercer and yet fiercer,
as it seemed to the eyes of the Savoyards, glared that beacon-light. Panic
seized their ranks, and when the morning broke the citizens of Geneva beheld
from their steeples and ramparts the armies of the invaders in full retreat. By
the time the sun rose the last foe had disappeared. As a dream, short but
terrible, so did the events of that night appear to the Genevans.[6]
The miscarriage of
the plot was followed by an exodus of Romanists from the city. Many of the
Mamelukes, as they were termed, fled, and thus the priests were left without
flocks, the churches without worshippers, and the images without votaries. The
Protestants were more than ever masters of the situation. In the final struggles
of the Papacy in Geneva we behold what has since been repeated in our own day,
on the wider arena of Europe, that every attempt to raise it up has only helped
to cast it down.
Yet another effort – that is, as things were going with
the Papacy, another plunge, the last and the deepest. The duke and the bishop
were but the more enraged by their repeated discomfitures. They resolved that
they would extinguish Lutheranism, or sweep the little town in which it had
entrenched itself from off its rock, and make it, like old Tyre, a place for the
spreading of nets by the shores of its lake. Considering the resources which the
duke had at his command, neither he nor any one else could see how he should not
be able to do his pleasure upon the audacious little city. Geneva had an enemy,
it may be said, in every man outside her walls. The castles that hemmed her in
on all sides were filled with armed men ready to march at the first summons.
Before beginning the war which was to make the rebellious town put its haughty
neck under his feet, Duke Charles III. sent his ultimatum to the citizens. They
must send away their preachers – Farel, Viret, and Froment; they must take back
their bishop, and return within the bosom of their holy mother the Church. On
these terms the duke, good and kind man, would give them his forgiveness.[7] The Genevans made answer
that sooner than do this they would bury themselves beneath the ruins of their
city. Even their good ally, Bern, despairing of their success, or else gained by
the flatteries of the duke, counselled the Genevans to submit. A Diet of the
Swiss cantons met at Lucerne in January, 1535, to determine on the matter. They
had no other advice to give Geneva than submission.[8] This was unspeakably
disappointing, but worse was behind. The great Emperor Charles V. came forward
and announced that he cast his sword into the scale of the duke.
The
cause of Geneva, already desperate, was now hopeless apparently. Could this
little town of only 12,000 inhabitants resist the Empire? Could the Genevans
stand alone against the world? All help has failed them on earth; nevertheless,
their resolution is as inflexible as ever. Geneva shall be a sanctuary of the
Protestant faith and a citadel of liberty, or its sons will "set fire to its
four corners," and make it their own funeral pile.
It was now that a
terrible resolution was taken by its heroic citizens. Outside the walls of
Geneva were four large suburbs, with a population of 6,200 souls.[9] In fact, there were two
cities, one within and another without the walls, and the latter, it was
obvious, would afford cover to the advancing foe, and prevent the free play upon
him of the cannon on the ramparts. On the 23rd of August, 1534, the Council of
Two Hundred resolved to demolish these suburbs, and clear the ground all round
the city.[10] This was to sacrifice one
half of Geneva to save the other half. The stern decree was carried out,
although not without many heavy sighs and bitter tears. Rich and poor pulled
down their homes with their own hands; although many of the latter knew not
where they were to lay their heads at night. Villa and hovel shared an equal
fate; convents and temples of a venerable antiquity were razed to the ground.
The monastery of St. Victor, of which Bonnivard was prior, and which was the
oldest edifice in Geneva, having been founded in the beginning of the sixth
century, fell by the same sentence, and mingled its ruins with those of fabrics
that were but of yesterday. The pleasant gardens, the sparkling fountains, and
the overshadowing trees which had graced so many of the dwellings were all swept
away. By the middle of January, 1535, the work of demolition was finished; and
now a silent and devastated zone begirt the city.[11]
It was not enough
to pull down, the citizens had to build up. The stones of the overturned
edifices were taken to repair and strengthen the fortifications. Amid the drifts
of winter the men might be seen building on the walls, and the women carrying
earth and stones. The bells of the demolished churches and convents were melted
and cast into cannon.
Though the idols were pulled down, the Roman
Catholics were protected in their worship.[12] The Genevans would not
stain the glory of the prodigious sacrifices they were making for their own
religious liberty by invading that of others. A little band of armed Protestants
kept watch at the church door while the few canons who remained in the city sang
their matins on Christmas morning.[13]All was now ready, and the heroic inhabitants, their
eyes lifted up to heaven, awaited the hour when the foe should gather round them
on all sides, and deliver his assault. Let him strike. Their resolution was
immovable. Geneva must be the temple that would enshrine their religion and
their liberties, or the mausoleum that would contain their
ashes.
CHAPTER 8
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ROME FALLS AND GENEVA
RISES.
New Foothold for Protestantism – Conditions Necessary in it –
Friburg and Bern Abandon Geneva – Resolution of the Citizens – The Bishop
Removes his Court – Geneva assumes its own Government – Castle of Peney –
Atrocities – Attempt to Poison the Protestant Ministers – Conversion of the
Franciscan Monks – Public Disputation – Miracles – Discoveries – Bodies of St.
Nazaire etc. – Relics – Souls from Purgatory.
MUCH, we may say everything, depended on the battle
now raging around the little town on the shores of the Leman Lake. Unless Geneva
were won to Protestantism, the victories already gained by the Reformation would
be but of small account; many of them would melt away and be lost. In Germany
the spiritual principle of the Reformation was becoming overshadowed by the
political. The princes, with their swords, were putting themselves in the van;
and the Reformers, with the Bible, were falling into the rear. This was to
reverse the right order. It was clear that the German Reformation had passed its
prime. It was necessary to seek a new foothold for Protestantism – some spot
where the SPIRITUAL, planted anew, might unfold itself, segregated from the
political; and where, unfettered and unaided by the temporal power, it would, in
virtue of its own heavenly might, continue to wax in stature and spreading wide
its boughs cover the nations with its grateful shadow, and solace them with its
precious fruits. It was not necessary to select, as its seat, a great empire or
a renowned capital; a little town such as this at the foot of the Alps would
serve the purpose better than a more conspicuous and more expansive stage. The
territory selected must be separated from the other countries of Christendom,
Popish and Reformed, and yet it must be near to them; and not near only, but in
the midst of them. Moreover, it must in some way be protected from external
violence while working out its great problem. If around it there rises no massy
bulwark frowning defiance on the foe; if there musters at its gates no powerful
army to do battle with the invader; if the great mountains are too remote to
serve as walls and ramparts to it; if earthly defense it has none, all the more
evident will it be that it owes its safety to an Invisible Arm that is stretched
out in its behalf, and that it is environed by ramparts which the foe is unable
to see, and equally unable to scale.
Here will stand the true "Threshold
of the Apostles." The doors of this shrine will open to the holy only; it will
be visited by enlightened and believing hearts from every land; and its highways
will be trodden and its portals thronged, not by dissolute and superstitious
crowds, but by the confessors and exiles of Christ. Here Christianity, laid in
its grave at Rome a thousand years before, with crowned Pontiffs and lordly
hierarchs keeping watch around its corpse, shall have its resurrection. Rising
from the tomb to die no more, it will attest, by the order, the liberty, the
intelligence, and the virtue with which it will glorify its seat, that it has
lost none of its power during its long entombment, but that, on the contrary, it
returns with invigorated force for the execution of its glorious mission, which
is that of making all things new. Will such a spot be found in Geneva? Shall the
bishop and the duke be chased from it, that it may be given to the men in whom
are found the embodiment of the highest ideal, intellectual and spiritual, of
Protestantism? This is the question which is to receive its answer from the
conflict now waging on the shores of the Leman. The issue of that conflict is at
hand.
We left Geneva reduced to the last extremity. Roman Catholic
Friburg had terminated its alliance with the Lutheran town, after a friendship
of eight years. The reflection of Scultetus on the dissolution of the treaty
between the two States is striking and suggestive. "The love of liberty," says
he, "had united the two towns in the closest bonds; but liberty opened the door
for religion, and its influence separated chief friends! But what is most
remarkable is, that the alliance lasted so long as the independence of Geneva
required it, and ceased when its dissolution helped to promote the
Reformation.
While its allies are drawing off from the little town on the
one side, its enemies are approaching it on the other. Every day they are
redoubling their efforts to take it, and it would seem as if, left to fight its
great battle alone, its fall were inevitable.
The duke is raising army
after army to force an entrance into it. The bishop is fighting against it with
both spiritual and temporal arms. Pierre de la Baume had fulminated the greater
excommunication against it, and published it in all the churches and convents of
the neighboring provinces.[1]
The Pope had added
his heavier anathema; and now, in the eyes of the inhabitants of the towns and
villages around, Geneva was a "dwelling of devils," and all were ready to
assail, burn, or lay waste a place which the bishop and the Pontiff had cursed.
To crown the misfortunes of the Genevans, the emperor, unsheathing his great
sword and holding it over their heads, demanded that they should open their
gates and receive back their bishop. What was to be done? Shall they crouch down
under the old yoke? They had obtained a glimpse of a new world, and their former
slavery appeared more horrible than ever. To go back to it was the most dreadful
issue which their imaginations could picture. Come victory and life, or come
defeat and death, they could not go back; they must and would advance with firm
step in the path on which they had entered.
The same cause which had
repelled the Popish Friburg from Geneva, as narrated above, will draw the
Protestant Bern closer to its side; so one would think. Yet no! the threatening
attitude of the Popish powers, and its own complications, made Bern shy of
giving open aid to Geneva in its fight for liberty and the Reformed faith.[2] Some Bernese ambassadors,
won by the gracious manners of the duke, and forgetting in the lighter matters
of courtesy the greater matters of liberty, went to Geneva, and counselled the
citizens to send away their preachers, and take back their
bishop.
Astounded at. such a proposal from the men of Bern, the Council
of Geneva replied, "You ask us to abandon our liberties and the Gospel of Jesus
Christ." At its sorest need the little State was forsaken of every earthly aid.
But this only serves to show how rapidly the tide of devotion to the Reformed
faith was rising within its walls. It was its religion that saved it. But for
it, Geneva never would have won its liberty. "We are resolved," said the Council
to the Bernese ambassadors, "to sacrifice our property, our honors, our very
children, and our own lives for the Word of God. Tell the duke we will rather
with our own hands set fire to the four corners of our city, than part with the
Gospel."
Meanwhile, the number of the Reformed within the city was daily
increasing, partly from conversions from Popery, and partly from the numerous
disciples chased from France by the storms of persecution, and now daily
arriving at the gates of Geneva. On the other hand, those Romanists who disliked
or feared to dwell in a place cursed by the Church, and hourly sinking deeper in
the gulf of heresy, quitted Geneva in considerable numbers. Thus the proportion
between the two parties was growing every day more unequal, and the quiet of the
city more assured.
The bishop, moreover, by way of visiting the
Protestants with a special mark of his displeasure, did them a signal favor. He
removed his episcopal council and his judicial court from Geneva to Gex, in the
dominions of the Duke of Savoy.[3] Thereupon the Council of
Geneva met and resolved, "That, as the bishop had abandoned the city to unite
himself with its most deadly foe, and had undertaken divers enterprises against
it, even to the length of levying war, they could no longer regard him as the
pastor of the people." They declared the see vacant.[4] Before taking this step,
however, they invited the canons to elect a new bishop; this the canons declined
to do. They next lodged an appeal at Rome; but the Pope gave them no answer.
This observance of forms greatly strengthened the legal position of the Council.
The Vatican would not interfere, the canons would neither elect a new bishop nor
bring back the old one; the city was without a ruler, and the Council was by no
means sorry to step into the vacant office. To the last the Council followed
rather than preceded the people and the preachers The political situation, so
full of dangers, made it imperative that they should weigh every step, and
especially that they should be satisfied that the Reformation had established
itself in the hearts of the people before establishing it by edict.
If
the number of malcontents who were leaving the city lessened the difficulties
within the walls, it greatly increased the dangers without. The Castle of Peney,
on the precipitous banks of the Rhone, about two leagues from Geneva, belonged
to the bishop. It was a strong and roomy place, and now it swarmed with men
breathing vengeance against the city they had left. From this nest of brigands
there issued every day ferocious bands, who laid waste the country around
Geneva, cut off the supplies coming to its markets, waylaid its citizens, and,
carrying them to their stronghold, tortured them in its dungeons, and then
beheaded or otherwise dispatched them. A former Knight of Malta, Peter Goudet, a
Frenchman, who, having embraced Protestantism, had found refuge in Geneva, was
entrapped by these bandits, carried to their den, and, after a mock trial,
burned alive.[5] Nor were these ruffians
alone in their barbarities and cruelties. The gentry of Savoy and of the Pays de
Vaud, following their worshipful example, armed their retainers, and, scouring
the country around, showed that they equalled in zeal, by equalling in atrocity,
the free-booters of Peney.[6]
A yet darker crime
stains the attempt to uphold the Roman Catholic cause in Geneva. The sword of
the duke had failed: so had the excommunication of the bishop, although backed
by that of the Pope. Other means must be thought of. A plot was laid to cut off
Farel, Viret, and Froment, all three at once, by poison. The circumstance that
they lodged together in the same house, that of Claude Bernard, an intelligent
and zealous friend of the Gospel, favored the design. A woman, a native of
Bresse, was suborned to leave Lyons, on pretense of religion, and come to
Geneva. She entered the service of Bernard, with whom the preachers lived. She
began, it is said, by poisoning her mistress. A few days thereafter she mixed
poison with the soup which had been prepared for the ministers' dinner. Happily
only one of them partook of the broth. Farel was indisposed, and did not dine
that day, Froment made his repast on some other dish, and Viret alone ate of the
poisoned food. He was immediately seized with illness, and was at the point of
death. He recovered, but the debilitating effects of the poison remained with
him to the end of his days. The wretched woman confessed the crime, but accused
a canon and a priest of having instigated her to it. The two ecclesiastics were
permitted to clear themselves by oath, but the woman was condemned to death on
the 14th April, and executed.[7]
This wickedness,
which was meant to extinguish the movement, was closely connected with its final
triumph. To guard against any second attempt at poison, the three preachers had
apartments assigned them by the Council in the Franciscan Convent de Rive. The
result of the Reformers being lodged there was the conversion of nearly all the
brethren of the convent, and in particular of James Bernard, a citizen of good
family, and brother of Claude mentioned above. The latter had been one of the
more ardent champions of Popery in Geneva, and, as his change of mind was now
complete, he thought it would be well, at this crisis, to hold a public
disputation on religion, similar to those which had taken place elsewhere with
such good results. His design was approved by the Reformers to whom he had
communicated it. It was further sanctioned by the Council.
Accordingly
Bernard offered to maintain the following propositions against all who chose
publicly to impugn them:[8] –
It was the foundations of the two faiths that were to
be publicly put on their trial.
The Town Council made the arrangements
for the discussion. They had the theses printed and published. Copies of them
were affixed to the doors of the churches of the city, and of all the churches
of the neighborhood. They were, moreover, posted up in the towns of Savoy that
were under the jurisdiction of Bern, and messengers were dispatched to placard
them in the distant cities of Grenoble and Lyons. Men of learning, generally,
whether lay or clerical, were invited; all were assured of safety of person and
liberty of speech; eight members of Council were appointed to preside; and four
secretaries were to take down all that was said on both sides.
The
disputation opened on the 30th of May in the grand hall of the Convent de Rive.
It continued four weeks without intermission, and ended on the 24th of June.
Bernard himself took the lead, assisted by Farel and Viret. The two opposing
champions were Peter Careli, a doctor of the Sorbonne, and John Chapuis, a
Dominican of Geneva. These days of combat were days of joy to the friends of the
Gospel. Each day some old idol was dethroned. The ancient cloud was lifting, and
as fold after fold of the murky vapor rolled away, Truth came forth in her
splendor, and showed herself to eyes from which she had long been hidden.
In the end, both Caroli and Chapuis acknowledged
themselves vanquished, and declared, in presence of the vast assembly, their
conversion to the Reformed faith.[11]
The verdict of the
public on the disputation was not doubtful, but Farel and some of the leading
citizens wished the Council also to pronounce its judgment;. Three of its four
members were now on the Protestant side; nevertheless, it would give no
decision. Its policy, for the present, was to curb rather than encourage the
popular zeal. It visited with frowns and sometimes with fines the demolition of
the images. When asked to give the Magdalen and St. Peter's for the use of the
preachers, whose congregations daily increased, its reply was, "Not yet." The
Council had not lost sight of the duke and the emperor in the distance, and they
knew that the duke and the emperor had not lost sight of them. Meanwhile, to
speed on the movement, there came some startling revelations of the frauds by
which the falling superstition had been upheld.
It is a doctrine of the
Church of Rome that infants dying unbaptised are consigned to limbo, a sort of
faubourg of hell. To redeem such wretched babes from so dreary an abode, what
would not their unhappy mothers be willing to give! But was such a thing
possible? Outside the gates stood the Church of Our Lady of Grace. To this
Virgin was ascribed, among other marvellous prerogatives, the power of
resuscitating infants for so long as would suffice for their receiving the
Sacrament. The corpse was brought to the statue of Our Lady, and being laid at
its feet, its head would be seen to:move, or a feather placed on its mouth would
be blown away. On this the monks, to whom an offering had previously been made,
would shout out, "A miracle! a miracle!" and ring the great bell of the church,
and salt, chrism, and holy water would instantly be brought and the child
baptised. The Council ordered an investigation into the miracle, and the verdict
returned was the plain one, that it was "a trick of the priests."[12] The syndics forbade all
such miracles in time to come.
There came yet another edifying discovery.
It was an immemorial belief at Geneva that the bodies of St. Nazaire, St.
Celsus, and St. Pantaleon reposed beneath the high altar of St. Gervais. Indeed,
the fact could not be doubted, for had not the worthy saints been heard singing
and talking together on Christmas Eve and similar occasions? But in an evil hour
for this belief the altar was overturned, and the too curious eyes of
Protestants peered beneath its foundation-stones. They found not Nazaire and his
two venerable companions; they saw, instead, a curious mechanism in the rock,
not unlike the pipes of an organ, with several vessels of water, so placed that
their contents could be forced through the narrow tubes, making a hollow sound,
not unlike the voices of men singing or conversing in the bowels of the earth.
The Genevans were hardly in circumstances to make merry; nevertheless, the idea
that the saints should amuse themselves below ground by playing upon musical
glasses seemed so very odd, that it raised a laugh among the citizens, in which,
however, the monks did not join.[13]
This little town on
the shores of the Leman had the distinction of possessing the brain of St.
Peter, which lay usually upon the high altar. It was examined and pronounced to
be a piece of pumice-stone. Again the monks looked grave, while smiles mantled
every face around them. The spiritual treasury of the little town was further
enriched with the arm of St. Anthony. The living arm had done valorous deeds,
but the dead arm seemed to possess even greater power; but, alas! for the relic
and for those who had kissed and worshipped it, and especially those who had
profired so largely by the homage paid it, it was found, when taken from its
shrine, to be not a human arm at all, but part of a stag. Again there were
curling lips and mocking eyes.[14] Nor did this exhaust the
list of discoveries.
Curious little creatures, with livid points of fire
glowing on their bodies, would be seen moving about, at "dewy eve," in the
churchyards or in the cathedral aisles. What could they be? These, said the
priests, are souls from purgatory. They have been permitted to revisit "the pale
glimpses of the moon" to excite in their behalf the compassion of the living.
Hasten with your alms, that your mothers, fathers, husbands may not have to
return to the torments from which they have just made their escape. The
appearance of these mysterious creatures was the unfailing signal of another
golden shower which was about to descend on the priests. But, said the Genevans,
before bestowing more masses, let us look a little more closely at these
visitors. We never saw anything that more nearly resembled crabs with candles
attached to them than these souls from purgatory. Ah, yes! the purgatory from
which they have come, we shrewdly suspect, is not the blazing furnace below the
earth, but the cool lake beside the city; we shall restore them to their former
abode, said they, casting them into the water. There came no more souls with
flambeaux to solicit the charity of the Genevans.[15]
CHAPTER 9
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ESTABLISHMENT OF PROTESTANTISM IN
GENEVA.
Symbol of St. Francis – Monstrous Figure in the Dominican
Convent – Mass Forbidden by the Council – Interview of Syndics with the Canons,
etc. – Edict of the Reformation – Wrath of the Duke of Savoy – Blockades Geneva
– Friburg Breaks its Treaty with Geneva – Bern also Forsakes it – The City
nearly Taken – Successful Sorties of the Besieged – Bern comes to the Help of
the Genevans – The Savoyard Army Retreats – The Duke Deprived of his Kingdom by
Francis I. – Geneva Completes its Reformation – Farel and the Council – Sermons
– Social Regulations – School – Oath of the Citizens – City Motto – Tablet of
Brass – Greatness of the Victory.
THERE came discoveries of another kind to crown with
confusion the falling system. In the Convent of the Cordeliers de la Rive a
tablet was discovered on which St., Francis of Assisi, the patriarch of the
order, was represented under the figure of a great vine, with numerous boughs
running out from it in the form of Cordeliers, and having underneath the
inscription, "John 15:1: I am the vine, ye are the branches."[1] This showed a faculty for
exegesis of a very extraordinary kind. The schoolmen might have relished it as
ingenious: the Genevans, who had begun to love the simplicity of the Scriptures,
condemned it as blasphemous.
It was not a little curious that at that
same hour, when the Papacy was tottering to its fall in Geneva, another tablet,
also highly suggestive, should have been drawn from the darkness in the Convent
of the Dominicans. It represented a monster, with seven heads and ten horns, in
the act of being delivered of a horrible brood of Popes, cardinals, and monks,
which were being dropped into a huge cauldron, round which flames circled and
devils danced. Underneath was a prophecy in Latin rhyme, to the effect that the
hour was approaching when God would destroy the power and glory of Rome and
cause its name to perish. The picture was in all likelihood made by Jacques
Jaqueri, of the city of Turin, in the year 1401. He is supposed to have been a
Waldensian, who probably had had to do penance in the Inquisition for this
exercise of his art, and hence the fact that the picture was found in one of the
convents of the Dominicans, the order to which, as is well known, this
department of the Church's work had been assigned.[2]
The hour was now
fully come. The enormities of the Genevan priesthood had first awakened
indignation against the Papacy; subsequent revelations of the cheats to which
the system had stooped to uphold itself, had intensified that indignation; but
it was the preaching of Farel and his companions that planted the Reformation –
that is, converted the movement from one of destruction to one of restitution.
On the 10th of August, 1535, the Council of Two Hundred assembled to take into
consideration the matter of religion. Farel, Viret,
and many of the citizens appeared before it. With characteristic eloquence Farel
addressed the Council, urging it no longer to delay, but to proclaim as the
religion of Geneva that same system of truth which so great a majority of the
Genevans already professed. He offered, for himself and his colleagues, to
submit to death, provided the priests could show that in the public disputation,
or in their sermons, he and his brethren had advanced anything contrary to the
Word of God.[3]
After long
discussion the Council saw fit to lay its commands on both parties. The
Protestants were forbidden to destroy any more images, and were considered as
bound to restore those they had already displaced, whenever the priests should
prove from Holy Scripture that images were worthy objects of religious
veneration. The Roman Catholics, on their part, were enjoined to cease from the
celebration of mass until the Council should otherwise ordain. So stood the
matter on the 10th of August. The step was a small one, but the gain remained
with the Reformation.
Two days after, the Council summoned before them
the Cordeliers, the Dominicans, and the Augustines, and having read to them a
summary of the disputation held in the city a few days previously, they asked
them what they had to say to it. They answered, one after the other, that they
had nothing to object. The Council next offered that, provided they made good
the truth of their dogmas and the lawfulness of their worship from the Word of
God, their Church should be re-established in its former glory. They declined
the challenge, and submitted themselves to the Council, praying to be permitted
to live as their ancestors in times past had lived.[4]
The same day after
dinner three syndics and two councillors, by appointment of the Senate, waited
on the grand-vicar of the bishop, the canons, and the parochial cures. Briefly
recounting the religious conflicts which had disturbed the city these ten years
past, they made the same offer to them which they had made to the monks in the
morning. But the prospect of rendering Romanism once more supreme in Geneva,
could not tempt them to do battle for their faith; they had no desire, they
said, to hear any more sermons from Farel; nor, indeed, could they dispute on
religions matters without leave from their bishop. They craved only to be
permitted to exercise their religion without restraint. The deputation announced
to them the order of Council that they should cease to say mass, and then
retired.[5]
From that day mass
ceased to be said in the churches and convents, and on the 27th of August a
general edict was issued, enjoining public worship to be conducted according to
the rules of the Gospel, and prohibiting all "acts of Popish idolatry." From
that day forward Farel and his two colleagues preached, dispensed the Sacraments
of Baptism and the Lord's Supper, celebrated marriages, and performed all other
religious acts freely.[6] The monastery of La Rive
was converted into a public school, and the convent of St. Claire into an
hospital. The goods of the Church, and of the religious houses, due provision
having been made for existing incumbents, were applied to the maintenance of the
Protestant clergy, of schools, and of the poor.[7]
The priests, monks,
and nuns were very courteously treated. It was entirely in their own choice to
remain within the city or to leave it. The nuns of St. Claire, whom Sister
Jussie's narrative has made famous, chose to withdraw to Anneci. They had been
haunted by the terrible idea of being compelled to marry, and thought it better
to "flee temptation" than remain in Geneva. Some of the sisters had not been
outside the walls of their convent for thirty years. To them, every sight and
sound of the country was strange; and it is impossible to withhold a smile in
perusing Ruchat's account of their journey, and thinking of the terrors into
which the good sisters were thrown at the sight of the sheep and oxen in the
fields, which they mistook for lions and bears.[8]
From the 27th of
August, 1535, the Popish faith ceased to be the religion of Geneva. But the
victory, though great, did not terminate the war, or justify the Genevans in
thinking that they had placed their liberties on an impregnable basis. On the
contrary, never, apparently, had they been in greater danger than now, for the
step of proclaiming themselves Protestant had filled up their cup in the eyes of
their enemies. The duke, roused to fury by this daring affront on the part of a
city that had scarcely a soldier to defend it, and that was without an ally in
Europe, resolved to make this handful of burghers repent of their madness. He
would concentrate all his power in one terrible blow, and crush a heresy that
was so full of insolence and rebellion in the ruins of the city in which it had
found a seat. He blockaded Geneva on the land side by his army, and on the side
of the lake by his galleys. The gates that would not open to his soldiers must
open to famine, and he would see how long these haughty burghers would hold fast
their heresy and rebellion when they had not bread to eat. And, in sooth, the
prospects of the little city seemed desperate. The blockade was so strict that
it was hardly possible to bring in any provisions, and no one could go or come
but at the risk of being waylaid and killed. The bare and blackened zone outside
the city walls, so recently a rich girdle of stately villa and flourishing
garden, was but too exact an emblem of its political nakedness, now entirely
without allies. Even Bern, in this, the hour of Geneva's sorest need, stood afar
off. Every day the stock of provisions in the beleaguered city was growing less.
The citizens could count the hours when gaunt famine would sit at every board,
and one by one they would drop and die. Well, so be it! They would leave the
duke to vanquish Geneva when, from a city of patriots, it had become a city of
corpses. This was the illustrious triumph they would prepare for him. Their
resolve was as unalterable as ever. Be it a nation or be it an individual, every
truly great and noble career must have its commencement in an act of
self-sacrifice. It was out of this dark night that the glorious day of Geneva
sprang.
The Genevans found a messenger expert enough to escape detection
and carry tidings to Bern. The powerful Bern, at ease as regarded its own
safety, listened in philosophic calmness to the tale of Geneva's perils,[9] but after some days it
thought right to interfere so far in behalf of its former companion in the
battles of liberty and religion as to open negotiations with the duke. The duke
was willing to receive any number of protocols, provided only the Bernese did
not send soldiers. While their Lordships of Bern were negotiating, famine and
the duke were steadily advancing upon the doomed city. But now it happened that
the Bernese were themselves touched, and their eyes opened somewhat roughly to
the duke's treachery and the folly of longer indulging in the pastime of
negotiation. The Lord of Savoy had taken the Chatelain of Muss, a titled
freebooter, into his service. The Chatelain, with his band of desperadoes, made
an irruption into the districts of Orbe, Grandson, and Echelous, which were the
common property of Bern and Friburg, and spoiled them in the duke's name. Bern
hesitated no longer. She declared war against the Duke of Savoy, thinking it
better to fight him at Geneva than wait till he had come nearer to her own
gates.[10]
Having at length
resolved to act, Bern, it must be confessed, did so with vigor. On the 13th of
January, 1536, the Council came to the resolution of declaring war. The
following day they sent notice of their determination to the Swiss cantons,
praying them to unite their arms with theirs in what, beyond question, was the
common cause of the Confederacy, the repulsion of a foreign tyranny. On the 16th
they issued their proclamation of war; on the 22nd their army of 6,000 began
their march. They gave its command to Jean Franqois Naeguli, who had served with
honor in the wars in Italy. On the 2nd of February the Bernese army arrived at
the gates of Geneva.[11] The joy their appearance
caused and the welcome accorded them may be easily imagined.
Meanwhile
the dangers within and outside Geneva had thickened. Despite the necessities of
the citizens, certain rich men kept their granaries closed. This led to
disorders. On the 14th of January the Council assumed possession of these
stores, and opened them to the public, at the same time fixing the price at
which the corn was to be sold, and so too did they as regarded the wine and
other necessaries. The dangers outside were not so much in the control of the
Council.
The Savoyard army had resolved to attempt scaling the walls, the
same night, at three points. The assault was made between nine and ten. One
party advanced on the side of St. Gervais, where the city was defended only by a
palisade and ditch; the others made their attempt on that of the Rive and St.
Victor. The latter, having crossed the ditch, were now at the foot of the wall
with their ladders, but the Genevans, appearing on the top, courageously
repelled them, and forced them to retire. On the 16th of January came the good
news, by two heralds, that Bern had declared war in their behalf, this
re-animated the Genevans; though weakened by famine they made four sorties on
the besiegers. In one of these, 300 Genevans engaged double that number of
Savoyards. The duke's soldiers were beaten. First the duke's cavalry gallopped
off the field, then the infantry lost courage and fled. Of the Savoyards 120
were slain and four taken prisoners. The Genevans did not lose a man; one of
their number only was hurt by the falling of his horse, which was killed under
him.[12]
This was only the
beginning of disasters to the duke's army. A few days thereafter, the Bernese
warriors, who had continued their march, despite that the five Popish Cantons
had by deputy commanded them to stop, appeared before Geneva. They rested not
more than a single day, when they set out in search of the enemy. The Savoyard
army was already in full retreat upon Chambery. The Bernese pushed on, but the
foe fled faster than they could pursue. And now came tidings that convinced the
men of Bern that the farther prosecution of the expedition was needless. Enemies
had started up on every side of the duke, and a whole Iliad of woes suddenly
overtook him. Among others, the King of France chose this moment to declare war
against him. Francis I. had many grudges to satisfy, but what mainly moved him
at this time against the duke was his desire to have a road to Milan and Italy.
Accordingly, he moved his army into Savoy, wrested from the duke Chambery, the
cradle of his house, chased him across the Alps, and, not permitting him to rest
even at Turin, took possession of his capital. Thinking to seize the little
territory of Geneva, the duke had lost his kingdoms of Savoy and Piedmont. he
retired to Vercelli, where, after seventeen years of humiliation and exile, he
died.[13] How many tragedies are
wrapped up in the great tragedy of the sixteenth century!
The duke off
the scene, the movement at Geneva now resumed its march. The edict of the 27th
August, 1535, which had dropped somewhat out of sight amid sieges and battles,
and the turmoil of war, came again to the front. That edict proclaimed
Protestantism as the religion of Geneva. But Farel did not deceive himself with
the fiction that the decree which proclaimed Geneva Protestant had really made
it so. The seat of religion, he well knew, is the hearts and understandings of a
people, not the edicts of a statute-book; and the great task of making the
people really Protestant was yet to be done. There were in Geneva a goodly
number who loved the Gospel for its own sake, and it was the strength of these
men which had carried them through in their great struggle; but the crown had
yet to be put upon the work by making the lives, as well as the profession, of
the people Protestant.
This great labor was undertaken jointly by Farel
and by the Council. The temporal and spiritual powers, yoked together, drew
lovingly the car of the Reform, and both having one aim – the highest well-being
of the people– neither raised those questions of jurisdiction, or felt those
rivalries and jealousies, which subsequent times so plentifully produced. There
is a time to set landmarks, and there is a time to remove them.
Farel,
occupying the pulpit, sent forth those expositions of the Reformed doctrine
which were fitted to instruct the understandings and guide the consciences of
the Genevans: while the Council in the Senate-house framed those laws which were
intended to restrain the excesses and disorders into which the energetic and
headstrong natures of the citizens were apt to impel them. This, all will admit,
was a tolerably fair division of the labor.
Farel's teaching laid a moral
basis for the Council, and the Council's authority strengthened Farel, and
opened the way for his teachings to reach their moral and spiritual ends. A
close examination of the matter, especially under the lights of modern science,
may, it is true, result in disclosing instances in which the Council did the
work of Farel, and Farel did the work of the Council; but we ought to bear in
mind that modern society was then in its infancy; that toleration was only in
its dawn; and that punctiliousness would have marred the work, and left Geneva a
chaos.
Not only was the standard of Protestantism displayed in the August
preceding again raised aloft, but the moral and social regulations which had
accompanied it, in order to render it a life as well as a creed, were brought
into the foreground. There never was a class of men who showed themselves more
anxious to join a moral with a doctrinal Reformation than the Reformers of the
sixteenth century. The separation which at times has been seen between the two
is the error of a later age. Re-entering this path, the first labor of the
Council and Farel was to establish a perfect concord and unity among the
citizens. Of those even who were with the Reform, and had fought side by side
against the duke, there were two parties – the zealous and the lukewarm. Hates
and mutual reproaches divided them. On the 6th of February, 1536, the
Council-General – that is, the whole body of the citizens – assembled, and
passed an edict, promising by oath to forget all past injuries, to cease from
mutual recriminations, to live henceforward in good brotherhood, and submit
themselves to the Syndics and Council.[14]
Next came the
matter of public worship, The number, place, and time of the sermons were fixed.
Four ministers and two deacons were selected to preach on the appointed days.
Moderate stipends were assigned them from the ecclesiastical property. The
Sunday was to be religiously observed, and all the shops strictly closed. On
that day, besides the other services, there was to be sermon at four in the
morning, for the convenience of servants. The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper was
to be dispensed four times in the year. Baptisms were to take place only in the
church at the hours of public worship. Marriage might be celebrated any day, but
the ceremony must be in public, and after three several notifications of it.[15]
Last of all came
the rules for the reformation of manners. Since the beginning of the century
Geneva had been, in fact, a camp, and its manners had become more than rough. It
was necessary, in the interests of morality, and of liberty not less, to put a
curb upon the wild license of former days. They had banished the duke, they must
banish the old Geneva. The magistrates forbade games of chance, oaths and
blasphemies, dances and lascivious songs, and the farces and masquerades in
which the people had been wont to indulge. They enjoined all persons to attend
the sermons, and other exercises of religion, and to retire to their homes at
nine o'clock at night. They specially commanded the masters of hotels and
cabarets to see that their guests observed these regulations. That no one might
plead ignorance, these rules were frequently proclaimed by sound of
trumpet.
The education of the youth of the State was an object of special
care to the magistrates, who desired that they should be early grounded in the
principles of virtue and piety, as well as in a knowledge of the classical
tongues, and the belles lettres. For this end they erected a school or academy,
with competent professors, to whom they gave suitable salaries. There was a
school in Geneva in Popish times, but it was so badly managed that it
accomplished nothing for the interests of education. The Council-General, by a
decree of May 21st, 1536, established a new seminary in the convent of the
Cordeliers on the Rive, and appointed as headmaster Antony Saunier, the
countryman and friend of Farel. The latter sought, in divers places, for learned
men willing to be teachers in this school.[16]
On the same 21st of
May there was witnessed a solemn sight at Geneva. The whole body of the
citizens, the magistrates and ministers at their head, assembled in the
Cathedral of St. Peter, and with uplifted hands swore to renounce the doctrine
of the Roman Church, the mass and all that depends upon it, and to live
according to the laws of the Gospel. This national vow included the regulations
we have just enumerated, which were regarded as necessary deductions from the
great Christian law. Soon after this Farel composed, in conjunction with Calvin,
who by this time had joined him, a brief and simple Confession of Faith, in
twenty-one articles,[17] which was sworn to by all
the citizens of the State, who appeared before the Council in relays of tens,
and had the oath administered to them. This was in the November following.[18]
To mark the laying
of the foundations of their Protestant State, and the new age therewith
introduced, the Genevans struck a new coin and adopted a new motto for their
city. In the times of paganism, being worshippers of the sun, they had taken
that luminary as their symbol. Latterly, retaining the radical idea in their
symbol, they had modified and enlarged it into the following motto: Post
tenebras spero lucem – i.e., "After the darkness I hope for the light:" words
which look like an unconscious prophecy of a time of knowledge and truth in the
future. Having established their Reformation, the Genevans changed their motto
once more. Post tenebras lucem – "After darkness, light" – was the device
stamped on the new money of the State, as if to intimate that the light they
looked for was now come.[19]
Finally, as an
enduring monument of this great event, the citizens placed a tablet of brass in
front of the Town-house, with the following inscription engraven on it: –
Never did more modest tablet record greater victory.
That victory was too great, in truth, to be represented by any monument of
marble. No pomp of words, no magnificence of art, could express its value.
Protestantism, now planted on this spot, which the struggles, the blood, and the
prayers of believing men had won for it in the midst of Christendom, rising
aloft in its own majesty, and shining by its own splendor, must be its own
monument; or, if other memorial it is to have, it must be just such simple
record of accomplished facts as this tablet contains.
But, in truth, when
the Genevans placed their memorial-stone in the front of their Senate-house,
they did not know half the worth of the victory they had won. No man, at that
day, could even guess at the many brilliant triumphs which lay folded up in this
one triumph. It required a century to evolve them. What is it that the men of
Geneva have done, according to their own account? They have rescued a little
city from tyranny and superstition, and consecrated it to liberty and pure
Christianity. This does not seem much. Had it been a great throne, or a powerful
realm, it would have been something; but a third-rate town, with only a few
leagues of territory, what is that? Besides, Geneva may be lost to-morrow. May
not Spain and France come in any hour and extinguish its liberties? They believe
they may, and they make the attempt, but only to find that while their armies
are melting away, and their empires dissolving, the sway of the little
Protestant town is every year widening. Very diminutive is the spot; but the
beacon-light does not need a continent for a pedestal; a little rock will do;
and while the winds howl and the billows shake their angry crests, and roll
their thundering surges around its base, its ray still burns aloft, and
streaming far and wide over the waves, pierces the black night, and guides the
bark of the mariner. What was it the ancient sage demanded in order to be able
to move the world? Only a fixed point. Geneva was that fixed point. We shall see
it in the course of time become the material basis of a great moral
empire.
CHAPTER
10 Back to
Top
CALVIN ENTERS GENEVA — ITS CIVIL AND
ECCLESIASTICAL CONSTITUTION.
Calvin at the Gates of Geneva — Farel
Told — Meeting of Farel and Calvin — Is this the Author of the
Institutes?—Adjuration — Calvin Remains in Geneva — Commences as Lecturer in the
Cathedral — His Confession of Faith — Excommunication — What is it? — Morality
the Corner-stone of the New State — Civil Constitution of the Republic — The
Council-General — The Council of Two Hundred — The Council of Twenty-five — The
Syndics — The Consistory or Church-Court — Distinction between the Civil and
Ecclesiastical Powers — Calvin's Ideas on the Relations between Church and State
— Guizot's Testimony — Calvin's Ideal in Advance of his Age.
ONE day, towards the end of August, 1536, a stranger,
of slender figure and pale face, presented himself at the gates of Geneva. There
was nothing to distinguish him from the crowds of exiles who were then arriving
almost daily at the same gates, except it might be the greater brightness that
burned in his eye. He had come to rest only for a night, and depart on the
morrow. But as he traversed the streets on his way to his hotel, a former
acquaintance — Du Tillet, say some; Caroli, say others — recognised him, and
instantly hurried off to tell Farel that Calvin was in Geneva.
When,
nearly a year ago, we parted with Calvin, he was on his way across the Alps to
visit Renee, the daughter of Louis XII. of France, and wife of Hercules d'Este,
Duke of Ferrara. "He entered Italy," as he himself said, "only to leave it,"[1] though not till he had
confirmed the illustrious princess, at whose court he sojourned, in her
attachment to the Protestant faith, in which, despite the many and peculiar
trials to which her constancy exposed her, she steadfastly continued to her
life's end. His eldest brother dying, Calvin recrossed the mountains, on a hasty
journey to his birthplace, most probably to arrange the family affairs,[2] and leave Noyon for ever.
Where shall he next go?. The remembrance of the studious days he had passed at
Basle returned to him with irresistibly attractive force, and now, accompanied
by his brother Antoine, and his sister Maria,[3] he was on his way to his
former retreat; but the direct road through Lorraine was blocked up by the
armies of Charles V., and this compelled him to make a detour by Switzerland,
which brought him to the gates of Geneva.
With startled but thankful
surprise Farel received the news that the author of the Christian Institutes was
in the city. God, he thought, had sent, at a critical moment, the man of all
others whom he most wished to associate with himself in the work of reforming
Geneva.
Farel had begun to feel the difficulty of the task he had in
hand. To break this people from their habits of lawless indulgence, nurtured by
the contests in which they had won their liberty, would indeed be no easy
matter. They would spurn all attempts to coerce them, and yield only to the
force of a stronger will, and the sway of a loftier genius. Besides, the highest
organising skill was demanded in the man who should set up a moral tribunal in
the midst of this licentious city, and found on this unpromising spot an empire
which should pervade with its regenerating spirit nations afar off, and
generations yet unborn. Believing that he had found in Calvin one who possessed
all these great qualities, Farel was already on his way to visit
him.
Farel now stands before the author of the Institutes. He beholds a
man of small stature and sickly mien. Were these the shoulders on which he
should lay a burden which would have tasked the strength of Atlas himself? We
can well believe that Farel experienced some moments of painful misgivings. To
reassure himself he had to recall to mind, doubtless, the profound wisdom, the
calm strength, and the sublimity of principle displayed on every page of the
Institutes. That was the real Calvin. Now Farel began to press his suit. He was
here combating alone. He had to do daily battle against an atrocious tyranny
outside the city, and against a licentious Libertinism within it. Come, he said
to the young Reformer, and be my comrade in the campaign.
Calvin's reply
was a refusal. His constructive and practical genius was then unknown even to
himself. His sphere, he believed, was his library; his proper instrument of
work, his pen; and to cast himself into a scene like that before him was, he
believed, to extinguish himself. Panting to be at Basle or at Strasburg, where
speaking from the sanctuary of a studious and laborious privacy, he could edify
all the Churches, he earnestly besought Farel to stand aside and let him go on
his way.
But Ferel would not stand aside. Putting on something of the
authority of an ancient prophet, he commanded the young traveler to remain and
labor in Geneva, and he imprecated upon his studies the curse of God, should he
make them the pretext for declining the call now addressed to him.[4] It was the voice not of
Farel, but of God, that now spoke to Calvin; so he felt; and instantly he
obeyed. He loved, in after-life, to recall that, "fearful adjuration," which
was, he would say, "as if God from on high had stretched out his hand to stop
me."[5]
Calvin's journey
was now at an end. He had reached the spot where his life's work was to be done.
Here, in this grey city, clinging to its narrow rocky site, the calm lake at its
feet, and the glories of the distant mountains in its sky, was he for
twenty-eight years to toil and wage battle, and endure defeat, but to keep
marching on through toil and defeat, to more glorious victory in the end than
warrior ever won with his sword, and then he would fall on sleep, and rest by
the banks of that river whose "arrowy" stream he had crossed but a few minutes
before, he gave his hand to Farel, and in doing so he gave himself to
Geneva.
If the destiny of Calvin was from that moment changed; if from a
student he became a legislator and leader; if from being a soldier in the ranks
he became generalissimo of the armies of Protestantism, not less was the destiny
of Geneva from that moment changed. Calvin had already written a book that
constituted an epoch in Protestantism, but he was to write it a second time;
though not with pen and ink. He would display before all Christendom the
Institutes, not as a volume of doctrines, but as a system of realised facts — a
State rescued from the charnel-house of corruption, and raised to the glorious
heritage of liberty and virtue — glorious in art, in letters, and in riches,
because resplendent with every Christian virtue. To write Protestantism upon
their banners, to proclaim it in their edicts, to install it as a worship in
their Churches, Calvin and all the Reformers held to be but a small affair; what
they strove above all things to achieve was to plant it as an operative moral
force in the hearts of men, and at the foundations of States.
Calvin was
now at the age of twenty-seven. The magistrates of Geneva welcomed him, but with
a cautious reserve, if we may judge from the first mention of his name in the
registers of the city, about a fortnight after his arrival, as "that Frenchman!"
He was appointed to give lectures on the Scriptures, and to preach.[6] Beza styles him "doctor or
professor of sacred letters," but as yet no academy existed, and his prelections
were delivered in the cathedral. As regards the latter function, that of
preacher, it was some time before Calvin would assume it. When at length he
appeared in the pulpit as pastor, he spoke with an eloquence so simple and
clear, yet so majestic and luminous, that his audiences continued daily to grow.
