READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
CHAPTER XICALVIN AND THE REFORMED CHURCH.
THE Reformation emerges as an inevitable result from
the interaction and opposition of many and complex forces. The spirit of the
time, even when intending to be its enemy, proved its friend. The Renaissance,
which had raised the ancient classical world from its grave, was not in itself
opposed to the Catholic Church; but in the reason it educated and the
historical temper it formed, in the literature it recovered and the languages
it loved, in the imagination it cultivated and the new sense of the beautiful
it created, there were forces of subtle hostility to the system which had been
built upon the ruins of classical antiquity. Erasmus used his wit to mock the
vulgar scholasticism of Luther. But Erasmus more than any man made
Protestantism necessary and the Papacy impossible, especially to the grave and
reverent peoples of the North. The navigators, who by finding new continents
enlarged our notions both of the earth and man, seemed but to add fresh
provinces to Rome; but, by moving the centre of
social and intellectual gravity from the shores of the Mediterranean to those
of the Atlantic, they inflicted on her a fatal wound. Moreover, by the easy
acquisition of the wealth which lower races had accumulated, there was begotten
in the Latin peoples so fierce and intolerant an avarice that their highest
ambitions appeared ignoble, in contrast with the magnanimity and the enterprise
of the Teutonic nations that became Protestant.
And just as the history of man’s past lengthened and
the earth around him broadened and with it his horizon, so the nature beneath
him and the heavens above began by telling him their secrets to throw over him
their spell. With the new knowledge of nature came new hopes which looked more
to the energies that were creating the future than to the authorities that had
fashioned the past. Faith in man as man, and not simply as King or noble, as
Pope or priest, was reborn; and he appeared as the maker of history and the
doer of the deeds that distinguish time.
The most famous of the humanists were either
themselves poor or sons of poor men, though they might affect, especially in
Italy, the Courts of Kings and the palaces of the great, who had patronage as
well as power in their hands. The most eminent of the explorers was a Genoese
sailor; the best known conqueror was an officer’s bastard; the author of the
new astronomy was a clerk who never became a priest; the foremost scholar of
the day was a child born out of wedlock; the most acute political thinker was a
plain Florentine citizen; and the most potent English statesman was the son of
a rustic tradesman. And this strenuous individualism found its counterpart in
religion; the rights of man in religion were declared; the individual asserted
his competence to know and to obey the truth by which he was to be judged.
But the Reformation, at least in its earlier phase,
bore also upon its face the image of the man whose genius gave it actual being.
Luther had become a Reformer rather by necessity of nature than by choice of
will. His peasant descent may have given him a conservative obstinacy which was
concentrated and intensified by his narrow scholastic education. No man ever
clung with more tender intensity to the customs and beliefs that could be saved
from the wreckage of the past. But he did his work as a Reformer the more
thoroughly because he did it from nature rather than from choice. It is
doubtful if in the whole of history any man ever showed more of the insight
that changes audacity into courage. By the publication of his Theses he proclaimed
a doctrine of grace that broke up the system which Europe had for centuries
believed and obeyed. By burning the papal Bull he defied an authority which no
person or people had been able to resist and yet live. By his address to the
nobles of the German nation he appealed from ecclesiastical passion and
prejudice to secular honor and honesty. By his appearance and conduct at the
Diet of Worms he showed that he could act as he had spoken. By his translation
of the Bible he spread before the eyes of every religious man the law by which
he was bound. And by his marriage he declared the sanctity of the home and the
ties which attached man to woman.
But, though Luther was by nature strong and heroic, he
was yet so intellectually timid that he could not bear suspense of judgment,
even where such suspense was an obvious duty. And so the system he created was,
alike in what it sacrificed and what it spared, a splendid example of
dialectical adaptation to personal experience. He was indeed so typical a
German that his Church suited the German people; but for the same reason it
could not live outside Teutonic institutions and the Teutonic mind. He had no
constitutional tendency to skepticism, for his convictions did not so much
follow or obey as underlie and guide the processes of his logic. Hence he was a
man equally powerful in promoting and in resisting change; he stood up against
forces that would have overwhelmed a weaker or a smaller man; but as a
conservative by nature he professed beliefs that a man of a more consistent
intellect would have dismissed, and cherished customs which a more radical
reformer would have surrendered. And he was not conscious of any
incompatibility among the things he retained or of any coherence between what
he gave up and what he spared. Thus he opposed to the authority of the Pope the
authority of Holy Scripture; but the Apostle who seemed to ignore or deny his
most fundamental belief he was ready to denounce as if he were the Pope. He
appealed to the German people to uphold against Rome a Gospel which declared
all men to be equal before God; but, when the peasants drew from his first
principle an inference which justified their revolt, he sided with the Princes.
From his doctrine of Justification by Faith he argued against the papal chair
and its claims; but his theory of the Eucharistic Sacrament was more full of
mysteries that tax the reason than any of the articles which he regarded as
specifically Popish. He held freedom to be the right of every Christian man,
and confessed himself bound to accept every consequence which came by
legitimate reasoning from the truth he acknowledged; but he refused the right
hand of brotherhood to Reformers whose love of freedom, integrity of character,
purity of motive, and zeal in the faith were equal to his own.
The longer the Protestant Church lived, the more the
Reformer’s inconsistencies and the inadequacy of his Reformation became
evident; and so a double result followed. On the one side the ancient Church
pressed with growing severity upon the revolt and its leaders; and, on the
other side, the more eager of the rebellious spirits went forward in search of
simpler yet more secure positions. Rome did not indeed understand at once what
had happened; but she understood enough to see how Luther and the communities
he had founded could best be dealt with. An ancient Church which has governed
man for centuries, instructed him, organized and administered his worship,
consecrated him from his birth and comforted him in his death, has always an
enormous reserve of energy. Man is a being with an infinite capacity for
reverence; and it is where he most reveres that he is most conservative and
least inclined to change.
And consequences soon followed from the Reformation
which threatened to limit its scope to the purification of Catholicism, to the
restoration of its decayed energies, and to furnishing it with the opportunity
of vindicating by policy and argument, by speech and action, its name and its
claims. Heresies soon arose in the Protestant as they had arisen in the early
Church; the collision of the new thought with the old associations provoked
discussion; discussion begat differences; differences became acute antitheses
which were hardened into permanence by the very means taken to soften or
overcome them. Anabaptism supplied Catholicism with fruitful illustrations of
the dangers incident to freedom of thought; the Peasants’ War was made to point
a moral which appealed to the jealousy of nobles and the ambitions of Kings;
the rise of sectaries and the multiplication of sects were employed to set
off" the excellence of a uniform faith and an infallible Church; the
abolition of priesthood and hierarchy was used to unchurch the
heretic and deny to his societies both divine authority and sacramental grace.
Revival and reaction followed so fast on the heels of reform that, had the
Lutheran Church stood alone, neither the eloquence of its founder, nor the
sagacity and steadfastness of the Saxon Electors, nor the vigour of Landgrave Philip
could have saved it.
But Luther did not exhaust the tendencies that worked
for Reform. They were impersonated also in Zwingli. As the one was by
disposition and discipline a schoolman who loved the Saints and the Sacraments
of the Church, the other was a humanist who appreciated the thinkers of
antiquity and the reason in whose name they spoke. Luther never escaped from
the feelings of the monk and the associations of the cloister; but Zwingli
studied his New Testament with a fine sense of the sanity of its thought, the combined purity and
practicability of its ideals, and the majesty of its spirit; and his ambition
was to realize a religion after its model, free from the traditions and
superstitions of men. It was this that made him so tolerant of Luther, and
Luther so intolerant of him. The differences of opinion might have been
transcended, but the differences of character were insuperable. The two men
stood for distinct ideals and different realities; and as they differed so did
their peoples. Differences of political order, geographical situation, and
climate could not but reappear in character and in belief as well as in the
forms under which these were coordinated and expressed. Ecclesiastical order
will ever reflect the civil polity prevailing in the region where it is evolved.
Thus the Roman Church was built upon the ruins of the Roman Empire; the Eastern
patriarchates were organized according to the methods and the offices of
Byzantine rule; and the ecclesiastical institutions of the sixteenth century
were shaped by the political capacities and usages of the peoples among whom
and for whom they were created. Thus the Church adapted to a German kingdom was
not suited to the temper and ways of an ancient republic; nor was a system
fitted to a despotic State congenial to the genius of a free people. Hence
there emerged a twofold difference between the Reformations accomplished by
Luther and by Zwingli : one personal, which mainly affected the faith or creed
of the Church, another social or civil, which mainly affected its polity.
Luther, a schoolman while a Reformer, created out of his learning and
experience a faith suited to his personal needs; but Zwingli, a Reformer
because a humanist, came to religion through the literature which embodied the
mind of Christ and the Church of the Apostles. Hence, the Lutheran Reformation
is less radical and complete than the Zwinglian,
while its faith is more traditional and less historical and rational. But the
differences due to the political order and the civil usage were, if not deeper,
yet more divisive. Luther effected his change under an empire and within a
kingdom by the help of Princes and nobles; but Zwingli effected his under a
republic by the aid of citizens with whom he had to argue as with consciously
freeborn men. Both might organize their respective Churches by means of the
civil power and in dependence on it; but the civil powers were not the same,
the reigning forces being in the one case the law and the princely will, and in
the other case the reason and the free choice of men trained in self-government
by the usages of centuries. The Lutheran Church was thus more monarchical,
the Zwinglian more republican in
constitution; the one was constructed by Princes, the other organized by the
genius and built by the hands of a free people.