He had already done a winter's work, but had received scarcely any wages, for we
read in the Council Registers, under date February 13th, 1537: "Six gold crowns
are given to Cauvin or Calvin, seeing that he has hitherto scarcely received
anything."[7]
It was not long
till Calvin's rare genius for system and organisation began to display itself.
Within three months from the commencement of his labors in Geneva, he had, in
conjunction with Farel, compiled a brief but comprehensive creed, setting forth
the leading doctrines of the Christian faith. To this he added a Catechism,[8] not that, in question and
answer, for children, which we now possess, but one adapted to adults. The
Genevans, with uplifted hands, had embraced Protestantism: Calvin would show
them what that Protestantism was which they had professed, and what were the
moral duties which it demanded of all its adherents. The Genevans had lifted up
their hands: had they bowed their hearts? This was the main question with him.
He had no trust in blind obedience. Knowledge must be the corner-stone of the
new State, the foundations of which he was now laying.
We can give here
only the briefest outline of this Confession of Faith. Placing the Word of God
in the foreground, as the one infallible authority, and the one and sole rule,
it proceeds, in twenty-one articles, to declare what Scripture teaches, touching
God, and the plan of redemption which he has provided for man fallen and
helpless. It proclaims Christ the one channel of all blessing; the Spirit, the
one Author of all good works; faith, "the entrance to all these riches;" and
then goes on to speak of the apparatus set up for offering redemption to men,
the Sacraments and ministers. Then follow articles on the Church, "comprehending
the whole body of true believers;" on excommunication, or the exclusion from the
Church of all manifestly unholy and vicious persons, till they shall have
repented; and, in fine, on magistracy, "an ordinance of God," and to be
respected "in all ordinances that do not contravene the commandments of God." On
the 10th of November, 1536, this Confession was received and approved of by the
Council of Two Hundred.[9]
To the
half-Protestantised citizens of Geneva the sting of this document was in the end
of it — ex-communication. The other articles had simply to be professed, this
one was heavier than them all, inasmuch as it had to be borne. What did this
power import? Was the Protestant excommunication but the Papal anathema under
another name? Far from it. It carried with it no cruel infliction. It operated
in no preternatural or mystic manner, inflicting blight upon the soul. It did
not even pronounce on the state of the man before God. It simply found that his
life was manifestly unholy, and, therefore, that he was unfit for a holy
society, and in token of his exclusion it withheld from him the Sacraments. No
society can exist without laws or rules; but of what use are laws without an
executive or tribunal to administer them? and without the right of inflicting
penalties, a tribunal would be powerless; and a lighter penalty than
"excommunication" or expulsion it would be impossible to conceive or devise.
Without this power the Church in Geneva would have been a city without walls and
bulwarks; it would have been dissolved the moment it was formed.
It is
necessary at this stage to refer to the Constitution — civil and ecclesiastical
— of Geneva, in order that the course of affairs may be clearly intelligible.
The fundamental principle of the State was, that the people are the source of
power. In accordance therewith came, first, a Convention of all the citizens,
termed the Council-General.
This was the supreme authority. To obviate
the confusion and turbulence incident to so large an assembly, a Council of Two
Hundred was chosen, termed the Great Council.[10] Next came the Little, or
ordinary Council, consisting of twenty-five members, including the four Syndics
of the city.
This last, the Council of Twenty-five, was the executive,
and possessed moreover a large share of the judicial and legislative power. The
constitutional machinery we have described in detail was popularly summed up
thus — the PEOPLE, the COUNCIL, and SENATE of Geneva. The Council-General — that
is, the People — was convoked only once a year, in November, to elect the four
Syndics. Besides this annual assembly, it met on important emergencies, or when
fundamental changes were to be determined upon, and then only. The actual
government of the State was mainly in the hands of the Council of Twenty-five,
which was by constitution largely oligarchical. Such was the republic when
Calvin became a member of it.
With Protestantism there arrived a new
power in Geneva — the religious, namely — and we complete our picture of the
government of the little State when we describe the provision made for the
exercise of the ecclesiastical authority. The court or tribunal which took
cognisance of Church scandals was the Consistory. The Consistory was composed of
the five ministers of the city and twelve laymen.[11] It met every Thursday, and
the highest penalty it had power to inflict was excommunication, by which is
meant expulsion from the Church. If this failed to reclaim the offender, the
Consistory had the right to report the case to the Council, and require it to
proceed therein according to the laws.
In judging of this arrangement
time and circumstances are to be taken into account. The course of affairs at
Geneva inevitably tended to graft the ecclesiastical upon the civil government,
and to some extent to build up the two in one. It was Protestantism that had
called Geneva into existence as a free State. Protestantism was its soul, the
center and citadel of its liberties, and whatever tended to weaken or overthrow
that principle tended equally to the ruin of the republic. Encompassed on all
sides by powerful enemies, this one principle was the bond of their union and
the shield of their freedom; and this went far to impart, in many cases, a
two-fold character to the same action, and to justify the Church in regarding
certain acts as sins, and visiting them with her censures, while the State
viewed the same acts as crimes, and meted out to them its
punishments.
Calvin took the Jewish theocracyas his model when he set to
work to frame, or rather to complete, the General Republic. What we see on the
banks of the Leman is a theocracy; Jehovah was its head, the Bible was its
supreme code, and the government exercised a presiding and paternal guardianship
over all interests and causes, civil and spiritual. Geneva, in this respect, was
a reproduction of the Old Testament state of society. We of the nineteenth
century regard this as a grave error. At the same time, it must be acknowledged
that Calvin grasped the essential distinction between things civil and things
ecclesiastical, and the necessity of placing the two under distinct
jurisdictions or powers. But his theocratic views produced a dinmess and
confusion in his ideas on that head, and he was more successful in settling the
just limits of the ecclesiastical authority, than he was in defining those of
the civil jurisdiction. He would not allow a particle of civil power to the
Consistory, but he was not equally careful to withhold ecclesiastical power from
the Council. This error arose from his making the Old Testament a model on a
point which, we believe, was temporary and local, not permanent and universal.
Nevertheless, the Reformer of Geneva stood ahead in this great question of all
his predecessors. We may quote here the words of a great statesman, and a
countryman of Calvin's, who has done justice to the Reformer on this point. "A
principle," says Guizot, "we should rather say a passion, held sway in Calvin's
heart, and was his guiding star in the permanent organisation of the Church
which he founded, as well as in his personal conduct during his life. That
principle is the profound distinction between the civil and the religious
community. Distinction, we say, and by no means separation. Calvin, on the
contrary, desired alliance between the two communities and the two powers, but
each to be independent in its own domain, combining their action, showing mutual
respect, and lending mutual support ..... In this principle and this fundamental
labor," continues the historian, "there are two new and bold reforms attempted
in the very heart of the great Reformation of Europe, and over and above the
work of its first promoters." in proof, Guizot goes on to instance England,
where the "royal supremacy" was accepted; Switzerland, where the Council of
State held the sovereign authority in matters of religion; and Germany, where
the magistrate was the chief bishop; and continues: "In this great question as
to the relations between Church and State, Calvin desired and did more, than his
predecessors .... in spite of the resistance often showed him by the civil
magistrates, in spite of the concessions he was sometimes obliged to make to
them, he firruly maintained this principle, and he secured to the Reformed
Church of Geneva, in purely religious questions and affairs, the right of
self-government, according to the faith and the law as they stand written in the
Holy Books."[12]
In this statement
of facts, Guizot is undoubtedly correct. Only we think that he is mistaken in
believing that it was the Church of Rome, and the "independence of its head,"
which taught the Reformer the "strength and dignity" conferred on the Church by
having "an existence distinct from the civil community." Calvin learned the idea
from a Diviner source. Nor was he quite so successful in extricating the
spiritual from the civil jurisdiction, either in idea or in reality, as Guizot
appears to think. As regarded the idea, he was embarrassed by the Old Testament
theocracy, which he took to be a Divine model for all times; and as regarded the
actuality, the opposition which he encountered from the civil authority at
Geneva made it impossible for hint to realize his idea so fully as he wished to
do. But it is only justice to bear in mind that his ideal was far in advance of
his age, as Guizot has said.
CHAPTER
11 Back to
Top
SUMPTUARY LAWS — CALVIN AND FAREL
BANISHED.
Geneva Stands or Falls with its Morality — Code of Morals —
Dances, etc. — The Sumptuary Laws Earlier than Calvin's Time — Rise of the
Libertine Party — Outcries — Demand for the Abolition of the New Code — The
Libertines obtain a Majority in the Council — Bern Interferes adversely —
Question of Unleavened BreadsConfusion and Disorders in Geneva — Calvin and
Farel Refuse to Dispense the Communion at Easter — Tumult in the Churches —
Farel and Calvin Banished by the Council.
CALVIN'S theological code was followed by one of
morals. There were few cities in Christendom that had greater need of such a
rule than the Geneva of that day. For centuries it had known almost nothing of
moral discipline. The clergy were notoriously profligate, the government was
tyrannical, and the people, in consequence, were demoralised. Geneva had but one
redeeming trait, the love of liberty. The institutions of learning were
neglected, and the manners of the Genevans were as rude as their passions were
violent. They revelled, they danced, they played at cards, they fought in the
streets, they sung indecent songs, uttered fearful blasphemies; indulged, in
short, in all sorts of excesses. It was clear that Protestantism must cleanse
the city or leave it. Geneva was nothing unless it was moral; it could not stand
a day. This was the task to which Calvin now turned his attention.
This
introduces the subject of the sumptuary laws, which were sketched at this time,
though not finished till an after-period. The rules now framed forbade games of
chance, oaths and blasphemies, dances,[1] lascivious songs, farces,
and masquerades. The hours of taverners were shortened; every one was to be at
home by nine at night, and hotel-keepers were to see that these rules were
observed by their guests. To these were added certain regulations with a view of
restraining excess in dress and profusion at meals. All were enjoined to attend
sermon and the other religious exercises.[2]
Even before the
time of Calvin, under the Roman Church, most of these practices, and especially
dances, had been forbidden under severe penalties. Forty years after his death,
under Henry IV. of France, similar edicts were promulgated.[3] The British Government at
this day adopts the principle of the Genevan regulations, when it forbids
gambling, indecent pictures and plays, and similar immoralities; and if such
laws are justifiable now, how much more so in Calvin's time, when there were
scarcely any amusements that were innocent!
The second battle with the
citizens proved a harder one than the first with the priests, and the
reformation of manners a more difficult task than the reformation of beliefs.
The citizens remembered the halcyon days they had enjoyed under their bishop,
and contrasted them with the moral restraints imposed upon them by the
Consistory. The reproofs which Calvin thundered against their vices from the
pulpit were intolerable to many, perhaps to most. The population was a mixed
one. Many were still Papists at heart; some were Anabaptists, and others were
deeply tainted with that infidel and materialistic philosophy which had been
growing quietly up under the shade of the Roman Church. The successful conflict
the Genevans had waged for their political independence helped, too, to make
them less willing to bow to the Protestant yoke. Was it not enough that they had
shed their blood to have the Gospel preached to them? It was mortifying to find
that very Protestantism which they had struggled to establish turning round upon
them, and weighing them in its scales, and finding them wanting.
Loud and
indignant cries were raised against Calvin for neglecting his office. Appointed
to be an expositor of Scripture, who made him, asked his calumniators, a censor
of morals and a reprover of the citizens?
Religion, in the age gone by,
had been too completely dissociated from morality to make the absurdity of this
accusation palpable. The Libertines, as the oppositionists began now to be
called, demanded the abolition of the new code; they complained especially of
the "excommunication." "What!" said they, "have we put down the Popish
confessional only to set up a Protestant one?" and mounting party badges, they
wore green flowers in mockery of the other citizens, calling them "brothers in
Christ."[4] The Government began to be
intimidated by these clamours. The majority of the citizens being still on the
side of the ministers, the Council ventured on issuing an edict, commanding the
Libertines to leave the city.
But it had not the courage to enforce its
own order; and the Libertines, seeing its weakness, grew every day more
insolent. At length the elections in February, 1538, gave a majority in their
favor in the Council; three out of the four Syndics were on the side of the
Libertines.[5] This turn of affairs
placed the pastors in a position of extreme difficulty. They stood in front of a
hostile Council, pushed on from behind by a hostile population. Calvin remained
firm. His resolution was taken unalterably to save his principle, come what
might to himself. He was determined at all hazards not to give holy things to
unholy men; for he saw that with that principle must stand or fall the
Reformation in Geneva.
While these intestine convulsions shook the city
within, invasion threatened it without. The strifes of the citizens were the
signal to their old enemies to renew their attempts to recover Geneva. The
inhabitants fortified the walls, cast the superfluous bells into cannon, and
placed them upon the ramparts.[6] Alas! this would avail but
little, seeing they were all the while pulling down that which was their true
defense. With their morality was bound up their Protestantism, and should it
depart, not all their stone walls would prevent their becoming once more the
prey of Rome.
At this stage the matter was still further embroiled by the
interference of Bern. The government of that powerful canton, ambitious of
assuming the direction of affairs at Geneva, counselled the Genevese to restore
certain ceremonies which had been retained in the Bernese Reformation, but cast
off in the Genevan one; among others, holidays, and the use of unleavened bread
in the Communion.[7] Calvin and Farel demurred
to the course recommended.
The moment the sentiments of the pastors
became known, a vehement zeal seized the Libexines to have the Lord's Supper
dispensed with unleavened bread. The Government decided that it should be as the
Libertines desired. With Calvin a much greater question was whether the
Communion should be given to these persons at all. As Easter approached, the
fury of the party increased. They ran through the streets at night voeiferating
and yelling. They would stop before the pastors' houses, calling out, "To the
Rhone! to the Rhone!" and would then fire off their arquebuses. They got up a
masquerade in which they parodied that very ordinance which their scrupulous
consciences would not permit them to receive save with unleavened bread.
Frightful confusion prevailed in Geneva. This is attested by eye-witnesses, and
by those who had the best opportunities of knowing the truth of what they have
narrated. "Popery had indeed been forsworn," says Beza, "but many had not cast
away with it those numerous and disgraceful disorders which had for a long time
flourished in the city, given up as it was for so many years to canons and
impure priests."[8] "Nothing was to be heard,"
says Reset, "but informations and quarrels between the former and present lords
(the old and new members of Council), some being the ringleaders, and others
following in their steps, the whole mingled with reproaches about the booty
taken in the war, or the spoils carried off from the churches."[9] "I have lived here," says
Calvin himself, describing those agitations, "engaged in strange contests. I
have been saluted in mockery of an evening before my own door, with fifty or
sixty shots of arquebuses. You may imagine how that must asteroid a poor
scholar, timid as I am, and as I confess I always was."[10] It was amid these shameful
scenes that the day arrived which was to show whether the Libertines backed by
the Council, or Calvin supported by his own great principle, would give
way.
On the morning of Easter Sunday, 1538, the great bell Clemence rung
out its summons, and all the quarters of the city poured out their inhabitants
to fill the churches. Farel ascended the pulpit of St. Gervais, Calvin occupied
that of St. Peter's. In the audience before them they could see the Libertines
in great force. All was calm on the surface, but a single word might let loose
the winds and awake the tempest. Nevertheless they would do their duty. The
pastors expounded the nature of the Lord's Supper; they described the
dispositions required in those who would worthily partake of it; and appealing
to the disorders which had reigned in the city in the past weeks, in proof that
these were not the dispositions of the majority of those now assembled, they
concluded by intimating that this day the Holy Supper would not be dispensed.
Hereupon, outcries drowned the voice of the preachers. The uproar was specially
great in St. Gervais; swords were unsheathed, and furious men rushed toward the
pulpit. Farel waited with his arms crossed. He had long since learned to look on
angry faces without trembling. Calvin in St. Peter's was equally resolute.
Sooner should his blood dye the boards he stood upon, than he would be guilty of
the profanation demanded of him. "We protest before you all," he said, "that we
are not obstinate about the question of bread, leavened or unleavened; that is a
matter of indifference, which is left to the discretion of the Church. If we
decline to administer the Lord's Supper, it is because we are in a great
difficulty, which prompts us to this course." Farel had borne the brunt of the
tempest in the morning, it was to be Calvin's turn in the evening. On descending
to the Church of Rive, the former Convent of St. Francis, near the shores of the
lake, he found the place already filled with an assembly, many of whom had
brought their swords with them. Whatever apprehensions the young Reformer may
have felt, he presented to the assembly, which hung upon the edge of the storm,
a calm and fearless front. He had not been more than eighteen months in their
city, and yet he had inspired them with an awe greater than that which they felt
even for Farel.
These two were men of the same spirit, as of the same
office, and yet they were unlike, and the Genevans saw the difference. Farel was
the man of oratory, Calvin was the man of power. In what attribute or faculty,
or combination of faculties, his power lay, they would have had great difficulty
in saying. Certainly it was not in his gestures, nor in his airs, nor in the
pomp of his rhetoric, for no one could more sedulously eschew these things; but
that he did possess power — calm, inflexible, resistless power — they all knew,
for they all felt it. Farel's invectives and denunciations were terrible; his
passion was grand, like the thunderstorms of their own Alps; but there was
something in the noise that tempered his severity, and softened his accusations.
Calvin never thundered and lightened. Had he done so it would have been a
relief; the Genevans would have felt him to be more human and genial — a man of
like passions with themselves; at least, of like passions with Farel, whom they
regarded with a mixture of love and fear, and whom they could not help
half-forgiving, even when he was rousing their anger by his reproaches. But in
his terrible calmness, in his passionless reason, Calvin stood apart from, and
rose above, all around him — above Farel — even above the Council, whose
authority was dwarfed before the moral majesty that seemed to clothe this man.
He was among them like an incarnate conscience; his utterances were decrees,
just and inflexible, like the laws of heaven themselves. Whence had he come,
this mysterious and terrible man? Noyon was his birth-place, but what influences
had moulded such a spirit? and what chance was it which had thrown him into
their city to hold them in his spell, and rule them as neither bishop, nor duke,
nor Pope had been able to rule them? They would try whether they could not break
his yoke. For this end they had brought their swords with them.
The
historians who were eye-witnesses of the scene that followed are discreet in
their accounts of it. It did not end so tragically as it threatened, and instead
of facts that would not redound to the honor of their city, they treat us to
felicitations that the affair had no worse a termination. What the words were
that evoked the tempest we do not know. It was not necessary that they should be
strong, seeing the more violent the more welcome would they be. While Calvin is
preaching we see a dark frown pass suddenly over the faces of the assembly.
Instantly there come shouts and outcries; a moment after, the clatter of weapons
being hastily unsheathed salutes our ears; the next, we are dazzled by the gleam
of naked swords. The tempest has burst with tropical suddenness and violence.
The infuriated men, waving their weapons in the face of the preacher, press
forward to the pulpit. One single stroke and Calvin's career would have been
ended, and not his only — with him would have ended the career of Geneva as the
new foothold of the Reformation. Farel had felt the burden too heavy for him;
and had Calvin fallen, we know of no one who could have taken his place. What a
triumph for Rome, who would have re-entered Geneva over the mangled corpse of
the Reformer! But what a disaster to Europe, the young day of which would have
been quenched in the blackness of a two-fold night — that of a rising atheism,
and that of a returning superstition!
But the movement was not fated so
to end. He who had scattered the power of emperors and armies when they stood in
battle array against the Reformation, stilled the clamours of furious mobs when
they rose to extinguish it. The same buckler that covered Luther in the Diet of
Worms, was extended over the head of Calvin amid the glittering swords in the
Church of Rive. In that assembly were some who were the friends of the Reformer;
they hastily threw themselves between the pulpit and the furious men who were
pressing forward to strike. This check gave time to the less hostile among
Calvin's foes to recover their senses, and they now remonstrated with the more
violent on the crime they were about to commit, and the scandal they would cause
if they succeeded in their object. Their anger began to cool; first one and then
another put back his sword into its sheath; and after some time calm was
restored. Michael Roset, the chronicler and magistrate, who appears to have been
present, says, with an evident sense of relief, "The affair passed off without
bloodshed ;" and the words of the syndic Guatier, who reckoned its peaceable
ending a sort of miracle, show how near it had been to having a very different
termination,[11] The Reformer's friends did
not think it prudent to leave him undefended, though the storm seemed to have
spent itself. Forming an escort round him, they conducted him to his
home.
On the morrow the Council of Two Hundred met, and pronounced
sentence of banishment upon the two ministers. This sentence was ratified on the
following day by the Council-General or assembly of the people. On the decision
being intimated to Calvin, he replied with dignity, "Had I been the servant of
man, I should have received but poor wages; but happy for me it is that I am the
servant of him who never fails to give his servants that which he has promised
them." The Council rested its sentence of banishment upon the question of
"unleavened bread." Herein it acted disingenuously. The pastors had protested
that the question of leavened or unleavened bread in the Eucharist was with them
an open one.
The real ground of banishment is one on which the
magistrates of Geneva, for obvious reasons, are silent — namely, the refusal of
Farel and Calvin to celebrate the Lord's Supper, on account of the blasphemies
and immoralities indulged in by many of those who demanded admission to the
Communion-table. Before being condemned, Calvin asked to be heard in his defense
before the Council-General, but his request was refused.[12]
It is important to
mark, at this stage, that the principle on which the Reformer rested his whole
scheme of Church government was — holy things are not to be given to the unholy.
This principle he laboured to make inviolable, as being the germ, in the first
place, of purity in the Church; and, in the second, of morality and liberty in
the State. The principle was, as we have seen, on this its first attempt to
assert itself, cast out and trodden under foot of an infidel democracy. That
party, in the days of Calvin, was only in its first sprouting; it has since
grown to greatness, and put forth its strength on a wider theater, and the world
has seen it, particularly in France, pull down and tread into the dust kings and
hierarchies. But Calvin's principle, being Divine, could not perish under the
blows now dealt it. It was overborne for the moment, and driven out of Geneva in
the persons of its champions; but it lifted itself up again, and, rentering
Geneva, was there, fifteen years afterwards, crowned with
victory.
CHAPTER
12 Back to
Top
CALVIN AT STRASBURG — ROME DRAWS NEAR
TO GENEVA.
Farel at Neuchatel — Calvin at Strasburg — His Labors
there — Disorders at Geneva — Calvin's Poverty — Efforts of Rome to Retake
Geneva — Cardinal Sadoleto — His Letter to the Genevans — Who shall Reply to it?
— Calvin does so — Rising Tide of the Reformation — Ebb of Romanism — Conference
between the Protestants and Romanists at Frankfort — Calvin goes thither — No
Fruit of the Conference — Calvin and Melancthon's Interviews — Calvin's
Confidence in Melancthon — His tender Love for him — Calvin and Luther never
Meet — Luther placed amid the Teutonic Peoples, Calvin amid the Latin Nations —
Wisdom of this Arrangement.
WITH steps slow and sad, and looks cast behind — for
it was hard to relinquish all hope of a city on which they had bestowed so much
labor — did the two banished ministers pursue their uncertain way. After an
ineffectual attempt on the part of Bern and Zurich to compose the quarrel, Farel
went to Neuchatel, which became the field of his future labors, and thus he
completed the building of which he had laid the foundations in years gone by.
Calvin, journeying by way of Basle, and halting awhile in a city which he loved
above all others, ultimately repaired to Strasburg, to which he had been
earnestly invited by the two pastors of that city, Bucer and Capito. Three years
of honorable labor awaited him in Strasburg.
Distinguished foreigners,
exiles for the Gospel, gathered round him; the French refugees, said to be about
15,000 in number, forming themselves into a congregation, made him their pastor;
and the Town Council, appropriating the Church of the Dominicans to his use,
appointed him to give lectures on the Scriptures. His audience was a more
erudite and polished one than any Geneva could then furnish, for only through
Calvin was Geneva to become learned. The love of Strasburg was as balm to the
smitten and wounded heart of the exile.[1]
The expulsion of
the two ministers did not calm the tempest that raged in the little State on the
banks of the Leman. The Council, perhaps to show that they could govern without
Calvin, published some new edicts for the reformation of manners; but, alas!
moral power had departed with the ministers, and the commands of the magistrates
were unheeded. The more distant the retreating steps of Farel and Calvin, the
louder grew the disorders in the city they had left. The preachers, Marcourt and
Morand, who now occupied the vacated pulpits, were simply objects of contempt.[2] They soon quitted the city
in disgust. The Council thought to make the two rectors of the school which
Farel had opened for though there were 900 priests there was not a schoolmaster
in Geneva — supply their place. The two teachers rose up and shook the dust from
their feet, and the school was closed. The dominant faction had demanded
"liberty," and now, left without either religious guide or secular instructor,
they were in a fair way of being as free as their hearts could wish, and
eminently pious to boot, if there be truth in the maxim that "ignorance is the
mother of devotion.[3]
Calvin, in his new
sphere at Strasburg, preached four times a week, and discharged all the other
duties, private and public, of a faithful pastor. He lectured every day on
theological science to the students of the Academy, taking as his text-book the
Gospel of St. John and the Epistle to the Romans, which he expounded. The fame
of his lectures drew students from other countries, and Strasburg promised to
rival Wittemberg as a school of theology.[4] The Reformer had asked no
salary from the magistrates, and they were in no haste to assign him one, and
now he was in deep poverty: He appears to have been still in receipt of a small
sum from his paternal inheritance, which he strove to supplement by the sale of
his books. Painful it must have been to him to part with these, but he had no
alternative, for we find him writing to Farel at this time that he "did not
possess a farthing." The Senate of Strasburg afterwards appointed him a stipend,
but so small that it did not suffice for his wants. But we return to
Geneva.
Calvin being gone, the Pope now drew near. He had been watching
the ripening of the pear for some time, and now he deemed it fit to be plucked.
Cardinal Sadoleto was employed to write a letter to the people of Geneva, which,
it was thought, was all that was needed to make them re-enter the old fold. Than
Sadoleto no fitter man could have been found for this task. Having passed his
youth at the court of Leo X., he was quite as much a son of the Renaissance as a
son of the Church. He overflowed with that mild tolerance which, bred of
indifferentism, is sometimes mistaken for true liberality. He could write any
number of fine sentiments in the purest Latin. He was of irreproachable life.
The Protestants sometimes thought that he was about to become one of themselves.
But no: he loved the calm of letters, and the aesthetic delights of art. Above
all, he rejoiced in the security and comfort of an infallible Church. It saved
the toil of inquiry and the torment of doubt.
His letter "to the Senate
and People of Geneva" was such as might have been expected from such a man. He
began by protesting his ancient affection for them; he praised their many noble
qualities; and he "drowned his page" with his poignant grief at their
misfortunes. Alas! that they had suffered themselves to be seduced into
Protestantism, which, however, he was good enough to say contained a modicum of
truth. And so, tasking the elegance of his pen to the utmost, he coined some
glowing compliments in praise of Holy Writ, of Christ as the sole Author of
salvation, and of the doctrine of justification by faith. In thus expressing
himself, Sadoleto had not the remotest intention of becoming a disciple of the
Protestant faith; he was only beckoning back the Genevans to repose beneath the
tiara. In an infallible Church only could they find escape from such storms as
the exercise of private judgment had let loose upon them.
The letter had
the very opposite effect from that which it was expected to produce. It helped
to show the men of Geneva the brink to which they were drawing nigh. Are we
then, they said to themselves on reading the cardinal's letter, so near to Rome
that the Pontiff believes he has only to open the gates in order that we may
come in? Moreover it made them feel the loss they had sustained in the
banishment of Calvin; they looked around for a man to reply to Sadoleto, for
they felt that his letter must not remain unanswered, but they looked in vain.
One name was on every lip as that of the man who alone was adequate to the task
of replying, but with the ink not yet dry in which the banishment of the man who
bore that name was written, they dared not utter it. This showed, however, that
the tide had begun to turn. Calvin meanwhile got a copy of the cardinal's letter
at Strasburg, and without waiting to be asked by the Genevans he answered it
forthwith, and in such fashion that Sadoleto made no second attempt of the
sort.[5] Calvin's reply to Sadoleto
was the work of six days, and it remains a monument of his genius. He begins by
paying a fine compliment to the cardinal's learning and eloquence, and goes on
to express his wonder at the "singular love and goodwill" which Sadoleto, an
entire stranger to the people of Geneva, had so suddenly conceived for them, "of
which nevertheless no fruit ever appeared." "If," continues Calvin, "it was
ambition and avarice," as Sadoleto had hinted, which moved him in separating
from Rome, what a blunder had he fallen into! "Certain it is," said he, "if I
had paid regard to my personal advantage, I should never have separated from
your faction." "Was not," he asks, "our shortest way of attaining to wealth and
honours to accept from the first the conditions which you have offered us?"
Apostates you call us, says Calvin. "The men of Geneva, extricating themselves
from the slough of error in which they were sunk, have returned to the doctrine
of the Gospel, and this thou callest abandoning the truth of God. They have
withdrawn from Papal tyranny, and this thou sayest is to separate from the
Church!" "We contradict the Fathers!" exclaims the Reformer, adverting to
another charge the cardinal had brought against the Protestants, "we are more
nearly in agreement with antiquity than you our opponents, as thou knowest,
Sadoleto, and we ask for nothing else than to see restored that ancient face of
the Church which has been torn to pieces and almost destroyed by the Pope and
his faction." And after reminding the cardinal of what his learning made him
well acquainted with, namely, the condition of the Church during the days of
both the Greek and the Latin Fathers, Calvin asks him, "Wilt thou call that man
an enemy of antiquity who, full of zeal for ancient piety, longs to restore in
their first splendor the things which are now corrupted? With what right are we
accused of having subverted the ancient discipline by the very party that has
abolished it?"
With a few strokes Calvin next draws a picture of the
state in which the Reformers found the schools and the pulpits: nothing taught
in the first but "pure sophistries," "tangled and twisted scholastic theology,"
"a kind of secret magic." And as for the pulpits, "there were no sermons from
which foolish old women did not learn more dreams than they could relate in a
month by their own fireside." Was it a crime to have replaced that rubbish by a
theology drawn from the Word of God, and to have silenced the monks by filling
the pulpits with preachers of the ancient Gospel? There follow some noble
passages on justification by faith, on Christ's sole mediatorship, on worship,
the Lord's Supper, the ministry, the Church, and then comes the close, in which
the Reformer reproduces, though in a contrary sense, Sadoleto's prosopopaeia.
The cardinal had cited Calvin and his brethren as criminals before the
judgment-seat of God.
Calvin obeys this trumpet-summons. He comes to the
dread tribunal to which the cardinal had cited him, and he thus pleads: "I saw
Christ cast into oblivion, and become unprofitable; what was I to do? I saw the
Gospel stifled by superstition; what was I to do? I saw the Divine Word
voluntarily ignored and hidden; what was I to do? If he is not 'to be reputed a
traitor who, seeing the soldiers dispersed and scattered, raises the captain's
ensign, rallies them, and restores their order,' am I a traitor for having
raised amid the disbanded Church the old banner of Jesus Christ? For it is not a
new and 'strange ensign which I have unfurled, but thy noble standard, O Lord!'"
He adds, with reference to Sadoleto's taunt that they had broken the peace, "Did
they [the Romanists] not most suddenly and furiously betake themselves to the
sword and the gibbet? Did they not think that their sole resource was in arms
and cruelty?" They have given us in default of other consecration that of
tribulation and of blood. We know what we have done, and in whom we have
believed, and "heaven grant, Sadoleto, that thou and thine may one day be able
to say as much sincerely."[6]
Thus did Calvin,
though banished, continue to cover Geneva with his shield. The writing ran
quickly through Europe. Luther read it and was delighted beyond measure with it.
His eye at once discerned its freedom, strength, and majesty. "Here," said he,
"is a writing which has hands and feet. I rejoice that God raises up such men.
They will continue what I have begun against Antichrist, and by the help of God
they will finish it."
Calvin has now become, or is very soon to become,
the center of the movement, whose present position in Christendom is somewhat
perilous. A crisis had arrived in the great conflict between Romanism and
Protestantism. It was clear to both parties that the breach that divided them
must be healed now, and that if a settlement was much longer delayed the
controversy would grow into an embittered and sanguinary war, prolonged from
decade to decade, and it might be for a still longer period. During the years
that Calvin resided at Strasburg, the Popish and Protestant worlds assembled in
not fewer than four successive conventions, to try whether it was not possible
to frame a basis on which the two Churches might come together, and peace be
restored to Christendom. The initiative of these conferences was taken by the
emperor on the part of the Romanists; and indeed of the two parties it was the
latter that had the stronger reasons for holding out the
olive-branch.
Twenty-five years had now passed away in their efforts to
put down Protestantism, and instead of being able to recount a series of
victories, they had little to show save a list of defeats. All things worked
contrariwise for them. If they held a disputation, it was only to expose the
weakness of their champions; if they convoked a synod, it was only to hear a
Protestant Confession; if they held a conference, it was to have some new
concession wrung from them; if they planted stakes, they found they were but
sowing the seed of new martyrs; if they leagued among themselves in order to
strike a combined blow, some untoward event fell out, some ally betrayed them,
or the ominous figure of the Turk started up, and so their plans came to
nothing. The bow broke just as the arrow was about to be let fly.
And,
then, what at this hour was the attitude of the several nations as regarded
their obedience to the Papal chair? One half of the European States had placed
themselves, or were hastening to do so, beneath the banner on which was
inscribed: "An open Bible and a free conscience."
The two Saxonys,
Prussia, Hesse-Cassel, Wurtemberg, with some smaller States, and a multitude of
free cities, were now ranged round the great PROTEST. The better half of
Switzerland was lost to Rome. Few, save the herdsmen of the mountains, now
received her pardons and sent their money in return. Denmark and Sweden had
revolted. The powerful kingdoms of England and France were at that hour
trembling in the balance.
Everywhere men were kicking against Rome's
ancient and sacred sway, and soon, on the north of the Alps, few subjects would
remain to her. Parliaments were passing laws to check her usurpations; her bulls
were dis-honored; palls were at a discount; tithes, annats, reservations, and
expectatives were but as the gleanings after the harvest; palmers and anchorets
were disappearing from her highways; men were burying her relics instead of
worshipping them; the cowl and frock were being abandoned for the garb of honest
labor; schools and hospitals were replacing monasteries and convents; the
reading of the Scriptures was supplanting the counting of beads, and the
preaching of the Gospel the chanting of litanies and masses.
And then, in
addition to all these losses, when the Romanists looked at the other side they
could not conceal from themselves the strength of the Protestant position. Not
only did the Reformation divide Christendom — not only did it receive the
support of States, princes, and free cities — but, further, it had created a
multitude of agencies, which were continually at work multiplying its adherents,
and extending still farther its area.
Foremost among these were the
Sacred Oracles in the mother-tongue of the nations. In the rear of this Divine
instrumentality came nearly all the men of thought, of letters, and of eloquence
which the age could boast. Ever and anon Luther's pen was darting flashes of
light over Europe.
Recently had come that magnificent demonstration, the
Institutes. That work was moving up and down in Christendom, an embattled
phalanx of argument, compared with which the legions of the emperor were as
weakness. Around the two great chiefs, Luther and Calvin, were a hundred keen
and disciplined intellects ready to expose a sophism, to confront a falsehood,
to laugh at folly, and to castigate hypocrisy and arrogance. Moreover, the habit
of free inquiry, and the art of combining — of which the Schmalkald League
furnished an example, which was not lost upon its opponents — had come to the
aid of that cause which had given them birth. In fine, among the forces on the
side of Protestantism, not the least was the spirit of its disciples. They could
face the dungeon and the rack, the scaffold and the stake, and not quail; and in
the room of those who were burned to ashes to-day, hundreds would start up
to-morrow to grasp the falling standard, and bear it onward to victory. These
considerations could not but force themselves upon the minds of the Romanists,
and weigh with them in the overtures they now made to the Protestants. From the
far-off banks of the Tagus came a letter full of not unfriendly professions.
Writing in the Alcazar at Toledo, the 25th of November, 1539, the emperor
invited the Protestant princes of Germany to meet and try whether they could not
devise measures of conciliation.[7] Charles intimated at the
same time that the King of France, with whom he was then at peace, was equally
solicitous on this point with himself.
In pursuance of this letter, the
princes assembled next February at Frankfort. Eldo, Archbishop of Lunden,
represented the emperor at the conference. Calvin, accompanied by Sturm, went
thither, at the urgent solicitations of his brethren, mainly with the view of
watching over the interests of the Swiss Churches, and of having the pleasure of
meeting and conferring with Melancthon. The debates were long, but the
conclusions reached were of no great moment. All resulted in a truce, which was
to last for fifteen months, to permit a convention of theologians and learned
men to meet and discuss the steps necessary for quieting the religious troubles.
Without the truce the members would not have been sure of their heads.
Meanwhile, prosecutions against the Protestants in the imperial chamber were to
be dropped, and no one on either side was to be disturbed on account of his
religion. The Protestants thought they saw the cloven foot in the attempts to
confine this agreement to those of the Augsburg Confession. The emperor had the
best reasons for excluding the Swiss from its benefits. He knew that should the
German and Swiss Reformers combine, and form one Protestant camp, extending from
the Baltic to the banks of the Rhone, and the foot of the Pennine mountains, the
cause of Rome would be lost north of the Alps, and his own dynastic projects
along with it.[8]
We turn with a
peculiar pleasure from the chamber of conference, to the yet more sacred chamber
where the Reformation's greatest scholar, and its greatest theologian, were
about to commune together. From the first moment Melancthon and Calvin
understood each other. Of Melancthon's inviolable loyalty at heart to the
Protestant creed Calvin had not a doubt. The unwise concessions into which his
love of peace at times betrayed him, though they drew forth Calvin's rebuke,
never shook his confidence in him. A free interchange of sentiments on the
nature of the Eucharist took place, and Calvin, as we learn from his letters to
Farel, was delighted to find that Melancthon's opinions nearly approximated to
his own, although his veneration for Luther kept him from saying so in public.
Future discussions, however showed that the unanimity was not quite so great as
Calvin had hoped. Their friendship, nevertheless, continued unbroken throughout
their lives, and yielded its fruits to the Church of God. How deep and tender
Calvin's love for Melancthon was, is shown by the touching words written after
the grave had closed over the latter: "O Philip Melancthon — for it is thou whom
I address — thou who now livest at the hand of God with Christ, awaiting us on
high till we are gathered with thee into blessed repose — a hundred times hast
thou said to me when, wearied with toil and vexation, thou didst lean thy head
upon my bosom — Would to God, would to God, that I might die upon that bosom! As
for me, later, a hundred times have I wished that it had been granted us to be
together. Certainly thou wouldst have been bolder to face struggles, more
courageous to despise envy and calumny. Then, also, would have been suppressed
the malignity of many whose audacity increased in proportion to what they called
thy pusillanimity."[9]
There is one other
meeting that would have had greater interest for us than even that which we see
now taking place. It was intensely longed for on one side at least. Writing to
Luther, Calvin says, "Oh, if I could fly towards thee, and enjoy thy society,
were it but for a few hours!" One cannot help asking, had Luther and Calvin met,
which would have appeared the greater? Would the breach in the Protestant host
have been healed, and the Wittemberg and Genevan camps been merged into
one?
Would the splendor of Luther have paled before the calm majesty of
Calvin, or would the mighty strength of the latter have bowed before the swift
intuition and dazzling genius of the former? But, it was not to be that these
two men should ever see one another in the flesh. They were formed to dwell in
spheres apart. The impetuous Luther was given to the Teutonic nations, which
needed his enthusiasm to kindle them. Calvin was placed amid the excitable and
volatile peoples of the South, where his severe logic and love of order helped
to curb their tendency to excess and their passion to theorise. Had Luther gone
to France — and there was a moment, outside the gate of Augsburg, on the
occasion of his flight from Cajetan, when he thought of turning his horse's head
in that direction he would have kindled a conflagration by his eloquence, which,
after speedily blazing up, would as speedily have sunk down and died out. And
had Calvin, when he first visited Strasburg, instead of turning southward to
Basle, gone forward to Wittemberg, and made Germany the scene of his labors, as
he had some thoughts of doing, he would there doubtless have been able to plant
his system of Church order, but without that amount of enthusiasm on the part of
those who submitted to it, necessary to give it permanancy, or to carry it over
Christendom, while the South would have become a prey to the pantheistic
theories of such men as Ochin and Servetus. What a beautiful ordering in the
gifts of these two men, in the place assigned to each in the field, and the time
when they entered it!
Luther had been the center in the first act of the
great drama. That was now closing, and at the center of the second act, which
was about to open, Calvin stands up; with an enthusiasm as great, but a logic
more severe, to complete and crown the work of his
predecessor.
CHAPTER
13 Back to
Top
ABORTIVE CONFERENCES AT HAGENAU AND
RATISBON.
Convention at Hagenau — Attempt to Steal a March on the
Protestants — Firmness of the German Princes — Conference at Ratisbon —
Perplexities of Charles V. — Cardinal Contarini — Programme — Auspicious
Beginning of Conference — Agreement on several Doctrines — The Dead-lock of
Transubstantiation — Hopes come to Nothing — Would Conciliation have been a
Blessing to Christendom? — It would have given Entombment to Protestantism, and
New Life to Atheistic Revolution.
THE next convention was held at Hagenau, the 25th of
June, 1510. The assembly was presided over by King Ferdinand. The Protestant
princes were represented by their deputies. A great number of divines were
present, and among others Calvin. Melancthon was taken in on the road, and was
thus unavoidably absent. Ferdinand, on the ground that the Protestant princes
were not present, adjourned the assembly, to meet at Worms on October 28th.[1] Meanwhile, it was
attempted to steal a march on the Protestants by requiring them to restore the
buildings:, lands, and revenues which they had taken from the Papists, and to
promise that no new members should be received into the Schmalkald League. These
proposals were indignantly rejected. First, let the religious question be
decided, said the Protestants, and then the details will adjust themselves. They
had robbed no man: the appropriated Church revenues they had devoted to the
religious instruction of the people, to the support of schools, and the relief
of the poor. And as to refusing the protection of the League to those who were
persecuted for righteousness' sake, they spurned the idea of binding themselves
to so dastardly a policy.[2] Calvin, who was not
readily imposed upon, nor easily satisfied, bears the highest testimony in his
letters to the zeal of these men, as he witnessed it at Frankfort. Sooner than
dissolve their League, and abandon defenceless provinces and towns to the will
of the emperor and the Pope, they would see their cities ploughed as a field,
their castles razed, and themselves led to the scaffold.[3]
The conference
assembled at Worms, as appointed, but on the third day came letters from the
emperor dissolving it, and summoning it to meet, with greater solemnity, at
Ratisbon, in January, 1541. [4] The members not arriving
in time, the Diet of Ratisbon opened only in April. Calvin, deputed by the city
of Strasburg, went thither, though he expected little from the conference,
mistrusting the sincerity of the Roman managers, and knowing, perhaps better
than any other man, that an impossible task had been assigned to them when they
were required to reconcile essentially antagonistic creeds. And yet many things
seemed to prognosticate a prosperous issue to this the fourth attempt, within
the space of two years, to effect the pacification of Christendom. First, the
position of the emperor's affairs made it clearly his interest to be on friendly
terms with the princes of the Protestant League. He was raising armies,
expending vast sums, wasting his years and strength, and taxing his genius in
toilsome expeditions and mighty undertakings, and yet the perplexities around
his throne were thickening instead of lessening. Verily, he had no need to court
new difficulties. Charles spoke truth, doubtless, when, by the mouth of
Grenville, he opened the Diet with these words: "When he perceived how religion
had torn and rent asunder the Empire, and given occasion to the Turk to pierce
almost into the bowels of Germany, it had been a great grief to him, and,
therefore, for many years past he had, with their own consents, been essaying
ways of pacification."[5]
The Pope, Paul
III., leaned scarcely less than the emperor towards conciliation. In token of
his friendly disposition he sent Gaspar Contarini as his legate to the
conference. A patrician of Venice by birth, Cardinal Contarini was of pure life,
of devout disposition, and of liberal opinions. He had been a member of "The
Oratory of Divine Love," an association which sought to promote a large reform
of Church abuses, and on the important doctrine of justification approximated
very closely to Luther. Not less desirous were the Protestant divines of healing
the breach, provided it could be done without burying the Reformation. When they
thought of the sacrifices which the continuance of the struggle implied the
desolations of war, and the blood that must flow on field and scaffold — they
shrunk from the responsibility of hastily closing the door against any really
well-meant attempt at union. At no former moment had peace seemed so
near.
The proceedings began by Grenville presenting to the conference a
book, which he said had received the emperor's approval, and which he wished
them to adopt as the basis of their discussions. The book consisted of a series
of chapters or treatises on the doctrines, the rites, the Sacraments, the
orders, and the constitution and powers of the Church. The members were to say
what in it they agreed with, and what in it they dissented from.[6] The Pope naturally wished
the weighty point of his supremacy to be first taken in hand and settled; but
Contarini, departing from his instructions in this matter, postponed the
question of the Pope's powers to the end, and gave precedence to the doctrines
of the Christian system. For some time all went smoothly enough. A very
tolerable unanimity was found to exist between the two sides of the assembly on
the doctrines of original sin, free-will, and justification. Calvin was
astonished to find the Romanists conceding so much. "We have retained," says he,
writing to Farel, "all the substance of the true doctrine. If you consider with
what kind of men we have had to agree, you will acknowledge that much has been
accomplished."[7] As yet, no cloud appeared
in the sky of the conference.
Next came the subject of the Church. The
conference was agreed on the constitution of the Church; as regards its
authority it began to be seen that there were two parties in the assembly. To
obviate immediate danger, it was proposed to pass on to other questions, and
leave this one for future settlement.[8]
The Sacraments
followed. The Diet was nearing the more critical questions. There was here some
jarring, but the Protestants conceded the ceremonies as things indifferent, and
the conference was able to proceed. At last came the consideration of the
Sacrament of the Lord's Supper. "There," said Calvin, "stood the impassable rock
which barred the way to farther progress."[9] "I had," continues Calvin,
"to explain in Latin what were my sentiments. Without fear of offense, I
condemned that peculiar local presence; the act of adoration I declared to be
altogether insufferable."[10]
We now behold the
representatives of the Popish and Protestant worlds gathered in presence of the
Roman sphinx — the stupendous mystery of transubstantiation. If they shall solve
the riddle — reconcile the dogma to Scripture, to reason, and to sense — all
will be well; they will have united the two Churches and pacified Europe; but if
they shall fail, there awaits Christendom a continuance of divisions, of
strifes, of wars. One after another comes forward with his solution, in the hope
that, like another OEdipus, he will read the riddle, disarm the monster, and
avert from Christendom the untold calamities with which it is threatened. First
come the Protestants. "Philip and Bucer," says Calvin, "have drawn up ambiguous
and insincere formulas, to try whether they could satisfy the opposite party by
yielding nothing."[11] He bears his testimony to
their "best intentions," but expects nothing of their "equivocation." Next come
the Romanists. They enveloped the whole in a cloud of mystification. The riddle
is still unread; the mystery still stands unsolved, despite the learning, the
wit, and the sophistry which have been expended upon it to make it
comprehensible; it is as defiant of Scripture, of reason, and of sense as
ever.[12]
At this stage an
incident partly tragic and partly grotesque came to diversify the proceedings of
the convention. One day, the veteran controversialist, Dr. Eck, being worsted by
Melancthon in an argument on the Eucharist, went home in a rage, and drank so
deep at supper as to drown his sense of discomfiture and contract a fever at the
same time. His gruff stentorian voice was heard no more in the debates, nor his
tall, broad-shouldered and burly form seen in the conference hall.[13]
Afterwards the
questions of private masses, invocation of saints, and the Pope's supremacy
received a languid discussion, but with no satisfactory re-suits. The skies, so
fair when the conference assembled, were now overcast with heavy clouds. The
promise of peace had failed. The emperor dissolved the Diet, with the promise,
always forthcoming when affairs had got into a dead-lock, that a General Council
would speedily convene, and that should the Pope refuse to call such, he himself
would convoke a Diet of the Empire for the settlement of all the religious
differences of Christendom.[14]
So ended the Diet
of Ratisbon. Had it succeeded in uniting the two Churches, the history of the
world would henceforward have been different. Would it have been better? We
answer unhesitatingly, it would have been worse. God's plans are not only larger
and wiser but more beneficent than the thoughts of man. A union on only such
terms as were then possible would have closed the career of Protestantism; for a
half-Reformation would have been no Reformation. Would then the Church of Rome,
her doctrines modified, we shall suppose, her worst abuses corrected, and her
sway become more tolerant, have resumed possession of Europe, and pursued her
course unobstructed by rival or opponent? We reply emphatically, it would not.
The Popish champions altogether overlook the forces which were at work in
Christendom, when they lay the misfortunes of their Church at the door of
Protestantism. The Church of Rome was morally bankrupt before the Reformers
arose. The nations had lost faith in her. The pantheistic principles which had
been springing up ever since the twelfth century were fast coming to a head, and
but for the moral breakwater which Luther and Calvin erected, they would by the
end of the sixteenth century have broken out and swept over Europe in all the
fury of a destructive revolution. Protestantism did not awaken, it mitigated the
angry feelings of which Rome was the object, and diverted them into the channel
of Scriptural Reformation. The Christendom of that day was called to make its
choice between the teachers of morality and order, such as Calvin, and the
apostles of atheism, with its attendant crimes, revolutions and woes, such as
Castellio and Servetus. Unhappily the Roman Church mistook her friends for her
foes. We would ask, how has it fared with her in those countries which remained
Popish? Is it in lands where the Reformation established itself, or in those
where it was suppressed, that the "Church" has been most exempt from spoliation,
and her priests from violence? and to what shore is it that they flee in those
oft-recurring tempests of revolution that sweep across the Popish
world?
The Reformation in its Lutheran form had now culminated. It had
planted in the mind of Christendom the great radical principle of renovation,
"salvation through grace;" but, instead of building upon it an organised Church,
to act as a moral breakwater against the godless principles ready to rush in and
fill the void caused by the partial demolition of Romanism, the Reformation in
Germany was passing into political action; it was running to seed. What was
needed was a vigorous Church, what was formed was a political league. A new
center had to be found for the principle of Protestantism, where, disentangling
itself from political alliances, it might grow into a great purifying and
restraining power, and be seen by the world, not simply as a body of doctrines,
but as a new and holy society. While a number of cunning artificers at Ratisbon
are trying to repair the old fabric and keep it from falling, a new building is
rising elsewhere.
CHAPTER
14 Back to
Top
CALVIN RETURNS TO
GENEVA.
The Movement must resume its March — Calvin at Strasburg —
The Libertines at Geneva — Calvin's Four Persecutors Perish — Tide Turns at
Geneva — Deputations to entreat Calvin's Return — The Idea of going back
Terrible to him — Bucer's Adjuration — Starts on his Return Journey — Enters
Geneva — Reception — Lessons Learned in Exile — Returns Fitter for his Work —
Idelette de Bure — His Salary, etc.
HAD the Diet at Ratisbon succeeded in finding, what
both parties in the convention so sincerely labored to discover, a basis of
agreement, Calvin would not have returned to Geneva. There would have been no
need to seek a new center for a Reformation which had run. its course, and was
about to disappear from the stage; It was saved, however, from the entombment
which agreement would have given it. The movement is again to resume its march.
Its second and grandest act is about to open, and accordingly Calvin is on his
way back to Geneva.
While living honored in Strasburg, each day occupied
in fruitful labors, interrupted only by attendances at imperial Diets, the
public feeling respecting the Reformer had been undergoing a great change on the
banks of the Leman. The faction of the Libertines, reinforced by Anabaptists and
Papists, grew every day more ungovernable; Licentiousness and tumult ran riot
now that Calvin was gone.[1] The year 1539 passed in
the most outrageous saturnalia.[2] The Council, helpless in
the face of these disorders, began to repent of what they had done. The four
syndics who had been mainly active in the banishment of Calvin were now out of
the way. One had perished on the scaffold, charged with the crime of
surrendering Genevese territory; another, accused of sedition, had attempted to
escape by his window, but, falling headlong, broke his neck.
His
fellow-citizens, on learning his tragic end, called to mind that he had said
tauntingly to Calvin, "Surely the city-gate was wide enough to let him go
out."[3] The two remaining syndics,
implicated in the same charges, had betaken themselves to flight. All this
happened in the same year and the same month.
It was now 1540. The city
registers show the daily rise in the tide of popular feeling for Calvin's
recall. September 21st: the Council charged Amy Perrin, one of its members, "to
find means, if he could, to bring back Master Calvin." October 13th: it was
resolved to write a letter "to Monsieur Calvin that he would assist us." October
19th: the Council of Two Hundred resolved, "in order that the honor and glory of
God may be promoted," to seek all possible means to have "Master Caulvin as
preacher." October 20th: it was ordered in the General Council, or Assembly of
the People, "to send to Strasburg to fetch Master Jean Calvinus, who is very
learned, to be minister in this city."[4] The enthusiasm of the
citizens is thus described by an eye-witness, Jacques Bernard: "They all cried
out, ' Calvin, Calvin! we wish Calvin, the good and learned man, and true
minister of Jesus Christ!'"[5]
Three several
deputations did Geneva send to entreat the return of the man whom, two years
before, it had chased from its gates with contumely and threats. The same two
cantons, Bern and Zurich, whose approaches in the way of mediation it then
repulsed, were now asked to use their good offices with the magistrates of
Strasburg, in order to overcome their unwillingness to forego Calvin's services.
In addition to the Senate's advances, numerous private citizens wrote to the
Reformer in urgent terms soliciting his return. These letters found Calvin
already on his way to the Diet at Worms, whither the deputy of Geneva followed
him.[6] The repentant city opens
its gates. Shall he go back?
It was a critical moment, not in Calvin's
history only, but in that of Christendom; though neither Calvin nor any other
man could then estimate the momentous issues that hung upon his decision. The
question of going back threw him into great perplexity. The two years he had
already passed in Geneva, with the contradictions, perils, and insults with
which they were filled up, rose vividly before him. If he returns, shall he not
have to endure it all over again? Going back was like lying down on a bed of
torture. The thought, he tells us, filled him with horror. "Who will not pardon
me," he writes, "if I do not again willingly throw myself into a whirlpool which
I have found so dangerous?"[7] He appeared to himself of
all men the most unfit for a career so stormy as that which awaited him at
Geneva. In a sense he judged correctly. He was naturally shy. His organisation
was exquisitely strung. Sensitive and tender, he recoiled from the low arts and
the coarse abuse of rough and unprincipled opponents. It was sympathy and love
that he sought for. But it is exactly on a constitution like this that it is
possible to graft the finest and loftiest courage. Qualities like these, when
found in combination with high conscientiousness and lofty aims, as they were in
Calvin's case, become changed under discipline, and in fitting circumstances
develop into their opposites. The shrinking delicacy or timidity which quails
before a laugh or a sneer disappears, and a chivalrous boldness comes in its
room, which finds only delight in facing danger and confronting opposition. The
sense of pain is absorbed in the conscious grandeur of the aim, and the
sensitive man stands up in a courage which the whole world can neither bend nor
break.
Calvin disburdened his mind to his brethren, telling them with
what apprehensions this call to his former field of labor had filled him, yet
that he would obey, should they deem it his duty to go. They knew his worth, and
were reluctant indeed to part with him; but when they thought on Geneva,
situated on the borders of Italy and France, and offering so many facilities for
carrying the light into these countries, they at once said, "This is your post
.of service." Not yet, however, could Calvin conquer his aversion. The city on
the banks of the Leman was to him a "chamber of torture;" he shuddered to enter
it. Bucer stood forward, and with an adjuration similar to that which Farel had
formerly employed to constrain him to abide in Geneva, he constrained Calvin to
return to it. Bucer bade him beware of the punishment of Jonas for refusing to
go and preach repentance to the Ninevites.[8] This was enough; the die
was cast: mobs might rage, faction might plot, a hundred deaths might await him
in Geneva, he would go nevertheless, since duty called him.
He now began
to prepare for his journey. Loaded with many marks of honor by the magistrates
of Strasburg, he bade adieu to:that city. A mounted herald, sent from Geneva,
rode before him. He traveled slowly, halting at Neuchatel to compose some
differences which had sprung up in the flock of Farel, and solace himself a
little while in the society of the most loved of all his friends, before
crossing the territory of the Vaud, and resuming his great task. On the 13th of
September we behold him entering the gates of Geneva, his face still pale, but
lighted up with his earnest look and eagle eye. He climbs, amid the reverend
gaze of the citizens, the steep and narrow Rue des Chanoines, and takes up his
abode in a house prepared for him beforehand at the head of that street, with
its little garden behind, and a glorious vista of lake and mountains beyond —
the broad blue Leman, with the verdant and woody Jura on this hand, and the
great Alps, in all their snowy magnificence, on that. It has been often asked,
was Calvin insensible to these glories? And it has been answered, he was, seeing
he says not a word about them in his letters. No more does St. Paul in his,
though his labors were accomplished amid scenes of classic fame, and physical
beauty. The general, in the heat of action, has no time to note the scenery that
may lie around the battle-field. What to Calvin was Geneva but a battle-field?
it was the center of a great conflict, which enlarged year after year till it
came to be coextensive with Christendom, and every movement in which Calvin had
to superintend and direct. The grandeur of the natural objects that surrounded
him, at times, doubtless fixed his eye and tranquillised his soul, but with the
alternations of hope and fear, sorrow and triumph, filling his mind as the
battle around him flowed or ebbed, he may well be excused if he refused to sink
the Reformer in the painter.
In being sent into exile Calvin was, in
fact, sent to school. Every day of his sojourn at Strasburg his powers were
maturing, and his vision enlarging, and when at last he returns to Geneva he is
seen to be fully armed for the great fight that awaits him there. The study of
his character, previous to his expatriation, reveals these defects, which, if
not corrected, might have seriously marred his success. He yearned too strongly
for sympathy — we do not say praise — with his work and his aims. His own
delight in what was true and lofty was so intense that he reckoned too readily
on finding the same in others, and was in the same proportion discouraged when
he failed to find it. He must learn to do the work for the work's sake,
irrespective altogether of censure or sympathy, save the sympathy of One, the
Master even. This first infirmity begat a second, a guilelessness bordering on
simplicity. He thought that he had but to show himself actuated by upright and
high aims in order to disarm opposition and conciliate friends and
fellow-laborers. He did not make sufficient allowance for the shortsightedness,
the selfishness, the craft, the cruelty that are in the heart of man. But the
deep wound he received in "the house of his friends" helped to cure him of this
weakness. He knew better than before what was in man. The sharpest injuries he
saw were to come not from the Romanists, but from professed Protestants. He now
stood armed on this side.
But the greatest defect in the character of the
Reformer grew out of one of his more notable excellences. We refer to the
intensity and tenacity with which he laid hold on his object. This was apt to
lead to the too exclusive concentration of his powers on the task or the spot
that engaged him for the time. It tended, in short, to isolation. Up to his
first coming to Geneva he had lived only in French circles; the greater world of
the Reformation he had not entered; and had he never made acquaintance with a
wider sphere, there was a danger of his being only the man of Geneva, and giving
to a little State what was meant for Christendom. He must go forth, he must
tread German earth, he must breathe German air, he must survey from this post of
observation the length and breadth of the great movement, at the center of which
is his own permanent place, and for three successive years must his eye be kept
fixed on that wide field, till what is merely national or denominational has
dropped out of view, or at least assumed its proportional importance, and only
what is oecumenical and eternal remains. Here at Strasburg he will associate not
with scholars and burghers only, but with practical Reformers, with princes, and
with the leading minds of many various nationalities; and thus we find that when
a second time he presents himself at the gates of Geneva, he is no longer the
Frenchman simply, he is of no nation because of all nations. To the clear,
sharp-cut, beautiful genius of France he now adds the robustness of the Teuton.
He feels as deeply as ever the necessity of guarding the purity of the
Communion-table, for it is the point from which he is to work outward for the
regeneration of the Church in the first place, and the State in the second, and
accordingly his aims are no longer bounded by the limits of Geneva; they stretch
wide around, and the little city becomes the pedestal simply on which he places
that spiritual apparatus by which he is to regenerate
Christendom.
Calvin, the stern, the severe, insensible alike to Alpine
grandeurs and to female loveliness, had married while at Strasburg.[9] Idelette de Bure, the
woman who had given her hand to the Reformer, came from Liege, one of the
earliest among the cities of the Netherlands which embraced the Gospel. She was
a widow. Her modest yet courageous deportment as evinced in facing the perils to
which the profession of the Gospel exposed her, her devoted affections and
deep-seated piety as shown in ministering to the sick, and watching tenderly
over the two children whom she had borne to her former husband, Jean Storder,
had won the esteem of Calvin.
Many friends from a distance testified
their sympathy and joy by attending his nuptials. But why is not his Idelette de
Bure by his side when he re-enters Geneva? She is to follow, and to be the
modest, loving, and noble-minded companion of the Reformer, during nine of the
most laborious and stormy years of his life. Three horses, a carriage, and a sum
of money are sent her by the Senate, to bring her to Geneva. A piece of cloth
was presented to Calvin for a gown,[10] and the pulpit in St.
Peter's was prepared for the preacher: it was fixed against a massive pillar,
and placed low, that the speaker might be distinctly audible to
all.
CHAPTER
15 Back to
Top
THE ECCLESIASTICAL
ORDINANCES.
Assembly in the Cathedral — Calvin's Address — Resolves
to Stem the Tide of Moral Ruin — Proposal to the Council — The Ecclesiastical
Ordinances Drafted — Voted by the People — His Ecclesiastical Government — Four
Orders of Ministers — Two in Reality — The Venerable Company — Election of
Pastors — Consistory — Its Functions — The Council Punishes in the Last Resort —
The Ecclesiastical Ordinances the Laws of the State — Freely Accepted by the
People — Is this the Inquisition over again? — No — A Theocratic Republic
established at Geneva — Bungener's Defence of it.
THE first act done by Calvin and the Senate and
people of Geneva was to bow themselves in humiliation before the Eternal
Sovereign. Only a day or two after the Reformer's arrival, the great bell
Clemence rung out its deep, far-resounding peal over city, lake, and champaign.
The citizens flocked to the cathedral to hear again the voice that was dearer to
them than ever.
Calvin addressed them, dwelling briefly on those awful
events which gave so deep a solemnity to the passing time. In the East the Turk
was overrunning Hungary, and shedding Christian blood in torrents. Nearer to
them the Postilence was ravaging the cities of Germany and the towns on the
Rhine. In France and England their brethren were falling by the sword of the
persecutor. In Barbary, whither he had gone to fight the Moors, the emperor's
fleet and army were perishing by the tempests of the sky. The Reformer called on
them to see in these mingled events the hand of God, punishing the nations in
his anger. The Sacrament was then dispensed, and the services of the day were
closed with a solemn prayer, in which the little city, environed on every side
by powerful enemies, cast itself upon the arm of the Almighty.[1]
Without a moment's
delay Calvin set about his great task. Everywhere, over the entire face of
Christendom, moral ruin was at work. The feeble restraints of the Roman Church
were dissolved. The power of the German Reformation was decaying, the Political
element having acquired the predominance. An outburst of pantheistic doctrines
was about to drown Europe in a flood of hideous immoralities and frightful
disorders. What was needed was a great moral power, strong enough to awe the
atheism that was lifting up its portentous head. This was the Herculean labor to
which Calvin was called. He understood it. In his clear, calm judgment, and
constructive skill — in his powers of memory and of logic — in a genius equally
fitted for speculation or for business — in his intellectual vision which
extended wide, yet penetrated deep — in his indomitable patience, inflexible
conscientiousness, and profound submission to the Bible, he was the one man, of
all then living, who possessed the gifts necessary for the work. he would begin
by regenerating Geneva, and from Geneva as a center there would go forth a
regenerating influence over the face of Christendom. Accordingly, on his first
appearance before the Council, and before he had been many hours within their
walls, he demanded the erection of a court of morals, or ecclesiastical
discipline. "Immediately after I had offered my services to the Senate," says
he, writing to Farel, "I declared that a Church could not hold together unless a
settled government should be agreed on, such as is prescribed to us in the Word
of God, and such as was in use in the ancient Church. I requested that they
would appoint certain of their number who might confer with us on the subject.
Six were then appointed."[2] The Senate's consent had,
in fact, been given when it supplicated him to return, for it well knew that he
could return not otherwise than as a Reformer.
Such dispatch did Calvin
and his colleagues use in this matter, that the draft of the ecclesiastical
discipline was presented to the Council on the 28th of September. Its
examination was begun and continued till the 27th of October. The project, as
definitely amended, was, on the 9th of November, adopted by the Council of Two
Hundred; and on the 20th by the Council-General, or Assembly of the People.
These ecclesiastical ordinances were farther remodelled, and the final vote of
the people took place on the 2nd of January, 1542. "It is," says Bungener, "from
that day that the Calvinistic Republic legally dates."[3]
We shall briefly
consider this ecclesiastical order and government, — the inner organisation of
the Reformation; — the instrument for the regeneration, first of Geneva, next of
Christendom. Calvin and the Council are seen working together in the framing of
it. The Reformer holds that the State, guiding itself by the light of
revelation, can and ought to make arrangements and laws conducive to the
maintenance of the Church of God on the earth. He at the same time made what
provision the circumstances permitted for the separate and independent working
of the Church and the State, each within its own sphere. His plan of Church
order was borrowed avowedly from the New Testament. He instituted four orders of
men for the instruction and government of the Church — the Pastor, the Doctor,
the Presbyter or Elder, and the Deacon. We have here strictly viewed but two
orders — the Presbyter and the Deacon though we have four names. The Presbyter
embraces those who both preach and govern, as also others who govern but do not
preach. By the Deacon is meant the officer who administered the Church's
financial affairs.
The city clergy, the professors of theology, and the
rural pastors formed the body known as the Venerable Company. The election of
pastors was conducted in the following manner: — When a pulpit fell vacant, the
Company united in a deputation to the Council. In presence of the magistrates
the ministerial candidates were subjected to a severe examination, especially as
regarded their ability to expound Holy Scripture. The magistrates then retired,
and the Company, by a majority of votes, elected one as pastor. The
newly-elected, if approved by the Council, was announced to the congregation
from the pulpit next Sunday, and the people were invited to send in their
objections, if they had any, to the magistrates. The silence of the people
confirmed the election, and eight days afterwards the new minister was ordained
as pastor, the moderator of the Company presiding at the ceremony. The triple
action of the government, the people, and the clergy in the election was a
sufficient guarantee against intrigue and favor.[4]
The ecclesiastical
authority was wielded by the Consistory, or tribunal of morals. The Consistory
was composed of the ministers of the city and twelve laymen. These twelve laymen
were elected by the Little Council, confirmed by the Great Council, and finally
approved by the people with whom remained the power of objecting to any or all
of them if they saw cause. The Consistory met every Thursday. It summoned before
it those reported as guilty of immoralities. It admonished them, and, unless
they promised amendment, excommunicated them — that is, deposed them from
membership in the Church — and in consequence thereof withheld from them the
Sacraments. The Consistory had no power to compel attendance before it, and no
power to inflict a civil punishment. "It was," says Ruchat, "a purely
ecclesiastical chamber, possessing no civil jurisdiction whatever, which it left
entirely to the magistrate."[5] It "gives notice" to the
Council, and the Council "sees to it." In the infliction of its censures it
exercised a rigorous impartiality. It knew nothing of rank or friendship,
"punishing," says M. Gaberel, "with equal severity the highest magistrate and
the meanest burgess, the millionaire and the peasant."[6]
If the action of
the Consistory effected the reformation of the offender, he was straightway
restored to his place in the Church; if he remained incorrigible, the case came
under the cognisance of the civil jurisdiction. The Council summoned him to its
bar, and inflicted punishment — it might be imprisonment, or it might be
banishment. The Spiritual Court, looking at the act as an offense against the
ecclesiastical ordinances, had visited it with an ecclesiastical censure; the
Council, looking at it as a breach of the civil laws, awarded against it a
temporal punishment. We ask why this double character of the same act? Because
in Geneva the nation was the Church, and the ecclesiastical ordinances were also
the laws of the State. They had not only been enacted by the Senate, they had
been twice solemnly and unanimously voted by the people. "The people could not
afterwards allege," says M. Gaberel, "that they were deceived as to the bearing
of the laws they were sanctioning. For several weeks they could meditate at
leisure on the articles proposed; they knew the value of their decision, and
when twice — on the 20th of November, 1541, and again on the 2nd of January,
1542 — they came to the Cathedral of St. Peter's, and, after each article,
raised their hands in acceptance of it, the vote was an affair of conscience
between God and themselves, for no human power could impose such an engagement.
They were 20,000 citizens, perfectly free, and masters of their own town. The
Genevese people were absolutely sovereign; they knew no other limit to their
legislative power than their own will, and this people voted the ordinances from
the first chapter to the last. They engaged to frequent public worship
regularly, to bring up their children in the fear of the Lord, to renounce all
debauchery, all immoral amusements, to maintain simplicity in their clothing,
frugality and order in their dwellings."[7]
It is asked, is not
this discipline the old regime of Rome over again? Do we not here see an
ecclesiastical court investigating and passing sentence, and a civil tribunal
coming in and carrying it out? Is not this what the Inquisition did? There are,
however, essential differences between the two cases. At Rome there was but one
jurisdiction, the Pontifical; at Geneva there were two, the ecclesiastical and
the civil. At Rome simple opinions were punishable; at Geneva overt acts only.
At Rome the code was imposed by authority; at Geneva it was freely voted by the
people. If it was the Inquisition, it was the people who set it up. But the main
difference lies here: at Rome the claim of infallibility put conscience, reason,
and law out of court; at Geneva the supreme authority was the Constitution,
which had been approved and sanctioned by the free conscience of the
people.
What was established at Geneva was a theocratic republic. The
circumstances made any other form of government hardly possible. The necessities
of the city made it imperative that in its legislation the moral should
predominate; its very existence depended on this. But even the genius of Calvin
could not find means, in so small a State, to give free expression to his views
touching the distinction between things spiritual and things secular, nor could
he prevent the two jurisdictions at times overlapping and amalgamating. It is
strange to us to see blasphemy, unchastity, and similar acts visited with
imprisonment or with banishment; but we are to bear in mind that the citizens
themselves had made abstinence from these vices a condition of citizenship when
they voted the Constitution. They were not only offenses against morality, they
were breaches of the social compact which had been freely and unanimously
formed. Those who, while the Constitution existed — and it could not exist a
moment longer than the majority willed — claimed to be permitted these
indulgences, were logically, as well as legally, incurring expatriation. Calvin
made this very plain when, on one occasion, he advised the Libertine.to
withdraw, and build a city for themselves. Such a city, verily, would have had
neither a long nor a tranquil career.
"The more this legislation has been
studied," remarks M. Bungener, "the more is it seen to be in advance of all
anterior systems of legislation. The form sometimes surprises us a little by its
quaint simplicity, but the grandeur of the whole is not the less evident to
those who seek it, and this was about to manifest itself in the history of the
humble nation to whom this legislation was to give so glorious a place in the
intellectual as well as in the religious world."
"Neither absorbing nor
degrading the Statue," adds M. Bungener, "the Church maintained herself at its
side, always free, so far as the Reformer had intended her to be so. This was,
indeed, an important, an indispensable element of her influence abroad. A Church
visibly in the power of the magistrates of so small a State would have been
hearkened to by none. But the Church of Geneva had been put into possession of a
free and living individuality. Henceforth it mattered little whether she was
small or great, or whether she was at home under the shelter of a small or
mighty State. She was the Church of Geneva, the heiress of Calvin. lqone in
Europe, friend or foe, thought of asking more."[8]
CHAPTER
16 Back to
Top
THE NEW GENEVA.
The
Ministry — The Weekly Exercise — Visiting — Calvin — His Sermons — Studies —
Correspondence — From the Centre Watches the Whole Field — Geneva the Dwelling
of a Righteous People — Calvin's Aim to make it a Model City — Character of
Calvin's Commentaries— Two Genevas — The Libertines — Geneva becomes the
Thermopyke of Christendom.
WE have surveyed only the grand outlines. To Geneva
for the reinvigoration of the Reformation, ,see the completeness and efficiency
of the scheme let us glance a moment at the details. which Calvin elaborated and
set a-working in First the ministry was cared for. To guard against the entrance
of unworthy and incompetent persons into its ranks, candidates were subjected to
repeated tests and examinations previous to ordination.
The ministry
organised, arrangements were made to secure its efficiency and purity. The
pastors were to meet once a week in conference for mutual correction and
improvement; each in his turn was to expound a passage of Scripture in presence
of the rest, who were to give their opinions on the doctrine delivered in their
hearing. The young were to be kept under religious instruction till qualified by
their knowledge and their age for coming to the Communion-table. Every Friday a
sermon was to be preached in St. Peter's, which all the citizens were to attend.
Once a year every family was to be visited by a minister and elder, and once
every three years a Presbyterian visitation of all the parishes of the State was
to take place. Care was also taken that the sick and the poor should be
regularly visited, and the hospitals attended to. Never before, nor since
perhaps, has a community had the good fortune to be placed under so complete and
thorough a system of moral and spiritual training. Calvin must first reform
Geneva, if through Geneva he would reform Europe.
It was a Herculean task
which the Reformer had set himself. He could find no one to share it with him.
Viret and Farel could not be spared from Lausanne and Neuchatel, and it was on
his shoulders alone that the burden rested. The labors which from this time he
underwent were enormous. In addition to his Sunday duties as pastor of the
parish of St. Peter's, he preached every day of the alternate week. He delivered
three theological lectures weekly. Every Thursday he presided in the Consistory.
Every Friday he gave a public exposition in St. Peter's. He took his turn with
the other ministers in the visitation of the sick, and other pastoral
duties.
When the plague was in Geneva he offered himself for the service
of the hospital, but the Council, deeming his life indispensable to the State,
would not hear of his shutting himself up with the pestilence. Day by day he
pursued ]his studies without intermission. He awoke at five o'clock; his books
were brought him and, sitting up in bed, he dictated to an amanuensis. When the
hour came to mount the pulpit, he was invariably ready; and when he returned
home, he resumed, after a short rest, his literary labors. Nor was this all.
From every part of Christendom to which the Reformation had penetrated — from
Poland, Austria, Germany, and Denmark, and from the nearer lands of Switzerland,
France, and England — came letters daily to him. There were Churches to be
organised, theological questions to be solved, differences to be composed, and
exigencies to be met. The Reformer must maturely weigh all these, and counsel
the action to be taken in each. Without diminishing his rate of daily work, he
found time for this immense correspondence.
Calvin had pitched his tent
at the center of a great battle, and his eye ranged over the whole field. There
was not a movement which he did not direct, or a champion for whose safety he
did not care. If anywhere he saw a combatant on the point of being overborne, he
hastened to his aid; and if he descried signs of faint-heartedness, he strove to
stimulate afresh the courage of the desponding warrior, and induce him to resume
the battle. The froward he moderated, the timid he emboldened, the unskilful he
instructed, and the erring he called back. If it happened that some champion
from the Roman or from the pantheistic camp stepped forth to defy the armies of
Protestantism, Calvin was ever ready to measure swords with him. The controversy
commonly was short but decisive, and the Reformed Church usually, for some time
after, had rest from all similar attacks. To those on their way to the stake,
Calvin never failed to send greeting and consolation, and the martyrs in their
turn waved their adieus to him from their scaffolds. The words, "We who are
about to die, salute thee!" which greeted the emperor in the Roman circus, were
again heard, cried by hundreds of voices, but in circumstances which gave them
an ineffably greater sublimity.
While he watched all that was passing at
the remote boundary, he did not for one moment neglect the center. He knew that
so vast a plan of operations must repose on a solid basis. Hence his incessant
toil to reform the manners, enlarge the knowledge, and elevate the piety of
Geneva. He would make it the dwelling of a righteous nation. All who might enter
its gates should see, and those at a distance should hear, what that
Christianity was which he was seeking to restore to the world, and what mighty
and blessed transformations it was able to work on society. Its enemies branded
it as heresy, and cursed it as the mother of all wickedness. Come, then, was in
effect Calvin's reply; come and examine for yourselves this heresy at its
head-quarters. Mark the dens of profligacy and crime rooted out, the habits of
idleness and beggary suppressed, the noise of blasphemy and riot extinguished!
And with what have they been replaced? Contemplate those nurseries of art, those
schools of letters, those workshops where industry plies its honest calling,
those homes which are the abode of love, those men of learning rising up to
adorn the State, and those patriots ready to defend it. Blessed heresy that
yields such fruits! It was this — a great living proof of the Gospel's
transforming power — that Calvin had in view to create in all his labors,
whether in his study, or in his chair, or in the pulpit.
And in
enlightening Geneva he enlightened Christendom; in instructing his
contemporaries he taught, at the same time, the men of after-ages. Though. his
pen produced much, it sent forth nothing that was not fully ripened. His
writings, though composed in answer to the sudden challenge of some adversary,
or to meet an emergency that had unexpectedly arisen, or to fulfill the call of
daily duty, bear traces neither of haste nor of immaturity; on the contrary,
they are solid, terse, ever to the point, and so fraught with great principles,
set forth with lucidity and beauty, that even at this day, after the lapse of
three centuries, during which the works of numberless authors have sunk into
oblivion, they are still widely read, and are acting powerfully on the mind of
Christendom. As an expositor of Scripture, Calvin is still without a rival. His
Commentaries embrace the whole of the Old and New Testaments, with the exception
of the Apocalypse; but though the track is thus vast which his mind and pen have
traversed, what a flood of light has he contrived' to shed throughout it all!
How penetrating, yet how simple; how finely exegetical, yet how thoroughly
practical; how logical in thought, yet how little systematic in form are his
interpretations of the Holy Oracles! Nor is the unction his Commentary breathes
its least excellence. Its spirit is that of the Bible itself; its fragrance is
of heaven, and the reader's soul is refreshed with the celestial air that he is
inhaling.
We now behold Calvin at his post, and we hang with intense
interest upon the issue of his experiment. The question is not merely shall he
protestantise Geneva, but shall he extricate the Reformation from its dead-lock;
restore it to its spiritual path; and, having developed it into new rigor and
soundness in Geneva, plant it out in other countries. For five years all went
smoothly, nothing occurred to obstruct the regular working of the spiritual and
intellectual machinery he had set a-going in this little but wisely-selected
territory. The fruits were appearing. "By the blessing of God on the labors of
Calvin," says Ruchat, "the Church of Geneva put on a new face."[1] But the Libertinism of
Geneva had been scorched, not killed.
In 1546, it again lifted up its
head, and the struggle was renewed. There were, in fact, two Genevas: there was
the religious and orderly Geneva, composed of the native disciples of the
Gospel, the foreign refugees of Protestantism, and the youth of various
nationalities here training under Calvin to bear the banner of the Reformation
in the face of fire and sword through all parts of Europe; and there was the
infidel and the disorderly Geneva, a small but ominous band, the pioneers in
their beliefs and in their practices of those bodies which afterwards at various
intervals filled Popish Christendom with their swarms, and made themselves a
terror by the physical and moral horrors that marked their career.
"One
day, in the large hall of the Cloisters, behind the cathedral, Calvin was giving
his lecture on divinity. Around his chair hundreds were thronging, and amongst
them numbers of future preachers and of future martyrs. Suddenly they hear
outside laughter, cries, and a great clamore: This proceeds from fifteen or
twenty Libertines, who, out of hatred to Calvin, are giving a specimen of their
manners, and of what they call liberty. "Such is the picture of the two Genevas.
One of the two must necessarily perish."[2]
Among the
Libertines, however, there were two classes. There was the class of which we
have just had a specimen, and there was a class of a much less malignant and
dangerous kind. The latter was composed of the old families of Geneva. They
loved to dance, to masquerade, to play.
Hating the moral restraints which
the new Constitution imposed upon them, they raised the cry that the ancient
charters had been subverted, and that liberty was in danger. The other party
joined in this cry, but under it they meditated far deeper designs than their
confederates. Their aim was to root out the belief of a God, and so pull down
all the fences of order, and dissolve all the obligations of morality. Both
united against Calvin. In Wittemberg, the battle of Protestantism had been
against Romanism; in Geneva, it was against Romanism and pantheism combined. Two
hosts were now in arms, and their victory would have been equally fatal to Rome
and to Geneva. In fact, what we behold at this crisis is an uprising of old
paganism. Its Protean vices, the austere and the gay, and its multiform creeds,
the superstitious and the pantheistic, are marshalled in one mighty army to
overwhelm the Gospel, and devastate the kingdoms of Europe. Geneva must be the
Thermopylae of Christendom.
CHAPTER
17 Back to
Top
CALVIN'S BATTLES WITH THE
LIBERTINES.
Pierre Ameaux — His Wife — The Spiritual Libertines — A
Public Confession — Jacques Gruet — An Execution — Practical Reforms — Amy
Perrin — his Ambition — Francois Favre — Madame Perrin Imprisoned — Rage of the
Favre Family — The Law Triumphs — The Disorders Renewed — Calvin's Appearance
before the Council — His Magnanimity — Peace Restored — Calvin meanwhile Labours
indefatigably — Growing Renown of Geneva — The Favres again "Lift up the Horn "
— Perrin made First Syndic — Personal Outrages on Calvin — Comparison between
Luther and Calvin in their Sufferings — Sublimity of Calvin — His Wife, Idelette
de Bure, Dies.
THE battle lasted nine years, and during all that
time Calvin "guided Geneva as a vessel on fire, which burns the captain's feet,
and yet obeys him."[1] It began in the following
way: — Pierre Ameaux was a maker of playing-cards by trade, and a member of the
Council of Two Hundred. In 1546, his wife was cited before the Consistory "for
several monstrous propositions." She had given herself up to the grossest
immorality on principle. "It is in this sense," she said — and in this she spoke
the common sentiments of the spiritual Libertines — "we ought to take the
communion of saints, spoken of in the Apostles' Creed; for this communion can
never be perfect till all things are common among the faithful — goods, houses,
and body." From the Consistory, Madame Ameaux passed to the Council, which sent
her to prison. Her husband, from whom she had learned these doctrines, saw
himself condemned in his wife's condemnation. Besides, he had a grudge at
Calvin, who had injured his trade by forbidding card-playing. One night, when
merry at supper, he said to his friends that "his religion was the true
religion, whereas Calvin's religion was deceit and tyranny, and that the
magistrates who supported him were traitors."[2] On the words being
reported to the Council, Ameaux was compelled to apologise. Calvin deemed this a
too lenient sentence for an offense that struck at the fundamental settlement of
the State. He demanded that the Council should inflict a more adequate
punishment, or put himself and the other ministers on their trial. The Council,
who were resolved to uphold the moral discipline, cancelled their first
sentence, and pronounced a second and harder one. They adjudged Pierre Ameaux to
walk through the streets bareheaded, carrying a lighted candle, and to make
confession of his fault on his knees. The anger of the Libertines was great. A
few days after, knowing that Calvin was in the pulpit, they rushed into the
church and made a disturbance. The Council, feeling that with the Gospel must
fall the republic, set up a gibbet in the Place St. Gervais. The hint was
understood and respected.
In the following year (1547) events of greater
consequence occurred. One day a paper was found affixed to the pulpit of St.
Peter's, full of abuse of the ministers, and threatening them with death.[3] Suspicion fell on Jacques
Gruet, who had been seen loitering about the cathedral. From a canon in the
Roman Church, Gruet had passed to the ranks of the Libertines, to whose
principles his notorious profligacy did honor. The Council arrested him. A
domiciliary visit brought to light another trait of his character, which until
then was unknown, save to his more intimate friends. His shorn head had not
prevented him becoming an infidel, and an infidel of a very malignant type.
Certain writings, his own composition, breathing an envenomed hatred of Christ,
were discovered in his house. A clue, moreover, was there found to a
correspondence tending to deliver up Geneva to the duke. The billet affixed to
the pulpit was forgotten in the graver discoveries to which it led. Gruet
confessed his guilt, and was condemned and beheaded.[4]
The Council
maintained its ground in presence of the Libertines. So far from receding in the
way of relaxing the moral code, it advanced in the path of practical
reformation. It closed the taverns; it placed under surveillance certain places
in the city where jovial parties were wont to assemble; it forbade the baptising
of infants by the names of Popish saints, a practice which was understood to be
a manifesto against the Protestant rule; and it prohibited the performance of
the Acts of the Apostles, a comedy designed, its patrons alleged, for the
edifying of the people, but which, in the opinion of the Council, profaned the
Word of God, and wasted the public money, "which it were better to expend on the
necessities of the poor Protestant refugees with which Geneva was now beginning
to be filled." These decided measures only inflamed the rage of the
Libertines.[5]
This party now
found a leader in an unexpected quarter. We have already mentioned the name of
Amy Perrin. Six years before, he had gone all the way to Strasburg to prevail on
Calvin to resume his place at Geneva. But he was not to remain always by the
side of the Reformer. Perrin was irascible in temper, frivolous in manners, a
lover of fetes and magnificent dresses, and as ambitious of power as he was
devoid of the talents for exercising it. He aped, in Geneva, the part of Caesar
at Rome; but Calvin saw that his vein fitted him for the comic rather than the
heroic, and styled him at times "Caesar the Comedian." He had been raised, by
the voice of the people, to the chief military command in the republic, he was
thus not without the means of aiding his party, and of damaging his
opponents.
The wife of Perrin was the daughter of Francois Favre, who was
now closing a life that had been not unprofitable to the State, with an old age
of shameless immorality. His flagrancies compelled the notice of the Council.
His daughter, Madame Perrin, gave a ball, by way of showing how little she
regarded either Consistory or Senate. This was a transgression of the
ecclesiastical ordinances. All concerned in the affair, including one of the
syndics, were summoned before the Consistory. Only two, of whom Perrin was one,
acknowledged their fault; the rest set the Ecclesiastical Court at open
defiance, and, in accordance with the constitutional law and practice, were
summoned before the Council, and ordered to prison.
Madame Perrin was
among the incarcerated. Her rage knew no bounds; and what added to it was the
circumstance of her father being imprisoned about the same time for "debauchery
and adultery." The humiliation of the family of Favre was now complete, and
their indignation was fierce in proportion. They loudly demanded the abolition
of the ecclesiastical laws, and denounced Calvin as bringing back, under another
name, the tyranny of the Roman Church.[6] The captain-general,
Perrin, took the part of his wife and his father-in-law, and used all his
influence both in the Council and in the city against Calvin.
The party
increased in numbers and in audacity. They demanded that the Council should
strip the Consistory of the power to excommunicate, and take it into its own
hands. They hoped, no doubt, that in the hands of the Council excommunication
would remain a dead letter, and thus the mainspring of the Calvinistic
discipline would be broken.
Calvin saw how much was at stake, and
resolved to continue the battle till he should fall at his post or be driven
from it. With him it was no trial of strength between himself and the Favre
family, which of the two had the greater influence in Geneva, and which should
bow the head before the other. The question to be decided was whether the
Reformation, in its re-invigorated spiritual phase, should be propagated over
Europe or be trampled underfoot by Genevan Libertinism. If it was to spread to
other countries, its purity and rigour must be maintained at all hazards in
Geneva, its center. It was from this calm elevation that Calvin surveyed the
struggle. Writing to Farel, he says: "I told them that so long as they were in
Geneva, they should strive in vain to cast off obedience to the laws; for were
there as many diadems in the house of the Favres as frenzied heads, that that
would be no barrier-to the Lord being superior."[7]
As Calvin had
foretold, so it happened: the law held its course. The Favres had to digest
their humiliation as best they could; the law knew no distinction between them
and the lowest citizen.
The battle, however, was not ended; nay, it grew
still fiercer. Geneva became yet more divided and demoralised. On the 12th
December, 1547, we find the pastors going to the H'tel de Ville "to show that a
great deal of insolence, debauchery, dissoluteness, and hatred was prevalent, to
the ruin of the State." On the 16th December the Council of Two Hundred met to
discuss the measures to be taken. The contention was so hot, and the threats
uttered against the pastors, and especially against Calvin, were so violent,
that their friends ran to beg the ministers not to appear that day before the
Council. Calvin proceeded to the H'tel de Ville alone. An excited crowd was
gathered at the door of the Council-hall. "I cast myself," says Calvin, "into
the thickest of the crowd. I was pulled to and fro by those who wished to save
me from harm." But he adds, "The people shrank from harming me as they would
from the murder of a father."[8] Passing through the crowd,
Calvin entered the Council-chamber.
There fresh combats awaited him. On
his entrance the cries grew louder, and swords were unsheathed. He advanced
undismayed, stood in the midst of them, and looked round on the scowling faces
and naked swords. All were silent. "I know," said Calvin, addressing the members
of the Council, "that I am the primary cause of these divisions and
disturbances." The silence grew yet more profound, and the Reformer proceeded:
"If it is my life you desire, I am ready to die. If it is my banishment you
wish, I shall exile myself. If you desire once more to save Geneva without the
Gospel, you can try." This challenge brought the Council to their senses. It
recalled the memory of the disorders that had made it necessary to implore the
interposition of the very man they were now seeking to drive away, to save the
republic when on the brink of ruin. The recollection cooled the most irritated
spirits present. A republic, of course, could bestow the title of king upon no
one; but all felt that the man before them, though he had no crown, was in
reality a king. He wore his pastor's cloak right royally, and looked more august
than monarch in his robes of state. His magnanimity and wisdom procured him a
submission that could not have been more instant or more profound though he had
carried scepter and sword. Peace was established between the two parties, and
Calvin, in prospect of the Communion at the approaching Christmas, held out his
hand to Perrin.[9] The members of Council,
holding up their right hands, signified their desire that past feuds should be
buried, and in token of reconciliation a banquet took place at the town-hall.[10]
But the Reformer
cherished no delusive hopes: he knew that between parties so diametrically
divided in principle there could be no lasting truce. The storm had lulled, but
all through the year 1548 it continued to mutter. In the midst of these
tempests, his pen was not for a moment idle. His genius, with concentrated
power, continued to produce and send forth those defences and expositions of the
Protestant system which were so mightily useful in extending the Reformation and
building it up in other lands, and which, year by year, lifted higher into the
world's view, and invested with a greater glory, that city from which they
emanated, although a powerful faction was seeking to expel from it the man who
was its strength and glory. Not a week which might not be Calvin's last in
Geneva. And yet when men spoke of that valorous little State, growing day by day
in renown, it was Calvin of whom they thought; and when the elite of other
countries, the most enlightened and scholarly men in Europe, some of them of the
highest rank, flocked to its gates, it was to see Calvin, to enjoy Calvin's
society, and to share Calvin's instructions.
Again the storm darkened.