The Reformation, then, could not possibly be expressed
in a single homogeneous form. Organization was a necessity, if the liberty
achieved by the movement was to be preserved; but it is a much harder thing to
establish an order agreeable to liberty than an order suitable to bondage. When
a revolution once begins, authorities, personal or political, may retard or
deflect it, but they cannot stop or turn it back. And no revolution leaves man
exactly where it found him; the wheel may accomplish its full round, but it
never returns to the point whence it started. If, then, man could not go back
and must preserve what he had gained, he needed a system that would serve his
new mind as Catholicism had served his old. Out of Luther's Reformation came
the Church which bears his name; out of Zwingli's the Church which is specially
termed the Reformed. This Church was born in Switzerland, but named in France;
and the name signified that while it was a Church Protestant and Evangelical
like the Lutheran, it was yet ancient and continuous like the Roman, able to
change its form or accidents without losing its essence. Being Swiss by birth
it was republican in polity and democratic in spirit, a Church freely chosen by
a free people and capable of living amid free institutions. But France, in
adopting and naming it, made it less national and more cosmopolitan, helping it
to realise a
character at once more comprehensive and aggressive. Now, the causes of this
action may be described as at once general and particular, or national and
personal. Of the more general, or national, causes three may here be specified.
The French Reformation.
French Protestantism was more a lay than a clerical
revolt; the men who led and who formed it were without the mental habits or the
associations of the priest. At first indeed it was termed, just as if it had
been imported from Germany, ‘the Lutheran heresy’; but the most notable of the
early French martyrs, Louis de Berquin,
was a pupil of Erasmus rather than of Luther. The men who made the psalms which
the French Protestants loved to sing, were not of the priestly order, while
their two most illustrious teachers were both jurists and scholars. It was then
but characteristic that the Reformed Church of France should more emphasize
moral character and temper than custom or formulated beliefs, and that John
Calvin, who was its most creative personality, should not think like a
schoolman or appeal to the Imitatio Christi as
Luther had appealed to the Theologia Germanica. Its genius was to sacrifice everything
which Scripture did not directly sanction and justify; while the genius of the
Lutheran Church was to spare everything that Scripture did not expressly
forbid. And these differences were felt and resented by the Lutherans long
before they were perceived or appreciated by the Catholics; for one of the most
tragic things of history is the jealousy which made the Lutherans so fear the
Reformed Church that they would at one time rather have seen Rome than Geneva
victorious.
Again, the Reformed Church in France had to live in
the face of a persecution so severe and a legislation so repressive as to be
without parallel in the annals of any civilized country. Certainly, in the case
of the early Church the martyrdoms were numerically fewer, while its sufferings
were less continuous and its period of persecution not so unbroken and
protracted. The Roman amphitheatre was,
compared with the Place Maubert,
a home of mild humanity; the gay and careless intolerance of Francis I had nothing
to learn from pagan hate, while the Inquisition was a fiercer and more pitiless
foe than heathenism could have bred. The first martyrdoms took place in 1523 at
Meaux and at Paris; by 1526 they had become common. An eye-witness tells us
that in six months (1534-5) in Paris alone twenty-seven persons were burned to
death. And in 1568, as if to show how the thirst for blood had grown, two
Huguenot writers assure us that, during the short peace, in three months more
than ‘ten thousand’ people were slain, a statement which the testimony of the
Venetian ambassador abundantly confirms. In 1581 a book dedicated to Henry III
places the number who had fallen within the few preceding years for the
‘Religion’ at two hundred thousand, and it goes on to enumerate the victims
provided by the larger Churches.
These figures may be exaggerated; but the
exaggerations, which are those of contemporaries, will seem extravagant only to
those who have never looked into the records of congregations and classes. In
any case the figures witness to the fierceness of the fires that scorched the
Reformed Church in France, and explain if they do not justify ‘its passion of
religious hate’, while they drew to it the pity and awakened for it the
admiration of all its sister and daughter communities. To define policy and
shape character in their own and other lands, for their own and later ages, has
ever been the prerogative of the persecuted. And this prerogative the Huguenot
has exercised as a splendid revenge. He had no opportunity of becoming a loyal
citizen; the State would not allow him. L'Hôpital laid
down the principle that there could be no civil unity where there was religious
dissension; and that the city which allowed its citizens to disagree in their
theological beliefs could know no peace. While he urged the sectaries to
cultivate charity, and cease to use the “mots diaboliques” which they flung at
each other, and to employ instead the truest and most characteristic of names,
‘Christian’, yet his thought translated into law rendered, so far as the
Huguenot was concerned, duty to the State and duty to conscience incompatible.
And the tragic struggle in which the Huguenot was engaged made him a heroic and
a potent figure. What the French Revolution did later for the European peoples,
the Huguenot did for Protestantism. He made his faith illustrious; his example
became infectious, and the Churches of other lands loved to emulate the
Reformed Church of France. And this effect was at once intensified and
heightened by the expulsive power of the anti-Protestant legislation. It drove
men out of France without expelling their love of France; they only loved her
the more that she had made them fugitives for conscience’ sake. Men like John
Calvin and Theodore Beza did not cease to
be sons of France though they became citizens of Geneva; and they used their
foreign citizenship to serve their mother land more effectually than they could
have done in any of her own cities. The Protestants failed in France, yet it is
doubtful whether without their failure there the Reformed Church could have
prospered. The events that so tended to define its creed and demeanour, helped it to fight
its battles the more bravely.
Finally, the Reformed Church as organized by the
French mind belongs essentially to the second Protestant generation, and its
distinctive note was an enlarged historical knowledge and a clarified
historical sense. The feeling for religion was in the second generation not
less strong than in the first; but it knew better the problem to be solved and
had become more conscious of the many and complex factors required for its
solution. The new literature had almost nothing to do with determining the
minds and motives of the earlier Reformers; but determined almost exclusively
those of the later. With the exception of Melanchthon no Lutheran of the front
rank came from the humanists, but all the creative minds of the Reformed Church
were children of the Renaissance. The problem as they saw it was historical and
literary as well as religious. The Old Testament which Reuchlin had recovered
and the New Testament which Erasmus had published and interpreted enabled them
to study both the religion which Christ had found and the religion which He had
made; the Apostolic writings showed how the men who knew Him or who knew those
who knew Him understood and tried to realize His mind. Their own experience had
set them face to face with a Church and system which claimed to express the
mind of the Apostles and to represent the apostolical society. They were not curious
and scientific enquirers who wished to discover how the one had become the
other, or how the twin laws of continuity and change had fulfilled themselves
in history; they were convinced and sincere religious men, who studied first
the Scriptures to find the idea of Christ, and then their own times to see
whether it had been and how it could be realized.
There was thus an objectivity in the Reformed ideal
which was absent from the Lutheran; a greater thoroughness, a more
comprehensive spirit, a more conscious and coherent endeavor to repeat and
reflect the Apostolic age. The Reformed Church was not built to meet the
exigencies of an expanding personal experience, but articulated throughout
according to a consciously conceived idea. It bore indeed even more than the
Lutheran the impress of a single mind; but then that mind was as typical of
France and the second Protestant generation as Luther was typical of Germany
and the first; and it had come by a very different process and way to the
convictions which drove it into action. Calvin, like Zwingli, was a humanist
before he became a Reformer, and what he was at first he never ceased to be. On
the intellectual side, as a scholar and thinker, his affinities were with
Erasmus, though on the religious side they were rather with Luther; indeed,
Calvin can hardly be better described than by saying that his mind was the mind
of Erasmus, though his faith and conscience were those of Luther. He had the
clear reason and the open vision of the one, but the religious fire and moral
passion of the other. The conscience made the intellect constructive, the
intellect made the conscience imperious, at once individual, architectonic, and
collective. In Calvin the historical sense of the humanist, and the spiritual
passion of the Reformer, are united; he knows the sacred literature which his
reason has analyzed, while his imagination has seen the Apostolic Church as an
ideal which his conscience feels bound to realize. There was rigorous logic in
all he did; dialectic governed him, from the humanism which furnished his premisses to the religion,
which built up his conclusions. This is the man whom we must learn to know, if
we would understand the Reformed Church, what it did, and. what it became in
his hands.
1509] Influence of Calvin.
The personal cause, then, which most of all
contributed to the creation of the Reformed Church, as history knows it, is
John Calvin; and him we must here attempt to understand from two points of view
: first, that of descent and education; secondly, that of the place and sphere
in which he did his work.
Calvin was born on July 10, 1509, at Noyon, in Picardy. It was the year when Henry VIII had
succeeded to the English throne; when Colet was meditating the formation of a
school which was to bear the name of the Apostle whom he loved; when Erasmus,
learned and famous, was in Rome, holding high argument with the Cardinal de'
Medici; when Luther attained the dignity of Sententiarius, and had been called to
Wittenberg; and when Melanchthon, though only a boy of thirteen, matriculated
at Heidelberg. Calvin’s ancestors had been bargemen on the Oise; but his
father, Gérard Calvin, had forsaken the ancestral craft, and had sometime
before 1481 migrated from Pont l'Évêque to Noyon, where he had prospered, and had in due course
become Notaire apostolique, Procureur fiscal du Comté,
Scribe en Cour d'Église, Secrétaire de l’Évesché, et Promoteur du Chapitre. He married Jeanne
le Franc, the daughter of a well-to-do and retired innkeeper, described by a
Catholic historian as a ‘most beautiful woman’, and by a local tradition as
‘remarkably devout’. Beza says that the
family was honorable and of moderate means; and he adds that the father was a
man of good understanding and counsel, and therefore much in request among the
neighboring nobility. To this couple were born four sons and two daughters,
John being the second son. The father, who intended the boy for the Church, had
the successful man’s belief in a liberal education, and obtained for him, just
as the modern father seeks a scholarship or exhibition, first, the revenues of
a chapel in the cathedral, and some years later those of a neighboring curacy.