The house of Favre, which had been compelled to "lower the head" in 1547, once
more "lifted up the horn" in 1549. In the end of 1548, Perrin, Favre's
son-in-law, was restored to his place in the Council, and to his office of
"Captain-General," of both of which he had been deprived. Restored to office and
honors, he so ingratiated himself with the citizens that early in 1549 he was
elected to the Syndicate, and, contrary to custom, was made First Syndic. This
gave fresh courage to his party. It was now that the tide of popular contumely
and derision around the Reformer rose to the full. The hero of the Libertine
populace — "the pillars of the Tavern," as Farel called them when addressing the
Council during a visit which he made about this time to Geneva — was, of course,
Captain Perrin, the First Syndic. To ingratiate themselves with Perrin was an
easy matter indeed; they had only to do what already they were but too well
disposed to do — indulge their spite against the Reformer. They hit upon a
method of annoyance which, doubtless, they thought very clever, but which was
only very coarse. They called their dogs by the name of Calvin. At times, to
make the insult more stinging, they pronounced the word as Cain.[11] Those who could not
indulge themselves in this ingenious and pleasant pastime, not being the owners
of a mastiff, could nevertheless as they passed the Reformer hiss or put out the
tongue. Such were the affronts to which Calvin at this time was daily subjected,
and that too from men who owed to him the very liberty which they abused: men
whose city he was making illustrious all over Europe, and the streets of which,
the moment he should cease to tread them, would become the scene of internecine
carnage. Verily, it was no easy matter for Calvin to endure all this, and
preserve his consciousness of greatness. To pass from the sublime labors of his
study to such revilings as awaited him out-of-doors was like passing into
another sphere of being. This was a depth of persecution into which Luther had
never been called to descend.
Opposition Luther had encountered, peril he
had known, death he had confronted, but respect had ever waited upon his person,
and his sufferings had ever in them an element of greatness that alleviated
their pain. But Calvin, while equally with Luther an object of hatred to the
great, was also the scoff of the base. But he bore all the fierce threats of men
who occupied thrones or stood at the head of armies, and the ribald jest and
hiss of the poor Libertine by his side — with equal equanimity. He remembered
that a Greater had been "the song of the drunkard," and that he was but treading
a path which Blessed feet had trodden before him. With a sublime grandeur of
soul, which laudation could not enhance, and which the basest contumely could
not degrade, he purged off these foul accretions, maintained the lofty mood of
his mind, and went on in the performance of his mighty task.
It was not
possible, one would think, that the sky could grow darker above Calvin; and yet
darker it did become. He whom we see already so sorely stricken is to be yet
more deeply wounded. All these years Idelette de Bure had been by his side.
Tender of heart, magnanimous of soul, loving, confiding, constant, she soothed
her husband in his trials, watched by his sick-bed, exercised hospitality to his
friends and numerous visitors, or in her closet prayed, while Calvin was being
assailed by the ribald insults and outrages of the street. The love and entire
devotion of his wife was among his chief joys. But, alas! her frail and delicate
health gave way under the pressure of a protracted illness, and .early in 1549,
Idelette de Bure died. "Oh, glorious resurrection!" were her last words. "God of
Abraham and of all our fathers, not one of the faithful who have hoped in thee,
for so many ages, has been disappointed; I also will hope."[12] These short sentences were
rather ejaculated than distinctly spoken. "Truly mine is no common source of
grief," said her husband writing to Viret; "I have been bereaved of the best
companion of my life, of one who, had it been so ordered, would have been not
only the willing sharer of my indigence, but even of my death. During her life
she was the faithful helper of my ministry." But we drop the curtain, as Calvin
himself did, on his great sorrow.
CHAPTER
18 Back to
Top
CALVIN'S LABORS FOR
UNION.
Misfortunes of Protestantism in Germany—Death of Paul
III.—Election of Julius III.—The Conclave—Jubilee—The Golden Hammer—Francis I.
Dies—Henry II.—He Looks Two Ways at Once—Calvin Turns with Hope to
England—Edward VI. on the Throne—What Calvin Judged Necessary for England's
Reformation—Scotland—Spain—Philip II.—All Things being Shaken—Calvin's Labors
for the Union of the Church— The Eucharist the Point of Division—Zwingli's and
Calvin's Views— They are Substantially One—The Consensus Tigurinis—Its Teaching
Accepted by Switzerland, France, and England—Germany Stands Aloof—Theodore Beza
Arrives at Geneva—His Youth and Studies— Becomes Calvin's Associate in
Labor—Distinguished Group around Calvin—Outer and Wider Group—The Man at the
Center.
DURING these years, while an abyss was opening at
Geneva, the grave, as it seemed, of Calvin and his work, the battle was going
against the Reformation all over Europe. Luther was sleeping in the
Schloss-kirk, and the arms of the emperor were overrunning Protestant Germany.
The theological school at Wittenberg was broken up; the Schmalkald League was
dissolved, and its two chiefs, the captives of Charles, were being carried about
in chains, in the wake of the emperor. The Interim had replaced the Confession
of Augsburg, the Protestant ministers had been driven away, and their flocks
scattered; the free cities had capitulated, and in many of them the mass was
being substituted for the sermon. The noble edifice which the hands of Luther
had reared appeared to be falling into ruins. He who was to become Philip II.,
but who had not yet assumed the title, or opened his career of blood, was making
a progress through the towns of Flanders, in company of his father; and the
emperor, in the hope of perpetuating his mighty despotism, was exacting from the
cities of the Low Countries an oath of allegiance to Philip.[1]
In Italy, Paul
III., the worthy successor of Borgia, had just died (1549), and his feet,
extended through an iron grating, had been duly kissed by the Roman populace.
All Rome was yet ringing with a terrible book which had just been published,
containing the life of the defunct Pope, when the cardinals assembled in that
city to elect his successor, the ceremony usual on such occasions being
carefully observed. Duly morning by morning each cardinal came from his darkened
chamber, with its solitary taper, and after mass and prayer, wrote the name of
the person for whom he gave his vote upon a bit of paper, and folding it up,
dropped it into the silver chalice upon the crimson-covered table before the
altar of the chapel. This was repeated day by day, till a majority of two-thirds
of the votes were recorded in favor of one candidate. Our own Cardinal Pole was
just on the point of being elected, but the suspicion of Lutheranism which
attached to him, caused him the misfortune or the happiness of missing the
tiara. On the 7th of February, 1550, [2] John Maria de Monte, who
had presided in the Council at Trent, and afterwards at Bologna, when the
cardinals crossed the mountains, was elected, and ascended the Papal chair under
the title of Julius III. It was the year of Jubilee, for although, when first
instituted by Boniface VIII., A.D. 1300, that great festival was ordained to be
held only on the first year of each century, the period had since been
shortened, and the Jubilee came round once every half-century. Paul III. had
earnestly desired to see that great day of grace, but the grave closed over him
before it came. That festival was reserved to signalize the opening of his
successor's Pontificate. Rome was full of pilgrims from all countries, who had
come to share in the inestimable benefits which the year of Jubilee brings with
it to the faithful. Two days after his election, Julius III., with the golden
hammer in his hand, proceeded to the golden gate, and broke it open, that the
imprisoned flood of celestial virtues and blessings might freely flow forth and
regale the expectant and rejoicing pilgrims.
The golden hammer, with
which the new Pope had broken open the gate— ever a much-coveted treasure—was
this year bestowed on the Bishop of Augsburg. On being jocularly interrogated by
some of his friends what use he meant to make of the gift, the bishop replied
"that he intended to knock the Lutherans on the head with that hammer."[3] The other pilgrims carried
back to their distant homes, as the record of the cost and toil of their
journey, besides the forgiveness of their sins, "bits of the lime and rubbish"
of the demolished gate, to be kept as "precious jewels."[4]
Francis I. of
France had gone to the grave. Literature, war, gallantry, had engaged him by
turns. Today he snubbed the monks, tomorrow he burned the Lutherans. The last
years of his reign were disgraced by the horrible massacre of the Vaudois of
Provence, and embittered by the painful disease, the result of his vices, which
carried him to the grave in his fifty-fifth year. His son, Henry II., brought to
the throne, which he now filled, all the evil qualities of his father, and only
some of the good ones. He was the husband of Catherine de Medici, Pope Clement
VII.'s niece, but the wife was the real sovereign. The Protestant princes of
Germany, with Maurice of Saxony at their head, besought his aid in the war they
were then waging with the emperor, Charles V. He entered into alliance with
them, but before setting out for the campaign he lighted up his capital with the
lurid blaze of Lutheran martyr-piles. This was his way of notifying to the world
that if he was the enemy of the emperor, he was nevertheless the friend of the
Pope; and that if he was the confederate of the German Protestants in arms, he
was not a partaker with them in heresy.[5] In the direction of
France, then, there was no clearing of the sky. The air was thick with tempest,
which in coming years was to strew the soil of that land with more terrible
wrecks than any that had as yet disfigured it.
The only quarter of the
heaven to which the eye of Calvin could turn with any pleasure was England.
There, during the years we speak of, there was a gleam of sunshine. Henry VIII.
now slept in "dull cold marble." His "sweet and gracious" son, Edward VI.,
succeeded him. The clouds that had overhung the realm during all the reign of
the father, and which let fall, at times, their tempests, and ever and anon
threatened to burst in more furious storms, were dispersed by the benign rule of
the son. With Edward VI. on the throne, the Duke of Somerset, Lord Protector of
the Kingdom, in the Cabinet, and Archbishop Cranmer in the Church, the
Reformation of England was advancing at a rate that promised to give it
precedence of both France and Germany, and make its Church one of the bright
stars in the heavens of Protestantism. The counsel of Calvin was sought by the
Protector and the Primate, and the frankness, as well as fidelity, with which it
was given, shows the interest the Reformer took in the Church of England, and
the hopes he rested on its Reformation. In his letter to Somerset, June, 1548,
he expounds his views on the transformation needed to be wrought on England.
First, it must adopt the principle, the only fruitful one, of justification by
faith; secondly, this principle, in order to become fruitful, must thoroughly
permeate the people, which could only be by living and powerful preaching;
thirdly, the Word of God must be the rule as regards what is to be retained and
what abolished, otherwise the Reformation is not the work of God, but the work
of man, and would come to nothing; and fourthly, means must be taken for
reducing morals into harmony with faith. After the fall of the Protector, Calvin
corresponded with the young monarch, who, notwithstanding the loss of his able
and faithful adviser, continued to prosecute vigorously the Reformation of his
kingdom. The seed sown by Wicliffe two centuries before was springing rapidly
up, and promised an abundant harvest. But the clouds were to return after the
rain.
The young prince went to his grave. With Mary came a swift and
terrible reaction. The Reformers of the previous reign became the martyrs of the
succeeding one, and a night thick with gloom and lurid with fire closed in once
more around the realm of England.
Scotland was awakening. The stakes of
Hamilton and Wishart had already lighted up its skies. But its Reformation was
too little advanced, and the country too remote, to fix the eye of the great
Reformer. John Knox had not yet crossed the sea, or entered the gates of Geneva,
to sit at Calvin's feet, and on his return continue in his native land the work
which Calvin had begun in Geneva. But Scotland was not to be veiled for ever in
the northern mist, and the yet denser shadow of Papal superstition. The Gospel,
that mighty mother of civilization, was to enter it, and lead thither her fair
daughters, letters, science, arts, and liberty. The culture which Rome failed to
give it, Scotland was to receive from Geneva.
We turn for a moment to
Spain. Worn with toil and care, and sick of grandeur, Charles was about to lay
down the Empire. Fortune, like a fickle maiden, had deserted him, so he
complained, for younger soldiers. He would show that he could bear the slight,
by turning his back on a world which was turning its back on him. He made
partition of his goods. The magnificent Empire of Spain was to be given to his
son Phililp. This man was fated to develop into a Nero. this little finger was
to be bigger than his father's loins. The astute ambition of Charles, the
sanguinary violence of Henry, the ferocious bigotry of Francis, were all to be
forgotten in the monstrous combination of cruelty, bigotry, and blood which was
about to reveal itself to the world in Philip II. Alas for the Protestantism of
Spain! It was to have ten brief years of flourishing, and when about to "shake
with fruit," and fill the realm of Iberia, it was to be mowed down by the scythe
of the Inquisition, and garnered in the burning-grounds of Valladolid, of
Madrid, of Seville, and of other cities.
As the great chief of
Protestantism looked from his narrow foot-hold, he beheld around him a world
groaning and travailing in pain to be delivered from the bondage of the old, and
admitted into the liberty of the new. All Christendom was in agony. The kingdoms
were moved; monarchs were falling; there was distress of nations; the sea and
the waves roaring. But Calvin knew that these were but the shaking of those
things which are destined to be removed, in order that those things which cannot
be removed may be introduced. If the old was passing away, it was the more
necessary to lay the foundations of that kingdom which was to long outlast the
Empire of Charles and of Francis, and to stretch its scepter to tribes and
nations which theirs had never reached. It was now that he engaged in attempts
to promote the union of the Church.
In the great and blessed work of
union Calvin began at home. His first aim was to unite the Churches of Geneva
and Zurich. In prosecuting this endeavor, however, he studied to frame such a
basis of agreement as might afterwards serve as a platform for a greater union.
His aims reached forth to the Lutherans of Germany, whom he wished to comprehend
in visible fellowship with the Churches of France and England, and so draw
together into one body all the Churches of Protestantism. His hopes of
ultimately reaching this grand result were strengthened when he reflected that
the Churches were divided mainly by one point—a misunderstanding touching the
Lord's Supper. There is a real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, said they
all; but they differed in their answer to the question, In what manner is he
present? He is present bodily, said Luther, who attributed ubiquity or
indefinite extension to our Lord's humanity. So far from a bodily presence, said
Zwingli, the Eucharist is only a memorial and sign of Christ. No, said Calvin,
it is more; it is a seal as well as a sign.
So stood the matter; and
such, in brief, were the distinctive opinions of the three clusters of
Protestant Churches, when Calvin, rousing himself from his great sorrow for
Idelette, and setting out with Farel in the fine spring days of 1549, arrived in
Zurich to confer with the ministers there—the first step toward the rallying of
the whole protestant Church around its one standard, the Bible; and its
centralization in its one Head, even Christ. A far longer way would the Reformer
have been willing to go, if it could have promoted the cause on which his heart
was so deeply set. "I am ready to cross ten seas,"hie wrote to Cranmer, "for the
union of the Church."
Between the views of Calvin and those of Zwingli on
the Eucharist there was really, after all, no essential difference. Zwingli
indeed, by way of removing himself to the farthest distance from Rome, and of
getting rid of all her unintelligible mysticism on that head, had called the
Eucharist an "empty sign "—that is, a sign not filled by the material body of
Christ.
But Zwingli's teaching regarding the Lord's Supper logically
covers all that Calvin held. It is the "commemoration" of Christ's death, said
Zwingli, but the character and significance of that "commemoration" are
determined by the character and significance of the event commemorated. Christ's
death was a death endured for mankind, and is the ground on which God bestows
the benefits of the New Covenant. When, therefore, we commemorate that death, we
do an act, not of simple remembrance, or mere commemoration, but of
appropriation. We express by this commemoration our acceptance of the benefits
of the New Covenant, and we receive the Eucharist as God's attesting sign or
seal of his bestowal of these benefits upon us: and in so doing we have real
communion with Christ, and a real participation in all the blessings of his
death. "Christ," said Calvin, "unites us with himself in one life."
These
were substantially the explanations put before the Pastors of Zurich by Calvin.
The conference, which was held in the presence of the Civic Council, continued
several days. A formulary was drawn up, known as the Consensus Tigurinis, or
Zurich Confession,[6] on which the Churches of
Geneva and Zurich united. This Confession was afterwards subscribed by all the
Churches of Helvetia and of the Grisons. It was communicated to the Reformed in
France, and to Bucer in England, and in both countries was hailed with joy. The
faithful in Switzerland, France, and England had now been brought to be of one
mind on the doctrine of the Eucharist; their union had been virtually
established, and Calvin was comforted after his great sorrow.[7]
But the greater
union Calvin was not to see. The Lutherans of Germany still held aloof, and the
Protestant world still continued to present the appearance as of two armies.
Melancthon, as the result of his interview with the Reformer at Worms (1540),
had come into somewhat close agreement with Calvin on the doctrine of the Lord's
Supper. The Consensus of Zurich, he acknowledged, shed a yet clearer light on
the question, and had brought him still nearer to the Genevan Reformer.[8]
But the more
zealous spirits of the party, such as Flaccius, Osiander, and especially
Westphal, clung to the consubstantiation of Luther with even greater tenacity
than when its great expounder was alive, and both Melancthon and Calvin saw with
sorrow a union, which would have closed a source of weakness in the Protestant
ranks, and made patent to the whole world the real Catholicism of the
Reformation, postponed to a day that has not even yet fully come.
We have
seen one companion fall by the side of the Reformer, we are now to see another
raised up to fill the vacant place. Within a month after the death of Idelette
de Bure, eight French gentlemen, whom persecution had driven from their native
land, arrived at the gates of Geneva. One of them, in particular, was
distinguished by his noble mien and polished manners. Calvin recognised in him
an acquaintance of his youthful years. This was Theodore Beza, of Vezelay, in
Burgundy. Beza had enjoyed the instructions of Melchior Wolmar, first at
Orleans, and next at Bourges, and he had acquired from him, not only a knowledge
of Greek, but some taste for the Reformed doctrine, which, however, was overlaid
for the time by a gay and worldly spirit. Not unlike to Calvin's had been his
course of study. His first devotion was law; but his genius inclined him more to
the belles lettres. He was a great admirer of the Latin poets, he read them
much, and composed verses in imitation of them. After the manner of the times he
followed his models somewhat too freely, and his Popish chroniclers have taken
occasion, from the lascivious phrases of his verse, to assail his life, which,
however, they have never been able to prove to have been other than pure. His
uncle procured him a living in the Church, and to preserve himself from the
vices into which others had fallen, he contracted a private marriage, in the
presence of Laurence de Normandie and Jean Crespin. An illness, which brought
him to the brink of the grave, awoke his conscience, and now it was that the
religious impressions which his early preceptor had made upon him
revived.
Brought back from the grave, Beza renounced Popery, openly
avowed his marriage, quitted France, and setting out for Geneva, presented
himself, as we have seen, before Calvin. He discharged for a short time the
office of Greek professor and theological lecturer at Lausanne. Returning to
Geneva, he became from 1552 the right hand of Calvin, for which his talents, his
eloquence, his energy, and his courage admirably fitted him; and when the great
chief of the Reformation was laid in the grave, no worthier than Beza could be
found to succeed him.
Beza did not stand alone by the side of Calvin. A
brilliant group was now gathering round the Reformer, composed of men some of
whom were of illustrious birth, others of distinguished scholarship, or of great
talent, or of venerable piety. Among them may be mentioned Galeaceo Caracciolo,
Marquis of Vico, who had forsaken house and lands, wife and children, for the
Gospel's sake; and Peter Martyr Vermili, whom Calvin called the "Miracle of
Italy."[9] But the exiles are to be
counted, not in hundreds only, but in thousands, of whom there scarce was one
but contributed to brighten, by his rank, or genius, or learning, that galaxy of
glory which was gathering round Geneva. Each brought his stone to that
intellectual and spiritual edifice which was rising on the shores of the
Leman.
Others there were, nearer or farther off, who acknowledged in
Calvin their center, and who, though parted from him and from one another by
mountains and oceans, formed one society, of which this sublime spirit was the
center. There was Melancthon, and the group of which he was the chief, and who,
although they bore the name of Lutheran, felt that they were in spirit one with
those who were styled Reformed, and especially with the Catholic-hearted man who
stood at their head. There was Bullinger in Zurich, and the group around him,
which embraced, among many others, Pellicanus, and the fervent, loving Musculus.
There was the peace-loving Bucer in England, and John 'a Lasco, the learned and
accomplished Pole.[10] And among the men of those
days, who looked up to Calvin and sought his counsel, we must likewise rank the
young monarch and the venerable Primate of England. There were the Turretinis of
Italy, and the Colignys of France, representative men. There were Margaret,
Queen of Navarre, her great daughter Jeanne d'Albret, and Renee, Duchess of
Ferrara.[11] There were thousands and
thousands, humble in station but elevated in character, spread over all
countries and speaking many tongues, but forgetting diversity of country, of
rank, and of speech, in the cause that made them all of one heart and one mind.
We behold in this great multitude a refined, an intellectual, a holy fellowship,
than which there never perhaps existed sublimer on earth. Verily, the man who
formed the center of this brilliant assemblage, who kept his place in the
presence of so many men so dignified in rank and so powerful in intellect; whom
all confessed to be first, and whom all loved and reverenced as a father, must
have been, whatever his enemies may affirm to the contrary, a man of many sides.
He must have possessed varied as well as great qualities; he must have been
large of heart, and catholic in sentiment and sympathy; he must have been rich
in deep, tender, and loving sensibilities, though these may often have been
repressed by labor or veiled by sorrow, and could be seen only by those who
stood near to him; while those who were farther off could but mark the splendor
of those gifts that shone in him as the Reformer, and of which the world was
continually receiving new proofs, in the expositions and defences of Protestant
truth, which he was almost daily sending forth. But whether near or afar off,
all who stood around the Reformer, from the inner-most to the most distant
circle, were ever ready to confess that he was as inflexible in principle as he
was colossal in intellect, that he was as unselfish in aim as he was grand in
conception, and as untiring in patience as he was unconquerable in energy and
courage.
CHAPTER
19 Back to
Top
SERVETUS COMES TO GENEVA AND IS
ARRESTED.
Toleration—Servetus's Birth—Genius—Studies—Commission to
Reform all Religions—Malignant Attacks on Christianity—Publishes his Restitution
of Christianity—Sends the Book to Calvin—Its Doctrine Pantheism—Servetus
Condemned to Death at Vienne—Escapes—Comes to Geneva—Is Imprisoned—His
Indictment drawn by Calvin— Haughtiness of his Defence—Servetus and Calvin face
to face— Indecencies and Blasphemies against Christianity—The Question at
Geneva, Shall it be a Pantheistic Republic ruled by Servetus, or a Theocracy
ruled by Calvin?
WE now come within the shadow of a great tragedy. But
the horror which the act we are about to narrate awakens is, in truth, a homage
to Protestantism. If a deed which not only called forth no condemnation from the
age in which it was done, a few personal enemies of Calvin excepted, but which,
on the contrary, was pronounced by the best and most enlightened men then living
to be just and necessary, awakens our abhorrence—that abhorrence is, in fact,
the measure of our advance in toleration since the sixteenth century. But it is
Protestantism that we have to thank for that advance.
It is the
melancholy and tragic story of Servetus which we are now to record. Michael
Servetus [1] was a Spaniard, born in
the same year as Calvin, 1509. Nature had endowed him with a lively but
fantastic genius, an active but illogical mind, an inordinate ambition, and a
defective judgment.[2] He studied with
characteristic versatility law, divinity, physic, and some have said astrology.
After a short but distinguished career as a lecturer on the physical sciences in
Paris,[3] he ultimately established
himself at Vienne, in Dauphine, as a medical practitioner.[4] In this profession he
discovered superior skill, and in his first work, On the Errors of the Trinity
(1531), he anticipated the great discovery of our own Harvey of the circulation
of the blood.[5] His mind, speculative,
daring, lawless, of the scholastic rather than the Reformation type, followed
its bent, which was ethical, not physical.
He spent fully twenty years of
his life in wandering up and down in Christendom, visiting Germany, Italy,
Switzerland, venting his fancies and reveries, unsettling the minds of men, and
offending every one he came in contact with by his pride, self-sufficiency, and
dissimulation.[6] He believed that he
possessed the power, and had received a commission, to remodel all knowledge,
and establish the world on a new basis. The more fundamental doctrines of
Christianity became the object of his settled dislike, and his most virulent
attack. But it was against the doctrine of the Trinity mainly that his shafts
were levelled. Romanism he had renounced in his youth, but neither did the
Reformation satisfy his grand ideal.
Christianity, he held, had been lost
at an early age, if indeed it ever had been fully promulgated to the world.
Servetus undertook to restore and re-institute it.[7] About the year 1546 he
wrote to Calvin from Vienne,?to the effect that the Reformer had stopped too
soon, that he had preached as yet only a half-Reformation; and modestly offered
to initiate him into his new system, and assign him the post of leader in that
great movement by which mankind were to be led into a grander domain of truth.
He accompanied his letter with a volume in MS., in which Calvin should see, he
said, "stupendous and unheard-of things."[8] The unhappy man had
virtually arrived at pantheism, the final goal of all who in these high matters
forsake the path of Divine revelation.
Calvin saw in the "stupendous
things" of Servetus only stupendous follies. Writing to Farel, 13th February,
1546, the Reformer said: "Servetus lately wrote to me, and coupled with his
letter a long volume of his delirious fancies, with the thrasonic boast that I
should see something astonishing and unheard-of. He takes it upon him to come
hither, if it is agreeable to me. But I am unwilling to pledge my word for his
safety, for if he shall come, I will never permit him to depart alive, provided
my authority be of any avail."[9]
The eye of Calvin
saw that the creed of Servetus was essential pantheism. He knew too that such a
creed struck at the whole settlement of Church and State in Geneva, and would
sweep away the basis on which had been placed the republic. Further, the
Reformer foresaw that if Servetus should come to Geneva, and attempt propagating
his doctrine, he would be placed under the painful necessity of choosing between
a pantheistic and a theocratic republic, between Servetus and the Reformation.
Sharing in the universal opinion of his age, that heresy is to be punished with
the sword of the magistrate, and deeming this heresy to be, as indeed it was,
subversive not only of the religious belief, but also the civil order of Geneva,
Calvin did not hesitate to avow his preference for the Protestant over the
pantheistic republic, and declared that should Servetus come to Geneva, he would
use his influence that he should "not depart alive."
These words from any
pen would fill us with horror, but conting, as they do, from the pen of Calvin,
they inspire us with a double horror. And yet the truth is that we know of no
Reformer of that age, not even Melancthon himself, who would not, in Calvin's
position, most probably have written them:[10] Again we must repeat, they
caused no horror to the age in which they were written; nay, they were the
verdict of that age on the case of Servetus; and if it is impossible that ours
could utter such a verdict, or the Protestant world of our day repeat the crime
of the Protestant world of the sixteenth century, we see in this one of the
proudest of the triumphs of that Protestantism which was then struggling into
existence against the mighty opposing forces of Romanism on the one hand and of
pantheism on the other.
In 1552, Servetus published clandestinely at
Vienne the MS. volume which he had sent to Calvin in 1546. It bore the title of
Restitutio Christianismi, or "Christianity Restored." This led to his
apprehension by the authorities of Vienne, where he was tried by the
Inquisition. He managed to give his judges the slip, however, and was condemned
in absence to be "burned alive, at a slow fire, till his body be reduced to a
cinder." The award of the court was carried out by the substitution of the
effigy of Servetus for Servetus himself.[11] Escaping from Vienne he
came, of all places, to Geneva! "If ever poor fanatic thrust himself into the
flames," says Coleridge, "it was Servetus."
"I know not what to say of
him," exclaimed Calvin in astonishment, "except that he must have been seized
with a fatal madness to precipitate himself upon destruction." He arrived in the
middle of July, and took up his abode at the "Auberge de la Rose," near the
lake.
Calvin had not induced Servetus to come to Geneva; he had in fact,
by refusing him a safe-conduct, warned him off the territory of the republic;
nevertheless, now that he was come, he did what the constitutional laws of
Geneva required of him;—he reported his presence in the city to the Council, and
demanded his apprehension.[12] Servetus was committed to
prison on the 13th of August. The law required the accuser to go to prison with
the accused till the charge should be so far substantiated as to warrant its
being taken up by the public prosecutor. Nicholas de la Fontaine, a young
student, and secretary to the Reformer, entered himself as accuser.[13] The articles of
accusation, extracted from the writings of Servetus, were drawn up by Calvin,
and presented next day to the tribunal.
Fontaine was unequal to the task
of confronting so subtle and eloquent an opponent as Servetus. The Council saw
this, and at its second meeting all the ministers were requested to appear.
Calvin now at length stood face to face with his adversary. The Reformer's
severe logic soon unmasked the real opinions of the man, and forced him to admit
the frightful conclusions to which they led; but if he put forth all his power
in arguing with Servetus, it was not to procure a conviction, but a recantation,
and save the unhappy man from the flames. "No great danger hung over him," he
declared, "if he could possibly have been brought to his senses."[14] "Would," he sorrowfully
exclaimed at a later period—"Would that we could have obtained a recantation
from Servetus, as we did from Gentilis!"[15]
It must be
acknowledged that Servetus on his trial, both at Vienne and Geneva, showed
neither courage nor truthfulness. At the former place he behaved badly indeed.
He disowned his books, denied his handwriting, uttered repeatedly falsehoods on
oath, and professed himself a son of his "holy mother the Church." Swollen with
insolence and venting defiance while at liberty, he proved a very craven before
the Inquisition. How different from the noble sincerity and courage of the
martyrs of Protestantism, who at that very time were expiring amid the flames at
Lyons! His behavior before the Council at Geneva was characterised by alternate
insolence and cowardice. When confronted only with Nicholas de la Fontaine, he
professed that he had not intended to blaspheme, and that he was ready to
recant.[16] When Calvin was
introduced, he broke into a tempest of rage, denounced the Reformer as his
personal enemy, again and again called him a liar, and styled him a corrupter of
the Word of God, a foe to Christ, a sorcerer, "Simon Magus." This coming after
twenty years' vituperation and abuse, to which Calvin's reply had been a
dignified silence, was more than the Reformer could bear, and he became heated
in his turn and, as he himself said to Farel, "answered him as he
deserved."
The scene revealed the man to his judges. The blasphemies
which he avowed, and not less the haughtiness with which he defended himself,
shocked and revolted them. The Trinity he styled "a three-headed Cerberus,"[17] a hell-hound." Some of the
suppositions he made to discredit the Incarnation were simply indecent, and we
pass them by. "If the angels," he said, "were to take the body of asses, you
must allow they would be asses, and would die in their asses' skins. So too you
must allow that, on your supposition being right, God himself might become an
ass, and the Holy Spirit a mule. Can we be surprised if the Turks think us more
ridiculous than mules and asses?" Calvin truly divined the deeper error beneath
these—the denial of a personal God—that is, of God. "His frenzy was such," says
the Reformer, writing to Farel,[18] "that he did not hesitate
to say that the Divinity dwells even in devils. The Godhead is essentially
communicated to them as it is to wood and to stones." "What, unhappy man,"
replied Calvin, "if any one treading upon this floor should say to you that he
was treading your God under his feet, would you not be scandalised at such an
assertion?" He answered, "I, on the contrary, do not doubt but that this
footstool, or anything else which you may point out, is the substance of God."
When it was again objected to him, "Then will the devil actually be God," he
answered with a peal of laughter, "And can you doubt it?"
We have narrated in former chapters the war now
waging between Calvin and the Council of Geneva. The First Syndic, Perrin, was
the Reformer's mortal enemy. Other members of the Council, less influential,
were equally the determined opponents of the Reformer, and were laboring for his
overthrow. It was, in a word, the crisis of Calvin's power in Geneva—that is, of
all the Reformed laws and institutions of the republic. M. Rilliet of Geneva, in
his Life and Trial of Servetus,[19] has conjectured that what
tempted Servetus to enter Geneva at that time was his knowledge of the state of
Parties there, and the hope of replacing Calvin, then in daily danger of
banishment from the city. Be this as it may, the fact is undoubted that the
Libertines perceived the advantage they might derive by playing Servetus off
against the Reformer; and Servetus, on the other hand, was aware of the
advantage that might accrue to him from strengthening the Libertines against
Calvin. As the battle went with Calvin, as the Libertines seemed now to prevail
against him, and now to fall before him, Servetus was contemptuous and defiant,
or timid and craven. But the tacit union of the two helped to bring on the ruin
of both.
The patronage of the pantheist by the Libertines wrought ill for
Servetus in the end, by opening the eyes of the Council to the real iussues at
stake in the trial. The acquittal of Servetus, they saw, meant the expulsion of
Calvin, and the triumph of the Libertines. This put the personal interference of
the Reformer in the matter out of court, even if his influence had not at that
moment been at zero. The magistrates felt that it was a question of life and
death for the republic, and that they must decide it irrespective altogether of
the wishes of Calvin, and on the high grounds of the interests of the State.[20]
CHAPTER
20 Back to
Top
CALVIN'S VICTORY OVER THE
LIBERTINES.
Another Arena—Excommunication—Council Grasps the
Ecclesiastical Power—Berthelier Excommunicated—Spiritual Sentence Annulled by
the Senate—The Libertines make Common Cause with Servetus—New Indictment against
Servetus—Calvin Fighting Two Battles at the Same Time—Communion
Sunday—Consistory's Remonstrance with the Council—The Council Changes Nothing in
its Decree—Sunday, 3rd September, 1553—A Momentous Issue to be Determined—The
Comnmnion-table in St. Peter's—The Libertines Approach—Calvin Debars them—The
Reformation Saved—Moral Grandeur of the Act— The Two Beacons—Worms a Triumph
over Tyrannical Power—St. Peter's a Triumph over Godless
Democracy.
LEAVING Servetus in prison, let us repair to another
arena of combat. It is another, and yet the same, for the affair of Servetus has
entered the sphere of Genevan politics, and awakened into fresh intensity the
slumbering conflict between the two parties that divide the republic. Perrin was
laboring to undermine, step by step, the power of Calvin. The pastors had been
expelled front the Council-General—the assembly of the whole people. There
followed a more direct attack upon the ecelesiatstical authority. It was
proposed to transfer the power of excommunication from the Consistory to the
Senate. This was to strike a fatal blow at the principle on which Calvin had
based the Reformation of the State. Should this principle be overturned, his
work in Geneva would be at an end; and he might leave it the next hour, so far
as any good purpose was to be served by remaining in it. The Consistory stripped
of all independent jurisdictive power, moral order would fall, and those halcyon
days would return when men could go to the tavern at all hours of the day and
night, drink as deep as they had a mind, and disport themselves in dances like
those in which the pagans of old honored the god Bacchus.
About a year
and a half before this, Philip Bertheliot had been debarred the Communion-table
by the Consistory. Philip was the son of that Berthelier who, in 1521, had spilt
his blood for the liberty of the Fatherland. As the father had ennobled the
State by his virtues, the son thought he had a right to disgrace it with his
vices. "He was," says Bayle, "a bad liver." He submitted quietly to the
excommunication of the Consistory for a year and a half; but now, deeming the
moment opportune, inasmuch as the tide was running against the Reformer and his
policy, he appeared before the Council and demanded that it should annul the
sentence of the Spiritual Court, and so restore him to communion with the
Church. The Reformer hastened to the Council, and warned it of the fatal
consequences of complying with Berthelier's request, he urged strongly that the
edicts of the republic gave the Council no power concerning excommunication, and
that to bind and loose ecclesiastically was to effect a revolution. The
Reformer's remonstrance was disregarded. The Council released Berthelier from
the spiritual sentence, and opened his way to the Communion-table. The axe was
laid at the root of the ecclesiastical discipline, and the days of the Genevan
Republic were, to all appearance, numbered.
From the council-chamber,
where the fatal measure in which the Libertines saw the approaching downfall of
the spiritual authority had been passed, Calvin hurried to the prison, where he
and his colleagues were to be confronted with Servetus. This day (lst September,
1553) it was resolved by the Council that the oral debates between the prisoner
and the pastors should be dropped, and that the discussion should henceforward
be carried on in writing. This change was supported by Perrin and Berthelier,
who were there, flushed with the victory of the morning. The proposal made in
the interests of Servetus,[1] who was supposed to be
more eloquent with his pen than with his voice, was adopted, and it brought with
it a marked change in his demeanor, which Rilliet thus describes: "What
demonstrates with the clearest evidence the hope which the prisoner placed in
the power of his protectors, is the language which from that time he adopted,
and the open, furious, mortal war which he waged against the Reformer, now
become the object of his direct attacks. Servetus threw himself, with all the
ardor of a man well-nigh sure of victory, into a path where, by his own
confession, he wished to pursue his opponent, 'even till the cause be terminated
by the death of him or me.'"
At the same meeting of Council,[2] Calvin was ordered to draw
up anew articles of indictment from the works of Servetus, in the form of plain
statements, without any reasoning for or against. The crisis which had arisen in
the matter of the ecclesiastical discipline might well, one should think, have
engrossed all the Reformer's thoughts, but he gave himself with his might to
this new labor. He reproduced from the works of the prisoner thirty-eight
propositions, and appending neither note nor comment, and giving simply
references to the text, he handed them to the Council. This done, he turned his
thoughts to the graver matter that weighed upon him. The resolution of the
Council touching excommunication was simply a breaking into pieces of the lever
with which he hoped to elevate the republic. The Reformer must fight two battles
at the same time.
Time pressed. The day after the morrow was the first
Sunday of September, when, according to a custom universal in the French
Reformed churches, the Communion was to be celebrated [3] and, unless the edict were
revoked, Berthelier would then present himself at the sacred table with the
warrant of the Council in his hand. The Reformer, without a moment's delay,
assembled all the pastors, alike of town and country, and putting himself at
their head, proceeded to the Great Council. He showed, with characteristic
energy, the brink to which the decision of the Little Council had brought the
republic; that that decision was a manifest violation of both the laws of the
State and the rules of Scripture; and that if persisted in it would sweep away
all that had been done during the past ten years for the reformation of manners,
and render hopeless all efforts in the future. In short, it was a revolution.
The whole people, he said, had with uplifted hands adopted the edict
establishing the spiritual power in the spiritual court, and "he would die
rather than tolerate, contrary to his conscience, an excomnmnicated man at the
sacred table."[4] In this protest the
pastors to a man joined, all declaing that rather than suffer the contemplated
profanation they would "lay down their offices and leave their churches."[5] The Council answered that
it "changed nothing in its decree."[6] In taking into its own
hands the spritual authority, the Council, it might be unwittingly, assumed the
right of trying and adjudging Servetus. It said to the Consistory, Stand aside;
you are dissolved as a court having jurisdiction; we assume the function and
responsibility of giving judgment on all persons and causes, civil and
spiritual.
To Perrin and the Libertines victory was following on victory.
The coming day, they hoped, would crown this series of successes. Whichever way
Calvin might turn he would, they were sure, encounter defeat. If he should obey
the edict of the Council, he would be disgraced before the people; if he should
disobey it, he would rebel against the magistrate: either way his power was at
an end. They had not yet taken the true measure of the Reformer; or rather, they
had not yet learned how much better is a little wisdom than great cunning. By
the simple strategy of going right forward, the Reformer broke all the toils the
Libertines had woven round him, and swept away alike the victories they had
already won and those which they made themselves sure of winning in the
future.
Sunday morning, the 3rd of September, dawned. No more eventful
day had for centuries risen over Geneva, or indeed over Christendom. This day it
was to be seen whether Protestantism, which had retreated within its last
stronghold, would recruit: its powers and reorganize its forces, and from hence
go forth to reconquer Christendom, or whether it would relinquish the battle as
beyond its strength. Twice already the great Protestant movement, after giving
promise of emancipating the world, had failed. First the Albigensian revival,
next the Bohemian uprising, overborne by violence, had disappointed the hopes
they had inspired. Was this third movement, which had come nearer the goal than
either of the two preceding ones, after all to fall short of it, and leave the
world still under the dominion of the darkness? The moment was the most critical
that had occurred since Luther's appearance at the Diet of Worms. In Germany,
the Reformed phalanx was demoralized, thanks to the sword and yet more to the
Interim of Charles. France, under Henry II., was blazing with martyr-piles. With
Mary, in England, had come a fiercer tempest of persecution than that country
had ever before known. Where now, alas! we hear Calvin pathetically exclaim,
where now are Cranmer, and Ridley, and John a Lasco, and the hundreds of others
in England which the Reformation numbered aforetime amongst its children? Some
of them, leaving their bodies to the flames, had mounted on high, and were now
living with God. Others, crossing seas and mountains, had found a home in
foreign lands. On every side, up to the limits of the Genevan territory, the
Reformation was pursued by the tyrant and the inquisitor. And even here, if the
sword was still restrained, new and hideous foes had risen to assail the Gospel.
The abyss of Atheistic Pantheism had suddenly opened, and a monstrous birth had
come up out of it, which sought to strangle the infant Reformation, where the
Hydra sought to strangle the infant Hercules—in its cradle. Such were the
portents that deformed the time.
The customary hour of public worship was
now come. The great bell Clemence had tolled out its summons. The throng of
worshippers on their way to the cathedral had rolled past, and now the streets,
which had resounded with their tread, were empty and silent. Over city, plain,
and lake there brooded a deep stillness. It was around the pulpit of St.
Peter's, and the man with pale face, commanding eye, and kingly brow who
occupied it, that the heart of Geneva palpitated. The church was filled with an
uneasy crowd. On the benches of the Consistory sat, unmoved, the pastors and
elders, resolved to bear the greatest violence rather than not do their duty. A
confused noise was heard within the temple. The congregation opened with
difficulty, and a numerous band of men, of all ranks, their hands upon their
sword-hilts, forced their way in presence of the holy table. The elite of the
Libertines had decided to communicate. Berthelier did not appear as yet. He
reserved himself till the last moment.[7]
Calvin, calm as
ever, rose to begin the service. He could not but see the group of Libertines in
the vast congregation before him, but he seemed as if he saw them not. He
preached on the state of mind with which the Lord's Supper ought to be received.
At the close, raising his voice, he said.[8] "As for me, so long as God
shall leave me here, since he hath given me fortitude, and I have received it
from him, I will employ it, whatever betide; and I will guide myself by my
Master's rule, which is to me clear and well known. As we are now about to
receive the Holy Supper of our Lord Jesus Christ, if any one who has been
debarred by the Consistory shall approach this table, though it should cost my
life, I will show myself such as I ought to be."[9]
When the liturgies
were concluded, Calvin came down from the pulpit and took his stand before the
table. Lifting up the white napkin he displayed the symbols of Christ's body and
blood, the food destined for believing souls. Having blessed the bread and wine,
he was about to distribute them to the congregation. At that moment there was
seen a movement among the Libertines as if they would seize the bread and the
cup. The Reformer, covering the sacred symbols with his hands, exclaimed in a
voice that rang through the edifice, "These hands you may crush; these arms you
may lop off; my life you may take; my blood is yours, you may shed it; but you
shall never force me to give holy things to the profane, and dishonor the table
of my God."[10] These words broke like a
thunder-peal over the Libertines. As if an invisible power had flung back the
ungodly host, they slunk away abashed, the congregation opening a passage for
their retreat.[11] A deep calm succeeded; and
"the sacred ordinance," says Beza, "was celebrated with a profound silence, and
under a solemn awe in all present, as if the Deity himself had been visible
among them."[12]
Than the
transaction we have just narrated, we know nothing more truly sublime in the
whole history of the Reformation, that epoch of heroic men and of grand events.
The only thing we can compare with it is Luther's appearance at the Diet of
Worms. If we abstract the dramatic accompaniments of the latter scene—the
gorgeous hall; the majesty of the emperor; the blaze of princely and knightly
rank gathered round him; the glitter of stars and decorations; the men-at-arms;
the lackeys and other attendants—and look only at the principle at stake, and
the wide and lasting good achieved by the prompt vindication of that principle,
the act of Calvin in the Cathedral of St. Peter's, in 1553, stands side by side,
its equal in spiritual sublimity and heroism, with the act of Luther in the Hall
of Worms, in 1521. "I cannot," said Luther. "I will not," said Calvin. The one
repelled the tyrant, the other flung back the mob; the one stemmed the
haughtiness of power, the other bridled the raging fury of ungodliness; in both
the danger was equal, in both the faith and fortitude were equal, and each saved
the Reformation at a great crisis.
These two acts, Luther's at Worms and
Calvin's in St. Peter's, were in fact two beacon-lights kindled by providence
for the instruction of Europe. They were hung out at the opening of a new epoch,
to enable Christendom to pilot itself past two tremendous dangers that lay right
in its course. The one of these dangers was only beginning to be visible. The
conflict waged in St. Peter's on Sunday, the 3rd of September, 1553, showed how
that danger was to be avoided. A Protestant Church, scripturally constituted,
and faithfully governed, was the only possible breakwater against that lawless
pantheism which was even then lifting up its head and threatening society with
ruin. Such was the lesson taught by the heroic act in St. Peter's. Calvin was
the first man against whom the foul and furious tide of communism dashed itself;
it broke against the pulpit of St. Peter's before it precipitated itself upon
the throne of France.
It has since with swelling and triumphant crest
overwhelmed parliaments and dynasties, laid prostrate thrones and devastated
kingdoms; but in contemplating these dismal tragedies it becomes us to call to
mind that the Reformer of Geneva confronted this communism 300 years ago, that
he confronted it single-handed, and conquered it. Had the principles of
Protestantism been rooted and grounded in every parish of France, yielding the
same spiritual fruits as they did at Geneva, how different would have been the
history of a people to whom nature has given a genius so manifold that it would
have shone equally in the beauty of their arts and in the grace and brilliancy
of their literature; in the valor of their arms, and the equity of their
jurisprudence; in the purity of their homes, and in the freedom and stability of
their public institutions. But continuing under the malign power of a corrupted
and a corrupting faith, this race, so richly endowed, has had its great
qualities transformed into headlong passions which have entailed upon country
and throne three centuries of calamities and woes.
CHAPTER
21 Back to
Top
APPREHENSION AND TRIAL OF
SERVETUS.
"Here I stand," etc.—Calvin expects to be Banished—Takes
Farewell of his Flock—Servetus—Resume—Servetus asks to Dispute with Calvin— The
Magistrates Refuse—Nicholas de la Fontaine—Enters himself as Prosecutor for
Calvin—Examination of Servetus—Defended by Berthelier—Calvin comes forward—The
Council take the Prosecution into their own hands—Indictment of the
Attorney-General—Sedition the Main Charge against Servetus—Servetus pleads for
Free Inquiry—His Cause Mixed up with the Libertines'—Boldness of
Servetus—Calvin's Struggle with the Council—Shall the Reformer Quit Geneva?—His
Influence with the Magistrates at Zero.
IT seemed, indeed, a small matter whether Calvin
should give the Sacrament to Berthelier or withhold it. But the question in
another form, as Calvin clearly saw, was whether he should maintain the
Reformation or abandon it. The moment he should put the consecrated elements
into the hands of the Libertine, that moment he would lay the spiritual
prerogative at the feet of the civil power, and Geneva would fall as the bulwark
of Protestantism. To Berthelier, therefore, with the edict of the Council in his
hand, and his Libertine hordes at his back, Calvin said, "No". It was the "Here
I stand, I cannot do otherwise. So help me, God," repeated over again, at a
moment equally critical, and in the face of a danger equally great.
The
Reformer had escaped the greater danger, even death, which the Libertines hinted
would be the penalty of refusal, but exile still hung over him. In the evening
of the same Sunday he ascended the pulpit, to take farewell of the flock from
which he expected the coming day would see him parted probably for ever. He
chose as the subject of his discourse Paul's farewell address to the elders of
the Church of Ephesus, and the scene witnessed that night on the banks of the
Leman was almost as touching as that enacted fifteen centuries before on the
shores of the AEgean.[1] Closing his sermon and
spreading out his hands over his loving flock, for the last time as he believed,
he said, "I commend you to God and to the word of his grace." The words were
mingled with the sobs and tears of those to whom they were spoken.
But no
order of banishment came on the morrow, though he waited hour after hour for it.
The Reformer perceived that so far the victory remained with him. Left
undisturbed, he turned his thoughts to the other matter which was then
engrossing him, for he was grappling with two foes at once. We shall now turn
with him to this, in every view of it, sad affair.
In order to an
accurate idea of the trial, and of the various interests that combined to guide
it to its deplorable issue, we must briefly review the steps already taken. On
the 13th of August, Calvin, having learned that Servetus was in Geneva, demanded
his arrest. But Genevese law required the accuser to go to prison along with the
accused till he had shown reasonable grounds for his accusation. Nicholas de la
Fontaine, the secretary of Calvin, gave himself up in the stead of the Reformer.
Next day a complaint in thirty-eight articles, drawn up, as we have said, by
Calvin, was presented against Servetus. On the morrow the Council assembled in
the Criminal Audience Chamber in the prison, and Servetus, having been
interrogated on the articles, demanded a public disputation, promising to
confute Calvin from Scripture and the Fathers. The prisoner further urged that
it did not become a civil court to adjudicate on such matters. Here was a door
opened for the Council to escape responsibility, had it chosen.
"But,"
says Rilliet, "the magistrates refused to entertain the proposal, though Calvin
for his part agreed, and protested that, as far as regarded him, 'there was
nothing that he more desired than to plead such a cause in the temple before all
the people.'" Why, we ask, this refusal on the part of the magistrates? Rilliet
answers, "The Council feared, no doubt, that it would thus dispossess itself of
the cognisance of an affair which stood connected with the prerogatives of which
it had recently appeared so jealous;"[2] that is, the Council was
then struggling to shut out the Consistory, and to secure to itself the
spiritual as well as the civil government of Geneva.
The preliminary
examination of Servetus ended, the Council, having regard to "his replies,
"found that the charges were true, and accordingly Nicholas de la Fontaine was
discharged from prison, under obligation to appear as often as he might be
called, and to prosecute his case. The Council, in coming to the conclusion that
Servetus was guilty, appear to have been influenced less by his opinions on the
Trinity than by his views on baptism. The frightful excesses of the Anabaptists
in Germany and Switzerland, which were fresh in their memory, made the Council,
doubtless, view this as the most dangerous part of his creed.
Tomorrow
(16th August) when the Council assembled to prosecute the affair, two new
parties appeared on the arena. These were Philibert Berthelier, the Libertine
opponent of Calvin, and M. Germain Colladon, a Protestant refugee, and a man
learned in the law. Colladon was associated with Fontaine in the defense and
prosecution. These two—Berthelier and Colladon, were representatives of the two
parties into which Geneva was divided, and their appearance indicated that the
affair was tending to wider issues than any personal to Servetus; in short, it
was becoming the battle-ground on which the question was to be determined
whether Libertine Pantheism or the Protestant faith should hold possession of
Geneva. Such is the inference of Rilliet, who says: "Each of the antagonists saw
behind the proceedings carried on in the bishop's palace, the interest of the
parties who disputed for Geneva."[3]
It appears from the
minutes that, at this meeting of Council, Berthelier undertook the defense of
Servetus, and strongly argued in favor of his peculiar doctrines as well as of
himself; Colladon attacked with equal ardor both the errors and their author;
the violence of the debate extended itself to the Council, and the sitting,
which was a stormy one, was abruptly terminated.[4]
This scene brought
forward a more powerful man than any who had hitherto appeared in the
prosecution. Berthelier was at that moment under excommunication by the
Consistory, and he had a petition lying on the table of the Council to have the
sentence of the spiritual court cancelled. It was thus tolerably plain that his
championship of Servetus was inspired not so much by the wish to defend the
prisoner, as by his desire to overthrow the Consistory. "Calvin felt," says
Rilliet, "that the moment had arrived for him to appear, and boldly to resist
the hostilities against himself, of which Servetus was about to become the
occasion,"[5] if he would not see his
whole work in Geneva swept away; accordingly the very next day he declared that
he would appear as accuser. "The Reformer was now invited by the Council to
assist, 'in order that his errors might be better demonstrated,' and to have
'whomsoever he chose with him' at the examinations of the prisoner.'"[6] At the first meeting after
this, at which Calvin was present, a sharp debate took place between him and
Servetus.
The issue was that the Council found that the charges contained
in the indictment were proven from the books given in, in evidence, and the
prisoner's own confessions.[7] Fontaine had previously
been discharged from prison; now he was released from his obligation to
prosecute, and the affair was taken entirely into the hands of the
Attorney-General.[8]
The second act of
the trial opened on the 21st of August. Their Exeellencies in Council assembled
resolved as follows:—"Inasmuch as the case of heresy of M. Servetus vitally
affects the welfare of Christendom, it is resolved to proceed with his trial."[9] At this sitting, Calvin
and the ministers, his colleagues, were introduced by the Attorney-General. They
were wanted to give their evidence as to the meaning of the word person, as used
in certain passages of the Fathers. Servetus taught that the person of the Son
of God had no existence prior to the Incarnation. He held that Christ existed
from all eternity only as an idea, not as a person, in the essence or bosom of
God, and that the term Son of God is applied in Scripture to Christ Jesus as a
man.[10] He cited passages from
Tertullian, Irenaeus, and Clement, favorable as he thought to this opinion; and
it was to give judgment on Servetus' interpretatin of these passages that the
pastors were now summoned. The service asked of them they rendered.
At
the meeting on the 23rd, the Attorney-General produced a new indictment against
Servetus. It differed considerably from that which Fontaine had given in when
the prisoner was first arrested, and which had been drawn up by Calvin. This new
indictment dropped the theological errors of Servetus out of view altogether,
well-nigh, and gave marked prominence to his offenses against society. Its title
ran thus:—"These are the interrogations and articles upon which the
Attorney-General of this city desires to question Michael Servetus, a prisoner,
guilty of blasphemies, of heresies, and of disturbing Christendom." "If Servetus
had had, in the eyes of Genevese justice," says Rilliet, "no other fault than
that of which De la Fontaine had declared him guilty in regard to Calvin, his
acquittal had been sure." "If Calvin alone," he continues, "had been concerned
in the affair of Servetus, all his efforts would have been unavailing to secure
the condemnation of his adversary." "Servetus was tried," says he again, "and,
as we shall mention below, condemned by the majority of his judges, not at all
as the opponent of Calvin—scarcely as a heretic—but essentially as seditious.
Politics acted a much more important part than theology, towards the close of
this trial—they came on the stage with the Attorney-General."[11] Servetus saw the new
position in which he stood, and strove to defend himself against the charges of
the Attorney-General, not by denying that his opinions were theologically false,
but by trying to show that they were not socially dangerous. This defense he
followed up with a petition to the magistrates, in which he labored to convince
them that his opinions at the worst were only speculative errors, and not
practical seditions; and, adds Rilliet, had he been able to make it appear that
they were "divested of all practical results, the issue of his trial would not
have been fatal." [12]
There came, at this
stage of the business, a series of discussions on points which we cannot help
thinking were irrelevant. Servetus was interrogated respecting his persistency
in publishing his opinions, seeing he knew they were condemned by ancient
Councils and imperial decrees, and the evil he had done or wished to do society
by maintaining them. He replied, with ability and apparent frankness, that
believing it to be the truth which he held, he would have offended God if he had
not published it; that the ecclesiastical edicts and imperial decrees, which
menaced him with death for these opinions, dated from a period when the Church
had become more or less corrupt, and that the Church in apostolic times knew no
such edicts, nor approved the doctrine of repelling opinion by force. These were
truths, and the only mistake about them—to Servetus a very serious one—was that
they came three centuries too soon, and were addressed to judges who were
incapable of feeling their force. But when the prisoner affirmed that he had
hardly ever spoken to any one on his peculiar opinions, he stated what it was
impossible to reconcile with the known fact of his twenty years' active
diffusion of his sentiments in Germany and France.
This was the very week
in which the struggle between Calvin and the Libertines came to a crisis.[13] The authority, and it
might be the life of the Reformer, hung upon the issue of that contest. Servetus
from his prison watched the ebb and flow of the battle, and was humble and bold
by turns, as victory appeared to incline now to Calvin and now to the
Libertines. The approaching Sunday was that of the September Communion, and
Berthelier, as we have seen, held an order from the Council, authorising him to
appear at the holy table.
This seemed the death-warrant of Calvin's
power. We can trace the influence of this turn of affairs upon Servetus. The
Council had ordered Calvin to extract from his works, and to present without
note or comment, those propositions in them which he deemed false. In obedience
to the order, the Reformer drew up thirty-eight articles,[14] which were given to the
prisoner to be answered by him. But Servetus' reply bore the character of a
bitter attack upon the Reformer, rather than that of a defense of himself.
"Wretch," said he, apostrophising Calvin, "do you think to stun the ears of the
judges by your barking? You have a confused intellect, so that you cannot
understand the truth. Perverted by Simon Magus, you are ignorant of the first
principles of things—you make men only blocks and stones, by establishing the
slavery of the will."[15] To write thus within the
walls of a prison, was to be very sure of victory!
Nay, Servetus, looking
upon Calvin as already fallen, no longer has recourse to subterfuges; he no
longer seeks to show that his doctrines are innocuous. Throwing aside the veil,
he openly avows that he held the opinions imputed to him in his indictment. He
had drawn up his self-accusation with his own hand.
Calvin instantly
wrote an answer to the paper of Servetus, as the Council had required. His
strong hand thrust back the unhappy man into his former position. "Injurious
words against Servetus," says Rilliet, "are not spared, but these were a coin so
current in those days that, instead of being deemed excessive, they fell from
the pen without observation." The Reformer's answer was given in to the judges,
signed by all the ministers of the Church of Geneva, fourteen in number. No
sooner has Calvin laid down the pen than, seeing his own position and work are
at that moment trembling in the balance, he turns to the other and graver
conflict. On Saturday, the 2nd of September, he appeared before the Little
Council to demand the cancelling of the warrant given to Berthelier to receive
the Lord's Supper. The Council declined to comply. It retained in its own hands
the power to admit or to exclude whomsoever it would from the Communion-table.
It stripped Calvin and the Consistory of all ecclesiastical authority and power,
and, of course, of all responsibility for censures and punishments of an
ecclesiastical kind. This power the Council took solely upon itself. The use it
made of it will afterwards appear.
The scene that took place in the
Cathedral of St. Peter's the very next day we have already narrated. But the
Reformer did not account it enough that he refused to obey in a matter which the
laws of the State gave no right to the Council to command; he resolved, although
at the risk of life, to maintain the battle, and reconquer the lost prerogative,
without which he would not remain in Geneva.
On the 7th September, Calvin
and his colleagues went to the Little Council, with the text of the
Ecclesiastical Ordinances, and appealing to the letter of the law he showed the
Council that the Ordinances gave it no power concerning excommunication, and
that what it had done was a subversion of the Constitution of Geneva. He further
craved the Council to make known its final determination upon the point, that he
and his colleagues might be able to regulate their conduct as regarded resigning
or retaining their functions in Geneva. The Council took three days to consider
the matter, and, adds the Register, it "commanded that meanwhile M. Calvin must
preach and do his duty." On the 18th September, the Council passed a resolution
declaring that "it would adhere to the edicts as it had hitherto done."[16] This reply, in point of
ambiguity, was almost Delphic. Interpreted by recent edicts, it meant that the
Council saw nothing inconsistent with the edicts in what they had done, and
would still retain in their own hands the ecclesiastical government. Still the
Reformer did not view it as justifying him in abandoning his work in Geneva, and
Farel and other friends wrote at this crisis earnestly beseeching him not to
quit his post.
Meanwhile Servetus was busy in his prison with his
annotations on Calvin's reply. The unhappy man, believing that his friends, the
Libertines, who communicated with him through the jailer, were on the eve of
triumphing, and that the Reformer was as good as fallen, was no longer at pains
to conceal his intense hatred of the latter. Writing between the lines and on
the margin of Calvin's document, he expressed himself in the following
melancholy terms— "You howl like a blind man in desert places, because the
spirit of vengeance burns in your heart. You lie, you lie, you lie, you ignorant
calumniator."[17] There followed a good deal
more in the same vein. The Reformer was shown the writing, but leaving to
Servetus the last word, he deigned no reply.
At this stage of the affair
the magistrates of Geneva resolved (19th September) to consult the Helvetic
Churches. Servetus himself had expressed a wish to that effect. A messenger of
State, Jacquemoz Jernoz, was dispatched on the 21st to the Churches of Bern,
Zurich, Schaffhausen, and Basle. He carried letters to the magistrates as well
as to the pastors of the four cities, as also the requisite documents—namely,
the articles of accusation, the papers exchanged between Servetus and Calvin,
and a copy of the Christianismi Restitutio.
From this moment Calvin quits
the scene. The course of the affair was precisely what it would have been
although he had not been in Geneva at all. His influence with the Council was
then at zero. We think we can see the end served thereby, though Calvin could
not. To him it was only mortifying as betokening impending overthrow to the
Reformation in Geneva. Writing to Bullinger at Zurich, on the 7th of September,
he says: "Were I to declare that it is day at high-noon, they [the Council]
would immediately begin to doubt it." That is all which he could put on paper,
but, adds he, "our brother Walther [the son-in-law of Bullinger] will tell you
more." This shows that the idea entertained by some that the Reformer was at
that time all-powerful with the Council, and that he dictated the sentence it
was to pronounce, is an entire misapprehension.
CHAPTER
22 Back to
Top
CONDEMNATION AND DEATH OF
SERVETUS.
The Swiss Churches Consulted—Servetus Demands Calvin's
Impeachment—Answer of the Swiss Churches—Their Verdict Unanimous—Council
Condemns Servetus to be Burned—Calvin Intercedes that the Sword be Substituted
for the Stake—Sentence Communicated to Servetus—Farel—Interview between Servetus
and Calvin—Servetus Summoned to Execution—his Terror—The Procession—View from
Champel—Farel's Last Conversation with Servetus—The Pile Kindled—Servetus
Dies—Gibbon—Jurisprudence of the Age—No Romanist can Condemn
Calvin.
IN the resolution to which the magistrates of Geneva
had come, to lay the affair of Serveins before the Swiss Reformed Churches, we
see the Churches of Helvetia formed into a jury. Pending the verdict, which it
would seem Servetus did not for a moment doubt would be entirely in his favor,
the accused took another step against Calvin. From his prison, on the 22nd of
September, he sent to the Council a list of "articles on which M. Servetus
wishes J. Calvin to be interrogated." He there accuses Calvin of having falsely
imputed to him the opinion that the soul is mortal. "If I have said that—not
merely said it, but publicly written it—to infect the world, I would condemn
myself to death. Wherefore, my lords, I demand that my false accuser be
punished, poena talionis, and that he be detained a prisoner like me, till the
cause be decided for his death or mine, or other punishment."[1] Servetus had formerly
declined the civil jurisdiction in matters theological; he now, in the hope of
placing the Reformer in the same hazard as himself, accepts that jurisdiction in
those very matters in which he had before declined it. And further, he makes it
plain that he was not more liberal than his age, in holding that a conviction
for heresy ought to draw after it the punishment of death.
Meanwhile the
State messenger was making his circuit of the four cities, sojourning long
enough in each to permit the magistrates and pastors to consider the documents,
and make up their minds. At the end of nearly a month, the messenger returned.
The answers of the cities and pastors were given in to the Council on the 18th
of October: they were eight in all, there being a deliverance from the
Government and a deliverance from the Church in each case. The verdict eight
times pronounced, with awful unanimity, was death. Thus, outside the territory
of Geneva, was the fate of Servetus decided.[2] About the same time that
the suffrages of the Swiss Churches were given in, an officer arrived at Geneva
from the tribunal of Vienne. This man carried an order from his masters
empowering him to demand the surrender of the prisoner, and bring him to Vienne,
that he might undergo the sentence that had been passed upon him. Their
Lordships of Geneva replied that it was not their custom to give up one charged
with a crime till he had been either acquitted or condemned.
However,
confronting Servetus with the Viennese officer, they asked him whether he would
remain with them or go back with the person who had come to fetch him. The
unhappy man with tears in his eyes replied, "Messieurs of Geneva, judge me
according to your good pleasure, but do not send me back with the hangman." This
interference of the Roman Catholic authorities of Vienne hastened the fate of
the prisoner.[3]
The Council of
Geneva assembled on the 26th of October to give judgment. The discussion was a
stormy one. Perrin, with the Libertines, fought hard to save the accused; but
the preponderating majority felt that the case could have but one issue.
Servetus had already been condemned by the Popish tribunal of Vienne; the
tribunal of the Swiss Reform had unanimously condemned him; the codes of
Theodosius and Justinian, which still formed the basis of the criminal
jurisprudence of Geneva, condemned him; and the universal opinion of
Christendom, Popish and Protestant, held him to be worthy of death. To these
considerations was added the horror his sentiments had inspired in all minds.
Not only did his opinions outrage the fundamental doctrines of the then common
creed of Christendom; they assailed with atrocious blasphemy the persons of the
Trinity; and they tore up, in their last consequences, the roots of society, by
striking down conscience within man, and the power of law without him. What day
the Council acquitted Servetus, it pronounced the dissolution of the State,
political and religious, and opened the flood-gates on Christendom of those
horrible impieties and massacring crusades which had already inflicted fearful
havoc in many of the provinces of Germany.
Europe, they believed, would
not hold them guiltless if they let loose this plague a second time. Therefore,
without consulting Calvin, without even thinking of him, and viewing the
question as a social rather than a theological one, and dealing with it as
sedition rather than heresy for, says Rilliet, "the principles of order, as then
understood, did not permit them longer to hesitate as to whether or not they
should see in them [i.e., the opinions of Servetus] the crime of treason against
society"[4] —the magistrates of Geneva
closed their Diet of the 26th of October with a decree condemning Servetus to
death. "Let him," so ran the decree of the Council, as described in the
Register, "be condemned to be led to Champel, and there burned alive, and let
him be executed tomorrow, and his books consumed."[5]
We record with
horror the sentence, but it is the sentence not of the magistrates of Geneva
only, nor of the magistrates and pastors of Reformed Switzerland only: it is the
sentence of the Christendom of that age, for the Inquisition on one side, and
Melancthon on the other, are heard expressing their concurrence in it. At this
supreme hour one man alone comes forward to attempt a mitigation of the
punishment of Servetus.
Who is that man? He is John Calvin. He earnestly
interceded with the Council, not that the unfortunate victim might be spared,
but that the sword might be substituted for the fire; but he interceded in vain.
"It is to him, notwithstanding," says Rilliet, "that men have always imputed the
guilt of that funeral pile, which he wished had never been reared."[6]
We must pursue this
affair to its appalling and scandalous termination. Farel, who had been watching
from Neuchatel the progress of the trial, came suddenly to Geneva at its close.
He was present with the unhappy man when the message of death was brought him.
Up till that moment Servetus had clung to the hope of acquittal. He was
horror-struck when the dreadful reality disclosed itself to him. "He was at
intervals," says Calvin, "like one mad—then he uttered groans, which resounded
through his chamber—anon he began to howl like one out of his senses. In brief,
he had all the appearance of a demoniac. At last his outcry was so great that he
without intermission exclaimed in Spanish, striking his breast, 'Mercy! mercy!'"
A terrible picture! and one cannot but wish that, with its graphic touches,
there had mingled a little more of that pity which it needs must awaken for the
sufferer in the heart of every one who reads it. When his first paroxysm had
subsided, Farel, addressing Servetus, besought him "to repent of his sins, and
confess the God who had thrice revealed himself."[7] This appeal but rekindled
the polemical pride of the unhappy man.
Turning to the aged evangelist,
he asked him to produce a single passage from Scripture where Christ was called
the Son of God previous to his coming in the flesh. Farel quoted several such
passages; but Servetus, though he had nothing to reply, remained unconvinced,
and continued to mingle cries for mercy, and appeals to Christ as his Savior,
with his disputation with Farel, in which he maintained that Christ was not
eternal, nor otherwise the Son of God except as regards his humanity.[8]
After this he
requested, or at least consented, to see Calvin. The Reformer was accompanied to
the prison by two members of Council, for it was just possible that the
condemned would make a retractation, and the terrible necessity of his death be
avoided. Being asked by one of the councillors what he had to say to Calvin,
Servetus answered that he desired to ask his pardon. "I protest," replied the
Reformer, "that I have never pursued against you any private quarrel." Mildly,
yet with the utmost fidelity, Calvin went on to remind Servetus of the pains he
had been at to prevent him plunging into these destructive errors; and he
counselled him, even now, to turn to God, and cast himself by repentance and
faith on his Son for pardon.[9] But Calvin had no better
success than Farel; and, finding that he could effect nothing, he
withdrew.
Whose heart does not bleed for the unhappy man? We feel a
compassion and sorrow for Servetus such as we feel for no martyr. The men who
died for the Gospel were upheld by the greatness and justice of their cause.
Instead of falling prostrate before their judges, they stood erect, their faces
shining with the light of faith. They trod the path to the fire, not with
serenity only, but with songs of holy triumph, knowing that "one like unto the
Son of Man" would descend and stand beside them in the midst of the flames. But,
alas! where shall Servetus look for consolation in his hour of agony? On whose
arm shall he lean when he goes forth to die? and who will be his companion when
he stands at the stake? The Trinity was to him "a Cerberus." From that Son to
whom the Father said, "Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever," and who is
"able to save to the uttermost," and from that Holy Spirit "who is the
Comforter," his creed shut him out. And now, when the storm comes down upon him
in a violence so terrific, he is without a shelter. No rock can he find on which
to stay his feet amid the surging billows. At the gates of the new dispensation
on which Christendom is entering stands Servetus, a monument of salt, to show
the world how little power there is in a creed emptied of all the great verities
of revelation, to sustain the soul amid the grand and dread eventualities of
existence.
As yet Servetus was ignorant, that he was to die by fire.
Calvin had earnestly besought the Council that the miserable man might be spared
this terrible surprise, but he had pleaded in vain. The magistrates would not
permit him to influence their proceedings in the matter, even to the extent of
substituting the sword for the stake. It was the morning of the 27th of October,
the day named for execution; Farel and some country ministers were with Servetus
as early as seven o'clock. The precious hours would seem to have passed in
wretched polemical discussions on the part of the condemned, who seemed more
intent on triumphing in the argument with the pastors, than prevailing in his
suit at the gates of the Eternal Mercy. It was now eleven o'clock in the
forenoon. The Lord Lieutenant, accompanied by the Secretary of Justice, entered
the prison, and addressed Servetus in the customary words, "Come with me and
hear the good pleasure of my lords."[10] He was led before the
court. "The staff was broken over his head,"[11] as was the wont with
criminals adjudged to death, and the sentence was then read by the presiding
syndic. Scarcely had the last words, which doomed him "to be fastened to a
stake, and burned alive, till his body be reduced to ashes," fallen on his ears,
when he cast himself at the feet of his judges, entreating that he might be
permitted to die by the sword,"[12] saying that if he had
erred, he had erred through ignorance, and that his opinions were conformable to
the Word of God. The syndics remained inexorable. Turning to the prisoner, Farel
said that he must first disavow his errors, and then ask forgiveness. Again
Servetus obtested his innocence, saying that he was being led to death as a
sacrifice, and that he prayed God to forgive his accusers. Farel, with a
sternness which is at least remarkable, threatened, should Servetus persist in
these protestations of innocence, to leave him, and not go with him to the
stake. The wretched man, feeling that in parting with Farel he was parting with
the last poor remnant of human sympathy and comfort left him, held his peace.[13]
Doom has been
spoken, and now the procession is marshalled and descends the steps of the
town-hall. The Lord Lieutenant and the Herald, in the insignia of their office,
head the way on horseback. Aghast, trembling, and pallid with terror, the
white-haired Farel by his side, Servetus appears in the midst of the archers
that form his escort. A crowd, smaller than usually assists at such sights,
brings up the rear. The executioners had gone on before to prepare the funeral
pile. The procession issued from the city by the gate of St. Anthony. They leave
on the left the spot, now bare, where stood the celebrated Faubourg and Church
of St. Victor, razed in 1534 for the defense of the city; on the right are the
downs of Plain Palais, the Campus Martius of Geneva. The one recalled the
sacrifices of the citizens for liberty, the other their gala-days of civic
festival and military pomp. In the south, about a mile from the city gates, rose
the little eminence of Champel, on the summit of which the stake had been fixed
[14] Sobs and ejaculatory
prayers burst from Servetus as he pursued his brief and bitter pilgrimage to the
fire. "O God!" he cried, "deliver my soul. Jesus, Son of the Eternal Father,
have mercy on me."
Farel has no word of solace to offer; he moves along
by the side of Servetus, half in sorrow, half in anger; this to us looks
heartless—nay, cruel; but Farel doubtless felt that consolation he could not
offer without being insincere, and doing violence to his own convictions. It was
his uprightness that made him look so stern, for the more earnest he was for the
true welfare of the unhappy man he was accompanying to the stake, all the more
did he strive to bring him to place his eternal hopes, not upon the man-God, but
upon the God-man.[15]
The melancholy
procession had now arrived at Champel. The stake that rose on its summit was the
one dark object in a scene otherwise full of light and beauty. The vast plain,
which lay outspread around the spot, wore a carpet of the richest foliage, now
beginning to be chequered with the autumnal tints. The far-off mountains were
tipped with the first silver of winter. In the center of the immense picture
gleamed the blue Leman, a mirror of polished steel. On the south of it were
seen, rushing along in their winding course, the snow-grey waters of the Arve.
On the north was the mighty amphitheatre of the woody Jura, which, entering
France and sweeping down towards Savoy, showed its massy rampart cleft in the
southwest to give passage to the Rhone. In this assemblage of riches one object
alone appeared in naked desolation. At some distance rose the steep, barren,
rocky Saleve, its blackness typical of the tragedy transpiring on the summit of
the little Champel, on which it looked down.
Farel asks him whether he
has wife or child, and would wish to make his will? Servetus makes him no
answer.[16] He asks again whether he
has anything else to say, hoping till the last moment to hear him confess a
Divine Redeemer. Sighing deeply, Servetus exclaims, "O God! O God!" Farel bids
him ask the prayers of the people. He does so; Farel uniting his own
exhortations to the same effect to the bystanders.[17] While these supplications
are being offered in silence, Servetus mounts the pile and seats himself on the
log of wood which had been placed there for that purpose. He was fastened to the
stake by an iron chain put round his body, and a rope twisted round his neck.
The executioner now kindled the torch, and, approaching the pile, set fire to
the wood. At the first glare of the flames Servetus gave a shriek so terrible
that it made the crowd fall back.[18] On his head was a wreath,
woven of straw and leaves, sprinkled with brimstone, the sooner to suffocate
him. His book, Restitutio Christianismi, was bound to his side, to be consumed
with him.[19] The fire burned but
slowly, and he lived for half-an-hour at the stake.[20] Some narrators say that a
little before expiring he cried aloud, "Jesus, Thou Son of the Eternal God, have
mercy upon me!" Farel says, on the other hand, that he protested "in the midst
of the flames, and in defiance of the whole Christian world, against the
doctrine of the Trinity."
A great historian exclaims that the stake of
Servetus caused him greater horror than all the autos-da-fe of Rome. A signal
inconsistency—as the burning of Servetus in a Protestant republic was—may no
doubt strike one more than does a course of crime steadily and persistently
pursued; but surely that mind is strangely constituted which is less moved to
commiseration by thousands of victims than by one victim. The same century which
witnessed the pile of Servetus saw some thirty or forty thousand fires kindled
by the Church of Rome [21] for the burning of
Protestants. But we by no means plead the latter fact as a vindication of the
former. We deplore—we condemn—this one pile. It was a violation of the first
principles of Protestantism. To say more on this head, writing as we do in the
nineteenth century, would be simply to declaim.
But let us not commit the
injustice of Gibbon and those who have followed him. Let us not select one of
the actors, and make him the scapegoat of his age. We have striven to give an
impartial statement of facts, that the reader may know the precise share which
Calvin had in this transaction, and the exact amount of condemnation to mete out
to him.
Calvin informed the Council of Servetus' arrival in Geneva; he
drew up the articles of indictment from the writings of Servetus, the first time
at his own instance, and the second time at the Council's order; and he
maintained these when face to face with Servetus before the syndics. All this he
could not decline to do without neglect of duty as president of the Consistory.
All this he was bound to do by the law of the State. If we are to be
discriminating in our censure, we must go farther back than the denunciation
given in to the Council, and come to the order of things established at Geneva,
which rendered this form of procedure in such cases imperative. It was a vicious
jurisprudence; but it was the jurisprudence of former ages, and of that age, and
the jurisprudence freely adopted by the citizens of Geneva. Those who condemn
Calvin for conforming to it in a matter of public duty, are in reality
condemning him for not being wiser in judicial matters than all previous ages,
his own included, and for not doing what there is no proof he had power to do,
namely, changing the law of the State, and the opinions of the age in which he
lived. Beyond what we have stated Calvin had no influence, and tried to exert
none.
We further grant that Calvin wished a conviction, and that he
approved of the sentence as just—nay, expressed his satisfaction with it, having
respect to the alternative of acquittal—namely, the expulsion of the Reformation
from Geneva. We condemn him for these views; but that is to condemn him for
living in the sixteenth and not in the nineteenth century, and we condemn not
him alone, but his age, for all who lived with him shared these views, and
believed it a duty to punish heresy with death; although even already Calvin, as
appears from his book of the following year, had separated himself from the
Romish idea that heresy is to be punished as heresy—is to be smitten by the
sword, though it should exist only in the depth of one's bosom. He would have
the heretic punished only when he promulgates his opinions to the disturbance of
society. This is to come very near—nearer perhaps than any other man of his day
came—to the modern doctrine of toleration.
But further, it is only
Protestants who are entitled to find fault with Calvin. No Romanist can utter a
word of condemnation. No Romanist of Calvin's's own age did condemn him,[22] and no more can any
Romanist of ours. The law of the Romish world to this day awards death by
burning to heresy; and the Romanist who condemns the affair of Servetus,
condemns what his Church then accounted, and still accounts, a righteous and
holy deed; and so condemns his Church, and himself not less, as a member of it.
He virtually declares that he ought to be a Protestant.
To Calvin, above
all men, we owe it that we are able to rise above the error that misled his age.
And when we think, with profound regret, of this one stake planted by Protestant
hands, surely we are bound to reflect, with a gratitude not less profound, on
the thousands of stakes which the teaching of Calvin has prevented ever being
set up.[23]
CHAPTER
23 Back to
Top
CALVIN'S CORRESPONDENCE WITH MARTYRS,
REFORMERS, AND MONARCHS.
Calvin at the Center- Stages of his Life—His
Work Advancing— Missionaries—The "Dispersed in the Isles"—The Martyrs—How Calvin
Comforted them—The Collar of the Order of Martyrs—The Five Martyrs of
Lyons—Their Behavior at the Stake—Calvin Surveying the Field and the Fallen
around him—Counsels Princes—Edward VI.— Calvin's Letter to Somerset on the
Reformation of England—Letter to Edward VI.—Archbishop Cranmer—Union—Calvin's
Longings for it.
INTENSE interest still attached to the great movement
and its headquarters, the little town of Geneva, around which the clouds of war
and danger were gathering heavier every day, though an unseen Hand withheld them
from bursting.
There sat the man whom the death of Luther had left the
one great chief of the movement. With undaunted brow and steadfast eye, he
surveys the vast field around him, on which so many dangers gather and so many
conflicts are being waged. Assailed by all passions and by every party, by the
democracy below and by the kings above, the Reformer, nevertheless, pursued his
Herculean task, and saw his work year by year taking deeper root and extending
wider on all sides. Luther's energies declined as his years advanced, and he had
the mortification, before he went to his grave, of seeing the Reformation in
Germany beginning to lose the purity to which it owed the splendor of its early
morning, and the power that made it in its noon the ruler of the Teutonic
nations. But Calvin's latter years were his most triumphant, for neither did his
powers decay nor his work stand still; on the contrary, the one continued to
strengthen, and the other to advance, till his last hour on earth. His first
years had been spent in elaborating the scheme of Christian doctrine: his next
were passed in constructing a spiritual machinery, through which the influence
of his doctrine might go forth in order to the purifying and elevating of
society; hence his efforts to hold Geneva, and to quell the infidel democracy,
whose instincts taught it that its greatest enemy was Calvin's Gospel, and that
it must crush it or be crushed by it. Having made good Geneva as a basis of
Protestant operations, Calvin's third period was passed in planting his system
abroad, and guiding, by his writings and letters, the Reformation in France,
England, Switzerland, Poland, and other countries. There was no land where
Calvin was not present.
Geneva, while the Reformer lived in it, was
continually opening its gates to give asylum to the persecuted of other
countries. The same gates were continually opening to let those go forth who
were returning to the field of labor, or it might be of martyrdom. We can give
here only a few instances. One day, in the summer of 1553, a missionary was
commissioned to carry a letter from Calvin, "To the faithful dispersed in some
isles of France." His name was Philibert Hamelin, and he was on his way to the
coast of Saintonge, where a young flock were much in want of some one to
organise and instruct them. Hamelin, a native of Tours, was the first preacher
of the Reformed doctrine in Saintes. He was seized in that town, but escaping
death by almost a miracle, he came to Geneva, where he followed the calling of a
printer. But the ardor of his zeal would not suffer him to remain in his asylum.
He set out to revisit his brethren, "dispersed among the isles," with this
letter, in which Calvin, addressing these young converts, said: "We are nowise
of opinion that you should be in a hurry to partake of the Holy Supper until you
have some order established among you. . . Nay, it would not be lawful for a man
to administer the Sacraments to you, unless he recognised you as the flock of
Jesus Christ, and found among you the form of a Church." The devoted missionary,
in an apostolate of four years, organised their Churches. He never returned to
the great captain who had sent him forth, to tell what success had attended his
labors. Taken anew, he was burned alive at Bordeaux, the 18th April, 1557. [1]
Whilst there was
one stake in the Place Champel, surrounding countries were lit up with a
multitude of blazing stakes. But there was not one of these piles at which
Calvin was not present, nor was there one of these sufferers who was not
refreshed by his words amid the flames. In the July of 1553 two confessors were
expecting death in the prisons of Lyons. Calvin received the tidings during the
trial of Servetus, and when he was in the thick of his contest with the
Libertines. He hastened to their dungeon, as it were, and by words from his own
courageous yet tender heart comforted theirs. "That God," he told them, "who had
called them to the honor of maintaining His truth, would lead them to martyrdom
as by the hand." He bade them think of the "heavenly immortality" to which the
"cross and shame and death" conducted, and of Him who waited, the moment these
were ended, to wipe away all tears. One of these sufferers, who had been reached
by the words of Calvin, thus thanked him:—"I could not tell you, sir and
brother," wrote Louis Marsac, "the great comfort I received from the letters
which you sent to my brother, Denis Peloquin, who found means of passing them to
one of our brethren who was in an underground cell above me, and read them to
me, because I could not read them, inasmuch as I can see nothing in my dungeon.
I pray you, therefore, to persevere in aiding us always with like consolation,
which invites us to weep and pray." When the little company of martyrs, of which
Louis Marsac was one, were led forth to be burned, all appeared with halters
round their necks except Louis. His enemies had spared him this indignity on the
ground of his being nobly born. But so far from reckoning this as a favor, he
even deemed the denial of it a dishonor, and asked why he was refused the collar
of that "excellent order" of martyrs.[2]
Of all the
martyrdoms of the period, the most touching perhaps is that of "the five martyrs
of Lyons." Natives of France, and desirous of taking part in the Reformation of
their own country, they repaired to Lausanne to study theology and qualify
themselves for the ministry. Having completed their course, they received
licence to preach, and set out to begin their labors in France. They rested a
few days in Geneva, and then passed on to their destined field, their spirits
invigorated, we can well believe, by their brief stay in the capital of
Protestantism, and especially by their converse with its great chief. Light they
were destined to impart to their native France, but not in the way they had
fondly hoped. On their journey to Lyons they met at the Bourg de Colonges, nigh
to L'Ecluse, a stranger who offered himself as their fellow-traveler. They
harbored no suspicion, and maintained no disguise in the company of their new
acquaintance. Soon after their arrival at Lyons, they were arrested and thrown
into prison. Their companion had betrayed them. Their fate having awakened great
interest, powerful influence was used in their behalf [3] at the court of France.
The Bernese Government interceded for "their scholars" with the king. Some among
the Romanists even, touched by their pure lives and their lovely characters,
interested themselves for their safety. Meanwhile their trial proceeded at
Lyons. The brutality of the judges was as conspicuous as the constancy of the
prisoners. From the sentence of the Lyonnese court, which adjudged them to
death, they appealed to the Parliament of Paris.
On the 1st of March,
1553, the decree arrived from the capital confirming the sentence of the court
below. So, then, it was by their burning pile, and not by the eloquence of their
living voice, that they were to aid in dispelling the darkness that brooded over
their native land. There was mourning in Lausanne and Geneva, and in other
places on the shores of the Leman, when it was known that those who had so
lately gone forth from them, and for whom they had augured a career of the
highest usefulness, were so soon to meet a tragic death.
"We have been,
for some days past, in deeper anxiety and sadness than ever," writes Calvin to
them, when he had learned the final decision of their persecutors. Turning away
from the throne of Henry II., "We shall," says he, "do our duty herein by
praying to Him that He may glorify Himself more and more in your constancy, and
that He may by the consolation of His Spirit sweeten and endear all that is
bitter to the flesh, and so absorb your spirits in Himself, that in
contemplating that heavenly crown you may be ready without regret to leave all
that belongs to this world. If He has promised to strengthen with patience those
who suffer chastisement for their sins, how much less will He be found wanting
to those who maintain his quarrel! He who dwells in you is stronger than the
world." [4]
How calm these
words, when we think who spoke them, and that they were spoken to men about to
expire in the fire! They breathe not the enthusiasm of feeling, but the
enthusiasm of faith. These five young men were to die for the Gospel, but this
was an every-day service in those days. Every disciple was supposed to be ready
to lay down his life, and to do so with the calm magnanimity of the soldier who
does his duty and nothing more. Calvin himself was prepared at any hour to walk
to the stake with the same absence of ostentation, the same obliviousness of
doing a grand act, as if he had been stepping into his pulpit. Was there, then,
no enthusiasm in those days? Yes, enthusiasm indeed there was; but it was an
enthusiasm that sustained itself, from day to day and from hour to hour, at so
lofty a pitch that it could rise no higher. It could have no spasm, no burst.
Hence, neither was boast in the mouth of the men who did the act, nor applause
in the mouths of those who witnessed it. The spectacle is all the more
sublime.
On the 16th of May the five young students were led to the fire.
They died with a heroism worthy of their age. "Being come to the place of
execution," says Crespin, "they ascended with a joyful heart the pile of wood,
the two youngest first. The last who ascended was Martial Alba, the eldest of
the five, who had a long time been on both his knees praying to the Lord. He
asked Lieutenant Tignac to grant him a gift. The lieutenant said to him, 'What
willest thou?' He said to him, 'That I may kiss my brethren before I die.' The
lieutenant granted it to him. Then the said Martial kissed the four who were
already bound, saying to each of them, 'Adieu, adieu, my brother.' The fire was
kindled. The voices of the five confessors were heard still exhorting one
another: 'Courage, my brethren, courage!' And these," continues Crespin, "were
the last words heard from the said five valiant champions and martyrs of the
Lord."[5]
What, one cannot
refrain from asking, were the thoughts of Calvin, as he was told that another
and another had fallen in the conflict? The feelings of a Caesar or of a
Napoleon, as he surveys the red field of his ambition, we can imagine. Every
corpse stretched out upon it, every drop of blood that moistens its soil, is a
silent accusation, and cries aloud against him. Far other were the feelings of
Calvin as he cast his eye over the field around him, where so many, and these
the noblest and purest of their age, languished in dungeons, or quivered on the
rack, or were expiring amid flames. These were not soldiers who had been dragged
into battle, and who had died to place a crown upon the brow of another. They
were men who had been fighting the battles of their Savior, and who in dying had
won for themselves the crown of life. Nor did the Reformer for one moment
despair of a cause that was suffering these repeated tremendous
losses.
Losses, did we say? Where and to whom was there loss? Not to the
martyr, who received an eternal life in place of the mortal one which he had
laid down; nor to the cause, which waxed stronger with each new martyr, and
received another and another pledge of final victory with every stake that was
planted and every drop of blood that was spilt. That such was the effect of
these martyrdoms, we quote the testimony of one who was no friend to
Protestantism. "The fires were lighted everywhere," says Florimond de Raemond,
"and as, on the one hand, the just severity of the law restrained the people
within their duty, on the other, the obstinate resolution of those who were
dragged to the gibbet astonished many. For they saw weak and delicate women
seeking for torment in order to prove their faith, and on their way to death
exclaiming, 'Only Christ, the Savior,' and singing some psalm; young maidens
walking more gaily to execution than to the bridal-chamber; men rejoicing to
behold the terrible preparations and instruments of death, and, half-burned and
roasted, remaining like rocks against the waves of pain. These sad and constant
sights excited some perturbation, not only in the souls of the simple but of the
great, who were not able to persuade themselves that truth was not on the side
of such as maintained it with so much resolution at the cost of their life."[6]
The same Calvin who
was by the side of the martyr on the scaffold was also with the statesman in his
cabinet, and at times at the foot of the throne giving counsel to princes. Henry
VIII. had died in 1547, and with him expired that peculiar scheme of Reform by
which he aimed at abolishing the jurisdiction of the Pope, yet preserving the
religion of Popery. His son, Edward VI., mounted the throne in his tenth year.
The Duke of Somerset, now Lord Protector, had educated the young prince in the
principles of the Protestant faith. The fine talents and noble character of the
youthful monarch excited the highest hopes in Calvin, and he strove to win him
more and more for the Gospel. Nor were the hopes which the Reformer cherished
disappointed. It was during the reign of this pious prince, and the regency of
Edward Seymour, Lord Protector, that the Reformation was established in England.
Hence the correspondence of Calvin with Somerset, to whom he dedicated, June,
1548, his Commentary on the First Epistle to Timothy. And hence, too, his
remarkable letter to the same statesman in October of the same year, in which he
states fully his sentiments touching what was necessary to complete the
Reformation in England.
This matter will come before us in its proper
place. Meanwhile we note that the Reformer, in his letter to Lord Protector
Somerset, insists on three things as necessary to the moral transformation of
England: first, the preaching of the pure Word of God; second, the rooting out
of abuses; and, third, the correction of vices and scandalous offenses. As
regarded the first, the preaching of the Gospel, Calvin laid stress upon the
manner as well as the doctrine—upon the life as well as the purity of the
pulpit. "The people," says he, "are to be so taught as to be touched to the
quick, and feel that the Word of God is a 'two-edged sword.' I speak this,
Monseigneur," continues the Reformer, "because it appears to me that there is
very little preaching of a lively kind in the kingdom, but that the greater part
deliver it by way of reading from a written discourse. . . This preaching ought
not to be lifeless but lively. Now you know, my Lord," Calvin goes on to say,
"how St. Paul speaks of the liveliness which ought to be in the mouth of good
ministers of God, who ought not to make a parade of rhetoric in order to show
themselves off, but the Spirit of God must resound in their voice." In short,
Calvin desiderated two things—"a good trumpet" and "a certain sound"—if the Lord
Protector would reap fruit of his labors, and the Reformation be permanent in
England.[7]
When at last the
intrigues of his rivals prevailed against him, and the good Duke of Somerset had
to mount the scaffold, Calvin addressed the young king, whose heart was not less
set on the Reformation of England than had been that of the Lord Protector. The
Reformer dedicated to him two of his works, the Commentary on Isaiah, and the
Commentary on the Catholic Epistles. Edward VI. was at this time only fourteen
years of age, but his precocious intellect enabled him to appreciate and even to
judge of the works the Reformer had laid at his feet.
The bearer of these
two books, the pastor Nicolas des Gallars, was received with marked respect at
the court of England. The books were accompanied by a letter to the king, in
which Calvin spoke with the plainness and honesty of the Reformer, yet, mindful
that he was addressing a king, he adopted the tone not of a master but of a
father.