Among the local gentry was the distinguished family of Montmor. One of them, Charles de Hangest, was from 1501 to 1525
Bishop of Noyon; and his nephew Jean held the
same episcopate for the succeeding fifty-two years. This. Jean quarreled
lustily with the Chapter, which disliked his manners, his dress, his beard, and
possibly also the tolerance of heresy which made him “suspect dans sa foi et odieux à l'Église et à l’État”. It is probable that his
friendship with this episcopal race helped Gérard to rise, and also hastened
his fall. Whatever the cause - whether financial embarrassments, personal
attachments, dubious orthodoxy, or all three combined - his later years were
more troubled than his earlier; and he died in 1531 under the Ban of the
Church. There is no evidence of any latent Protestantism either in him or in
his family at this time, though four years later John had become the hope of
the stern and unbending Reformers, and within five years the eldest son Charles
had died as une âme damnée,
for he refused on his deathbed to receive the Sacraments of the Church.
Calvin’s education began in the bosom of the Montmor family, not indeed
as a matter of charity, but, as Beza tells
us, at the charges of his father; and though Calvin never forgot that he was “unus de plèbe homundo” yet he was always grateful for
the early associations which gave to his mind and bearing a characteristic
distinction. In 1523 he was sent to Paris, where he entered as a student of
Arts the College de la Marche, whence he passed, for his later and more special
studies, to the College de Montaigu.
The University of Paris was old and famous, but its then state was not equal to
its age or its fame. Erasmus describes how the students were mobbed and hunted
on the streets, the sort of houses, no better than lupanaria, which they frequented or lodged
in, the filthy language they heard or used, the still filthier deeds they were
expected to do or suffer. Rabelais’ Panurge comes
to Paris skilled in a host of tongues, but malfaisant, pipeur, beuveur, bateur de pavez, ribleur,
averse to no form of mischief or pruriency.
James Dryander, brother of Francis, one of
Calvin's innumerable correspondents, describes the prœceptorculi and the magistelli of the
University as amazing the students by the impudence and ineptitude with which
they explained authors whom they did not understand. And how did the boy of
fourteen conduct himself in this, to him, strange atmosphere? We need not trust
the admiring or depreciative narratives of later men; but we may judge the lad
by the friends he made.
Foremost among these stand the four Cops. The father,
Guillaume Cop, the King’s physician, correspondent of Reuchlin and friend of
Erasmus, who praised him as of medicine the vindex et antistes,
and as Musarum cultor, and the sons : Jean,
who became a canon of the Church; Nicolas, who in 1530 became a professor of
philosophy, and in 1533 delivered as Rector of the University an address which
made both him and Calvin famous; and the youngest of the brothers, Michel, who
followed Calvin to Geneva and became a Protestant pastor. Beside the Cops there
stands another Erasmian,
Guillaume Budé, of
whom Calvin in his earliest work spoke as “primum rei literariae décus et columen, cuius bénéficia palmam eruditionis hodie sibi vendicat nostra Gallia”. One of the regents
of the College de la Marche was Mathurin Cordier, an enthusiastic teacher who loved learning and
learners, and whose keen eye saw the rich promise hidden in his new scholar.
The relations of master and pupil were almost ideal. Calvin never ceased to
regard Cordier with affection, dedicating
to him in profound but reserved gratitude one of his commentaries; Cordier ever respected Calvin, and showed his respect
by becoming, like him, a Protestant, and following him to Geneva, where he
died, though thirty-two years Calvin’s senior, in the same year as his quondam
pupil.
And here, perhaps, we may most fitly glance at the
commonest of all the charges brought against Calvin. He is said to have been
even then austere, severe, harsh, intolerant, inaccessible to the softer
emotions, well entitled to bear the name which the playful companions of his
youth gave him, ‘the Accusative’. But how stand the facts? There is no scholar
of his time more distinguished by his willingness to serve friends or his power
to attach and bind them to himself by bands of steel. Of the de Montmors, with whom he was
educated, almost all, in spite of high ecclesiastical connections and hopes,
became Protestants, while to his old fellow-pupil, Claude, he dedicated the
first fruits of his literary genius. The Cops and Cordier have
already been noticed; and, though Budé did
not himself cease to be a Catholic, yet his wife and family all became
Protestants, five of them on his death in 1549 seeking refuge in Geneva.
Another early teacher whom Calvin deeply revered, expressing his reverence in
one of his most characteristic dedications, was the Lutheran Melchior Wolmar, to whom he owed his introduction to the Greek
language and literature. But if one would understand the young Calvin, one must
study him as revealed in his letters to friends and companions like
François Connan, whom
he describes as the wisest and most learned of men, whom he trusts above all
others, and whose advice he rejoices to follow; or François Daniel, whom Calvin
salutes as “amice incomparàbilis” or
as “frater et amice integerrime”;
or Nicolas du Chemin, whom he rallies on his
literary ambitions, and addresses as “mea vita charior”.
The man is here revealed as nature made him, and before he had to struggle
against grim death for what was dearer to him than life; affectionate and
delicate, not in body, but in spirit.
Legal studies. The De clementia. [1528-32
In 1528 Calvin’s father, perhaps illuminated by the
disputes in his Cathedral Chapter, discovered that the law was a surer road to
wealth and honor than the Church, and decided that his son should leave
theology for jurisprudence. The son, nothing loth, obeyed, and left Paris for
Orleans, possibly, as he descended the steps of the College de Montaigu, brushing shoulders
with a Spanish freshman named Ignatius Loyola. In Orleans Calvin studied law
under Pierre de l’Estoile,
who is described as jurisconsidtorum Gallarum facile princeps, and as eclipsing in classical knowledge
Reuchlin, Aleander,
and Erasmus; and Greek under Wolmar, in whose
house he met for the first time Theodore Beza,
then a boy about ten years of age. After a year in Orleans he went to Bourges,
attracted by the fame of the Italian jurist Alciati, whose ungainliness of body and speech and
vanity of mind his students loved to satirize and even by occasional rebellion
to chasten. In 1531 Gérard Calvin died and his son in 1532 published his first
work, a Commentary on Seneca’s De clementia. His purpose has been construed by
the light of his later career; and some have seen in the book a veiled defence of the Huguenot martyrs, others a cryptic censure
of Francis I, and yet others a prophetic dissociation of himself from Stoicism.
But there is no mystery in the matter; the work is that of a scholar who has no
special interest in either theology or the Bible. This may be statistically
illustrated : Calvin cites twenty-two Greek authors and fifty-five Latin, the
quotations being most abundant and from many books; but in his whole treatise
there are only three Biblical texts expressly cited, and those from the
Vulgate. The man is cultivated and learned, writes elegant Latin, is a good
judge of Latinity, criticizes like any modern the mind and style, the knowledge
and philosophy, the manner, the purpose, and the ethical ideas of Seneca; but
the passion for religion has not as yet penetrated as it did later into his
very bones. Erasmus is in Calvin’s eyes the ornament of letters, though his
large edition of Seneca is not all it ought to have been; but even Erasmus
could not at twenty-three have produced a work so finished in its scholarship,
so real in its learning, or so wide in its outlook.
What gives the book significance is the nature that
shines through it; the humanist is a man with a passion for conduct, moral,
veracious, strenuous, who has loved labor and bestowed it without grudging on
the classical writer with whom he has most affinity. Of the twin pillars of
Roman philosophy and eloquence Cicero is for him an easy first, but Seneca is a
clear second. Calvin is here at once a jurist and a scholar, but amid his
grammatical, literary, and historical discussions -every phrase and idea
interpreted being illustrated from classical authorities- he speaks his mind
with astonishing courage concerning the qualities and faults of kings and
judges, States and societies. He bids monarchs remember that their best
guardians are not armies or treasuries, but the fidelity of friends and the
love of subjects. Arrogance may be natural in a prince, but it does not
therefore cease to be an evil. A sovereign may ravage like a wild beast, but
his reign will be robbery and oppression, and the robber is ever the enemy of
man. Cruelty makes a king execrable; and he will be loved only as he imitates
the gentleness of God. And so clemency is true humanity; it is a heroic virtue,
hard to practice, yet without it we cannot be men. And he uses it to qualify
the Stoic ethics; pity is not to him a disease of the soul, it is a sign and
condition of health; no good man is without pity; the Athenians did well when
they built an altar to this virtue. Cicero and even Juvenal teach us
that it is a vice not to be able to weep. And the doctrine becomes in Calvin's
hands social; man pitiful to men will be sensible of their rights and his own
duties. Conscience is necessary for us, but his good name is necessary to our
neighbor; and we must not so follow our conscience as to injure his good name.
We ought so to follow nature that others may see the reason in the nature that
we follow. He can be humorous, and laughs at the ridiculous
ceremonies which accompanied the apotheosis of Caesar, or at the soothsayers
who prophesied without smiling; but he is usually serious and grave,
criticizing Seneca for speaking of Fortune instead of God, and the Stoics for
doctrines which make human nature good, yet isolate the good man from mankind.
The ethics of the Stoics he loved, but not their metaphysics; their moral
individualism and their forensic morality he admired, but the defects of their
social and collective ideals he deplored and condemned. The humanist is alive
with moral and political enthusiasm, but the Reformer is not yet born.
Cop’s address. Flight of Calvin. [1533-4
The events of the next few months are obscure, but we
know enough to see how forces, internal and external, were working towards
change. In the second half of 1532 and the earlier half of 1533 Calvin was in
Orleans, studying, teaching, practicing the law, and acting in the University
as Proctor for the Picard nation; then he went to Noyon,
and in October he was once more in Paris. The capital was agitated; Francis was
absent, and his sister, Margaret of Navarre, held her Court there, favoring the
new doctrines, encouraging the preachers, the chief among them being her own
almoner, Gérard Roussel. Two letters of Calvin
to Francis Daniel belong to this date and place; and in them we find a changed
note. One speaks of ‘the troublous times’, and the other narrates two events:
first, it describes a play ‘pungent with gall and vinegar’, which the students
had performed in the College of Navarre to satirize the Queen; and secondly,
the action of certain factious theologians who had prohibited Margaret’s Mirror
of a Sinful Soul. She had complained to the King, and he had
intervened. The matter came before the University, and Nicolas Cop, the Rector,
had spoken strongly against the arrogant doctors and in defence of the Queen, ‘mother of all the virtues and of all good learning’. Le Clerc, a parish priest, the author of the mischief,
defended his performance as a task to which he had been formally appointed,
praising the King, the Queen as woman and as author, contrasting her book with
‘such an obscene production’ as Pantagruel,
and finally saying that the book had been published without the approval of the
faculty and was set aside only as ‘liable to suspicion’.
Two or three days later, on November 1, 1533, came the
famous rectorial address
which Calvin wrote, and Cop revised and delivered; and which shows how far the
humanist had travelled since April 4, 1532, the date of the De Clementia. He is now alive
to the religious question, though he has not carried it to its logical and
practical conclusion. Two fresh influences have evidently come into his life,
the New Testament of Erasmus and certain sermons by Luther. The exordium of the
address reproduces, almost literally, some sentences from Erasmus’ Paraclesis, including
those which unfold his idea of the philosophia Christiana;
while the body of it repeats Luther’s exposition of the Beatitudes and his
distinction between Law and Gospel, with the involved doctrines of Grace and
Faith. Yet “Ave gratia plena” is retained in the exordium; and at the
end the peacemakers are praised, who follow the example of Christ and contend
not with the sword but with the word of truth.
This address enables us to seize Calvin in the very
act and article of change; he has come under a double influence. Erasmus has
compelled him to compare the ideal of Christ with the Church of his own day;
and Luther has given him a notion of Grace which has convinced his reason and
taken possession of his imagination. He has thus ceased to be a humanist and a
Papist, but has not yet become a Reformer. And a Reformer was precisely what
his conscience, his country, and his reason compelled him to become. Francis
was flagrantly immoral, but a fanatic in religion; and mercy was not a virtue
congenial to either Church or State. Calvin had seen the Protestants from
within; he knew their honesty, their honor, the purity of their motives, and
the integrity of their lives; and he judged, as a jurist would, that a man who
had all the virtues of citizenship ought not to be oppressed and treated as
unfit for civil office or even as a criminal by the State. This is no
conjecture, for it is confirmed by the testimony he bears to the influence
exercised over him by the martyred Étienne de la Forge. He thus saw that a
changed mind meant a changed religion, and a changed religion a change of
abode. Cop had to flee from Paris, and so had Calvin.
In the May of 1534 he went to Noyon, laid down his offices, was imprisoned, liberated,
and while there he seems to have finally renounced Catholicism. But he feared
the forces of disorder which lurked in Protestantism, and which seemed embodied
in the Anabaptists. Hence at Orleans he composed a treatise against one of
their favorite beliefs, the sleep of the soul between death and judgment. Conscious
personal being was in itself too precious, and in the sight of God too sacred,
to be allowed to suffer even a temporary lapse. But to serve the cause he loved
was impossible with the stake waiting for him, its fires scorching his face,
and kindly friends endangered by his presence. And so in the winter of 1534 he
retired from France and settled at Basel.
1534-9] Calvin at Basel. The Christianae Religionis Institutio.
Aeneas Sylvius had
once described Basel as a city which venerated images, but cared little for
science, and had no wish to know letters; and when he became Pope he founded
there a University which effected a more marvelous change than he could have
anticipated. Erasmus chose Basel as his residence from 1514 to 1529; and here
his New Testament and his editions of the great Latin Fathers were printed by
John Proben, who
joined to the soul of an artist the enterprise of a merchant. When Proben died Erasmus forsook
Basel; but as the end drew near he came back, just as Calvin was finishing
his Institutio,
to die in the city which had been the scene of his most arduous and fruitful
labors. And if the zeal for learning at Basel was strong, the zeal for religion
was no less. As early as 1517 Capito had refused to celebrate the Mass, and had
preached in the spirit of Luther. Here Oecolampadius had learned from humanism a sweet reasonableness that won the respect of
Erasmus, yet ideas so radical that they placed him beside Zwingli at Marburg,
and made him so preach against the images which the city used to venerate that
the rabble hastened to insult and break them. Erasmus, who described the event
in more than one letter, marveled in his satirical way that “not a solitary
Saint lifted a blessed finger” to work a protecting or retributory miracle that
should stay or avenge the damage. Calvin did not reach the city which Oecolampadius had changed till three years after his death;
but the Reformer found it guided by men who were just as congenial :
Oswald Myconius, the
chief pastor and preacher, who, even amid notable differences, continued ever a
personal friend and admirer; Simon Grynaeus,
a learned Grecian, with whom he then and later discussed, as he himself tells
us, how best to study, to translate, and to interpret the Scriptures; Sebastian
Munster, professor of Hebrew, just seeing through the press his Biblia Hebraica,
praised in public as Germanorum Esdras et Strabo, and affectionately known in
private as “the Rabbi”, a master at whose feet Calvin could sit without shame;
Thomas Platter, once a poor and vagrant scholar, then professor of Greek, but
now a printer from whose press the Institutio was
soon to issue, though owing to financial straits not so soon as its anxious
author would have liked. Besides the residents, famous visitors came to Basel:
from Zurich Henry Bullinger, who was there just
at this time, discussing the terms of the First Helvetic Confession, and
twenty-one years later reminded Calvin of their meeting; and Conrad Pellican, who saw the dying
Erasmus and heard great things of a certain John Calvin, a Frenchman who had
dared to write plain and solid truth to the French King.
Now a city where Protestantism reigned, where learning
flourished, and where men so unlike as Erasmus and Farel, the fervid preacher of Reform, could do
their work unhindered, was certain to make a deep impression on a fugitive
harassed and expatriated on account of religion; and the impression it made can
be read in the Christianae Religionis Institutio, and especially
in the prefatory Letter to Francis I. The Institutio is Calvin’s positive
interpretation of the Christian religion; the Letter is learned, eloquent,
elegant, dignified, the address of a subject to his sovereign, yet of a subject
who knows that his place in the State is as legal, though not as authoritative,
as the sovereign’s. It throbs with a noble indignation against injustice, and
with a noble enthusiasm for freedom and truth. It is one of the great epistles
of the world, a splendid apology for the oppressed and arraignment of the
oppressors. It does not implore toleration as a concession, but claims freedom
as a right. Its author is a young man of but twenty-six, yet he speaks with the
gravity of age. He tells the King that his first duty is to be just; that to
punish unheard is but to inflict violence and perpetrate fraud. Those for whom
he speaks are, though simple and godly men, yet charged with crimes that, were
they true, ought to condemn them to a thousand fires and gibbets. These charges
the King is bound to investigate, for he is a minister of God, and if he fails
to serve the God whose minister he is then he is a robber and no King. Then he
asks, “Who are our accusers?” and he turns on the priests like a new Erasmus,
who does not, like the old, delight in satire for its own sake or in a
literature which scourges men by holding up the mirror to vice; but who feels
the sublimity of virtue so deeply that witticisms at the expense of vice are
abhorrent to him. He takes up the charges in detail: it is said that the
doctrine is new, doubtful, and uncertain, unconfirmed by miracles, opposed to
the Fathers and ancient custom, schismatical and
productive of schism, and that its fruits are sects, seditions, license. On no
point is he so emphatic as the repudiation of the personal charges : the people
he pleads for have never raised their voice in faction or sought to subvert law
and order; they fear God sincerely and worship Him in truth, praying even in
exile for the royal person and House.
The book which this address to the King introduces is
a sketch or programme of
reform in religion. The first edition of the Institutio is distinguished from all
later editions by the emphasis it lays, not on dogma, but on morals, on worship,
and on polity. Calvin conceives the Gospel as a new law which ought to be
embodied in a new life, individual and social. What came later to be known as
Calvinism may be stated in an occasional sentence or implied in a paragraph,
but it is not the substance or determinative idea of the book. The problem
discussed has been set by the studies and the experience of the author; he has
read the New Testament as a humanist learned in the law, and he has been
startled by the contrast between its ideal and the reality which confronts him.
And he proceeds in a thoroughly juridical fashion, just as Tertullian before
him, and as Grotius and Selden after him. Without a document he can decide
nothing; he needs a written law or actual custom; and his book falls into divisions
which these suggest. Hence his first chapter is concerned with duty or conduct
as prescribed by the Ten Commandments; his second with faith as contained in
the Apostolic symbol; his third with prayer as fixed by the words of Christ;
his fourth with the Sacrament as given in the Scriptures; his fifth with the
false sacraments as defined by tradition and enforced by Catholic custom; and
his sixth with Christian liberty or the relation of the ecclesiastical and
civil authorities. But though the book is, as compared with what it became
later, limited in scope and contents - the last edition which left the author’s
hand in 1559 had grown from a work in six chapters to one in four books and
eighty chapters - yet its constructive power, its critical force, its large
outlook impress the student. We have here none of Luther's scholasticism, or of
Melanchthon’s deft manipulation of incompatible elements; but we have the first
thoughts on religion of a mind trained by ancient literature to the criticism
of life.