Holding up to him the example of Josiah, he exhorted the young
monarch to "follow up the good work so happily begun;" he cautioned him against
viewing it as achieved, and that it was "not in a day that such an abyss of
superstition as the Papacy is to be purged." "True it is, sire," said he, "that
there are things indifferent which we may allowably tolerate, but then we must
always insist that simplicity and order be observed in the use of ceremonies, so
that the clear light of the Gospel be not obscured by them, as if we were still
under the shadows of the law, and then that there may be nothing allowed that is
not in agreement and conformity to the order established by the Son of God. For
God does not allow his name to be trifled with, mixing up silly frivolities with
his holy and sacred ordinances." "There is another point, sire, of which you
ought to take a special charge, namely, that the poor flocks may not be
destitute of pastors." In fine, he exhorted the king to have a care for the
efficiency and purity of the schools and universities, for he had been informed
that "there are many young people supported on the college bursaries, who,
instead of giving good hope of service in the Church, do not conceal that they
are opposed to the true religion." The Reformer entreated the king to take order
therein, "to the effect that property which ought to be held sacred be not
converted to profane uses, and far less to nourish venomous reptiles, who would
desire nought better than to infect everything for the future. For in this way
the Gospel would always be kept back by these schools, which ought to be the
very pillar thereof."[8]
The pious king had
for primate the erudite Cranmer. The archbishop had cowered under the capricious
tyranny of Henry VIII., but now, moving no longer in the cold and withering
shade of that monarch, Cranmer was himself again; and not only was he laboring
zealously to complete the work of Reformation in England, he was also holding
out the hand to all the Reformers and Reformed Churches on the Continent. He was
at that time revolving a grand Protestant union. He desired that the friends of
the Gospel in all lands should come together, and deduce from the Word of God a
scheme of Christian doctrine which all might confess and hold, and which might
be, to the generation then living and to the ages to come, a standard round
which the Church might rally.[9] At Trent the Church of
Rome was massing and marshalling her troops; the Primate of England thought that
the Protestant Church ought also to close her ranks, and, presenting an unbroken
front to the foe, be ready to repel his attack, or to advance her own triumphs
into regions where her banners had not yet been displayed. Cranmer communicated
his idea to the Reformer of Geneva.
Calvin, in his reply, intimated his
approval of his "just and wise design," and said that for his own part, if he
could further thereby the work of union, "he would not grudge to cross even ten
seas;" and he went on to indicate the existence of certain principles that lay
far down, even at the bottom of society, and which no eye save his own then saw,
but which have since come to the surface, and yielded that noxious and bitter
crop that he predicted they would if not obviated, "the distemper" even of "a
stupid inquisitiveness alternating with that of fearless extravagance." The
Reformer saw that the future of Christendom was menaced by "terrible disorders,"
not more by difference in religious sentiments than by that speculative
philosophic spirit which contravenes the laws of true science not less than it
contemns the authority of the Scriptures. In short, Calvin foresaw, even at that
early period, should Protestantism fail, a pantheistic Europe.
Soon after
this interchange of letters, the death of Edward VI. and the accession of Queen
Mary changed the whole face of affairs. The disastrous events which now took the
place of those bright triumphs that the good archbishop had judged to be so
near, belong to a subsequent period of our history.
CHAPTER
24 Back to
Top
CALVIN'S MANIFOLD
LABORS.
Dedication of his Commentaries and Works—Care of the
Churches— Poland, etc.—England and Elizabeth—Scotland—John Knox—Similarity
between Calvin and Knox—The Secret of their Power—Immense Labors of
Calvin—Calvin and Innocent III. Compared and Contrasted.
THE heart of Calvin must have been unspeakably
saddened and weighed down, as day after day refugees arrived in Geneva, telling
him that another and another of England's Reformers and scholars had perished at
the stake, and that another and yet another of the rites of Rome had been
re-introduced into that kingdom where the light of Reformation had begun to
shine so clearly. But alike in the foul day as in the fair, the Reformer must go
on with his work. He stood at the helm, and if the storm thickened, it was only
the more necessary that he should turn his eye to every quarter of the horizon,
and counsel, warn, and encourage, as the circumstances of each of the Protestant
countries required. "He bore," says Beza, "all these Churches upon his
shoulders." Which of them was it that his voice did not reach? We find him in
1545 renewing his intercourse with the distant Austrian provinces. He dedicated
his Catechism to the Protestant communities there, with the view of establishing
a union in doctrine between them and the Church of Geneva. His watchful eye did
not overlook Poland. In 1549 he dedicated to the monarch of that country,
Sigismund Augustus, his Commentary on the Hebrews. He exhorted him to give
himself to the service of Christ, which places us "in the rank of angels," and
to follow the footsteps of his father Sigismund, who, while persecution raged in
many other countries, kept his hands unstained with blood. Denmark and Sweden
also shared Calvin's solicitude. In the year 1552 he dedicated the first half of
his Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles to the excellent Christian I.; and
the second half he dedicated in 1554 to the son of that monarch,
Frederick.
Amid the crowned heads whom he thus acknowledges, the friends
of his youth and the refugees of the Gospel were not forgotten. The first part
of his Commentary on the Epistle to the Corinthians was dedicated, in 1546, to
the Sieur de Bourgoyne; and, ten years later, another part to an illustrious
Neapolitan, the Marquis Caraccioli, a refugee in Geneva. These dedications are
finely conceived. The writer is forgetful neither of their rank nor of his own
greatness. The Commentary on the Second Epistle to the Corinthians was dedicated
to Melchior Wolmar, and he accompanied it with an allusion, at once graceful and
grateful, to the days he had spent with him in his youth at Bourges. The
Commentaries on the Epistles to the Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, and
Colossians were dedicated to the young Duke Christopher of Wurtemberg, to
encourage him to persevere in the Reformed path, reminding him, as he had said
to the youthful Edward of England, that "it was a great matter to be a Christian
king, but a yet greater to be a Christian." The Commentary on the First Epistle
to the Thessalonians was dedicated, in 1551, to the aged Mathurin Cordier, his
early revered teacher, now principal of the Gymnasium at Lausanne. This was his
public acknowledgment of what he owed to the man who had first opened to him the
gate of knowledge, and guided him in the path with so much skill and pains. What
a deeply affectionate and truthful nature do we discover in all this![1]
Letters and
evangelists was Calvin daily sending to the Church of France. The "Shepherd of
Christendom," he was specially the apostle of the French Church. Born in that
land, but driven out of it, he was here on its border, in his Alp-environed
city, to direct and watch over its Reformation. The Protestants of that great
country would have been far happier had they lent a profounder ear to his
counsels. Their scaffolds would have had more victims, it may be, but the slain
of their battlefields would have been fewer. His messengers also crossed the
Alps, with letters to Renee, Duchess of Ferrara. Encompassed by the spies of
Rome, watched by a bigoted husband, with few near her to succor her efforts, or
share her longings for the emancipation of her fair Italy, the words of Calvin
must have been to the grief-stricken queen as "cold waters" to one athirst. The
Pyrenees no more than the Alps could confine his sympathies. He corresponded
with the Queen of Navarre, Margaret of VaIois, and with her illustrious
daughter, Jeanne d'Albret. We do not wonder that the eye of the Reformer should
rest with special delight on the little kingdom governed by these wise and
virtuous princesses, for there the Protestant vine, so sorely buffeted by
tempests in many other lands, flourished in peace, and yielded abundance of
happy fruits in the order, the industry, and the morality of the region. And
now, again, his attention was attracted to England. Mary was dead, and Elizabeth
was on the throne. To the foot of that throne came the Reformer, to instruct,
with a now fully-matured wisdom and prescience, the great English sovereign and
her ministers, how that faith, planted in their country by Wicliffe, might be
revived, and that goodly Church order set up by Cranmer, but overthrown by the
furious tempests that had since swept over the kingdom, might be restored and
completed.
It is on a country more to the north, then distinct from
England, now happily one with it, that the eye of the great chief of
Protestantism rests with the greatest delight of all. He had, perhaps, a
presentiment that it was that country, rather than France, in which his grand
idea was to be realised. A son of that land had already found his way to Geneva.
The keen eye of Calvin quickly discerned what sort of man the stranger was. The
leonine lineaments of his soul, the robust powers of his intellect stood out to
his view; he was the likest to himself of all the men around him, and the two
cleaved to each other, and became knit together in the bonds of a holy
friendship. Henceforward it was to be Calvin and Knox. Alone, unapproached,
towering above even the loftiest of the men around him, stood the Reformer of
Geneva; nevertheless the same two qualities that constitute the basis of the
character of Calvin constitute also that of Knox. The first is absolute faith in
God, the second is absolute submission to his Word. In these two men, these twin
principles existed to a degree of strength and intensity which we find in no
other of the Reformers, Luther excepted. These two master-principles were the
root that nourished all their virtues—their wisdom, their fearless courage,
their inflexible adherence to truth, and that unconquered and unconquerable
energy with which they pursued their great task till it was fully
achieved.
A strong, capacious, and versatile intellect did both these men
possess. This helped them in their work; it was like a sharp sword in the hand
of a mighty man. But we must never forget that the influence by which Knox
regenerated Scotland, and Calvin regenerated Christendom, was not an
intellectual force, but a moral, a Divine power. Their submission to the
Scriptures gave them access to the deep fountains of that celestial force, and
enabled them to bring it into play in all its freshness, fullness, and purity.
To propel this quickening energy through a dead world was the work of Calvin. It
was his work from day to day. Sitting in his closet, he sent abroad the arrows
of light all over Christendom. It was by the clearness, the tranquility, and the
beauty of his Commentaries that he acted upon the intellect and conscience of
the world. Thus he maintained the battle. With these shafts he smote his foes,
and overturned the kingdom of darkness.
When we think of his letters,
written on affairs of the greatest weight, addressed to the first men of
position and intellect in Europe—some of them in the graceful and concise Latin
of a Cicero or a Seneca, others of them in French that formed the precursor and
model of the age of Montaigne—so numerous are they, that it might have been
supposed he wrote letters and did nothing besides. When we turn to his
Commentaries, so voluminous, so solid, and so impregnated with the spirituality,
and fire, and fragrance of the Divine Word; —again it would seem as if we had
before us the labors of a life-time. "The Commentaries of Calvin," says
Bungener, "mark a revolution in the study of the Bible, and on that account
occupy a distinguished place, not only in the history of theology, but in that
of the human mind.[2] These immortal productions
are above all else that he wrote or did. Calvin—the Calvin that lived and acted
on the world of the sixteenth century—lives and acts on that of the nineteenth
through these Commentaries.
When, again, we think of him in the pulpit,
where he appeared, we may say, every day; when we think of him in the
Consistory, where he was present every week; in the academy, whither he often
went to address the youth; in the council-chamber, to which he was frequently
summoned to give advice on affairs of the State; when we think of his combats
with the Libertines, whose faction he overthrew; of his hospitalities and
attentions to the refugees of all nations; of the foreign Churches which
devolved upon him the task of their organization; of the hours spent in
meditation and prayer—and all accomplished in a feeble and sickly body—we find
once more that we have enough of work to fill a life-time, although it had stood
alone; and we stand amazed when we reflect that it was all done in a life which,
when closed, did not number fifty-five years complete.[3]
Modern Church
history presents us with two examples of the very loftiest style of governing.
Both soar immensely above the ordinary and vulgar methods of rule. The one
presents itself at the meridian of the Papacy, the other is seen in the morning
of Protestantism. The two stand over against each other, a beacon and lesson to
mankind. We refer to Innocent III. of Rome, and John Calvin of
Geneva.
Innocent professed to govern the world by methods purely
spiritual, and on sanctions altogether Divine. A man of comprehensive genius,
and untiring in his application to business, he wrote letters, promulgated
edicts, convoked Councils, perfected the doctrine of his Church by enacting
transubstantiation, and completed its govermnent by the establishment of the
Inquisition. In virtue of this machinery, more especially by the terrible
sentence of interdict, he made himself the master of all the thrones of Europe;
his will was obeyed to the remotest extremities of Christendom.
John
Calvin held with Innocent that the will of God, as made known in the Scriptures,
ought to be the supreme law on earth. But the results that attended this
principle as enthroned at Rome were just the opposite of those that flowed from
it as established at Geneva, and worked by Calvin. Innocent cast down thrones;
Calvin imparted stability and dignity to them. Innocent's rule sunk the nations
into serfdom, Calvin's raised them to liberty. Innocent scattered the seeds of
barbarism; Calvin sowed those of virtue and intelligence. Why this markedly
different result from what professed to be the same government, in its
foundation, in its maxims, and in its aims? It all lies in this: Innocent shut
the Word of God to the nations, by arrogating to himself the office of its sole
infallible interpreter; Calvin threw open the sacred volume, by asserting the
right of all to read and interpret it for themselves. He showed them, too, the
road by which they would arrive at a knowledge of its true meaning, and thus
while Innocent closed, Calvin opened the sluices of Divine influence on the
world. Or, to express the difference more briefly, Calvin governed by God;
Innocent governed as God.
CHAPTER
25 Back to
Top
FINAL VICTORY AND GLORY OF
GENEVA.
The Libertines Renew the Attack—Social Disorders—The
Spiritual Supremacy of the Consistory the Key of Calvin's Position—Cannot be
Abandoned—Council finally Concedes it—Flank Attack—The Libertines Complain of
the Sermons—of the Publications of Calvin—of the Refugees—Fifty Refugees
Enrolled as Citizens—Perrin Excites a Tumult—Projected Massacre of the
Refugees—Miscarriage of the Attempt—Executions—Perrin Flees—Victory—Glory of
Geneva.
WHILE Calvin was counselling monarchs, drafting plans
of Reform for statesmen, organising Churches, corresponding with theologians in
all countries, and laboring to harmonize their views of Divine truth—in short,
acting as the moral legislator of Christendom—he was the object of unceasing and
bitter attack on the part of a faction of the Genevese. They detested his
presence in their town, openly insulted him on their streets, and ceaselessly
intrigued to drive him from Geneva, the city which he had made famous throughout
Europe, and which, the moment that he quitted it, would sink into its orighlal
obscurity.
We have seen the victory which Calvin, at the peril of his
life, won over the Libertines in the Cathedral of St. Peter's, on Sunday, the
3rd of September, 1553. The storm lulled for a little while, but in a few months
it was renewed. Those who were guilty of scandals, and of course were visited
with the censures of the Church, repaired to the Council, and complained of the
rigor of the Consistory. The ministers were summoned to justify their
proceedings—a hard task before magistrates, some of whom were hostile, and
almost all of whom were lukewarm in the cause of the spiritual discipline. Might
not Calvin, it may be said, have obviated these complaints by separating the
Church from the State, in the way of distinguishing between citizens and
Church-members, and holding only the latter amenable to the ecclesiastical
discipline? This practically was what the Reformer was aiming at doing. By
excluding the profane from the Lord's Supper, he was separating the Church from
the world; but he was hampered by two circumstances—first, by the theocratic
government existing in Geneva, and which he found there in its rudimental state
when he entered it; and secondly, by the Libertines, who resented their
exclusion from Church privileges as an affront and wrong.
The Libertine
faction, scotched but not killed, became bold in proportion as they saw the
Council was timid. "See," said they, "how we are governed by French edicts and
by Calvin." One of its opponents said of the Consistory that "it was more savage
than Satan himself,[1] but he hoped soon to tame
it. Beza tells us that the revolutionary party made obscene songs on the Word of
God. Sometimes mock processions passed along the street, singing profane
parodies of the hymns of the Church.[2] "The Libertines," says
Roset, "commenced the year 1555 with new manifestations of their old wickedness.
Having supped together, to the number of ten, on the night of the 9th January,
they took each a candle, and paraded the streets, singing, at the full stretch
of their voices, the psalms, interlaced with jeers."[3] One day as Calvin was
returning from preaching in the suburb of St. Gervais, he was hustled on the
bridge of the Rhone by a knot of miscreants who had gathered there. He very
quietly rebuked their insolence by the remark that "the bridge was wide enough
for them all." We find him about this time writing to Bullinger that "his
position was become almost unbearable." We hear him pouring out his deep sighs,
and expressing, like Melancthon, his wish to die. This was much from the strong
man. The days had come, foreseen by him, and foretold in his own expressive
language to Farel, when he should have to "offer his bleeding heart as a
sacrifice to God." But, though his heart bled, his spirit, ever undaunted,
maintained the conflict with a patience and fortitude not to be
overcome.
The Reformer returned to Geneva from his banishment on the
express promise of the Council that the Consistory should be supreme in all
ecclesiastical causes. Without this provision Calvin would never again have
entered the gates of that city. Not that he wished power for himself. "I would
rather die a hundred times," said he, "than appropriate that authority which is
the common property of the Church."[4] But unless the sentences
of the spiritual court were final, how could order and moral rule be upheld? and
without the supremacy of moral law, of what use would his presence in Geneva be
to Protestantism? But this essential point was all the more the object of attack
by the Libertines.
Amy Perrin, the personal foe of the Reformer, once
more led in this second battle.[5] "It is to us," said Perrin
and his troop, "an astonishing thing that a sovereignty should exist within a
sovereignty. Good sense seems to us to require that the sovereign authority
should be entire, and that all questions and parties should be under the rule of
the Seigneury. Not otherwise can we preserve that liberty which we have so
dearly bought. You are reviving the tyranny of the Pope and the prelates,"
continued Perrin, "under this new name of spiritual jurisdiction."[6] "No," replied the pastors,
who had assembled in the council-chamber, and were speaking through the mouth of
Calvin, "No; we only claim obedience to the rule of the Bible, the law of Jesus
Christ, the Head of the Church. He has given to us the power to bind and
loose—in other words, to preach the Word and to administer the Sacraments. The
magistrates have no more right to forbid us the exercise of this power, than we
have to invade the government and civil jurisdiction. To us holy things have
been committed, and we shall take care that the Table of the Lord is not
dishonored by the presence at it of the profane."[7]
The pastors
fortified their position by appealing to the separation between things sacred
and things civil, that existed under the Old Testament. To the family of Aaron
had all things appertaining to worship been assigned; to the house of David had
the civil government been committed. It appertained not to the most powerful of
the Jewish monarchs to perform the humblest service at the altar; and those
kings who, forgetting this distinction, presumed to bring their authority into
the temple, were smitten with judgment. "So far," said Calvin in conclusion, "is
the power of the pastors from being a menace to the liberty of the republic,
that it is its best protection. Liberty without the Gospel is but a miserable
slavery."[8]
These reasonings
were not without their effect on the magistrates. By a majority of suffrages,
the Council resolved that its former edict should remain in force—in other
words, that the arrangement made with Calvin when he returned to Geneva—namely,
that the final decision in all Church offenses be with the Consistory—should be
maintained.[9] Geneva was still secured
to the Reformer. The basis on which he rested his great work, both in Geneva
itself and throughout Christendom, the Libertines had not yet been able to
overturn.
They did not, however, accept of their defeat and desist from
the war. Baffled in this front attack, they next assailed the Reformer on the
flank. "We have too many ministers," said they, raising their voices to a loud
pitch. "We have too many ministers and too many sermons." There were then only
four pastors in Geneva; but the Libertines thought that they were four too many,
and although they did not demand their entire suppression as yet, they modestly
proposed that they should be reduced to two. As regarded the Churches, they
would not lock their doors outright, but they would at once abolish the sermon,
in which their vices were branded with a pointedness and lashed with a severity
since transferred from the pulpit to the press and the platform. They were
willing that a harmless kind of worship should go on. They would permit the
people to be taught the "Creed," the "Lord's Prayer," and the "Ten
Commandments." This amount of instruction, they thought, might be safely
tolerated. As to those floods of exposition poured forth upon them weekday and
Sunday, they saw no need for such: it was dangerous; and the Council ought to
raise legal dykes within which to confine this torrent of pious eloquence.[10]
The Libertines next
turned their attention to the correction of another great abuse, as they deemed
it. The liberty of the press found no favor in the eyes of these champions of
freedom. What is the use, they asked, of so many Commentaries and printed books?
We must fetter the pen of this Calvin, for the State of Geneva is not able to
bear the many books he is sending forth. We must stop this plethora of writing
and publishing.[11]
Such was their
estimate of that mighty genius, in the light of which kings and statesmen were
glad to walk! We may imagine what would have been the fame of Geneva, and what
the state of letters and civilization in Europe in the next century, if the
Libertines instead of Calvin had triumphed in this controversy.
There
arose yet another cause of complaint and quarrel. The refugees who sought asylum
in Geneva were at this time increasing from week to week. Weeded out by the hand
of persecution, they were the men of the purest morals, of the richest culture,
and the noblest souls which the surrounding countries could boast. Not a few
were men of the highest rank, and of very large possessions, although in almost
every case they arrived penniless.[12]
The little State
began to inscribe their names on the registers of its citizens. The proudest
kingdom would have done itself an honor by enrolling such men among its
subjects. Not so did Perrin and his faction account it.
"They are beggars
who have come here to eat the bread of the Genevese."—so did they speak of those
who had forsaken all for the Gospel—"they are Calvin's allies, who flock hither
to support him in tyrannizing over the children of the soil; they are usurping
the rights of the ancient burgesses and destroying the liberties of the town;
they are the enemies of the republic, and what so likely as that they will
purchase their way back into their own country by betraying Geneva to the King
of France?" These and similar accusations—the ready invention of coarse and
malignant natures—were secretly whispered among the populace, and at last openly
preferred before the Council, against the distinguished men of almost every
nationality now assembled in Geneva.
Early in the year 1555 the matter
came to a head, and we note it more particularly because it brought on the final
struggle which overturned the faction of the Libertines, and left the victory
wholly with Calvin. At one sitting the Council admitted as many as fifty
foreigners, all men of known worth, to the rights of citizenship. Perrin and his
followers raised a louder cry than ever. "The scum of Europe," "the supporters
of Calvin's despotism," are possessing themselves of our heritage. These were
the epithets by which they chose to designate the new burgesses. These men had
not, indeed, been born on the soil of the republic, but Geneva had no better
citizens than they; certainly none more willing to obey her law, or more ready
to shed their blood for her liberty if occasion should require. The Gospel,
which they had embraced, made the territory of Geneva more their native land
than the country they had left. But the Libertines understood nothing of all
this. They went to the Council and complained, but the Council would not listen
to them. They carried their appeal to the populace, and at this bar that appeal
was more successful.[13]
On the 16th May,
Perrin returned to the Council with a larger number of followers, chiefly
fishermen and boatmen, armed with huge double-handled swords.[14] This motley host was
dismissed with the same answer as before. The malcontents paraded the streets
all day, calling on the citizens to bestir themselves, and save the town, which
was on the eve of being sacked by the foreigners. The better class of citizens
paid no attention to this cry of "The wolf!" and remained quiet in their homes;
but the ranks of the rioters were swelled by numbers of the lower orders, whose
patriotism had been stimulated by the free rations of wine and food which were
served out to them.[15]
On Friday, the 18th
May, the heads of the party met in a tavern with a certain number, says
Bonivard, of "brawling companions." The more moderate, who may be presumed to
have been also the more sober, were for convoking the Council-General; but the
more violent [16] would hear of nothing but
the massacre of all the refugees of religion, and their supporters. The Sunday
following, when the citizens would be all at church,[17] was fixed on for the
execution of this horrible plot.
The eagerness of the Libertines to
consummate their crime caused the plot to miscarry. The very next night after
their meeting, the fumes of the wine, we may charitably believe, not having as
yet exhaled, the mob-patriots rushed into the street with arms in their hands to
begin their dreadful work. "The French, the French," they shouted, "are taking
the town! Slay all, slay all!" But not one of the refugees was to be seen. "The
Lord," says Calvin, "had poured a deep sleep upon them." But the other citizens
rushed armed into the street. There was a great uproar, shouts, cries, and
clashing of arms; but fortunately the affray passed without bloodshed. "God,"
says Ruchat, "who watches over the affairs of men, and who wished to preserve
Geneva, did not permit Perrin to accomplish his design."[18]
The Council
assembled in a few days, and then measures were taken to bring the seditious to
punishment, and prevent the peace of the city being broken by similar outrages
in time to come. Four heads fell beneath the axe. Perrin's also would have
fallen, had he not timeously cared for its safety by flight. With him fled all
those who felt that they were too deeply compromised to presume on pardon. The
rest were banished, and found refuge on the territory of Bern. The issue of this
affair determined the future fortunes of Geneva.
From being a nest of
Libertines, who would have speedily wasted their own and their city's strength
by their immoral principles and their disorderly lives, and who would have
plunged Geneva into its former vassalage, riveting more hopelessly than ever its
old yoke upon its neck, this small but ancient town was, by this turn of
affairs, rescued to become the capital of Protestantism—the metropolis of a
moral empire.
Here, not in state, like a Roman cardinal, but in the
lowliness of a simple pastor, dwelt, not the monarch of that empire—for monarch
it has not on earth—but the presiding mind, the directing genius of
Protestantism. From this center were propagated those energies and influences
which, mightier than armies, were rending the shackles from the human soul, and
calling nations from their tomb. Within its walls the elite of Europe was
assembling; and as another and yet another illustrious stranger presented
himself at its gates, and crossed its threshold, the brilliant intellectual
glory of Geneva gathered an additional brightness, and its moral potency waxed
stronger day by day. To it all eyes were turned, some in admiration and love,
others in hatred and fear. Within it were born those great thoughts which, sent
forth in letters, in pamphlets, in great tomes, were as light to roll back the
darkness—bolts to discomfit the enemy, and pour confusion upon the champions of
error. Protestant troops are continually passing out at its gates, girded only
with the sword of the Spirit, to assail the strongholds of darkness, and add new
provinces to the kingdom of the Gospel. As realm after realm is won, there goes
forth from this same city a rescript for its organization and government; and
that rescript meets an obedience more prompt and hearty than was ever accorded
to the edicts sent forth from the proud mistress of the ancient world for the
molding of those provinces which her arms had subjugated.
What an
astonishing phenomenon must the sudden rise of this little town have appeared to
the men of those times! How portentous to the friends of the Old religion! It
had not been built up by human hands; it was not defended by human weapons; yet
here it stood, a great lighthouse in the center of Christendom, a mother of
Churches, a nurse of martyrs, a school of evangelists, an impregnable asylum of
the persecuted, a font of civilization, an abode of letters and arts; a great
moral tribunal, where the actions of all men were weighed, and in whose
inexorably just and righteous awards men heard the voice of a higher tribunal,
and were enabled to read by anticipation the final judgment of posterity, and
even that of the great Supreme.
This was what Calvin's victory had
brought him. He might well deem that it had not been too dearly bought. Truly it
was worth all the anxieties and insults he had borne, all the toil and agony he
had endured, all the supplications and tears he had poured out to achieve it.
Nine years had he been in gaining it, nine years were to be given him to turn it
to account.
CHAPTER
26 Back to
Top
GENEVA AND ITS INFLUENCE IN
EUROPE.
Peace of Geneva—Geneva and Calvin become One—Testimony of
Knox and others to the Church of Geneva—The Sundays of Geneva—The Libertines and
Bern—Bolsec and Castalio—Calvin's Care of the Church of France—Preachers sent to
it—Labors in Organising Churches— Calvin Counsels the French Protestants to
Eschew Arms—Martyrs, not Soldiers, wanted—Forged Letters— Constitution and
Organization of the French Protestant Church—Amazing Growth of Protestantism in
France.
CALVIN had made good his foothold at last. He had
fought for this little town as conqueror never fought for mightiest empire, and
now it was his own. Geneva had been rescued from the base uses to which the
Libertines had destined it, and was now consecrated to the noblest of all ends.
It was to be, not the head-quarters of a philosophy that would have demoralised
Christendom, but the temple of a faith that was to regenerate and exalt it. It
was to be, not the beacon to lure to the whirlpool of revolution, but the light
that would guide the nations to the haven of stability and glory.
The
Reformer had now peace. But his condition can be justly styled peace only when
compared with the tempests of the nine previous years. Of these he had feelingly
and compendiously said, "that while everywhere the Church was agitated, at
Geneva it was tossed as was the Ark on the billows." It was a true description;
but the calm had come at last. The Ark had found its Ararat, and now within that
city, for the possession of which two interests had so stoutly contended, the
fierce winds had gone down, and the waves had subsided into rest.
Calvin
now proceeded to make Geneva fit for the grand purposes for which he had
destined her. And Geneva willingly surrendered herself to be fashioned as the
Reformer wished; her life she permitted to be absorbed in his life, feeling
that, with him was inseparably bound up her order, her grandeur, nay, her very
existence, so far as concerned every good and useful object. Her law, her
Council, her citizens, all tacitly consented to be parts of the great
Reformer—the ministries through which he operated on Christendom. We have the
testimony of a noble eye-witness to the state of Geneva at this period. "In my
heart," says Knox, in a letter to his friend Mr. Locke, "I could have wished,
yea, and cannot cease to wish, that it might please God to guide and conduct you
to this place, where I neither fear nor eshame to say is the most perfect school
of Christ that ever was in the earth since the days of the apostles. In other
places I confess Christ to be truly preached; but manners and religion to be so
sincerely reformed, I have not yet seen in any other place beside.[1] Farel bore similar
testimony to the flourishing condition of Geneva after its many perils. "I was
lately at Geneva," he says, "and so delighted was I that I could scarce tear
myself away. I would rather be last in Geneva than first in any other place.
Were I not prevented by the Lord, and by my love for my congregation, nothing
would hinder me from ending my days there." Drelincourt expressed the same
admiration a hundred years after.[2]
If there was peace
in the days of Calvin within Geneva, there were ambushes all around. The first
trouble was created by the banished Libertines. Bern took the part of these
exiles in the quarrel, declaring that they had been guilty of no crime, and
demanding of the Council and citizens of Geneva that they should give
satisfaction to those they had expelled, and receive them back. It may be
conjectured that there was in all this a little jealousy on the part of the
powerful Bern of the rising glory of Geneva. The little republic replied to this
haughty demand by expelling the families of the Libertines, and forbidding the
return of the banished under pain of death. It was now feared that the
Libertines, supported by Bern, meditated re-entering Geneva by force of arms.
The territory of Bern bordered with that of Geneva, and the Libertines stationed
themselves on that part of it which lay nearest the city, and offered daily
menaces and petty annoyances. They resorted to the bridge of the Arve, and
mocked and jeered at the Genevese who had occasion to pass that way.[3] The citizens, irritated
beyond measure, were often on the point of rushing out and punishing these
insolences, but the Council restrained them.[4] The matter continued in an
uneasy and dangerous condition for some time, but a sudden turn in the politics
of Europe, which menaced both cities with a common danger, brought in the issue
deliverance to Geneva.
The battle of St. Quentin, in Normandy, was fought
about this time. In this fight the arms of Charles of Spain were victorious over
those of Henry II. of France. Philibert Emmanuel, Prince of Piedmont, who
commanded the Spanish army, was the heir of the titles and rights of his father
Charles, Duke of Savoy; but he inherited the titles only; the estates had gone
from his house, and were now partly in the hands of the King of France, and
partly in possession of Bern, and other Swiss cantons. The French king being now
humbled, the Prince of Piedmont deemed this a favorable moment for reclaiming
his hereditary dominions. He issued an edict to that effect, and immediately
thereafter dispatched a body of eight thousand lanzknechts, or lancers, to
establish his authority over his former subjects. The alarm was great throughout
Switzerland, and more especially in Geneva and Bern. The Bernese had now other
things to think of than the quarrel into which the banished Libertines had led
them. This last matter gradually went to sleep; and thus Geneva, by this
shifting in the great European winds, was delivered without the necessity of
striking a single blow.[5]
The affairs of
Bolsec and Castalio belong to biography rather than to history. Both of these
men opposed Calvin on the doctrine of predestination. Both of them interrupted
him publicly when preaching in St. Peter's. The Council had them seized, on the
ground of the maintenance of the public peace, rather than on the ground of
difference of doctrine. The result was that both were banished from Geneva,
never to return. This punishment, which has been laid at the door of the
Reformer, has been denounced as harsh. But we ought to keep in mind that Bolsec
and Castalio were not Genevese, banished from their native land; they were
foreigners who had resided in Geneva, the one a few years, the other only a few
months.[6] "As to those who are
indignant that Bolsec should even have been banished," says Bungener, "we know
not what to say to them, unless that they are completely ignorant how the
question stood in regard to the Reformation and to Geneva—especially to Geneva.
To wish that she had opened her gates to all the variations and daring flights
of religious thought, is to wish that that great lever, the Reformation, had
without a fulcrum lifted the world."[7]
Stationed just
outside the French territory, the Reformer was able, from this citadel in which
God had placed him, to keep constant watch over the Protestant Church of France.
During the nine years he had yet to live, that Church was the object of his
daily care. He had found her in her cradle, and he nursed her into strength. It
was for his counsel she waited when any emergency arose, and it was to his voice
and pen that she looked for defense when danger threatened. She revered him as
her father. The first necessity of Christendom, in the opinion of Calvin, was
the Gospel. Accordingly, it was one of his chief labors to prepare, in the
school of Geneva, qualified preachers who should go forth, and sow everywhere
the seed of the kingdom. Many of these missionaries selected France as their
field of labor. Thither were they followed by the instructions and prayers of
the great chief from whose feet they had gone forth; and the consciousness that
his eye was upon them, helped to make them zealous in labor and courageous in
death, which so many of them were called to endure in the discharge of their
ministry. We have two proofs that great numbers offered themselves to this most
inviting but very hazardous field. The first is the letter which the King of
France, Charles IX., in January, 1561, sent to Geneva, complaining of the
preachers who had come from thence, and calling upon the Council to recall them.
The second is the letter of Calvin to Bullinger, in the May following, which
reveals incidentally what a powerful propaganda Geneva had become, and shows us
the soldiers of the Cross daily setting out from her gates to spread the
triumphs of the Gospel. "It is incredible," writes Calvin, "with what ardor our
friends devote themselves to the spread of the Gospel. As greedily as men before
the Pope solicit him for benefices, do they ask for employment in the Churches
beneath the Cross. They besiege my door to obtain a portion of the field to
cultivate. Never had monarch courtiers more eager than mine. They dispute about
the stations as of the kingdom of Jesus Christ was peaceably established in
France.
Sometimes I seek to restrain them. I show to them the atrocious
edict which orders the destruction of every house in which Divine service shall
have been celebrated. I remind them that in more than twenty towns the faithful
have been massacred by the populace.[8] In those happy days— happy
although stakes were blazing—it seemed as if the ancient saying was reversed,
and that no longer were the laborers few. No wonder that Calvin for once breaks
into enthusiasm, and gives vent to his joy. But we do the Reformer only justice
when we say that he rejoiced not because he was leader, but because his soldiers
were devoted. They were men worthy of their captain.
The success of these
Evangelists entailed new labors and responsibilities on the Reformer. The
Churches which they planted had to be organised. These new communities came to
Geneva for the principles of their constitution, and the model of their
government. If Geneva bore the likeness of Calvin, France now began to bear the
likeness of Geneva. Thus the cares of the Reformer were multiplied and his
labors increased as he grew older, he lived two lives in one. The life passed in
communion with God, and in the study of His Word, in his closet, fed and
sustained that other life of intense and practical activity which he led before
the world. From the contemplation of the laws of the kingdom of Christ as laid
down in the Bible, he rose up to apply these, as he believed, in the arrangement
of living Churches, and in the scheme of policy which he enjoined on the now
powerful Protestant body of France.
His counsels on this head expressed a
lofty wisdom, which was not appreciated at the time, but the three centuries
that have since elapsed have set their seal upon it. All his authority and
eloquence were put forth to make the Protestants eschew politics, shun the
battle-field, and continue to fight their great war with spiritual weapons only.
The Reformer foresaw for the Church of France a glorious future, if only she
should persevere in this path. He had no faith in blood shed in battle: no, not
in victorious battle; but he had unbounded faith in blood shed at the stake of
martyrdom. Give him martyrs—not men in arms—and France was won. Not one letter
of Calvin is extant in which he recommends a contrary course. His advice to the
Protestants of France was to wait, to have patience, to submit to wrong, to
abstain from revenging themselves, and not to be sparing of their blood, for
every drop spilt would, he assured them, bring them nearer the goal they wished
to reach. Nor were these counsels given to a small and weak party, which by
resisting might bring destruction upon itself: they were addressed to a body now
approximating in numbers half the population of France. They were given to a
body which had in its ranks men of wealth, nobles, and even princes of the
blood: a body that could raise soldiers, lead armies, fight battles, and win
victories. Well, but, says Calvin, the victories of the battlefield are barren;
those of the martyr are always fruitfnl. One of the latter is worth a score of
the former.
Two letters have been forged with intent to convict the
Reformer of having prompted to the violent courses which some fiery spirits
among tha French Protestants were now beginning to pursue. The pretended
original manuscripts are in the archives of the family of D'Alisac, but their
spuriousness has been abundantly proved.[9] They are neither in the
handwriting of Calvin nor in that of any of his known secretaries; and they are,
moreover, disfigured by gross literary errors, by coarse and violent epithets,
and by glaring anachronisms. "In the first, M. du Poet is called general of the
religion in Dauphine, and this letter is dated 1547, a period in which the
Reformed religion had in Dauphine neither a soldier nor an organised Church, and
in which M. du Poet was still a Romanist! In the second letter, dated 1561, the
same person is called Governor of Montelimart, and High Chamberlain of Navarre,
dignities with which he was not invested till long after the death of Calvin.[10]
Attempts have also
been made to connect the Reformer with the raid of the notorious Baron des
Ardrets. This man signalised his short career as a Protestant by invading the
district of Lyons, slaughtering Romanists, sacking churches, making booty of the
priestly vestments and the sacred vessels, and appropriating some of the
cathedrals for the Protestant worship. Did Calvin account these acquisitions a
gain to Protestantism? Better, he said, worship in the open air, in dens of the
earth, anywhere, than in edifices so acquired. He wrote to Ardrets, sharply
reproving him, and condemning the outrages by which he had disgraced the holy
cause, for the sake of which he professed to have wrought them. A similar
judgment did the Reformer pronounce on the conspiracy of Areboise, that
ill-omened commencement of political Protestantism in France. "Better," he said,
writing to the head of that conspiracy, La Renaudie, "Better we should all
perish a hundred times than be the cause of exposing the Gospel to such a
disgrace."[11]
But day and night
he was intent on marshalling the spiritual host, and leading it to the combat.
Evangelists, martyrs, Churches: these were the three arms—to use a military
phrase—with which he carried on the war.
Of the skill and pains which he
devoted to the preparation of the latter weapon—the organization of Churches—we
give but one example. For forty years the evangelization of France had been
going on. There were now small congregations in several of its towns. In May,
1559, eleven ministers assembled in Paris, and constituted themselves into a
National Synod. This affair will come before us more fully afterwards; we notice
it here as necessary to the complete view of the work of Calvin. His plastic
hand it was that communicated to the French Protestants that organization which
we see assumed at first by a mere handful of pastors, but which was found to be
equally adapted to that mighty Church of thousands of congregations which, ten
years thereafter, was seen covering the soil of France.
There was first the single congregation, or Church of
the locality, with its pastor and small staff of associated rulers. This was the
foundation. Over the Church of a locality were placed the Churches of the
district. Each congregation sent its pastor and an elder to form this court,
which was termed the Colloquy. Over the Colloquy were the Churches of the
province, termed the Conference; and over the Conference were the Churches of
all France, or National Synod.
This constitution was essentially
democratic. The whole body of the people—that is, the members of the Church—were
the primary depositaries of this power; but its exercise was narrowed at each
gradation upwards. It began with the local congregation, which, through their
pastor and elders, decided on all matters appertaining to themselves. Thence it
passed to the Colloquy, which adjudicated on general questions, and on cases of
appeal. It proceeded upwards through the Provincial Conference to the National
Synod, which was the most select body of all, being constituted of two pastors
and two elders from each province. The National Synod passed sentence in the
last resort, and from its decision there was of course no appeal.
If the
basis of this government was broad, being composed of the whole body of the
people, it had for its apex the very elite of the clergy and laity. Liberty was
secured, but so too were order, vigor, and justice. For the decision of the most
important questions it reserved the highest talents and the maturest wisdom. It
combined the advantages of a democracy with those of a monarchy. Its foundations
were as wide and popular as the constitution of England, but counterpoised by
the weight and influence of the National Synod, even as the government of
England is by the dignity and power of the Crown.
Calvin did not carry
his narrowing process the length of a single overseer or bishop. Not that he
held it unlawful to place over the Church a chief pastor, or that he believed
that the Bible condemned the office of bishop in itself. He recommended an
episcopate to the Church of Poland:[12] he allowed the office of
bishop in the Church of England;[13] and he has so expressed
himself in his Institutes, as to leave the Church at liberty on this head. But
he thought he could more clearly trace in the New Testament such a distribution
of power as that which he had now made, and, at all events, this equality of
office he deemed much safer at present for the Church of France, for which he
foresaw a long period of struggles and martyrdoms. He would not expose that
Church to seduction by opening to her ministers the path of official or personal
aggrandisement. The fewer the dignities and grandeurs with which they were
encompassed, the more easy would they find it to mount the scaffold; and it was
martyrs, not mitred chiefs, that were destined, he believed, to lead the Church
to victory.
The organization of the Church of France brought with it a
new era to Protestantism in that kingdom. From this time forward its progress
was amazingly rapid. Nobles and burgesses, cities, and whole provinces pressed
forward to join its ranks. Congregations sprang up in hundreds, and adherents
flocked to them in tens of thousands. The entire nation bade fair soon to
terminate its divisions and strifes in a common profession of the Protestant
faith. Such was the spectacle that cheered the last years of Calvin. What a
profound thankfulness—we do not say pride, for pride he banished as sinful in
connection with such a cause—must have filled the bosom of the Reformer, when he
reflected that not only was the little city of Geneva, which he had won for the
Gospel in order that through it he might win mightier realms, preserved from
overthrow in the midst of hostile powers, but that it had become the center of a
spiritual empire whose limits would far exceed, and whose duration would long
out-last, the empire of Charles!
CHAPTER
27 Back to
Top
THE ACADEMY OF
GENEVA.
Foundation of the Academy—Subscriptions—Its Opening—Its
Literary Equipment—Its Subsequent Renown—Its Library—What it Suggests— Calvin's
Simplicity of Life—Sadoleto Visits him—The Cardinal's Surprise—Calvin's
Poverty—His Charity—He Declines the Aid of the Council.
IN the wake of the Gospel, learning and the arts,
Calvin held, should ever be found. Geneva had become, in the first place, a
fountain of Divine knowledge to the surrounding countries; he would make it, in
the second place, a fountain of science and civilization. In Italy, letters came
first; but in England, in Bohemia, in Germany, and now in Geneva, the Divine
science opened the way, and letters and philosophy followed. It was drawing
towards the evening of his life, when Calvin laid the foundations of the Academy
of Geneva. Next to the Reformation, this school was the greatest boon that he
conferred on the republic which had only lately enrolled his name among its
citizens. It continued long after he was dead to send forth distinguished
scholars, in every department of science, and to shed a glory on the little
State in which it was planted,[1] and where previous to the
Reformation scarcely one distinguished man was to be found.
The idea of
such an institution had long been before the mind of Calvin, and he wished not
to die till he had realised it. Having communicated his design to the Council,
it was approved of by their Excellencies, and in 1552 a piece of ground was
purchased on which to erect the necessary buildings. But money was lacking.
Geneva was then a State of but from 15,000 to 20,000 inhabitants. Its burdens
were numerous. It had to exercise hospitality to from one to two thousand
refugees. It had to endure the expenses of war in a time of peace, owing to the
continual rumors set on foot that the city was about to be assaulted. After
satisfying these indispensable demands, the citizens had not much money to
spare. For six years the ground on which the future college was to stand lay
untouched; not a sod was turned, not a stone was laid.
Impatient at this
delay, and thinking that he had waited long enough on the Council, Calvin now
set on foot a public subscription, and soon he found himself in possession of
10,000 florins. This was little for the object, but much for the times. He
immediately laid the foundations of the edifice. He marked with joy the rising
walls; tearing himself from his studies, he would descend from the Rue des
Chanoines to the scene of operations, and though enfeebled by quartan-ague he
might be seen dragging himself over the works, speaking kindly words now and
again to the workmen, and stimulating them by expressing his satisfaction at
their progress. Two edifices were rising at the same moment under the eye of the
Reformer. The organization of the French Protestant Church and the building of
the Academy went on together. On the 5th of June, 1559, just eleven days after
the meeting of the National Synod in Paris, the college was ready to receive
both masters and pupils. The inauguration was celebrated by a solemn service in
St. Peter's, at which the senators, the ministers, and the burgesses attended.