In the second edition published in 1539 his old
admirations reassert themselves. Plato is there described as of all
philosophers “religiosissimus et maxime sobrius”; and Aristotle, Themistius, Cicero,
Seneca, and other classical writers are quoted in a way that finds a parallel
in no theological book of the period. But in this first edition he is too much
in earnest, and writes too directly, to adorn his pages with classical
references; though in his style, in his argument, in his deduction of all things
from God, and in his correlation of our knowledge of God and of man, in his
emphasis on morals, in his sense for conduct and love of freedom, the classical
spirit is living and active. Thus, in his ideas of Christian liberty we can
trace the student of Seneca, as in his appreciation of law and order we see the
Roman jurist. He dislikes equally tyranny and license. Liberty is said to
consist in three things : freedom from the law as a means of acceptance with
God, the spontaneous obedience of the justified to the Divine will, and freedom
either to observe or neglect those external things which are in themselves
indifferent. He specially insists on this last; since without it there will be
no end to superstition and the conscience will enter a long and inextricable
labyrinth whence escape will be difficult. The Church is the elect people of
God, and must, if it is to do its work in the world, obey Him. But it can obey
only as it has control over its own destinies and authority over its own
members. It will not err in matters of opinion if it is guided by the Holy
Spirit and judges according to the Scriptures. Magistrates are ordained of God,
and ought to be obeyed, even though wicked; but here a most significant
exception is introduced. God is King of Kings; when He opens His mouth, He
alone is to be heard; it were worse than foolish to seek to please men by
offending Him. We are subject to our rulers, but only in Him; if they command
what He has forbidden, we must fear God and disobey the King.
The Institutio bears
the date ‘Mense Martio; Anno 1536’; but
Calvin, without waiting till his book was on the market, made a hurried journey
to Ferrara, whose Duchess, Renée, a daughter of Louis XII, stood in active
sympathy with the Reformers. The reasons for this brief visit are very obscure;
but it may have been undertaken in the hope of mitigating by the help of Renée
the severity of the persecutions in France. On his return Calvin ventured,
tradition says, to Noyon, probably for the sake
of family affairs; but he certainly reached Paris; and, while in the second
half of July making his way into Germany, he arrived at Geneva. An old friend,
possibly Louis du Tillet, discovered him, and
told Farel; and Farel, in sore straits for a
helper, besought him, and indeed in the name of the Almighty commanded him, to
stay. Calvin was reluctant, for he was reserved and shy, and conceived his
vocation to be the scholar's rather than the preacher's; but the entreaties
of Farel, half
tearful, half minatory, prevailed. And thus Calvin's connection with Geneva
began.
Calvin at Geneva. [1536
With the ancient and medieval history of Geneva we
have here no concern; it will be enough if we briefly indicate those
peculiarities of its constitution which gave Calvin his opportunity, and so much
of its history as will explain the condition in which he found it.
Ethnographically Geneva was connected with both the
Teutonic and the Latin races; by language it was French, by religious interests
and associations Italian, by political instincts and affinities Swiss, by
commercial and industrial genius German. In the thirteenth century its civil
superior had been a Count of Burgundy; in the fifteenth century and early
sixteenth he had been long superseded by the Dukes of Savoy. And the
supersession was inevitable, for Geneva occupied a corner of the Savoyard
country; and, as an old chronicler has it, the bells of the city were heard by
more Savoyards than citizens. Its constitution, at once hierarchical, feudal,
and democratic, so balanced parties, whose interests were seldom compatible, as
to put a premium on agitation and intrigue. These parties were the Bishop,
the Vicedom, or civil
overlord, and the citizens.
The Bishop was the sovereign of the city, elected
originally by the clergy and laity jointly, later by the Cathedral Chapter,
though customs significant of the older time continued to be observed. Thus the
mere vote of the Chapter did not constitute the Bishop lord of the State; the
election had further to be endorsed by the citizens, who accompanied the Bishop
in solemn procession to the Cathedral, where before the altar and in the
presence of clergy and people he swore on the open Missal that he would
preserve their laws, their liberties, and their privileges. As sovereign he
issued the coinage, imposed the customs, was general of the forces, and supreme
judge in both civil and ecclesiastical causes. In criminal cases he exercised
the prerogative of mercy, and endorsed or remitted penalties. The Cathedral
Chapter formed his Council and represented him in his absence. It constituted a
permanent aristocracy, and sat as a sort of spiritual peerage in the city
Council. Certain castles and demesnes were assigned to the Bishop, in order
that he might be as sovereign in appearance and in dignity as he was in law and
in fact.
The Vicedom was
captain of the Church, commissioned to repress violence in the city and to
defend it from external attacks, to act in the less important civil and
criminal cases, and to carry out the penalties which the law pronounced. He was
not reckoned a citizen, and stood sponsor for all the foreigners who enjoyed
the hospitality of Geneva. While in theory the Bishop's vassal, yet, as a
matter of fact and for reasons which neither he nor the city was allowed to
forget, the office had become hereditary in the House of Savoy; but as the Duke
could not himself reside, his duties were discharged by two lieutenants, whose
functions were carefully defined and delimited. In a word, the civil over-lord
was the minister of his ecclesiastical superior; but the superior tended to
become the puppet of the minister.
Apart from both stood the citizens in an order of
their own. The general Council of the city, composed of the whole of the
citizens, i.e. all the heads of families, met at the summons of the great bell
twice each year to transact business affecting the community as such, to elect
the four Syndics and the Treasurer, to conclude alliances, to proclaim laws, to
fix the prices of wine and of grain. The Syndics represented the municipal
independence as against the sovereignty of the Bishop and the power of the Vicedom. To them the greater
criminal jurisdiction was entrusted, and they were responsible for good order
within the city from sunset to sunrise. They were assisted by the Smaller
Council, composed of twenty qualified citizens; and if any event too responsible
for it to handle occurred, the Council of Sixty could be called, which was
composed of the representatives of the several districts and the most
experienced and respectable citizens. Later, and just before the Reformation,
the Council of Two Hundred was established in order that Geneva might be
assimilated to the Swiss Cantons whose help it invoked.
A State so constituted and governed could hardly
escape from the consciousness that it was a Church, or feel otherwise than as
if the ecclesiastic at its head made its acts and legislation ecclesiastical.
The spiritual offices were made secular without the secular offices becoming
spiritual; in other words, the clergy were assimilated to the laity, while the
laity did not correspond to the clerical ideal. The priests dressed and armed
like the people, played and fought with them, behaved more like examples of
worldliness than teachers of the Gospel; in a word, sinned and lived like
citizens of Geneva. The decay of clerical morals was not peculiar to Geneva,
though it must be noted as a main factor of the situation there. Kampschulte, here a reluctant
witness, declares that the Bishop had become a humiliation to the Church and a
degradation to the clergy; and he cites the case of the old priest who, when
ordered to put away his mistress, replied that he was quite ready to obey,
provided all his brethren were treated with the same severity. But the
constitution acted on the collective even more subtly than on the personal
consciousness. The Council legislated, disciplined, and excommunicated as if
the State were a Church, or, what may be the same thing, as if there were no
Church in the State. The extent to which a man could sin and yet remain a
citizen was a matter of statutory regulation : no citizen was allowed to keep
more than one mistress, and every convicted adulterer was banished. The
prostitutes had a quarter where they dwelt, special clothing which they wore,
and a ‘queen’ who was responsible for the good order of her community. The
clergy were a kind of moral police, responsible for the citizens and to the
city; and so their deterioration meant a moral decline.
But a more obvious and, so far as our immediate point
is concerned, a more serious consequence was this : every ecclesiastical
question tended to become civil, and every civil question to become
ecclesiastical. A constitution has a way of working in a fashion either better
or worse than, considered à priori, would have seemed possible; and
this because the people are ever a greater factor of harmony or disorder than
the laws they live under. Hence, so long as Geneva was inspired by one spirit,
the anomalies of the constitution did not breed discontent; but, when new
energies and new ambitions awoke, these anomalies became fruitful of disaster
to the State. So long as the Bishop and the people had common aims and
interests, loyalty to both was easy; but, the moment the interests of the
Bishop looked in an opposite direction from those of the people, the situation
became difficult. For loyalty to the Bishop as head of the State meant loyalty
to the Church of which he was head ; but loyalty to the people as the chief
constituent of the State became disloyalty to the Bishop as head both of Church
and city. How this situation arose in Geneva, what it signified and whither it
tended, subsequent events will show.
The determining factors of the situation were thus
two, the Bishop and the Duke. The Bishop stood for an ideal which he was not
always either able or willing to realize; the Duke, who was his vice-lord,
stood for an interest whose strength grew with its years, and created the
energy needed for its own realization. The function of a Bishop's Vicar did not
satisfy the House of Savoy; it wanted to be master in its own right, and sit in
Geneva facing the ultramontane kingdoms, as it sat in Turin and faced the
cismontane principalities and cities. And so began the game of intrigue in
which the House has always been a skilled performer; and the Bishop was played
off against the people, and the people against the Bishop. But it is harder to
capture a whole city than a single person; it is easier to annex an exalted
office than to control a whole population, a multitude of impulsive souls,
singly accessible to incalculable yet imperious ideas. So the House concentrated
itself on the Bishop; intrigued with the Chapter which elected; intrigued with
Rome which approved; prevailed with both, and got its creatures appointed, men
who would do its will and forget their office and its duties. A chronicler says
that ‘Duke and Bishop, like Herod and Pilate, stood united against the city’.
The Bishop he means is the Bastard of Savoy, appointed 1513, a man of
notoriously immoral conduct, and in everything the unscrupulous instrument of
the ducal policy. He lived ignobly, but served his House as best he could; and
in a moment of remorse, on his death-bed in 1522, he admonished his successor,
Pierre de la Baume, thus: “Do not when thou art Bishop of Geneva walk in my
footsteps, but defend the privileges of the Church and the freedom of the
city”. Pierre, of course, promised, and for a while remembered his promise, but
soon forgot it, neglected Geneva, alienated its citizens, lived isolated among
them, absented himself, and allowed the fruit to ripen which the House of Savoy
hoped soon to pluck and eat.
This policy was attended with mixed results, some of
which may be described as foreseen and desired by the ducal House; others as
unforeseen and undesired, yet inevitable. We may reckon in the former class the
weakening of the episcopal authority, the isolation of the Bishop, and his
inability to stand alone, which meant his increased dependence on the strong
arm of the Duke; and in the latter class the effect upon the people and the
uprising of fit and fearless leaders. Geneva might abut upon Savoyard
territory, but its citizens Were not Savoyards, and did not intend to become
what they were not. Around them was Swiss freedom, before them the French soil
and spirit. They breathed the air, partook of the temper, lived by the help, of
both; and they would be neither alienated from their kin nor cease to be
masters of their own destinies. They were not dissatisfied with their Church
nor with their city or its laws; they knew what they owed to the Bishop, how
defenseless they would have been without him, and what immunities his presence
and influence had secured. But they would not because of past favors submit to
present wrongs, especially to the wrong which the freeborn man most resents,
the loss of his freedom. Hence, Geneva read the situation with other eyes than
the House of Savoy, and resolved not to change its religion but to preserve its
liberty.
Its leaders were men like Philibert Berthelier, a genuine Genevan, self-indulgent, not free from vice, but brave,
prudent, patriotic, by his death helping to redeem the city he loved; Bezanson Hugues, a statesman, pure and high-minded, incapable of
meanness or cowardice, a devout Catholic, yet a strenuous republican, whose
policy was to check the Savoyard by a Swiss confederacy or a joint citizenship
with Swiss allies; François de Bonivard,
Abbot of St Victor, a humanist with the gift of speech and of letters, a kind
of provincial Erasmus, with a graphic pen and a faculty for witty epigram, yet
with a courage that neither the fear nor the experience of a prison could damp.
The patriots were known as ‘Eyguenots’ confederates,
men who had bound themselves by an oath to stand together and serve the common
cause; the Savoyard party were termed ‘Mamelukes’
because, as Bonivard tells
us, “they surrendered freedom and the public weal that they might submit to
tyranny, as the Mamelukes denied Christ
that they might follow Mohammad”.
The battle was fought with splendid tenacity; the
patriots, as became loyal Catholics, first tried to coerce the Bishop by
appeals to Rome and Vienne, and failed. Left face to face with Savoy, they
appealed to their Swiss neighbors, Bern and Freiburg, proposed to them a joint
citizenship, and long negotiated concerning it in vain. Bern hung back; for,
progressive and Protestant, it did not desire that the defeat of the Duke
should be to the advantage of the Bishop, who at last himself took the decisive
step. On August 20, 1530, Pierre de la Baume proclaimed the Genevans rebels, and called upon the Savoyard host to
put down the rebellion. Bern and Freiburg took the field, and the emancipation
of Geneva began. Yet it was only a beginning; the ecclesiastical question was
involved in the political, though the political had till now concealed the
religious. But the revolt against the Bishop could not but become a revolt
against the Church. In other times it might have been the reverse, but not now.
Reform was in the air; the preachers had long stormed at the gates of the city,
and they had remained closed. But with-Bern helping in the front they could be
kept fast no longer. They were opened, and Guillaume Farel, fiery and eloquent in speech and indomitable
in spirit, preached in his fearless way. On February 8, 1534, the public
opinion of Geneva pronounced for the Bernese joint citizenship, and therefore
for the Reformation; and thus ended the reign of the Bishop and the chances of
the House of Savoy. On May 21, 1536, the citizens of Geneva swore that they
would live according to the holy Evangelical law and word of God; and two months
later Calvin's connection with the city began.
1536-64] Calvin's spiritual development.
Calvin’s life from this point onwards falls into three
parts : his first stay in Geneva from July, 1536, to March, 1538; his residence
in Strasburg from September, 1538, to September, 1541; and his second stay in
Geneva from the last date till his death, May 27, 1564. In the first period,
he, in company with Farel,
made an attempt to organize the Church, and reform the mind and manners of
Geneva, and failed; his exile, formally voted by the Council, was the penalty
of his failure. In the second period he was professor of theology and French
preacher at Strasburg, a trusted divine and adviser, a delegate to the
Protestant Churches of Germany, which he learned to know better, making the
acquaintance of Melanchthon, and becoming more appreciative of Luther. At Strasburg
some of his best literary work was done - his Letter to Cardinal Sadoleto (in its way
his most perfect production), his Commentary on the Romans, a Treatise
on the Lord’s Supper, the second Latin and the first French edition of
his Institutio.
In the third period he introduced and completed his legislation at Geneva,
taught, preached, and published there, watched the Churches everywhere, and
conducted the most extensive correspondence of his day. In these twenty-eight
years he did a work which changed the face of Christendom.
It has been a subject of perhaps equal reproach among
his enemies and praise by his friends that, as Beza says,
Calvin “in doctrine made scarcely any change”. For a young man at twenty-six to
reach his final conclusions in the realms of thought and belief, especially
after a radical revolution of mind, would be matter of congratulation for his
enemies rather than for his admirers. But the judgment rests on a double
mistake, biographical and historical. As a matter of fact, few men may have
changed less; but few also have developed more. Every crisis in his career
taught him something, and so enhanced his capacity. His studies of Stoicism
showed him the value of morals; and he learned how to emphasize the sterner
ethical qualities as well as the humaner,
and the more clement by the side of the higher, public virtues. His early
humanism made him a scholar and an exegete, a master of elegant Latinity, of
lucid and incisive speech, of a graphic pen and historical imagination. His juristic
studies gave him an idea of law, through which he interpreted the more abstract
notions of theology, and a love of order, which compelled him to organize his
Church. His imagination, playing upon the primitive Christian literature,
helped him to see the religion Jesus instituted as Jesus Himself saw it; while
the forces visible around him-the superstitions, the regnant and unreproved vices, the people so quickly sinning and
so easily forgiven, the relics so innumerable and so fictitious, the acts and articles
of worship, and especially the Sacraments deified and turned into substitutes
for Deity induced him to judge the system that claimed to be the sole
interpreter and representative of Christ as a crafty compound of falsehood and
truth.
His knowledge that the system had profited by men like
Erasmus, whose wit made havoc of clerical sins and monkish superstition and
Romish errors, and who yet conformed, or men like Gérard Roussel, who preached what he himself and they thought the
Gospel, and who yet consented to hold office in the Catholic Church, begat in
him the belief that only by separation and negation could Reformation be
accomplished. His friendship with the good and simple, those who had tried to
realize the religion of Jesus, and his knowledge of the tyrannies, the
miseries, and the martyrdoms which they had in consequence endured, persuaded
him that his duty as an honest man was to side with the oppressed whom he
admired against the oppressors whose ways and policy he detested. His
experiences as a teacher and preacher of the new faith, especially at Geneva,
where he tells us he found at his first coming preachings and tumults, breaking and burning
of images, but no Reformation, showed him that individual men and even a whole
society might profess the Reformed faith without being reformed in character.
Out of these experiences came his master problem, namely, by what means could
we best secure the expression of a changed faith in a changed life? Or, in
other words, how could the Church be made not simply an institution for the
worship of God, but an agency for the making of men fit to worship Him?
His attempt to solve this problem constitutes his
chief title to a place in the history of religion and civilization. It means
that Calvin was greater as a legislator than as a theologian, that we have less
cause to be grateful to him for the system called Calvinism than for the Church
that he organized. In other words, his polity is a more perfect expression of
the man than his theology, though his theology was the point where he was most
vulnerable, and where therefore he was most fiercely, not to say ferociously,
attacked. The foes born in his own household, men like Castellio or Bolsec, took the Divine decrees as the spot where
they could strike most fatally at him and his preeminence. The Jesuits
developed their doctrine in explicit antithesis to his; and the Lutherans, when
they wished to discredit his views on the Lord’s Supper, thought they could do
it most effectually by criticizing the absolute Predestination. The sects that
rose within the Reformed Church, such as the Socinian and
the Remonstrant, justified their schism as a protest against views which they
described as equally dishonoring to God and belittling to man. But though Calvin's
theology occasioned the hottest and bitterest controversies known to Christian
history, yet it is here that his mind is least original and his ideas are most
clearly derivative. Without Augustine we should never have had Calvinism, which
is but the principles of the anti-Pelagian treatises
developed, systematized, and applied.
There are indeed two points of difference between
them; Augustine disguised his positions in a criticism of hated and feared
sectaries; but Calvin stated his in their severe and colossal nakedness as the
sole truth which Scripture had revealed to men. Yet Augustine affirms and
argues his doctrines with a breadth and a positive harshness which we do not
find in Calvin; on the contrary, there is evidence that while the system held and
awed Calvin’s reason it yet did not win his heart. That it was taught by the
greatest Father of the Church was a reason that appealed to him as a scholar;
that this Father found it in Paul was a more cogent reason still, for thus it
appealed to him as a thinker whose ultimate authority was the Word of God. And
on this point we have incidental evidence. In August, 1539, Calvin wrote the
Preface to the second edition of his Institutio, where the doctrines of Grace and
Sin occupy for the first time their determinative position in his system; and
in October of the same year he published his Commentary on Romans. It seems,
therefore, as if the greater prominence that he now gave to the doctrines,
which we have come to think most characteristic of him, was due to his closer
study of Paul as interpreted by Augustine. And this system helped him to do two
things : to explain his own as a normal human experience, and to face
undismayed the strength and the terrors of an infallible Church. These two
positions are affirmed and coordinated in a splendid passage in the Letter
to Sadoleto,
published also in 1539, in September, just between the Institutio and the Commentary,
which tells of his vocation by God, and of his consequent right to speak in the
name of Him who had put His word in his mouth and written His law upon his
conscience. God had called him, and laid upon him a duty which he could not
evade without defying God.