After prayer by Calvin, and a Latin address by Beza, the laws and statutes of
the college, the confession to be subscribed by the students, and the oath to be
taken by the rector and masters were read aloud. Theodore Beza was appointed
rector; five masterships—Calvin had asked seven—one of Hebrew, one of Greek, one
of philosophy, and two of theology, were instituted. In 1565, a year after the
death of the Reformer, there was added a lectureship in law. With her
Academy—which, however, was but the top-stone of a subsidiary system of
instruction which was to prepare for the higher—Geneva was fitter than ever for
the great spiritual and moral sovereignty which Calvin intended that she should
exercise in Europe.[2]
Bungener's
description of this memorial is as touching as his reflections are just. "After
their venerable cathedral," says he, "no building is dearer to the Genevese; if
you go upstairs to the class-rooms, you are in the rooms of the library—full of
memorials yet more living and particular. There you will be shown the books of
Calvin's library, the mute witnesses of his vigils, his sufferings, and his
death; there you will turn over the leaves of his manuscripts, deciphering, not
without difficulty, a few lines of his feverish writing, rapid as his thoughts;
and, if your imagination will but lend itself to the breathing appeals of
solitude and silence, there he himself is; you will behold him gliding among
those ancient walls, pale, but with a sparkling eye—feeble and sickly, but
strong in that inner energy, the source of which was in his faith. There also
will appear to you, around him, all those of whom he was to be the
father—divines, jurists, philosophers, scholars, statesmen, and men of war, all
filled with that mighty life which he was to bequeath to the Reformation, after
having received it from her. And if you ask the secret of his power, one of the
stones of the college will tell it you in a few Hebrew words, which the Reformer
had engraved upon it. Come into the court. Enter beneath that old portico which
supports the great staircase, and you will read—The fear of the Lord is the
beginning of wisdom. And it is neither on the wall nor on one of the pillars
that these words are engraved. Mark well: it is on the key-stone. What an
emblem! and what a lesson!"[3]
The position which
Calvin now filled was one of greater influence than perhaps any one man had
exercised in the Church of Christ since the days of the apostles. He was the
counsellor of kings; he was the adviser of princes and statesmen; he
corresponded with warriors, scholars, and Reformers; he consoled martyrs, and
organised Churches; his admonitions were submitted to, and his letters
treasured, as marks of no ordinary distinction. All the while the man who
wielded this unexampled influence, was in life and manners in nowise different
from an ordinary citizen of Geneva. He was as humbly lodged, he was as simply
clothed, and he was served by as few attendants as any burgess of them all. He
had been poor all his days, and he continued so to the end. One day a cardinal
of the Roman Church, Sadoleto, who happened to be passing through Geneva, would
pay him the honor of a visit. He was conducted to No. 122, Rue des Chanoines,
and told to his surprise that this was the house of the Reformer. A yet greater
surprise awaited the cardinal, he knocked for entrance: there was no porter at
the gate; no servant in livery gave him admission: it was Calvin himself that
opened the door.
His enemies, more just to him then than they have been
since, acknowledged and admired his indifference to money. "That which made the
strength of that heretic," said Plus IV., when told of his death, "was that
money was nothing to him." The Pontiff was correct in his fact, but at fault in
his philosophy. Calvin's strength was rooted in a far higher principle, and his
indifference to riches was but one of the fruits of that principle; but how
natural the reflection on the part of one who lived in a city where all men were
venal, and all things vendible!
The Reformer's wants were few. During the
last seven years of his life he took only one meal a day, sometimes one in the
thirty-six hours.[4] His charities were great;
the Protestant exiles were ever welcome to his table; kings, sometimes, were
borrowers from him, and his small stipend left him often in pecuniary
difficulties. But he never asked the Council for an increase of his emoluments;
nay, he positively refused such when offered.
"Satisfied with my humble
condition," was the witness which he bore to himself, in the place where he
lived, and before the eyes of all, a little while before his death, "I have ever
delighted in a life of poverty, and am a burden to no one. I remain contented
with the office which the Lord has given me."[5] The Registers of the
Council of Geneva bear to this day the proofs of his disinterestedness and
forgetfulness of self. In January, 1546, the Council is informed of the sickness
of M. Calvin, "who hath no resources." The Council votes him ten crowns, but; M.
Calvin sends them back. The councillors buy with the ten crowns a cask of good
wine, and convey it to Calvin's house. Not to give offense, the Reformer accepts
their Lordships' gift, but lays out ten crowns of his salary "for the relief of
the poorest ministers." In the winter of 1556 the Council sent him some
firewood. Calvin appeared with the price, but could not induce the Council to
accept of it.[6] The Registers of 1560
inform us of another cask of wine sent to M. Calvin, "seeing that he has none
good."[7] The Reformer this time
accepts; and yet, because he received these few presents in the course of a
ministry of twenty-six years, there have not been wanting men who accused him of
coveting such gifts, and of parading his ailments, of which indeed he seldom or
never spoke, in order to evoke these benefactions. "If there are any," said he,
in his Preface to the Psalms, "whom, in my lifetime, I cannot persuade that I am
not rich and moneyed, my death will show it at last." In his last illness he
refused his quarter's salary, saying that he had not earned it.[8] After his death it was
found that his whole possessions did not exceed in value 225 dollars,[9] and if his illness had
been prolonged, he would have had to sell his books, or receive the money of the
republic. On the 25th of April, about a month before his death, the Reformer
made his will. Luther's will was highly characteristic, Calvin's is not less so.
It exhibits the methodical and business habits that marked his whole life,
mingled with the humble, holy hope that filled his heart. Having disposed of the
225 crowns, and of some other small matters pertaining to the world he was
leaving, he thus breaks out:—
"I thank God that he has not only had mercy
on his poor creature, having delivered me from the abyss of idolatry, but that
he has brought me into the clear light of his Gospel, and made me a partaker of
the doctrine of salvation, of which I was altogether unworthy; yea, that his
mercy and goodness have borne so tenderly with my numerous sins and offenses,
for which I deserved to be cast from him and destroyed."
CHAPTER
28 Back to
Top
THE SOCLAL AND FAMILY LIFE OF
GENEVA.
The Daily Sermon—Its Attractiveness—Daily Life of the
Citizen—His Dress—His Table—Development of Wealth—The Refugees—The Benefits they
conferred on their Adopted Country—English Names on the Genevan Registers—The
Sabbath in Geneva.
NOW that Calvin has realised his program, let us look
at the social and family life of the Genevese. The "Christian Idea," as Gaberel
calls it, had created their State, and religion was the all-pervading and
dominant element in it. Calvin, the people, the State—all three were one, the
fusion was complete, and the policy of the Senate, and the action of the
citizens, were but the results of that great principle which had called into
existence this marvellous community. The "Sermon" held a first place among their
institutions. Day by day it reinvigorated that spirit which was the "breath" of
Geneva. But, besides the need the Genevans felt of the instructions and
consolations of religion, there were other influences that acted in drawing them
to the temples. Preaching was then a novelty. Like break of day in an Eastern
clime, the Gospel, in mid-day effulgence, had all at once burst on these men
after the darkness of the Middle Ages. Scarce had the first faint silvery
streaks shown themselves, when lo! the full flood of the sun's light was poured
upon them. The same generation which had listened to the monks, had now the
privilege of listening to the Reformers. From tales, legends, and miracles,
which were associated in their minds with the yoke of foreign masters, they
passed to the pure and elevating doctrines of the Word of God, which, apart from
their own beauty and majesty, were, they knew, the source whence had come their
political and civil independence. We at this day can but faintly realize the
charm that must then have hung round the pulpit, and which assembled, day after
day, the Genevese in crowds, to the preaching of the Gospel.
At Geneva,
the magistrate as well as the artisan invariably began the day with an act of
worship. At six in the morning the churches were opened, and crowds might be
seen in every quarter of the city on their way to spend an hour in listening to
the "Exposition." After this the youth assembled in school or college, and the
father and the elder sons repaired to the workshops. The mid-day repast, which
was taken in common with the domestics, again re-united the family. After dinner
the head of the household paid a short visit to his club [1] to hear the news. And what
were the events on which the Genevan kept his eyes intently fixed, and for which
he waited from day to day with no ordinary anxiety to receive tidings? The great
drama in progress around him completely occupied his thoughts. How goes the
battle, he would ask, between Protestantism and Rome in France, in Italy, in
Spain? Has any fresh edict of persecution issued these days past from the
Vatican? Has any one been called to yield up his life on the scaffold, and what
were his last words? What number of refugees have arrived in our city since
yesterday, and through what perils and sufferings have they managed to reach our
gates? Such were the topics that furnished matter of daily talk to the Genevese.
The narrow limits of their little State were far from forming their horizon.
Their thoughts and sympathies were as extensive as Christendom. There was not a
prisoner, not a martyr for the Gospel in any of its countries for whom they did
not feel and pray; he was their brother. Not a reverse befell the cause of the
Reform in any part of the field which they did not mourn, nor a success in which
they did not rejoice. They were watching a battle which would bring triumph or
overthrow, not to Geneva only, but to the Gospel; hence the gravity and
greatness of their characters. "The Genevan of that day," says Gaberel, "took
the same interest in the news of the kingdom of God, which he takes today in the
discussion of material affairs."[2]
The family life of
the Genevans at that period was characterised by severe simplicity. Their dress
was wholly without ornament. The magistrates wore cloth; the ordinary burgess
contented himself with serge. This difference in their attire was not held as
marking any distinction of class among the citizens, for the members of the
Councils were chosen entirely with reference to their merit, and in nowise from
any consideration of birth or wealth. Nor did this avoidance of superfluities
lead to any falling off in the industrial activity or the inventive skill of the
citizens. On the contrary, the arts and industries flourished, and both the
citizens of Geneva, and the refugees who found asylum within it, became famous
for their manufacture of objects of utility and luxury, which they exported to
other countries.
If their dress was marked by plainness, not less were
their tables by frugality. The rich and poor alike were obliged to obey the
sumptuary laws. "The heads of fanlilies," says Gaberel, "seeing the ease, the
health, the good order, the morality that now reigned in their dwellings,
blessed those rigorous laws, which only gourmands found tyrannical, who
remembered with regret the full tables of other days."[3] We dare say some of these
men would have wished rather that their dinners had been ampler, though their
liberty had been less. They are not the first who have thought the blessing of
freedom too dearly purchased if bought with the sacrifice of
dainties.
When periods of distress came round, occasioned by war or
famine, the citizens were especially sensible of the benefit of this simple and
frugal manner of life. They felt less the privations they had then to bear, and
were able to support with dignity the misfortunes of the State. Moreover, as the
result of this economy, the wealth of the citizens was rapidly developed, and
the State reached a prosperity it had never known in former days. Each citizen
laid by religiously a certain portion of his earnings, and the years of greatest
calamity were precisely those that were signalized by the greatest beneficence.
Instead of receiving support from other States, Geneva sent its charities to the
countries around, becoming a storehouse of earthly as of heavenly bread to the
nations. These citizens, who wore plain blouses, and sat down to a meal
correspondingly plain, entertained during many years, with liberal Christian
hospitality, the refugees of religion—nobles, scholars, statesmen, and men of
birth. The Genevan citizen, independent in means, and adding thereto that mental
independence which the Gospel gives, could not but be a being of conscious
dignity, and of character inherently grand, whom no call of devotion or heroism
would find unprepared.
Geneva profited immensely in another way by the
movement, of which it had become the headquarters. The men who crowded to it,
and to whom it so hospitably opened its gates, conferred on it greater
advantages than any they received from it. They were of every rank, profession,
and trade, and they brought to the city of their adoption, not refinement of
birth and elegance of letters only, but also new arts and improved industries.
There immediately ensued a great quickening of the energies of labor and skill
in Geneva, and these brought in their turn that wealth and conscious dignity
which labor and skill never fail to impart. It is a new nation that we behold
forming on the soil of the republic, with germs and elements in its bosom,
higher and more various than infant State had ever before enjoyed. The fathers
of the great Roman people were but a band of outlaws and adventurers! How
different the men we now see assembling on the shores of the Leman to lay the
foundations of the Rome of Protestantism, from those who had gathered at the
foot of the Capitoline to lay the first stone in the Eternal City! From the
strand of Naples to the distant shores of Scotland, we behold Protestantism
weeding out of the surrounding countries, and assembling at this great focus,
all who were skilful in art, as well as illustrious in virtue, and they
communicated to Geneva a refinement of manners and an artistic skill which it
continues to retain after the lapse of three centuries.
The most
important question raised by the arrival of these exiles was not, Where shall
bread be found for them? The hospitality of the Genevese solved this difficulty,
for scarce was there citizen who had not one or more of these strangers living
under his roof, and sitting at his table. The question which the Genevese had
most at heart was, how shall we utilize this great access of intellectual,
moral, and industrial power? How shall we draw forth the varied capabilities of
these men in the way of strengthening, enriching, and glorifying the State? Let
us begin, said they, by enrolling them as citizens. "But," said the Libertines,
when the proposal was first mooted, "is it fair that newcomers should lay down
the law to the children of the land? These men were not born on the soil of the
republic."
True, it was answered, but then the republic is not an affair
of acres, it is an affair of faith. The true Geneva is Protestantism, and these
men were born into the State in the same hour in which they became Protestants.
This broad view of the question prevailed. Nevertheless, the honor was sparingly
distributed. Up till 1555, only eighty had received the freedom of the city; in
the early part of that year, other sixty were added [4] —a small number truly when
we think how numerous the Protestant exiles were. The greatest of all the sons
of Geneva, he who was more than a citizen, who was the founder of the State, was
not legally enrolled till five years before his death. The name of John Knox was
earlier inscribed on the Registers than that of John Calvin. Hardly was there a
country in Europe which did not help to swell this truly catholic roll. The list
contributed by Italy alone was a long and brilliant one. Lucca sent, among other
distinguished names, the Calendrini, the Burlamachi, the Turretini, and the
Micheli.[5] Of these families many
took root in Geneva, and by the services which they rendered the State, and the
splendor their genius shed upon it in after-days, they repaid a hundred-fold as
citizens the welcome they had received as refugees. Others returned to their
native land when persecution had abated. "When the English returned," says
Misson, "they left in the Register, which is still preserved, a list of their
names and qualities— Stanley, Spencer, Musgrave, Pelham, are among the first in
it, as they ought to be. The title of citizen, which several had obtained, was
continued to them by an order and compliment of the Seigniory, so that several
earls and peers of England may as well boast of being citizens of Geneva as Paul
did of being a citizen of Rome."
One of the most striking characteristics
of the Geneva of that day, and for a century after, especially to one coming
from a Popish country, was its Sabbath. The day brought a complete cessation of
labor to all classes: the field was unwatered by the sweat of the husbandman,
the air was unvexed by the hammer of the artisan, and the lake was unploughed by
the keel of the fisherman. The great bell of St. Peter's has sounded out its
summons, the citizens have assembled in the churches, the city gates have been
closed, and no one is allowed to enter or depart while the citizens are occupied
in offering their worship.
Everywhere the stillness of the sacred day is
sublime, but here that sublimity was enhanced by the grandeur of the region. The
Sabbath seemed to shed its own pure and peaceful splendor upon the sublimities
of nature, and these sublimities, in their turn, seemed to impart an additional
sanctity and majesty to the Sabbath. There was peace on the blue waveless Leman;
there was peace on those plains that enclosed it in their vast sweep, and on
whose bosom the chalet lay hid amid festooned vines and tall pine-trees. There
was peace on the green rampart of the Jura, and peace on the distant Alps, which
in the opposite quarter of the horizon lift their snowy piles into the sky, and
stand silent and solemn as worshippers. A superb temple, indeed, seems the
region, walled in by natural grandeurs, and pervaded throughout with a Sabbatic
peace. In the midst of it is the little city of Geneva. No stirs or tumults are
heard within it; its bells and its psalms only salute the ear. Beaming faces,
the sign of happy hearts, tell what a clay of gladness it is—the most gladsome
of all the seven. In every dwelling is heard "the melody of health." But we must
go to St. Peter's, would we see in its highest manifestation the power of the
Sabbath to raise the souls and mould the characters of a people. A crowd of
magnanimous, earnest, intelligent faces look up around the pulpit. There are
gathered the finest intellects and holiest spirits of all Christendom, for
whatever was noble and pure in other countries had been chased thither. The
worship of men like these could be no common affair, no mere show or pantomime,
like that performed in bespangled vestments amid lighted tapers. The worshippers
in St. Peter's were men whose souls had been attempered in the fire, and who,
having forsaken all worldly goods for the sake of the Gospel, stood prepared
every hour to sacrifice life itself. Their worship was the worship of the heart,
and their prayer the prayer of faith that pierces the heavens.
And as the
devotion of the hearers was entire, so the instructions of the pulpit were
lofty. The preacher might not be always eloquent, but he was never tame. He
forgot himself and remembered only his great theme. Did he discourse on some
point of doctrine, his exposition was clear, his words weighty; did he plead the
cause of the confessors of other lands, "led as sheep to the slaughter," it was
with a truthfulness and pathos that made his hearers mingle their tears with
his, and prepared them to open their doors to such of the persecuted as might
escape the prisons and stakes which their enemies had prepared for them. Such
were the scenes that might be witnessed every Sabbath in those days within the
walls of St. Peter's, Geneva. If Geneva was the "inner Bureau" of the European
Reformation, as Gaberel says, the pulpit was the inner spring of power in that
"Bureau." While the pulpit of Geneva stood, Geneva would stand; if the pulpit
should fall, Geneva too would fall. It was the buhvark of its liberties, the
"horses and chariots" that guarded the independence of the State. It was at the
fire, which burned continually on this altar, that the men of Geneva kindled the
torch of liberty, and their love of liberty daily recruited that indomitable
firmness which so perplexed and mortified Philip II. in the Escurial, and the
Pope in the Vatican, and many others besides, who never warred against the
little State save to be broken upon it.
CHAPTER
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CALVIN'S LAST ILLNESS AND
DEATH
Calvin's Painful Maladies—Redoubles his Labors—Last Appearance
in the Pulpit—Europe Watches his Death-bed—The Plague breaks out—Its Frightful
Ravages—Calvin's Last Participation in the Lord's Supper— Goes for the Last Time
to the Senate—He Receives the Senators— Receives the Pastors—Farel Visits
him—Sits down at Table for the Last Time with his Brethren—His Last Week—One
continued Prayer—His Death—His Burial—His Grave.
TO the Reformer the close was now near. His body,
never robust, had become latterly the seat of numerous maladies, that made life
a prolonged torture. The quartan-ague of 1559 he had never recovered from. He
was afflicted with pains in his head, and pains in his limbs. Food was often
nauseous to him. He suffered front asthma, and spitting of blood. He had to
sustain the attacks of the gout, and the yet more excruciating agony of the
stone. Amid the ruins of his body, his spirit was fresh, and clear, and vigorous
as ever; but as the traveler quickens his steps when the evening begins to fall,
and the shadows to lengthen, Calvin redoubled his efforts, if so, before
breathing his last, he might make that legacy of wisdom and truth he was to
leave to the Church still more complete and perfect. His friends in many lands
wrote imploring him to take a little rest. Calvin saw rest—ever-lasting rest
coming with the deepening shadows, and continued to work on. Beza tells us that
during his last malady he translated from Latin into French his Harmony on
Moses, revised the translation of Genesis, wrote upon the Book of Joshua, and
finally revised and corrected the greater part of his annotations on the New
Testament. He was all the while receiving and answering letters from the
Churches. He had but a little before given the last touches to his immortal
work, the Institutes. The last time he appeared in the pulpit was on the 6th of
February, 1564.[1]
On that occasion he
was seized with so violent a fit of coughing that it brought the blood into his
mouth, and stopped his utterance. As he descended the stairs, amid the
breathless stillness of his flock, all understood but too well that his last
words in the pulpit of St. Peter's had been spoken. There followed weeks of
intense suffering. To the martyr when mounting the scaffold the Reformer had
said, "Be strong, and play the man:" during four months of suffering, not less
severe than that of the scaffold, was Calvin to display the heroism which he had
preached to others. The more violent attacks of his malady were indicated only
by the greater pallor of his face, the quivering of his lips, the tremulous
motion of his clasped hands, and the half-suppressed ejaculation, "O Lord! how
long?" It was during these months of suffering that he prosecuted the labors of
which Beza, who was daily by his bedside, tells us in the passage referred to
above. A little cold water was often his only nourishment for days, and having
refreshed himself therewith, he would again resume work.
On this
death-bed were riveted the eyes of all Christendom. Rome waited the issue of his
sickness with intense excitement, in the hope that it would rid her of her great
foe. The Churches of the Reformation asked with sorrowful and most affectionate
anxiety if their father was to be taken from their head. Meanwhile, as though to
impress the minds of men, and make a great mourning around this mighty bier, the
plague broke in, and inflicted unprecedented ravages on almost all the countries
of Europe. It traversed Germany, France, and Switzerland, "and men fell before
it," says Ruchat, "as fall the leaves in autumn when the tempest sweeps through
the forest." This pestilence was equally fatal on the mountain-top and in the
low valley. In the Tockenburg and other parts of Switzerland it entered hamlets
and villages, where it left behind it not one living man. In Basle it struck
down seven thousand persons, among whom were thirteen councillors, eight
ministers, and five professors; among the latter was the learned Cellarius. At
Bern, from one to two thousand died. It visited Zurich, and numbered among its
victhns Theodore Bibliander, the successor of Zwingli. Bullinger was attacked,
but recovered, though he had to mourn the loss of his wife and two daughters. At
Herisau, in the canton of Appenzell, there were upwards of three thousand
deaths. The Protestant congregations, in some cases, assembled in the open air,
and when they celebrated the Lord's Supper, the communicants in order to avoid
infection, brought each his own cup, and made use of it at the tablc. It was in
the midst of the universal gloom created by these terrible events that men
waited from day to day for tidings from the sick-bed at Geneva.
Calvin
longed to appear yet once again in that church where he had so often preached
the Gospel. "On the 2nd of April," says Beza, "it being Easter-day, he was
carried to church in a chair. He remained during the whole sermon, and received
the Sacrament from my hand. He even joined, though with a trembling voice, the
congregation in the last hymn, 'Lord, let thy servant depart in peace.'" He was
carried out, Beza adds, his face lighted up with a Christian joy.
Six
days before (27th March) he had caused himself to be borne to the door of the
Council-chamber. Ascending the stairs, supported by two attendants, he entered
the hall, and proposed to the Senate a new rector for the school; then, taking
off his skullcap, he thanked their Excelleneies for the kindness which he had
experienced at their hands, especially the friendship they had shown him during
his last illness: "For I feel," he said, "that this is the last time that I
shall stand here." The tones of that voice, now scarcely audible, must have
recalled, to those who listened to it for the last time, the many occasions on
which it had been lifted up in this same place, sometimes to approve, sometimes
to condemn, but always to attest that he who spoke was the fearless champion of
what he believed to be truth, and the unbending and incorruptible patriot. His
adieu moved the Council to tears.[2]
A month after, he
sent another message to the Council, intimating his desire to meet its members
yet once more before he shouhd die. Having regard to his great weakness, the
Council resolved to visit him at his own house. Accordingly, on the 30th April,
the twenty-five Lords of Geneva, in all the pomp of a public ceremony, proceeded
to his humble dwelling in the Rue des Chanoines. Raising himself on his bed, he
exhorted them, amongst other things, to maintain ever inviolate the independence
of a city which God had destined to high ends. But he reminded them that it was
the Gospel which alone made Geneva worth preserving, and that therefore it
behooved them to guard its purity if they would preserve for their city the
protection of a stronger arm than their own. Commending them and Geneva to God,
and begging them one and all, says Beza, to pardon his his faults, he held out
his hand to them, which they grasped for the last time, and retired as from the
death-bed of a father.[3]
On the morrow he
received the pastors. Most affectionate and touching was his address. He
exhorted them to diligence in their office as preachers, to show fidelity to the
flock, to cultivate affection for one another, and, above all, maintain the
Reformation and discipline which he had established in the Church. He reminded
them of the conflict he had had to wage in this matter, and the afflictions that
had befallen him, and how at length God had been pleased to crown his labors
with success. His many maladies and sicknesses, he said, had at times made him
morose and hard to please, and even irascible. For these failings he asked
pardon, first of God, and then of his brethren; and, "finally," Beza adds, "he
gave his hand to each, one after the other, which was with such anguish and
bitterness of heart in every one, that I cannot even recall it to mind without
extreme sadness."
The Council he had bidden farewell, his brethren he had
bidden farewell, but there was one friend, the oldest of all save Cordier, who
had not yet stood at his death-bed and received his last adieus. On the 2nd May,
Calvin received a letter from Farel, in which the writer intimated that he was
just setting out to visit hint. Farel was now nearly eighty. Could he not wait
the little while till he had put off "this tabernacle," and then, with less
difficulty to either, the two friends would meet? So it would seem did Calvin
think, and hence the letter he immediately dictated:—"Farewell, my best and most
faithful brother, since it is God's will that you should survive me; live in the
constant recollection of our union, which, in so far as it was useful to the
Church of God, will still bear for us abiding fruit in heaven. I wish you not to
fatigue yourself on my account. My breath is weak, and I continually expect it
to leave me. It is enough for me that I live and die in Christ, who is gain to
his people both in life and death. Once more farewell to thee, and to all the
brethren thy colleagues."
A few days afterwards the Reformer saw the old
man, covered all over with dust, having walked from Neuchatel on foot, enter his
sick-chamber.[4] History has not recorded
the words that passed between the two. "He had a long interview with him," says
Ruchat, "and on the morrow took his departure for Neuchatel." It was a long way
for one of eighty years, and yet surely it was meet that the man who had met
Calvin at the gate of Geneva, when he first entered it nearly thirty years
before, should stand beside him when about to depart. This time Farel may not
stop him.[5]
Yet a few days more
was the Reformer to pass on earth. The 19th of May, or the Friday before
Whit-Sunday, brought round the Censures, as they were called. The pastors, on
that day, met, and admonished each other fraternally, and afterwards partook
together of a modest meal. Calvin requested that the dinner should be prepared
at his house; and when the hour came he had himself carried into the room where
the repast was to be eaten. Seated amongst his colleagues, he said, "'I am come
to see you, my brethren, for the last time; for, save this once, I shall never
sit again at table.' Then he offered prayer, but not without difficulty, and ate
a little, "endeavoring," says Beza. "to enliven us." "But," he continues,
"before the end of the meal, he requested to be carried back to his chamber,
which was close by, saying these words with as cheerful a face as he could—"A
partition between us will not prevent me, though absent in body, being present
with you in spirit.'" He had spoken truly. From the bed to which he had been
carried he was to rise no more.
There remained yet eight days to the
Reformer on earth. These were almost one uninterrupted prayer. The fervency of
his supplications was indicated not so much by his voice, now scarcely audible,
as by his eye, which, says Beza, "retained its brightness to the last," and
testified to the faith and hope with which he was animated. He had not yet left
earth, and yet he had left it: for of earthly bread he ate not; with men he had
ceased to converse; he halted here, at the portal of the invisible world, to
calm, to elevate, and to strengthen his spirit, by converse with the Eternal,
before passing its awful but blessed threshold. It was now Saturday, the 27th of
May. He seemed to suffer less, and to speak with greater ease. But at eight
o'clock of the evening the sure signs of death became apparent. As he was
repeating the words of the apostle, "the sufferings of this present time are not
worthy to be compared with the glory to be... —without being able to finish, he
breathed his last.[6] Beza, who had been
summoned to his bedside, was just in time to see him expire. "And thus," says
he, "on this day, with the setting sun, the brightest light in the Church of God
on earth was taken back to heaven." The event was briefly chronicled in the
Consistorial Register thus—"Went to God, Saturday, the 27th."
Early on
the day following, which was Sunday, the remains of the Reformer were wrapped in
a shroud and enclosed in a wooden coffin preparatory to interment. At two
o'clock the funeral took place. It differed in no respect from that of an
ordinary citizen, save in the much greater concourse of mourners. The body was
followed to the grave in Plain-palais—about 500 paces outside the city—by the
members of the Senate, the body of the clergy, the professors in the college,
and by the citizens, and many distinguished strangers; "not," says Beza,
"without many tears." Over the grave to which they had consigned so much—the
Pastor, the Patriot, and the Reformer—they raised no monument. Not a line did
they write on marble or brass to tell the ages to come who reposed in this
grave, and what he had been to Christendom. They arranged in reverent silence
the dust above him, and departed. In this they but fulfilled Calvin's own
wishes. He had enjoined that he should be buried "after the customary fashion;"
"and that customary fashion," says Bungener, "which was observed down almost to
the present day, was that no monument should be raised upon any grave, however
illustrious the deceased might be."[7] "He was buried," says
Ruchat, "with all simplicity, in the common cemetery, as he himself had desired:
so simply that no one at this day knows where his grave is." "For more than two
centuries," says Bungener, "that grave has been dug over and over again, like
the rest, by the sexton's spade; and for less than twenty years a black stone
has marked the spot where Calvin perhaps reposed, for it is only a tradition.[8]
But it is well,
perhaps, that neither tomb nor monument was raised to Calvin. Forgetting his
dust we stand face to face with the living, thinking, deathless spirit, and rise
to a truer and sublimer ideal of the man. Death has not caused Calvin to retire;
he is still with us: he speaks to us in his works, he lives in the Churches
which he organized, and he prosecutes from century to century his vast plans in
the continued progress of that moral and spiritual empire which his genius and
faith founded, or, to speak more truly, restored. While that empire lives,
Calvin will live.
CHAPTER
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Top
CALVIN'S WORK.
Impression
made by the News of Calvin's Death—Exultation of Rome— Despondency of the
Reformed—Both Mis-calculate—The Reformation is Calvin—Geneva grows still
Greater—Luther and Calvin Compared— The Two Reformations One—The Culmination of
the German Reformation, the Starting-point of the Genevan—Calvin's Special
Service to the Reformation—Theories of Church Government—Luther's
Views—Melancthon's—Brentius'—Lambert's—Zwingli's—Calvin Builds on the
Foundations of his Predecessors—The Key of his Position—The Two
Lessons.
WHEN the tidings sped through Europe that Calvin was
dead, the two great parties into which Christendom was divided were very
differently affected. The one gave way to unbounded joy, the other was seized
with nearly as unbounded sorrow. Rome, hearing in the news the knell of
Protestantism, confidently anticipated the immediate return of the revolted
countries to their obedience. "The man of Geneva," as she termed the Reformer,
was no more. The arm which had so often smitten her legions, and chased them
from the field in disastrous rout, would never again be lifted up in battle; and
she had nothing more to do, in order to restore her Church to its former glory
and dominion, than simply to go forth and summon the Reforming ranks, now left
without a leader, to surrender. The Pope went so far as to nominate seven
commissioners, who were to proceed to Geneva on this business.[1] This step was taken with
the advice, amongst others, of Cardinal Boromeo and the Bishop of Anneci, who
seem to have persuaded the Pope that the Council and citizens of Geneva only
waited for some such embassage to abandon Protestantism, and bow as penitents
and suppliants at the footstool of the Papal throne. In truth they would have
done so during Calvin's life-time, they insinuated, but for the extraordinary
influence which that heretic exercised over them. The issue of this affair was
very far from answering the expectations of the Pope and his advisors.
If
Rome thought, on the one hand, that the death of Calvin was her triumph, there
were Protestants, on the other, who viewed it as the almost certain overthrow of
the Reformation. There was just as little foundation for this conclusion as for
the other. It is principles, not men, that keep the world moving. The Reformer,
in his short life of not quite fifty-five years, had embodied all the principles
of the movement in his writings; he had enshrined them as in a living model in
Geneva; through Geneva he had initiated the great work of impressing them on
Christendom. This, not the handful of dust in the Plain-palais, was Calvin. The
eye truly enlightened could see him still occupying his chair at Geneva, and
legislating and ruling Christendom from it as from a throne. While the
Reformation was there, Calvln was there; and if at Geneva, it was in France, and
in all Christendom. Both those who triumphed and those who trembled, thinking
the last hour was about to strike to Geneva and the Reformation, were alike
mistaken. The city rose higher than before, though the man who made it fantous
was in his grave. The movement spread wider than ever, and if the city was a
center and impelling power to the movement, the movement was a bulwark around
the city. "The Genevese of the sixteenth century," says an eloquent modern
writer, "committed one of those deeds of saintly daring which seem folly in the
eyes of men, but which are in reality the safeguard of nations heroic enough to
attempt them. Geneva had been the representative of a great right, liberty of
conscience; she offered an asylum to all the martyrs of the faith; she had put
her hand to the work, and pursued her career without casting a look behind.
Politicians and calculators may, if they please, see a sort of madness in a
republic, without strength or riches, proclaiming religious and moral liberty in
the face of Italy, Spain, and France, united for the triumph of Romish
despotism. But the God of the faithful ones who hold fast the truth confounded
human prevision, he surrounded our town with that celestial protection, against
which the plots and the rage of the mighty broke in vain. Thus Geneva, without
arms and without territory, accomplished her perilous mission; and remaining
faithful to the principle of her nationality, the city of Calvin saw herself the
object of the Divine favor, and enjoyed a prosperity, a respect, and an outward
security which the most powerful States in the world do not often obtain."[2]
Now that we have
come to the close of Calvin's career, it is necessary that we should pause, and
ask wherein lay his distinctive characteristic as a Reformer, and what was it
that constituted the specific difference between his Reformation and that of
Luther. The answer to this inquiry will help us to understand the unity that
belongs to the great drama whose successive developments we are attempting to
trace. The work of Luther was needed to prepare for that of Calvin, and Calvin's
was necessary to complete and crown that of Luther. The parts which each acted
were essential to constitute a whole. Wittenberg and Geneva make between them
one Reformation. This can be better seen in our day than when Luther and Calvin
were alive, and toiling each at his allotted part of the great task.
Let
us first sketch in outline the difference between these two men and their work,
and then return and explain it a little more in detail.
By the year 1535,
the Reformation in Germany had culminated, and was beginning to decline. The
Augsburg Confession (1530) marked the era of greatest prosperity in German
Protestantism; the formation of the Schmalkahl League notified the moment of its
incipient decline.
That League, in itself, was quite defensible—nay, even
dutiful, considering the power of the princes, and the attempts the emperor was
making to destroy the political system of Germany. But it exercised, especially
after the death of Luther, a depressing and withering effect upon the spiritual
energies of the Protestants, which did more to throw back the movement than
would any amount of violence that could have been inflicted upon it. With Luther
in his grave, with Melancthon and his compromises, with Landgrave Philip and his
soldiers, the Reformation in Germany had closed its period of well-doing.
Another center had to be found where the movement might have a fresh start.
Geneva was selected. There the Reformation was extricated from the political
entanglements with which it had become mixed up in Germany. It was rescued from
the hands of political and military men: it was withdrawn from reliance on
armies, and committed to those who could further it only with their prayers and
their martyrdoms. True, its second cradle was placed on a spot which, of all
others, seemed open to attack on every side, and where it was not sure of a
day's life; yet around that spot were invisible ramparts; the poise constantly
maintained in the ambitions of its neighboring sovereigns— Charles, Francis, and
the Pope—was to it for walls.
As new foothold had to be found for the
movement, so too had a new chief. And, accordingly, before Luther had been laid
in his tomb at Wittenberg, Calvin was fairly installed at Geneva. He was
prosecuting his work in quietness by the shores of the Leman, while the princes
of the Schmalkald League were fighting on the plains of Germany. Under Calvin
the Reformation entered upon a new and more spiritual dispensation. All the
incidents in Luther's life are sudden, startling, and dramatic: this form was
given them to draw attention and fix the minds of men. But the movement, once
launched, needed this array of outward drapery no longer. Under Calvin it
appeals less to the senses and more to the intellect: less to the imagination
and more to the soul. The evolutions in Calvin's career are quiet, gradual,
without the stage effect, if we may be permitted the phrase, which marked
Luther's more notable appearances, but they are more truly sublime. Henceforward
the Reformation proceeds more silently, but with a deeper power, and a higher
moral glow.
The leading stages of Luther's history repeat themselves in
that of Calvin, but after a different fashion. In the career of each there is a
marked point of commencement, and a marked point of culmination. The nailing of
the ninety-five Theses to the church door at Wittenberg has its analogue, or
corresponding act, in the publication of the Institutes at Basle. The one
manifesto struck and stirred Christendom even as did the other. Each notified
the entrance of its author upon a high career. They were two mighty voices
telling the world that great instructors had been sent to it, and bidding it
hear them. Again, the appearance of Luther before the Diet at Worms has its
corresponding act in the victory of Calvin over the Libertines of Geneva, when
at the risk of life he barred their way to the Communion-table. The first was
the more dramatic, the second was the more evangelically grand. Both were needed
fully to define the office and place of the Reformation. The first demonstrated
the Gospel's power to withstand kings and armies, and triumph over all the power
of the sword: the second showed that its energy equally fitted it to cope with
Libertine mobs, and to resist their devastating theories. It would not lay its
freedom at the feet of the tyrant, and neither would it surrender its purity at
the call of the populace.
Im fact, we see only the one half of the work
which Calvin accomplished, when we confine our attention to the blow he dealt
that great system which had so long kept the intellect of the world in darkness
and its conscience in bondage. The evil he prevented rising up was as great as
that he helped to pull down. It is altogether a mistake to suppose that if the
Reformation had not come, the Church of Rome would have continued to exercise
the sway she had wielded in the past. The hour of her supremacy had gone by. The
scandals and dogmas of the priesthood had destroyed belief: the speculations of
the schoolmen had sown the seeds of pantheism, and a great tempest lowered over
Europe. Loosened from its old foundations, an upheaval of society was
inevitable. But for Protestantism, Servetus would have been the Voltaire of the
sixteenth century: the Libertine club, on the shores of the Leman, would have
anticipated the Encyclopaedists who at a later period flourished on the banks of
the Seine; Geneva would have filled the post which Paris did two centuries
after, by becoming the headquarters of revolutionary propagandism; and the year
1593 would have been as fatal to the thrones and altars of the Papal world as
was the year 1793. Providence postponed the tempest through the agency of
Calvin, who grappled with the young giant of pantheistic revolution, and made
Geneva the headquarters of a Protestant propagandism, which by restoring
knowledge and faith imparted a new life to the European nations, and laid over
again the foundations of a world that was dissolving and about to vanish away.
And not only was the storm deferred thereby, its violence was mitigated when at
last it came, and its devastations restricted to the one half of Europe. The
Roman Church may not see the debt it owes to Calvin; that, however, does not
make it less the fact that there is no man who ever lived, to whom its priests
owe half what they owe to him. The inviolability of person which they continued
to enjoy for two centuries after his day was due to the Reformer.
Such
were the two men who figured so largely in the sixteenth century, and such is
the part accomplished by each in the one work assigned to them. But let us
explain a little more fully what we have now briefly stated. The special service
that Calvin rendered to Protestantism was to codify its laws, and organise its
adherents so as to conserve their morality and holiness—in other words, the
Reformation itself. His first step in the direction of this great end—in his
view the standing or falling of Protestantism—was to exclude the profane from
the Communion-table. This power he lodged in the Consistory, or body of pastors
and elders. He would allow no other authority on earth to exercise it: and in
claiming this power—and we have seen at what risks he exercised it—he separated
between the Church and the world, and laid the first stone in that system of
polity which he afterwards elaborated, and which was ultimately extended to the
Protestant Churches of France, of Holland, of Scotland, and of yet remoter
countries.
In what he did in this matter, the Reformer of Geneva built
upon the foundations of his great predecessors. The more eminent of the
Reformers who had been before him, had felt the necessity of drawing a
distinction between the Church and the world, and of excluding the ungodly and
vicious from the Sacraments, and so conserving the Church's purity; but their
theories of Church discipline were elementary and crude, and their practical
attempts were to a great extent failures. Still it is beyond doubt that these
early and immature experiments helped to eliminate the principles and shape the
projects which resulted at last in the establishment of the Genevan
polity.
Luther saw, and often mournfully felt, that the Church needed a
discipline, but he failed to give it such. When Luther enunciated his idea of a
Church as "a congregation of saints, a spiritual assembly of souls in one
faith,"[3] he laid the foundation of
a fabric on which Calvin afterwards placed the top-stone. But the German
Reformer proceeded no farther on this fundamental idea than to constitute an
office of men to preach the Word and dispense the Sacraments. Scattered through
his writings are the germs of a more complete and efficient polity; he could
distinguish between the temporal and the spiritual jurisdiction,[4] but how to give these
principles effect in the gathering and organising of the Church he knew not. He
sorrowfully confesses, in his German Mass and Order of Divine Worship, his
inability to furnish what was so much needed—a working plan for the government
of the Church. One main obstruction in his path was the low state of practical
religion among the mass of the German people. "I have not the people," said he,
"whom it requires. For we Germans are a wild, rude, riotous race, among whom it
is not easy to set anything on foot unless necessity compel."[5]
Melancthon
enunciated his views on this head a little more clearly than Luther. He declared
his opinion "that a pastor ought not to excommunicate any man without the
concurrence of a body of judges, and the cooperation of some worthy members of
the Church."[6] So also taught the four
Saxon Reformers—Pomeranus, Jonas, Luther, and Melancthon. In a joint epistle to
the ministers of Nuremberg, in 1540, exhorting them to resume the practice of
excommunication, they annex the condition that, in this business, elders be
associated with the pastor.[7] These projects embrace the
elements of the Genevan polity. They fell to the ground, it is true, about 1542,
when the system under which the Churches of the Lutheran Communion still are,
was adopted—namely, a Consistory, chosen by, and responsible to, the civil
powers; but they exhibit a notable approximation on the part of the German
Reformers to the plan of ecclesiastical rule afterwards elaborated and set
working by Calvin.
Next in order is the scheme of John Brentius. Brentius
was the Reformer first of the free imperial city of hall, in Swabia, and
afterwards of the Duchy of Wurtemberg. He had the merit of proposing to the
Council of Hall, in 1526, a better working plan for the regulation of the Church
than either Luther's or Melancthon's, although still his plan was defective.
Founding on what, according to his view, was the order followed in the Apostolic
Church, he says: "The saints of the primitive Church thought it good to observe
the following order in conducting evangelical discipline:— Certain ancient,
honorable, and discreet men were elected from the assembly by the Christian
people of each locality, to whom charge was given to take the oversight of the
congregation; and in particular to admonish such as gave offense by unChristian
'unchristian' behavior, and to inflict excommunication, if admonition proved
unavailing. Of these chosen men the one who was appointed to preach the Word,
and who was authorised to convene the others for business, was styled
Bishop—that is, overseer or shepherd; the rest were styled, in allusion to their
age, Presbyters—that is, Councillors. The meeting of the Presbyters and Bishop
was designated a Synod—that is, an assembly." Such was the scheme of Brentius;
it is a well-defined and independent plan of Church rule, lodging the correction
of manners solely in the hands of the Church herself—that is, of her
office-bearers.
Brentius appeared on the point of anticipating Calvin as
regards his Church polity; and yet he missed it. The existence of a Christian
magistracy, in his view, modified the whole question. A pagan magistrate could
not be expected to correct Church scandals, and therefore it behooved the
primitive Church, unaided by the State, to administer her whole discipline; but
now, the magistrate being Christian he was fitted, according to Brentius, to
share with the Church the task of correcting and punishing evils; although still
there were vices and sins which the civil ruler could not or would not correct,
and these the Church herself must see to. Thus he inextricably mixed up the
Church's discipline with the State's authority, and he added to the confusion by
giving to the magistrate the nomination of the lay-assessors who were to take
part with the pastor in the exercise of discipline.
Another scheme claims
a moment's attention from us. It is that of Francis Lambert, ex-monk of Avignon,
and Philip, Landgrave of Hesse. It was laid before the Committee of Hornburg in
the same year (1526) that saw the scheme of John Brentius submitted to the
Council of Hall. It is the most advanced of all. It lodged the administration of
discipline immediately and directly in the members of the Church. First of all,
so far as human judgment could effect it, a Church of saints only was to be
constituted; these were to convene from time to time, "for the public punishment
and exclusion of scandalous persons... for passing judgment on the doctrine of
their pastor, for electing and, in case of need, deposing bishops and deacons
(i.e., ministers and helpers) and guardians of the poor, and for whatsoever
other functions pertain to the congregation; for these reasons, we ordain that
in every parish, after God's Word shall have been preached for a season, there
shall take place a convention of the faithful, wherein all males, who favor the
cause of Christ and are reputed saints, shall come together to decide, along
with the bishop, on all Church affairs, according to the Word of God. The bishop
or minister may by no means excommunicate or absolve by himself, but only in
conjunction with the congregation."[8]
This is not so much
the Presbyterian as the Congregational polity. It is, in fact, a scheme that
blends the two, for it was made to approximate the first, by the institution of
provincial Synods, consisting of the pastors and a deputy from every
congregation. It is remarkable, when its age and place are considered. A draft
of it was sent to Luther for his approval. He advised that for the present the
project should not be attempted, but that every effort be made to fill the
pulpits and schools with efficient men. Thereafter the plan might be introduced
piece-meal, and if it met with general approval might become law; "for to draw a
fine plan and to reduce it to practice are two very different things. Men are
not constituted as those people imagine who sit at home and sketch fine plans of
how things are to go." This constitution was hardly set a-working when it was
abandoned. The Church of Hesse, surrounded on all sides by laxer schemes of
polity, in a year or two forsook that of Lambert, and adopted that under which
Luther had placed the Churches of Saxony.
The plan of Zwingli was
intermediate between that of Luther and that of Calvin. The Reformer of Zurich
framed a code of laws and ordinances covering the entire field of social life,
and committed their administration to a series of judges or courts, supreme over
which was the State.
Marriage, the Sunday, and the Sacrament were the
three centers of his moral scheme, the three points on which his ecclesiastical
code hinged. With Luther, he regarded the power of discipline as vested in the
whole body of the faithful; and the provisions he made for the exercise of that
power were, first, the Kirk-session, or Still-stand, so called for this reason,
that at the close of public worship the members remained in church,
still-standing, with the pastor, and in that attitude made their communications
to the minister, and to one another, and reproved those cited before them for
discipline. [9] Secondly, the half-yearly
Synod, which chiefly occupied itself with the doctrines and morals of the
clergy; and thirdly, the Board of Moral Control, to which was added, when the
discipline of the Church extended, the magistrates of the district.