But here emerges another point of distinction from
Augustine: Calvin conceived that God spoke to him directly, without any
intermediate person or institution. Augustine's theology was absolute, but his
theory of the Church was conditional, and thus the one qualified the other : the
God whom the thinker conceived was modified by the God of whom the priest was
the representative and mouthpiece. It is the essence of the priestly idea to
manipulate and administer the conditions on which God finds access to men, and
men gain access to God. Hence, so long as Augustine’s theology was embedded in
a sacerdotal system, the system softened the theology; the thought was
accommodated to the institution, the institution was not subdued to the
likeness of the thought. But Calvin rejected the Church of Augustine, and took
over his later intellectual system in all its naked severity. The sin of man
confronted the grace of God; man, sinful by nature, could do no right: God,
infinite in majesty and in holiness, could do no wrong. Man was born in sin; his
nature was corrupt, and as his nature was his actions must be. If then he was
to be saved, God must save him; and, as God's will was gracious, saving was as
natural to Him as sinning was to man. Hence, we could contribute nothing
towards our own salvation; God did it all; we had no merit, and He had all the
glory. In a system so conceived there was no room for the priest; his prayers
and sacrifices, his masses and absolutions, his shrines and relics and articles
of worship, were but the impertinences of ephemeral and feeble man in the face
of the Eternal Potency.
Calvin knew well the sublimity of the system which he
expounded, but he could have wished it to be more pitiful. He did not love to
think of the innumerable millions of the heathen with their infant children
ordained to everlasting death; the decree that fixed the number alike of the
saved and the lost was to him an awful decree, but he could not look towards
the Alps without feeling how closely the sublime and the awful were allied. And
if the sublimity of earth was terrible, how much more terrible must be the
majesty of God! But if He is so august, must we not labor to attain the dignity
of moral manhood, the only dignity which it becomes Him to recognise?
Influence of his theology on his legislation.
We come then to Calvin’s legislative achievements as
his main title to name and fame. But two points must here be noted. In the
first place, while his theology was less original and effective than his
legislation or polity, yet he so construed the former as to make the latter its
logical and indeed inevitable outcome. The polity was a deduction from the
theology, which may be defined as a science of the Divine will as a moral will,
aiming at the complete moralization of Man, whether as a unit or as a
society. The two were thus so organically connected that each lent
strength to the other, the system to the Church and the Church to the system,
while other and more potently reasonable theologies either died or lived a
feeble and struggling life. Secondly, the legislation was made possible and
practicable by Geneva, probably the only place in Europe where it could have
been enacted and enforced. We have learned enough concerning Genevan history and institutions to understand why
this should have been the case. The city was small, free, homogeneous,
distinguished by a strong local patriotism, a stalwart communal life. In
obedience to these instincts it had just emancipated itself from the
ecclesiastical Prince and its ancient religious system; and the change thus
accomplished was, though disguised in a religious habit, yet essentially
political. For the Council which abolished the Bishop had made itself heir to
his faculties and functions; it could only dismiss him as civil lord by
dismissing him as the ecclesiastical head of Geneva, and in so doing it assumed
the right to succeed as well as to supersede him in both capacities. This,
however, involved a notable inversion of old ideas; before the change the
ecclesiastical authority had been civil, but because of the change the civil
authority became ecclesiastical. If theocracy means the rule of the Church or
the sovereignty of the clergy in the State, then the ancient constitution of
Geneva was theocratic; if democracy means the sovereignty of the people in
Church as well as in State, then the change had made it democratic. And it was
just after the change had been effected that Calvin's connection with the city
Its chief pastor had persuaded him to stay as a
colleague, and the Council appointed him professor and preacher. He was young,
exactly twenty-seven years of age, full of high ideals, but inexperienced,
unacquainted with men, without any knowledge of Geneva and the state of things
there. He could therefore make no terms, could only stay to do his duty. What
that duty was soon became apparent. Geneva had not become any more moral in
character because it had changed its mind in religion. It had two months before
Calvin's arrival sworn to live according to the holy evangelical law and Word
of God; but it did not seem to understand its own oath. And the man whom his
intellectual sincerity and moral integrity had driven out of Catholicism, could
not hold office in any Church which made light of conviction and conduct; and
so he at once set himself to organize a Church that should be efficaciously
moral. He built on the ancient Genevan idea,
that the city is a Church; only he wished to make the Church to be primary and
real. The theocracy, which had been construed as the reign of the clergy, he
would interpret as ideal and realize as a reign of God. The citizens, who had
assumed control of their own spiritual destinies and ecclesiastical affairs, he
wanted to instruct in their responsibilities and discipline into obedience. And
he would do it in the way of a jurist who believes in the harmony of law and
custom; he would by positive enactments train the city, which conceived itself
to be a Church, to be and behave as if it were indeed a Church, living
according to the Gospel which it had sworn to obey.
Thus a confession of faith was drawn up which the
people were to adopt as their own, and so attain clarity and concordance of
mind concerning God and His Word; and a catechism was composed which was to be
made the basis of religious instruction in both the school and the family, for
the citizen as well as the child. Worship was to be carefully regulated,
psalm-books prepared, psalm-singing cultivated; the preacher was to interpret
the Word, and the pastor to supervise the flock. The Lord's Supper was to be
celebrated monthly, but only those who were morally fit or worthy were to be
allowed to communicate. The Church, in order that it might fulfil its functions and guard the Holy Table, must
have the right of excommunication. It was not enough that a man should be a citizen
or a councilor to be admitted to the Lord's Supper; his mind must be Christian,
and his conduct Christ-like. Without faith the rite was profaned, the presence
of Christ was not realized. Moreover, since matrimonial cases were many and
infelicity sprang both from differences of faith and impurity of conduct, a
board, composed partly of magistrates and partly of ministers, was to be
appointed to deal with them; and it was to have the power to exclude from the
Church those who either did not believe its doctrines or did not obey its
commandments.
These were drastic proposals to be made to a city
which had just dismissed its Bishop, attained political freedom, and proclaimed
a Reformation of religion; and Calvin was not the man to leave them
inoperative. A card-player was pilloried; a tire-woman, a mother, and two
bridesmaids were arrested because they had adorned the bride too gaily; an
adulterer was driven with the partner of his guilt through the streets by the
common hangman, and then banished. These things taxed the temper of the city
sorely; it was not unfamiliar with legislation of the kind, but it had not been
accustomed to see it enforced. Hence, men who came to be known as ‘libertines’,
though they were both patriotic and moral and only craved freedom, rose and
said, ‘This is an intolerable tyranny; we will not allow any man to be lord
over our consciences’. And about the same time Calvin's orthodoxy was
challenged. Two Anabaptists arrived and demanded liberty to prophesy; and
Peter Caroli charged him with heresy as to
the Trinity. He would not use the Athanasian Creed; and he defended himself by
reasons that the scholar who knows its history will respect. The end soon came.
When he heard that he had been sentenced to banishment, he said, ‘If I had served
men this would have been a poor reward, but I have served Him who never fails
to perform what He has promised’.
Expulsion and Return of Calvin. [1541
In 1541 Geneva recalled Calvin, and he obeyed as one
who goes to fulfill an imperative but unwelcome duty. There is nothing more
pathetic in the literature of the period than his hesitancies and fears. He
tells Farel that
he would rather die a hundred times than again take up that cross ‘in
qua millies quotidie pereundum esset’. And he writes
to Viret that it
were better to perish once for all than ‘in ilia carnificina iterum torqueri’. But he loved
Geneva, and it was in evil case. Home was plotting to reclaim it; Savoy was
watching her opportunity, the patriots feared to go forward, and even the timid
dared not go back. So the necessities of the city, divided between its factions
and its foes, constituted an appeal which Calvin could not resist; but he did not
yield unconditionally. He went back as the legislator who was to frame laws for
its Church; and he so adapted them to the civil constitution and the
constitution to them, that he raised the little city of Geneva to be the
Protestant Rome.
Calvin’s idea, whether of the Church or the State, it
is neither possible nor necessary to discuss fully here; as he conceived,
Fatherhood belonged to God, motherhood to the Church: we entered into life by
being conceived in her womb and suckled at her breasts, and so long as we lived
we were as scholars in her school. She was catholic, holy, one and indivisible;
to invent another Church would be to divide Christ. In this sense she
comprehended all the people of God, His elect in every age and place; but
this eternal and
internal Church was, as it were, distributed into local and external Churches,
which existed in the towns and villages inhabited of men. Calvin held, indeed,
that the local ought to possess the same spiritual qualities as the universal
Church; but he did not hold the two to be identical. They differed in many
ways; in the one case the chosen of God constituted the Church, but in the
other case, as Augustine had said, ‘there are very many sheep without, and very
many wolves within’. The universal Church lived under the immediate sovereignty
of God; but particular Churches, while bound so to live, yet were organized
according to the wants of human society, and so long as the people were God’s
and lived unto Him, their society was a Church, which, as an inhabitant of
space and time, could not but live its corporate life in some State, in
relation to it even while differing from it. What this relation ought to be
Calvin rather implied than discussed. He assumed their distinctness, but his
policy often involved their identity. It would be approximately true to say
that the ideal Church was independent of the State, above it while distributed
through it; but the actual Church, while owing its existence to the ideal, was
yet associated with the State, and often bound to act with it and through it.
It was not possible that a local Church should be merged in the State, for then
it would cease to be a Divine institution; or be subordinate to the State, for
then it would be a mere minister of man’s will, subject to all the accidents
and influences proper to time; or be separated from the State, for then it
would be cut off from the field which most needed its presence and action.