Excommunication—that is, exclusion from the membership of the Church, with all
implied in that sentence in Switzerland—was often pronounced by the Still-stand
as a temporary measure; but as a final measure it could be pronounced only by
the Council. The supreme ecclesiastical authority was thus in the hands of the
State, but it was handed over to it by Zwingli on the express condition that the
magistrates were Christian men, and were to take the Word of God as their sole
directory in all their proceedings.[10] The zeal and promptitude
with which the Council of Zurich aided Zwingli in his reforming measures, was
not without its influence in molding his scheme of polity, and indeed the Swiss
magistrates of those days were amongst the more enlightened and pious of the
population. But seeing Constitutions are permanent while men change, in order to
be wisely framed they ought to be based, not on exceptional cases, but on great
and general laws.
Next to the doctrine of the Church, there is nothing
that appertains more to her well-being than her discipline. Without this, her
life would ebb away, and she would fall back into the world from which she had
come out; whereas, with a suitable organization, not only would her life be
preserved, but her vigor and efficiency would be increased tenfold. We have
therefore sought to trace the successive stages of the growth of the polity of
the Protestant Churches. We see the Church's government, like her doctrine,
gradually developing and taking shape. The doctrine of the priesthood of all
believers we find lying at the foundation of all these schemes. On this idea
Luther constitutes the office of preacher of the Word. He feels that this is not
enough, but does not see how, in the then immature state of the Church, more can
be done. Brentius joined lay-assessors with the pastor, who were to exclude the
unworthy from the privileges of the Church; but the better half of this power he
gave to the magistrate, who might in the end—this was of course the questionable
part of the scheme—usurp the whole of it. Francis Lambert went to the other
extreme. He made all the members of the Church judges—a plan that will work with
difficulty in any age, and which certainly was unsuited to the age that saw its
birth. The polity constructed by Zwingli was more elaborate, and did much to
nourish morality and piety in Switzerland, but its framer seriously endangered
it when he surrendered to the magistrate the power, in the last resort, of
excluding from the Church and her ordinances.
Calvin, doubtless, had
studied all these attempts, and profited by them. There is no reason to think
that he reached this scheme of Church polity at a bound; it was rather a
reproduction of earlier schemes, avoiding, as far as he could, the rock on which
his predecessors had split. His genius detected the one thing which he thought
essential in Church discipline; and less concerned about other matters, he
tenaciously grasped this, the power namely of admitting to or excluding from the
privileges of the Church. It was his strong opinion that he who had this power
had the guardianship of the Church's purity, and the control of her govermnent,
and that this right must be exercised by the Church herself—that is, by her
chosen representatives—to the exclusion of all other authority and power. No
one, he considered, can share with the Church, and no one dare interfere with
her in the exercise of this right. At great peril and suffering he vindicated
this right, against both the Council of Geneva and the Libertine democracy. In
this battle he stemmed the rising tide of infidel sentiment and immoral manners
which would have been more fatal to Reformation than the arms of the Empire, and
he laid the corner-stone of that spiritual dominion which Protestantism was to
exercise over the nations.
The Presbyterian of the present day will not
admit that Calvin's scheme was faultless. The Reformer's views touching the
theocratic character of States prevented him doing full justice to his own idea
of the individuality of the Church, and forbade his placing his ecclesiastical
polity alongside the State's government, as an independent and distinct
autonomy. In the administration of practical discipline at Geneva the Council
was greater than the Consistory. But the essential principle, as Calvin deemed
it— namely, the sole power to admit or exclude, which was in his mind the key of
the position—he combated for, and vindicated with all the force of his mighty
intellect. And when he came to apply his theory of Church power to the French
Churches, the completeness and consistency of his ideas on ecclesiastical polity
were better seen. In France the government was hostile, and there, even if
Calvin had wished, he could not have effected the complication that existed at
Geneva. But all the more was the fitness of his scheme demonstrated. It gave a
perfect autonomy to the French Protestant Church, which enabled her to maintain
her place alongside the throne, and to survive a lengthened succession of
terrific tempests, which began from this time to assail her.
It is not
difficult to see, now that we look back on the epoch, that God was then teaching
a great lesson to the world—that a scripturally constituted and scripturally
governed Church would, in days to come, be the only bulwark against the
tremendous evils which were beginning to assail Christendom from opposite sides.
This lesson, we must repeat, was taught twice over, first in the case of Luther,
and secondly in the case of Calvin.
In Luther we see the Reformation,
undazzled by the blaze of worldly glory, and unterrified by the threats of
worldly power, maintaining its ground despite the insolence of authority. In the
case of Calvin, in the Cathedral of St. Peter's, we see the Reformation standing
before a licentious and furious infidel mob, who hate it not less than the
emperor does, and are just as eager to extinguish it in blood, and we behold
that mob recoiling abashed and awe-struck before its moral power. Happy had it
been for Italy and Spain had they laid to heart the first lesson! and happy had
it been for France had she pondered the second!
Book 15 Index
FOOTNOTES
VOLUME SECOND
BOOK FOURTEENTH
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 1
[1] De Bello Gallico, 1. 6.
[2] Spon, Hist. de Geneve, 3, p. 108.
[3] Ruchat, Hist. Reform. Suisse, tom. 1, p. 325; Lausanne, 1835.
[4] Bern MS., discovered by D'Aubigne in the Library at Bern — Hist. Reform. in Europe, vol. 1, p. 47.
[5] Advis et Devis de la Source de l'Idolatrie Papale, p. 34 — quoted by D'Aubigne, Hist. Ref. in Europe, vol 1, p. 160.
[6] Ibid., p. 80 — quoted by D'Aubigne, vol. 1, p. 161.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 2
[1] Bonivard, Chron., 2, 369 — apud D'Aubigne, 1, 257.
[2] D'Aubigne, bk. 1, chap. 20.
[3] M. Roset, Chron., 103. Ruchat, tom. 1, pp. 330, 331. Gallfie, Materiaux, etc., vol. 2, p. 303—apud D'Aubigne, vol. 1, p. 289.
[4] Ruchat, tom. 1, p. 331.
[5] D'Aubigne, vol. 1, p. 321.
[6] D'Aubigne, vol. 1, p. 331.
[7] D'Aubigne, vol. 1, pp. 338-340.
[8] Byron, Marino Faliero, act 2, scene 2.
[9] Bonivard, Chron., vol. 2, pp. 424-427. Galiffe, Hist. de Geneve, vol. 2, pp. 318-323. Journal de Balard, pp. 28-30 — quoted by D'Aubigne, vol. 1, p. 386.
[10] Registres du Conseil, December, 1525.
[11] Registres du Conseil, March 12, 1526. Journal de Balard, p. 54. Spon, Hist. de Geneve, 2. 392. Ruchat, 1. 331.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 3
[1] Ruchat, tom. 1, p. 353. Gerdesius, Hist. Evang. Renov., tom. 2, p. 322. (Ecolampadius to Farel, 27th December, 1526. Neuchatel MS. — quoted by D'Aubigne, vol. 4, p. 266; Edin., 1546.
[2] Ruchat, tom. 1, p. 353.
[3] Ibid., tom. 1, p. 356.
[4] J. J. Hottinger, 3. 364. D'Aubigne, vol. 4, p. 268.
[5] Ruchat, tom. 1, p. 356.
[6] Gerdesius, Hist. Reform., tom. 2, p. 322.
[7] We have already given a picture of the manners, lay and clerical, of Lausanne in the sixteenth century. See ante, vol. 1, bk. 8, ch. 3, p. 419.
[8] Ruchat, tom. 1, p. 357.
[9] Ibid., tom. 2, p. 175.
[10] Ibid., tom. 2, p. 178.
[11] Ruchat, tom. 2, pp. 176, 182.
[12] Ibid., tom. 2, p. 179.
[13] Farellus Molano. Neuchatel MS. — quoted by D'Aubigne, vol. 4, p. 323.
[14] Ruchat, tom. 2, p. 181.
[15] Choupard, MS. — quoted by D'Aubigne, vol. 4, p. 331.
[16] Ruchat, tom. 2, pp. 184, 185.
[17] Ibid., p. 185.
[18] Ruchat, tom. 2, pp. 276, 277.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 4
[1] Recess de MM. de Bern, MS. Choupard, MS. Chambrier, Hist. de Neuchatel. Governor's letter to Princess de Longueville — apud D'Aubigne. Ruchat, tom. 2, pp. 277-280.
[2] D'Aubigne, bk. 15, chap. 9.
[3] Memoire du Sire de Pierrefleur, p. 35. vol. 4, p. 258. Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 23.
[4] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 27.
[5] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 28.
[6] Melch. Adam., Vit. Theol., p. 120. Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 25. —German Switzerland differs from French Switzerland or the Swiss Romande, in that the former was evangelised almost entirely by native preachers, as Zwingle, (Ecolampadius, Hailer, etc. Viret was, we may say, the only native Reformer that arose in French Switzerland. It was mainly evangelised by men who had been born beyond its frontier.
[7] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 31-33.
[8] Memoire du Sire de Pierrefleur, p. 74. Choupard, MS. D'Aubigne, vol. 3, p. 291.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 5
[1] Memoire de M. de Bellegarde au sujet de l'audience qu'il a eu de S.M. Imperiale touchant les differends que S.A. avait avec ceux de Geneve. This MS. of about 25 pages was discovered by Dr. D'Aubigne in the archives at Turin. (See Hist. Reform. in Europe, bk. 5, chap. 6.)
[2] Spanheim, Geneva, Restituta, p. 43. Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 175.
[3] Froment, Gestes de Geneve, p. 5. Spon, Hist. de Geneve, tom. 1, p. 467. Choupard, MS. D'Aubigne, tom. 3, pp. 333. 334.
[4] Choupard, MS.
[5] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 177.
[6] La Saeur J. de Jussie, Le Lerain du Calvinisme, p. 46.
[7] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 177-180.
[8] Froment, Gestes de Geneve. pp. 5, 6. Choupard, MS. Spanheim, Geneva Restituta, p. 43.
[9] La Saeur J. de Jussie, Le Levain du Calvinisme, p. 48.
[10] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 179.
[11] Badollet MS. in Bern Library — Hist. Helv., quoted by D'Aubigne, vol 3, p. 375.
[12] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 180, 181,
[13] Froment, Gestes de Geneve, pp. 16-18.
[14] The prayer and the sermon that followed it have been recorded by Froment himself in his Gestes de Geneve. They are given by D'Aubigne in his History of the Reformation in Europe, bk. 5, ch. 12.
[15] Spanheim, Geneva Restituta, p. 52. Froment, Gestes de Geneve, pp. 43, 44. Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 185.
[16] Ruchat, tom. 4, p. 186.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 6
[1] Froment, Gestes de Geneve, p. 48. Spon, Hist. de Geneve, 1, p. 481.
[2] Hosea 6. 3.
[3] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 188. D'Aubigne, vol. 3,p. 432.
[4] D'Aubigne, vol. 3,p. 433.
[5] MS. Archives of Geneva: Letter from Bern, 20th March, 1533.
[6] Froment, Gestes de Geneve, p. 51.
[7] Spanheim, Geneva Restituta—"solenni sacramento." Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 190.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Ruchat, tom, 3, p. 191.
[10] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 193.
[11] Choupard, MS. D'Aubigne, vol. 3, p. 470.
[12] Froment, Gestes de Geneve, pp. 55-57. Roset, MS. Chron. Council Registers, 28th March, 1533. D'Aubigne, vol. 3, p. 472.
[13] Buchat, tom. 3, p. 194.
[14] La Scour J. de Jussie, Le Levain du Calvinisme, pp. 61, 62. D'Aubigne, vol. 3,p. 494,
[15] Froment, Gestes de Geneve, p. 59. La Saeour J. de Jussie, Le Levain du Calvinisme, p. 63. Council Registers, 4th and 23rd May, 1533. D'Aubigne, vol. 3,pp. 500, 501.
[16] "Permettre a chacun de suivre les mouvements de sa conscience, en telle sorte que personne ne soit constraint." (Council. Registers, 27th May, 1533.)
[17] Roset, MS. Chronicles. Froment, Gestes de Geneve, pp. 62, 63. D'Aubigne, vol. 4, p. 248.
[18] D'Aubigne, vol. 4, p. 253.
[19] Gaberel. Lettres Patentes de l'Eveque. D'Aubigne, vol, 4, p. 255.
[20] Roset, MS. Chronicles, bk. 3, chap. 17.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 7
[1] Roset, Chron., bk. 3, chap. 21. Registres du Conseil, February 8th and 10th, 1534.
[2] Froment, Gestes de Geneve, p. 82. Registres du ConseiI, March, 1534.
[3] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 325, 326.
[4] Ibid., tom. 3, p. 326.
[5] Ibid., tom. 3, p. 327.
[6] Froment, Gestes de Geneve, p. 125. Roset, Chron., bk. 3, chap. 27. Registres du Conseil, July 31st, 1534, and January 25th, 1537. D'Aubigne, Hist. Reform., vol. 4, pp. 400-402.
[7] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 337.
[8] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 343.
[9] Ibid., tom. 3, p. 354.
[10] Registres du Conseil, August 23rd, 1534.
[11] Misson in 1688 found Geneva still without suburbs. The four suburbs demolished were Rive, St. Victor, St. Leger, and Corraterie. (Misson, vol. 2, part 2, p. 410. Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 379.)
[12] "Les Catholiques avaient une pleine liberte de pratiquer publiquement leurs ceremonies, et de faire generalement par toute la ville tous les autres exercices de leur re1igion." (Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 342.)
[13] Registres du Conseil, January 24th, 1534.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 8
[1] Ruchat, tom 3, p. 330. Gaberel, Hist. Eglise de Geneve, vol. I., p. 115.
[2] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 348.
[3] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 335.
[4] Ibid., tom. 3, pp. 336-337.
[5] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 352.
[6] Ibid., tom. 3, pp. 338, 339, 341,
[7] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 346, 347. Roset Chron., bk. 3, chap. 31. Gaberel, Hist. Eglise de Geneve, vol. 1, pp. 125-128; Geneve, 1853.
[8] Gaberel, vol. 1, p. 156,
[9] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 357, 358. Roset, Chron., 3. 35.
[10] Spenser, The Faerie Queene, bk. 1, cant. 4, st. 16.
[11] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 359, 360. Spanheim, p. 79. Roset, Chron., bk. 3, chap. 35. Gaberel, vol. 1, pp. 156-158.
[12] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 355, 356, Roset, Chron., 3, 35.
[13] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 375, 376. Roset, Chron., bk. 3, chap. 50. Spanheim, pp. 25, 26.
[14] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 375. — "Cervi veretrum, pro Antonii brachio repertum est. O sacrum non ridicuhm modo, sed detestabile et vere pudendum!" (Spanheim, pp. 24, 25.)
[15] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 378, 379. Gabere1, 1. 128-131.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 9
[1] Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 378.
[2] Ibid., tom. 3, p. 378.
[3]. Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 371. Gaberel, Hist. Eglise de Geneve, vol. 1, p. 161.
[4] Ruchat tom. 3, pp. 372, 373. 1081
[5] Ibid., tom. 3, p. 375.
[6] Ibid., tom. 3, pp. 375, 376.
[7] So ran the decree. Calvin had afterwards to complain of the misappropriation of these funds to private uses.
[8] Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 381, 382, Roset, Hist. de Geneve, tom. 1, pp. 371, 372. Roset, Chron., bk. 3, chap. 37.
[9] Ruchat, tom. 4, p. 6.
[10] Ruchat, tom. 4, p. 7.
[11] Ibid., tom. 4, pp. 9-24.
[12] Ruchat, tom. 4, p. 15.
[13] Ruchat, tom. 4, pp. 24-33.
[14] MS. Chouet, p. 40. Roset, bk. 3, chap. 62. Ruchat, tom. 4, p. 108.
[15] MS. Chouet, p. 41. Ruchat, tom. 4, p. 109.
[16] Roset, bk. 3, chap. 68. MS. Chouet, p. 41. Ruchat, tom. 3, pp. 110, 111.
[17] A summary of this Confession will be found in the following chapter.
[18] MS. Chouet, p. 41. Ruchat, tom. 3, p. 111. A copy of this first Helvetic Confession from the original document, communicated to M. Ruchat by M. Jacob Bordier, Pastor of the Church of Geneva, and Librarian, is to be found in Ruchat's History, tom. 4, pp. 111-122.
[19] Ruchat, 3, 591, 592. Misson, Travel, 11, 417.
[20] "When in the year 1535 the tyranny of the Roman Antichrist had been overthrown and his superstitions abolished, the most holy religion of Christ in its purity, and the Church in its good order, were, by the singular mercy of God, here re-established. And at the same time its enemies having been beaten and put to flight, the city itself, not without the most manifest Divine interposition, was restored to its liberty. The Senate and People of Geneva decreed that this monument, in eternal memory of the event, should be prepared and set up in this place. By this they desire to testify their gratitude to God to all posterity." — Michael Roset says that a similar tablet was placed above the gate of the Corraterie; and the historical calendar, which is placed before the greater part of the old edition of the French Psalms, translated into verse by Marot and Beza, gives the date of the edict of the Reformation as the 27th of August, 1535.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 10
[1] Beza, Vita Calvini; Geneva, 1575.
[2] Ruchat, 4, 133.
[3] Beza, Vita Calvini.
[4] Beza, Vita Calvini.
[5] Praefatio ad PsaImos—Opp. Calvini.
[6] Ruchat, tom. 4, 133. Beza, Vita Calvini.
[7] Bungener, Calvin: his Life, his Labours, and his Writings, p. 102; Edin., 1863.
[8] Beza, Vita Calvini,
[9] Ruchat, tom. 4, pp. 111-122. Bungener, Calvin, pp. 104-108.
[10] The Council-General—that is, the People — elected the Council of Two hundred. In 1542 this was changed, and the election given to the Council of Twenty-five. Calvin saw the danger of the step, and conjured the magistrates to allow the Two Hundred to be named at all times by the Council-General. He foretold conflicts in the future, for the people would be sure some time or other to retake the power of which they had been deprived. "It was," says M. Gaberel, in his History of the Church of Geneva, "perhaps the only time in which Calvin was not listened to. If the election of Two Hundred had been left to the Council-General, the revolutions of the eighteenth century would never have caused blood to flow on the Genevese territory." (Tom. 1, p. 522.)
[11] Two Syndics, four members of the Council of Twenty-five, and six of the Council of Two Hundred. (Ruchat, Tom. 5, p. 158.)
[12] Guizot, Hist. France, vol. 3,pp. 236, 237; Lond., 1874.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 11
[1] Those who condemn Calvin for having forbidden dances, little dream of what sort these dances were. Ruchat, the historian of the Swiss Reformation (tom. 5, p. 244), tells us that there was in Lausanne a society of youths who at certain seasons "paraded the streets entirely naked, or in masques, representing the god Bacchus, dancing and singing lewd songs." Of a similar kind were the dances in Geneva. These laws, as we have seen in the previous chapter, were already enacted by the Council. Calvin found them in operation when he entered Geneva.
[2] Ruchat, tom.4, p. 110.
[3] Bungener, Calvin,. p. 110.
[4] Roset, MS. Chron.
[5] Ibid. Ruchat, tom. 5, p. 57.
[6] Ruchat, tom. 5, pp. 57, 58.
[7] Beza, Vita Calvini.
[8] Beza, Vita Calvini.
[9] M. Roset, Chron. de Geneva, bk. 4, chap. 15.
[10] Bonnet, Lettres Francaises, tom. 2, p. 575.
[11] Roset, MS,. Chron, bk. 4, chap. 18. Ruchat, tom. 5, pp. 65, 66
[12] Roset, MS. Chron. Beza Vita Calvini. Reqistrae, 23rd April, 1538.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 12
[1] Ruchat, tom. 5, pp. 84-86.
[2] Morand was minister at Cully, on the shores of Lake Leman. Marcourt was minister at Neuchatel. Some have said that Marcourt was the writer of the famous Placards, which Florimond Raemond attributes to Farel. These violent manifestoes first thoroughly awoke that spirit of bloody persecution from which the Protestants suffered so long in France. It has never been certainly proved whose work they were, but they are more likely to have emanated from Marcourt than from Farel.
[3] Ruchat, tom. 5, pp. 100,101.
[4] Ibid., tom. 5, pp. 123,124.
[5] Beza, Vita Calvini. Ruchat, tom. 5, pp. 115,116. Bungener, pp. 136-145.
[6] Ad J. Sadoletum Responsio—Opp. Jo. Calvini, vol. 8, pp. 105-115; Amstel., 1667.
[7] Sleidan, Hist. Reform., bk. 12, p. 245.
[8] Sleidan, bk. 12, p. 247.
[9] Bungener, p. 152.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 13
[1] Sleidan, bk. 13, p. 268.
[2] Ibid., bk. 13. pp. 267, 268.
[3] Calvin's Letter to Farel, April, 1589 — Jules Bonnet, vol. 1, p. 114.
[4] Sleidan, bk. 13., p. 270. Ruchat, tom. 5, p. 151.
[5] Sleidan, bk. 13, p. 275.
[6] Sleidan, bk. xiii., pp. 276, 277.
[7] Letters of Calvin — Jules Bonnet, vol. i., p. 236.
[8] Letter to Farel, 11th May, 1541 — Jules Bonnet.
[9] Ibid.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Letter to Farel, 11th May, 1541-Jules Bonnet.
[12] Sleidan, bk. xiv., pp. 278-282. Calvin, Letters, Nos. 63, 65, 67, 70. Paul Henry, Life and Times of Calvin, vol. i., pp. 230-237.
[13] M. Adamus, Vita Melancthonis, p. 340. Calvin, however, calls it apoplexy (Ep. 32). Eck died two years later, of a second attack of apoplexy. (Seckendorf, iii. parag. 112.)
[14] Sleidan, bk. xiv., p. 283.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 14
[1] Ruchat, tom. v., p. 96.
[2] The two foreign pastors, Marcourt and Morand, we find complaining to the Council in February, 1539, of the dissoluteness of Geneva, the masquerades, indecent songs, balls, dances, blasphemies, and of persons walking naked through the town to the sound of drums and fifes. (Ruchat, v. 112.)
[3] M. Roset, MS. Chron. Beza, Vita Calvini.
[4] Bungener, pp. 147, 148.
[5] Ruchat, tom. v., p. 155.
[6] Ruchat, tom. v., p. 152.
[7] Calvin to Farel, 27th October, 1540 — Jules Bonnet, No. 54.
[8] Beza, Vita Calvini. Ruchat, tom. v. p. 157. Letter to James Bernard, 1st March, 1541 — Jules Bonnet, No. 62.
[9] Had this been a biography, we should have dwelt at some length on Calvin's matrimonial negotiations; but in a history such details would press out graver matters. The Reformer devolved on his friends the task of providing a wife for him, They nominated and he exercised a veto. First a lady of noble birth and rich dower was found for him. He did not choose to mate with one above his own degree. He proposed that the lady should learn the French tongue; and, as Calvin had foreseen, she refused. Another lady was named, and Calvin had made advances, but, happily, he discovered in time sufficient reasons for not going farther. At last Bucer proposed one who had lately become a widow, Idelette de Bure, or Van Buren. She was a lady of deep piety, elevation of soul, and Christian courage, "a most choice woman," says Beza. These were the qualities that suited Calvin. The nuptials took place in the end of August, 1540. She was a girdle of strength to her husband. The reader cannot but remark the similarity of the names, Catherine de Bora and Idelette de Bure. They were noble women, but as the wives, the first of Luther and the second of Calvin, truth stand in a sort of twilight.
[10] "Pour la robe de Maistre Calvin." His salary was fixed at 500 Genevese florins, about £120 sterling of our day. He had besides twelve measures of corn, and two casks of wine. For a dwelling the mansion Freyneville was purchased at 260 crowns.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 15
[1] Paul Henry, Life and Times of Calvin, vol. i., p. 331. Sleidian, bk. xiv, pp. 284-286.
[2] Calvin to Farel; Geneva, 16th Sept., 1541 — Jules Bonnet, No. 76.
[3] Calvin: his Life, Labour., and Writings, bk. iii, chap. 1, p. 180.
[4] Gaberel, vol. i., pp. 255, 256.
[5] Ruchat, v., 158,159.
[6] Hist. de l'Eglize de Geneve; 1862.
[7] Gaberel, tom. i., pp. 269, 270.
[8] Calvin: his Life, Labours, and Writings, pp. 186, 187.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 16
[1] Ruchat, tom. v., p. 159.
[2] Bungener, p. 208.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 17
[1] Bungener, p. 207.
[2] Ibid., p. 209.
[3] Letter to Viret, July 11, 1547. Roset, Chronicle, 1546 (from MS. extracts by John McCrie, son of the biographer of Knox and Melville). Mr. John McCrie, a young man of the greatest promise, resided some time at Geneva, and made copious extracts from the Town Council Registers, and Roset's Chronicle, for the use of Dr. McCrie, his father, who then meditated writing the Life of Calvin. The Author was most obligingly favored with the use of these MS. extracts by his late valued friend, the younger McCrie.
[4] Ruchat, tom. v., pp. 318-320. Bungener, p. 210. Calvin to Viret, July 11, 1547.
[5] Roset, Chronicle (MS. extracts by John McCrie).
[6] Ruchat, tom. v., p. 317.
[7] Letter to Farel, No. 163 — Bonnet, vol. ii., p. 39.
[8] Letter to Viret, No. 211 — Bonnet, vol. ii., p. 135. This scene made so deep an impression on the mind of Calvin that he recalled it seventeen years afterwards, on his death-bed, in his farewell to the ministers of Geneva.
[9] Ruchat, tom. v., p. 327. Bungener, p. 215.
[10] Roset, Chronicle (MS. of John McCrie).
[11] Bezat Calv. Vita, an. 1548. Roset (MS. of John McCrie).
[12] Ruchat, tom. v., p. 380.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 18
[1] Sleidan, bk. 21, p. 485.
[2] Sleidan, bk. 21, pp. 491, 492.
[3] Ibid., p. 492.
[4] Sleidan, bk. 21, p. 492.
[5] Ibid p.484
[6] Formulaire de consentemen dans la doctrine de la Sainte Cene entre les Eglises de Zurich et de Geneve." (Ruchat, tom. 5, pp. 370-378.)
[7] Ruchat, tom. 5, p. 379. Beza, Calvini Vita, ann. 1549. Bungener, p. 297.
[8] Some of the Lutherans accused Calvin of having changed sides, and become a convert to Zwingli. To show that the charge is without foundation, Ruchat quotes Calvin's statements of the doctrine of the Lord's Supper, first in 1535, in the Institutes, and secondly in 1537, in the Formulary of Union presented to Bern. These are to the following effect:—First: "In the Lord's Supper there is neither transubstantiation, nor con-substantiation, nor impanation, nor any other change physical or corporeal." Second: "The Sacrament is not an empty sign, but in it we truly partake of the body and blood of Christ by faith." (Ruchat, tom. 5, pp. 379, 380.) Similar is his statement to Bullinger: "We are thereby made partakers of the body and blood of Christ, so that he dwells in us and we in him, and thus enjoy his universal benefits." (P. Henry, vol. 2, pp. 78, 79.)
[9] "Miraculum Italiae."
[10] "John a Lasco was a member of a Polish family which had given many distinguished names to the State, the camp, and the Church. He was the intimate friend of Erasmus and other scholars, a correspondent of the Queen of Navarre and other royal persons. Zwingli first sowed the seeds of the Protestant truth in his mind. He became the founder of the Reformed Church of Friesland, but his views on the Lord's Supper corresponding with those of the Swiss Church, he was persecuted by the Lutherans. He was invited to England by the Protector Somerset and Archbishop Cranmer. He left England on the accession of Queen Mary, and ultimately settled in Poland, where he labored, not without success, in the Reformation of the Polish Church. (See Strype, Memorials of Cranmer; M c Crie, Italy; Krasinski, Slavonia.)
[11] Daughter of Louis XII., and who but for the Salic law, or as she herself expressed it, the circumstance that nature had denied her a beard, would have been sovereign of France.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 19
[1] Not to be confounded, as Lupus has done, with Andrew Servetus, Professor of Law at Bologna, and afterwards Senator of the Kingdom of Arragon.
[2] Henricus Ab. Allwoerden, Historia Michaelis Serveti, p. 7; Helmstadt, 1727.
[3] Allwoerden, p. 33.
[4] Ibid., p.39.
[5] Bungener, p. 240. His theory of the circulation of the blood occurs in bk. 5 of the above work. It is given by Allwoerden in the appendix to his Historia Michaelis Serveti, pp. 232-234. A striking proof, surely, of the subtle, penetrating intellect of the man, and of the benefits he might have conferred on the world, had his genius been wisely directed.
[6] Allwoerden, pp. 23-26. P. Henry, 2, pp. 167-176.
[7] De Trin. Error., lib. 7, fol. 3, 6—apud P. Henry, vol. 2, pp. 167-169.
[8] Allwoerden, p. 42.
[9] Letters of Calvin—Jules Bonnet, vol. 2, No. 154: "Sed nolo fidera meam interponere, nam si venerit, modo valeat mea authoritas, vivum exire non paitar." The original letter is in the Bibliotheque du Rot at Paris. The author was told by his late friend, the younger McCrie, that he examined the letter, and was sorrowfully convinced of its authenticity. Bolsec quotes a letter of Calvin's to Viret to the same effect, but its authenticity is doubtful.
[10] The doom which the Reformers awarded to others for false dogmas, they accepted for themselves, should they teach what was contrary to the faith. "When I read Paul's statement," says Farel, writing to Calvin, "that he did not refuse to suffer death if he had in any way deserved it, I saw clearly that I must be prepared to suffer death if I should teach anything contrary to the doctrine of piety. And I added that I should be most worthy of any punishment whatever if I should seduce any one from the faith and doctrine of Christ." (8th September, 1553— Calvini Op., tom. 9, p. 71.) If we condemn the Reformers for their intolerance, we surely cannot but admire their devotion.
[11] Allwoerden, p. 54.
[12] "One of the syndics, at my instigation, committed him to prison." (To Sultzer, 9th September, 1553.) Spon, in his History of Geneva, says that Servetus had begun to dogmatise in the city. Bolsec says that he was arrested on the day of his arrival. It is now generally admitted that he remained a month in Geneva.
[13] Registers of the Council, 14th August, 1553.
[14] Calvin, Refut. Err. Servet., p. 517.
[15] P. Henry, vol. 2, p. 194.
[16] P. Henry, vol. 2, p. 195.
[17] Allwoerden, p. 71.
[18] August 20th, 1553.
[19] Calvin, Refut. Err. Servet., p. 522.
[20] Relation du Proces Criminel Intente a Geneve en 1553, contra Michael Servet, redigdee d'apres les documents originaux, par Albert Rilliet; Geneve, 1844.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 20
[1] Rilliet, Relation du Proces Criminel, etc., p. l60.
[2] Ibid., p. 162.
[3] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 38;
[4] Rilliet, p. 164. Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 38.
[5] Ibid, p. 165.
[6] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 38.
[7] Gaberel, Hist. de l'Eglise de Geneve, tom. 1, p. 311.
[8] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 39.
[9] Rilliet, pp. 166, 167. Rilliet quotes the passage from the unpublished History of Geneva by Gautier. The sermon was taken down by a notary, translated by Beza, and sent to Bullinger, at Zurich. The sermon, says Rilliet, "is not in the MS. collection at Geneva, where the discourses of the year 1553 are wanting."
[10] Gaberel, tom. 1, p. 312; Geneve, 1853.
[11] Bungener, p. 220.
[12] Beza, ann. 1553.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 21
[1] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 39.
[2] Rilliet (Tweedie's translation), p. 107.
[3] Ibid., p. 111.
[4] Berthelier's defense of Servetus is mentioned also by Roset (lib. 5, chap. 50, 51), and Beza (ann. 1553).
[5] Rilliet, p. 113.
[6] Ibid., p. 114.
[7] The nature of these errors we have already stated, but it does not concern us to go at large into their truth or atrocity, seeing either way we condemn the burning of Servetus. Our duty is to show, as fairly and clearly as we can, the exact connection which the Reformer and the Reformation had with this sad affair.
[8] Rilliet, pp. 120, 121.
[9] Ibid., p. 122.
[10] Allwoerden, Hist. M. Serveti, p. 109.
[11] Rilliet, p. 131. Such is the dispassionate judgment of one who has thoroughly weighed the documentary and historical evidence of this melancholy affair, and who has suffered himself to be blinded by no veneration for Calvin, or sympathy with his work.
[12] Rilliet, p. 140.
[13] See previous chapter.
[14] Rilliet, p. 163.
[15] Rilliet, p. 171.
[16] Rilliet, pp. 179-181.
[17] Ibid., pp. 184, 185. Ruchat, tom. 6, p.41.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 22
[1] Rilliet, p. 189.
[2] The replies of the magistrates and pastors of the four cities will be found in Ruchat, tom. 6, pp. 43-48; and Dr. Tweedie's translation of Rilliet, Relation du Proces Criminel, Etc. (Appendix).
[3] Gaberel, tom. 2, p. 256.
[4] Rilliet, p. 205.
[5] Ibid., p. 208.
[6] We have followed chiefly in this narration the authority of Rilliet, because he has examined all the existing documents, and speaks throughout with the dispassionateness of a judge. Any bias he indicates is in favor of Servetus, and against Calvin.
[7] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 51. Henry, Life of Calvin, vol. 2, p. 218; Lond., 1849.
[8] tom. 2, p. 262.
[9] Rilliet, p. 212. Ruchat, tom. 5, p. 51. Henry, vol. 2, pp. 218, 219.
[10] Rilliet, p. 213.
[11] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 51.
[12] Allwoerden, p. 113.
[13] Gaberel, tom. 2, p. 264.—On both sides we see a resoluteness, a tenacity, and a depth of conviction which many in this age will have great difficulty in understanding. On the one side there is not a word of yielding; on the other not a word of consolation. It does not seem to have occurred to Servetus, to his credit be it said, to save himself by a false retractation; nor does Farel believe it possible to utter one word of comfort or hope till Servetus has been brought to renounce those doctrines which he held to be fatal. This imparts to the one side the air of obstinacy, to the other the aspect of severity. The earnestness of the sixteenth century is, we believe, the key to a scene that appears to us extraordinary.
[14] On the level or summit of Champel, says Rilliet, and not at the spot called Champ du Bourreau, should be placed the theater of executions. The latter place was the cemetery of the executed. (Relation, etc., p. 222, foot-note.)
[15] Servetus supplicated Christ as the "Son of the Eternal Father," but he would not acknowledge him as the "Eternal Son of the Father." In short, he saw in the Incarnation, not "God in the likeness of flesh," but flesh in the likeness of God.
[16] Allwoerden, p. 123.
[17] See extract from Farel's letter to Hottinger—Ruchat, tom. 6, pp. 51, 52. Calvini Opp.—Refut. Error. Serveti.
[18] Allwoerden, p. 124.
[19] Ibid., p. 123.
[20] Ibid.
[21] "Everywhere else but in a Reformed city," says Rilliet, "he [Servetus] might have perished without his memory recalling anything but a funeral pile and a victim" (p. 223). And we may add that, but for the "fierce light that burns" on Calvin, and the fact that his official duty connected him with the trial, his name would have been scarcely more associated with the death of Servetus than is that of Melancthon or Viret, or any other Reformer who was then alive, and who shared the responsibility of the affair equally with him.
[22] Bolsec, the bitterest of all Calvin's enemies, speaking of Servetus, says that he experienced "no regret at the death of so monstrous a heretic," and adds that "he was unworthy to converse with men." (Bungener, p. 239.)
[23] We are precluded from hearing Calvin in his own defense, because the death of Servetus was not brought as a charge against him during his lifetime. Still he refers twice to this affair in rebutting general accusations, and it is only fair to hear what he has to say. In his Declaration upon the Errors of Servetus, published a few months after his execution, Calvin says: "I made no entrearies that he might be punished with death, and to what I say, not only will all good people bear witness, but I defy even the wicked to say the contrary." In 1558 he published his Defence of the Secret Providence of God. The book was translated into English by the Reverend Henry Cole, D.D., of Clare Hall, Cambridge. In that work, pp. 128, 129 (English translation), is the following passage, in which Calvin is appealing to his opponents:—"For what particular act of mine you accuse me of cruelty I am anxious to know. I myself know not, unless it be with reference to the death of your great master, Servetus. But that I myself earnestly entreated that he might not be put to death his judges themselves are witnesses, in the number of whom at that time two were his staunch favorers and defenders." This would be decisive, did the original fully bear out the English rendering. Calvin's words are— "Saevitiam meam in quo accuses, audire cupio: nisi forte in magistri tui Serveti morte, pro quo tamen me fuisse deprecatum testes sunt ipsi judices, ex quorum numero tunc duo erant strenui ejus patroni." (Opp. Calvini, vol. 8, p. 646.) The construction of the words, we think, requires that the important clause should be read thus—I myself know not that act, unless it be with reference to your master, Servetus, for whom I myself earnestly interceded, as his judges themselves are witnesses, etc. If Calvin had said that he earnestly entreated that Servetus should not be put to death, we should have been compelled to believe he had changed his mind at the last moment. But we do not think his words imply this. As we read them they perfectly agree with all the facts. Now that M. Rilliet de Candolle has published the whole process, the following propositions are undeniable:—
- 1. That Calvin wished for a capital sentence: he had intimated this as early as 1546 in his letter to Farel.
2. That when the time came the Council of Geneva had taken both the ecclesiastical and civil power into their own hands.
3. That the part Calvin acted was simply his statutory duty.
4. That he had no power either to condemn or save Servetus.
5. That the only party in Christendom that wished an acquittal were the Libertines.
6. That their object was the overthrow of the Reformation in Geneva.
7. That the sentence of the Council was grounded mainly on the political and social consequences of Servetus' teaching.
8. That Calvin labored to substitute decapitation for burning.VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 23
[1] Bonnet, Letters of Calvin, vol. 2, No. 327, and footnote, p. 414.
[2] Laval., Hist. of Reformation in France, vol. 1, p. 82; Lond., 1737.
[3] The names of these five students were Martial Alba, of Montauban; Peter Ecrivain, of Gascony; Charles Favre, of Blanzac in Angoumois; Peter Naviheres, of Limousin; and Bernard Seguin, of La Reole.
[4] Bonnet, vol. 2, p. 374, No. 308.
[5] Crespin, hist. des Mart. 3, 228-236; Geneva, 1570.
[6] Bungener, p. 38.
[7] Bonnet, vol. 2, pp. 168-184, No. 229. Bungener, (Calvin, pp. 272, 273.
[8] Bonnet, vol. 2, pp. 284-288, No. 273.
[9] See Cranmer's letters to the leading theologians of Switzerland and Germany, reproduced in the collections of his works, published by the Parker Society, as also the collection of Zurich Letters, first series, vol. 1.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 24
[1] Henry, Life and Times of John Calvin, vol. 2, p. 32; Lond., 1349.
[2] Bungener, p. 282. "Doubtless, in many passages, better elucidations have since been found, but it is precisely because his method has been followed."
[3] "In sooth," says Gaberel, "the work killed the workman." When we think of only one item of that labor—viz., ninety-six works—written too in the midst of sufferings, it is enough, as Gaberel says, "to give one a dizziness of head." "His health," remarks the same writer, "when he first arrived in his future country, was such as would have reduced to inaction any ordinary man. But Calvin knew to subdue his sufferings by the strength of his will. He exhibited in himself the phenomenon which is sometimes seen in the case of great commanders whose dangerous maladies have given place to health on the eve of battle; only what was abnormal in their case was Calvin's normal condition." (Gaberel, Hist. Eglise de Geneve, vol. 1, p. 398.)
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 25
[1] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 114.
[2] City Registers, January 9th, 1555.
[3] Roset, tom. 3, livr, 5, ch. 58—John McCrie's extracts.
[4] Calv. Epp., 385. Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 115.
[5] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 134.
[6] Ibid.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Ibid., p. 135. "Et qu'au reste route liberte hors de Christ estoit servitude miserable." (Roset, tom. 3, livr. 5, chap. 58-John McCrie's extracts.)
[9] To the Author it appears a remarkable circumstance that the law giving the spiritual supremacy to the Consistory should have been in abeyance for some time before and some time after the affair of Servetus. This has not had the attention paid to it which it deserves.
[10] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 135.
[11] Ibid., p. 136. Roset, livr. 5, chap. 65.
[12] Whilst the number of refugees was increasing at Geneva and the other towns of Switzerland, their wants were provided for by liberal charitable donations. This was the origin of the Bourse Etrangere, founded at Geneva, the revenues of which are applied, even in our own day, the support of poor students, or the founding of new schools. (Bonnet, Letters of Calvin, vl. 2, p. 430, foot-note.)
[13] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 136. Henry, Life of Calvin, vol. 2, p. 315.
[14] Ruchat, tom. 6, p: 137. Reset, tom. 3, livr. 5, chap. 64—John McCrie's extracts.
[15] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 137. Henry, vol. 2, p. 316.
[16] "Estoyent tous grands zelateurs de la liberte publique." (Roset, tom. 3, livr. 5, chap. 66-John McCrie's extracts.)
[17] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 138.
[18] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 138.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 26
[1] MS. Letters, p. 377—apud McCrie, Life of Knox, vol. 1. p. 195; Edin., 1831.
[2] Henry, Life of Calvin, vol. 2, p. 318.
[3] Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 189.
[4] Ibid., p. 190.
[5] Ruchat, tom. 6, pp. 192, 193.
[6] Bolsec, to avenge himself on the Reformer, and reconcile himself with Rome, to which communion he returned, wrote a bitter and calumnious book, which he entitled a Life of Calvin.
[7] Bungener, Calvin: his Life, etc., p. 237.
[8] Bungener, pp. 300, 301.
[9] Bungener, p. 302.
[10] Bungener, p. 302.
[11] Ibid., pp. 304, 305.
[12] Henry, Life of Calvin, vol. 1, p. 401.
[13] Ibid., p. 402.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 27
[1] Ruchat, tom. 6, p, 307.
[2] Roset, chap. 42—John McCrie's extracts. Ruchat, tom. 6, p. 307. Bungener, pp. 332-335.
[3] Bungener, pp. 335, 336.
[4] Hottinger, p. 890. Ruchat,tom. 7, p. 41.
[5] Henry, Life, vol. 2, p. 416.
[6] Ibid., vol. 1, p. 270.
[7] Bungener, pp. 339, 340.
[8] Ruchat,tom. 7, p. 44.
[9] Ibid.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 28
[1] "A son abbaye (cercle)."—Gaberel.
[2] Gaberel, tom. 1, p. 389.
[3] Gaberel, tom. 1, p. 390.
[4] Bungener, p. 226.
[5] Misson, vol. 2, part 1, p. 275. Besides the names mentioned in the text, Misson gives a list of other Italian families which settled at Geneva— De la Rue, Diodati, Boneti, Franconi, Martini, Rubbati, and many others. (Vol. 2, part 2, pp. 436, 437.)
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 29
[1] Ruchat, tom. 7, p. 41. "Crato, one of our engravers, lately returned from Wittenberg, brought letters from Luther to Bucer, in which he thus writes:—'Salute for me most respectfully Sturm and Calvin, whose books I have read with singular pleasure.' Now recall what I have there said concerning the Eucharist; think of Luther's noble-heartedness. It will be easy for you to see how little cause those have who so pertinaciously dissent from him. Philip, however, wrote thus:—'Luther and Pomeranus have desired Calvin and Sturm to be greeted. Calvin has acquired great favor with them.' Philip, moreover, desired the messenger to tell me that certain persons, in order to exasperate Martin, have shown him a passage in which he and his friends were censured by me. Thereupon he examined the passage, and felt that without doubt he was aimed at. At length he expressed himself thus—'I hope Calvin will one day think better of us; but it is well meanwhile that he should have a proof of our good disposition towards him.' If such moderation do not affect us, we are stones. For myself, I am melted, and have given myself the satisfaction of saying so in the preface to the Epistle to the Romans. If you have not yet read Philip on the authority of the Church, I desire you may read it. You will see how much more moderate he is than he appears in his other writings. Capito, Bucer, Sturm, Hedio, Bedrot, and others, salute thee most lovingly. Greet for me most warmly all the brethren. Most choice brother, farewell.—Strasburg, 12th Dec. (1539)."
[2] Ruchat, tom. 7, p. 41.
[3] Spon, Not., pp. 309-311. Ruchat,tom. 7, p. 42.
[4] Ruchat,tom. 7, p. 43.
[5] Farel made yet one more journey. In the spring of the following year, 1565, he went to Metz, the scene of his earliest labors, where he preached. The effort appears to have been too much for him, for soon after his return to Neufchatel he died of exhaustion.
[6] Gaberel, tom. 1, p. 405.
[7] Bungener, p. 348.
[8] When, a few years ago, the Author visited the Plain-palais at Geneva, he found a pine tree, and a stone of about a foot square, with the letters "J. C." inscribed on it, marking the supposed spot of Calvin's interment.
VOLUME SECOND- BOOK FOURTEENTH- CHAPTER 30
[1] Beza, Vita Calvini. Ruchat,tom. 7, p. 46.
[2] Gaberel, tom. 1, p. 466; 1858-1862
[3] Geschichte der Presbyterial-und Synodalverfassung seit der Reformation. Von G. V. Lechler, Knittilingen. Pages 6, 7. Leyden, 1854.
[4] Ibid., p. 8.
[5] For a statement in full of Luther's views on the constitution of the Church, see ante, bk. 9, chap. 12.
[6] Corp. Reform., ed. Bretschneider, vol. 4, p. 542.
[7] Corp. Reform., vol. 3, p. 965. Lechler, Geschichte der Presbyt., etc., pp. 8, 9.
[8] Lechler, Geschicte der Presbyt., etc., pp. 14-16.
[9] Christoffel, Life of Zwinqle, p. 160.
[10] Ibid., pp. 160-170.