Hence the proper analogy was natural rather than
political : as soul and body constituted one man, so Church and State
constituted one society, distinct in function but inseparable in being. Without
the State there would be no medium for the Church to work in, no body for the
soul to animate; without the Church there would be no law higher than expediency
to govern the State, no ideal of thought and conduct, no soul to animate the
body. Both Church and State therefore were necessary to the good ordering of
society, and each was explained by the same idea. All human authority was the
creation of God; His will had formed the State to care for the actual man, who
was temporal, and the Church to care for the ideal man, who was immortal. Each
had the same cause or root; and, without both, life could not be so ordered as
to realize Eternal Will. Over the State God placed the magistrate, who might
here be a monarch, an Emperor or King, and there a Syndic or Council, created
by the people for the people; but whatever he might be, he was yet a power
ordained of God for the good of man and the regulation of society. In, rather
than over, the Church God had set a ministry or authorities that were to rule
by the teaching which convinced the reason and commanded the conscience, and by
the service which won the heart and persuaded the will. The ministers were responsible
to the State in all civil matters; but the magistrates were responsible to the
Church in all religious concerns, especially those affecting faith and conduct.
The laws of the State were civil in form, but religious in origin; the laws of
the Church were civil in sanction, though spiritual in scope and purpose.
Calvin indeed had, as regards civil polity, distinguished between monarchy,
aristocracy, and democracy, and had indicated their respective excellences and
defects, as well as his own personal preferences; but he declined to assert
that one of them was absolutely or under all conditions the best. He could not
feel as if a similar latitude of judgment were allowed him as regards the
Church, where man was not free to follow any order he liked, for in the New
Testament a polity was given him to imitate. Our Lord had Himself shown how His
Church ought to be governed, and where He had spoken man's duty was to
interpret His word and do His will.
The Ordonnances Ecclésiastiques.
The Ordonnances Ecclésiastiques may be described as Calvin’s programme of Genevan reform, or his method for applying to the local and external Church the government which our Lord had instituted and the Apostles had realized. These Ordinances expressed his historical sense and gratified his religious temper, while adapting the Church to the city, so that the city might become a better Church. To explain in detail how he proposed to do this is impossible within our limits; and we shall therefore confine ourselves to the most important of the factors he created, the Ministry and the Consistory. The Reformed ministry had till now been largely the creation of conversion, or inspiration, or chance, and the result could not be termed satisfactory. Convinced men had found their way into it, and had created a conviction as sincere and an enthusiasm as vehement as their own; but along with them had also come hosts of restless men, moved by superficial and often ignoble causes: discontent, petulance, discomfort, the desire to legitimize illegitimate connections, dislike to authority, and the mere love of change. And they had proved most mischievous forces in the Protestant Churches, had continued restless, become seditious, impracticable, schismatic, authors of disorder and enemies of peace, who arrested progress and made men ashamed of change. Calvin had had his own experience of these men; and he, as a man of grave and juristic mind, had found the experience disagreeable, and was to find it more disagreeable still. With the insight of genius he perceived that the battle could be won, not by chance recruits, but only by a disciplined army; and, in order that the army might be created, he invented the discipline. The Ordinances may indeed be termed a method for making and guiding a Reformed ministry, a clergy that, without any priestly character, should yet be more efficient than the ancient priesthood. Hence where the Roman placed the Church, Calvin set the Deity, and made a man’s right to enter the ministerial office depend on his vocation by God. But this belief in a Divine choice and call was to be
tested by a threefold process, Examination, Election, Institution or
Introduction. The Examination, which was to be conducted by men already in the
ministry, the recognized preachers and teachers of the Church, covered the
whole period of thought and life; what the candidate had learned at school and
college, what he had been at home and in society, what evidence he could
furnish as to his call being of God. He had to show what and why he believed;
the relation in which his beliefs stood to the Church on the one hand and the
Scriptures on the other; whether he could teach what he had learned, or preach
as he believed; how he had hitherto lived, and whether he had so behaved himself
as to be without reproach. If the candidate satisfied the ministerial
examiners, they presented him to the Council; if the Council approved, he
preached before the people; and if they approved, he was declared to be elected
a minister of the Word. Institution, which was as much a civil as a religious
process, followed, and it ended with the candidate taking an oath before the
Council that he would edify the Church, serve the city, and set to all a goodly
example of obedience.
But these initial steps were not the most essential parts of the discipline; more effectual still were the means employed to secure the minister’s efficiency, and to define his relation to the city or Church. The conduct of each person was the concern of the ministerial body as a whole; and the behavior of the body was open to the criticism of every minister. The humblest pastor had the right, which was laid upon him as a duty, to criticize the bearing or the action of the most eminent; and responsibility was so personal and yet so collective, at once so concentrated and so distributed, that while it belonged to all, each individual was made to feel as if he alone bore it. Thus in Geneva the ministers formed the Venerable Company, correspondent to the Smaller Council, which was, as it were, the cabinet or executive of the Greater; and every week it met in Congregation, as it was called, to study the Scriptures, discuss doctrine, and review conduct. There was, besides, every three months a special Synod which made inquisition into the faults and failures of the brotherhood, and was charged with the discipline of the faithless. Alongside of these faculties ran duties which were coextensive with the religious wants of the city. The minister of the Word was a preacher who had to speak to the people concerning the truth and will of God; a pastor of the flock which was given him to supervise and tend; a guide of the worship which he was bound to make worthy of God and uplifting to man; an administrator of the Sacraments which sealed the covenants and spoke to faith of God’s saving grace and the presence of His Son; an instructor with the duty of catechizing old and young and directing education ; a friend to every man who needed him, with a special mission to the poor, especially in seasons of disease and distress, while also the soul of all the charity in the city. Nor, though the ministers were to hold so influential a place in the body politic, could they come to feel as if they were a self-propagating, an exclusive, or a sacrosanct corporation. Without the ministry the minister could not be made; but without the people he could not be called or maintained. He issued from the ranks of the citizens, and he could be reduced to their condition again. If his conduct was scandalous, or if his faith changed or failed, the reduction was inevitable. He was responsible to the Church, typified by its clergy; and responsible for the Church, typified by the city or the laity. Calvin's theory was a theocracy, not a hierocracy; the clergy did not reign, nor did the organised Church govern; but God reigned over Church and State alike, and so governed that both magistrates and clergy were His ministers. In Geneva every office was sacred, and existed for the glory of the God who was its Creator. The ministerial ideal embodied in these Ecclésiastical Ordinances may
be said to have had certain indirect but international results; it compelled
Calvin to develop his system of education; it supplied the Reformed Church,
especially in France, with the men which it needed to fight its battles and to
form the iron in its blood; it presented the Reformed Church everywhere with an
intellectual and educational ideal which must be realized if its work was to be
done; and it created the modern preacher, defining the sphere of his activity
and setting up for his imitation a noble and lofty example.
Calvin soon found that the Reformed faith could live
in a democratic city only by an enlightened pulpit speaking to enlightened
citizens, and that an educated ministry was helpless without an educated
people. His method for creating both entitles him to rank among the foremost
makers of modern education. As a humanist he believed in the classical
languages and literatures - there is a tradition which says that he read through
Cicero once a year - and so ‘he built his system on the solid rock of Graeco-Roman antiquity’. Yet he did not neglect religion;
he so trained the boys of Geneva through his Catechism that each was said to be
able to give a reason for his faith ‘like a doctor of the Sorbonne’. He
believed in the unity of knowledge and the community of learning, placing the
magistrate and the minister, the citizen and the pastor, in the hands of the
same teacher, and binding the school and the university together. The boy
learned in the one and the man studied in the other; but the school was the way
to the university, the university was the goal of the school. In nothing does
the pedagogic genius of Calvin more appear than in his fine jealousy as to the
character and competence whether of masters or professors, and in his unwearied
quest after qualified men. His letters teem with references to the men in
various lands and many universities whom he was seeking to bring to Geneva. The
first Rector, Antoine Saunier, was a notable
man; and he never rested till he had secured his dear old teacher, Mathurin Cordier; Castellio was a
schoolmaster; Theodore Beza was head of
College and Academy, or school and university, together; and Calvin himself was
a professor of theology. The success of the College was great; the success of
the Academy was greater. Men came from all quarters-English, Italians, Spanish,
Germans, Russians, ministers, jurists, old men, young men, all with the passion
to learn in their blood to jostle each other among the thousand hearers who met
to listen to the great Reformer. But France was the main feeder of the Academy;
Frenchmen filled its chairs, occupied its benches, learned in it the courage to
live and the will to die. From Geneva books poured into France; and the French
Church was ever appealing for ministers, yet never appealed in vain. Within
eleven years, 1555-66 (Calvin died in 1564) it is known that Geneva sent 161
pastors into France; how many more may have gone, unrecorded, we cannot tell.
And they were learned men, strenuous, fearless, praised by a French Bishop as
modest, grave, saintly, with the name of Jesus Christ ever on their lips.
Charles IX implored the magistrates of Geneva to stop the supply and withdraw
the men already sent; but the magistrates replied that the preachers had been
sent not by them but by their ministers, who believed that the sovereign duty
of all Princes and Kings was to do homage to Him who had given to them their
dominion. It was small wonder that the Venetian Suriano should describe Geneva as ‘the mine
whence came the ore of heresy’; or that the Protestants should gather courage
as they heard the men from Geneva sing psalms in the face of torture and death.
It was indeed a very different France which the eyes
of the dying Calvin saw from that which the young man had seen thirty years
before. Religious hate was even more bitter and vindictive; war had come and
made persecution more ferocious; but the Huguenots had grown numerous, potent,
respected, feared, and disputed with Catholicism the supremacy of the kingdom.
And Calvin had done it, not by arms nor by threats, nor by encouragement of
sedition or insurrection - to such action he was ever resolutely opposed - but
by the agency of the men whom he formed in Geneva, and by their persuasive
speech. The Reformed minister was essentially a preacher, intellectual,
exegetical, argumentative, seriously concerned with the subjects that most
appealed to the serious-minded. Modern oratory may be said to begin with him,
and indeed to be his creation. He helped to make the vernacular tongues of
Western Europe literary. He accustomed the people to hear the gravest and most
sacred themes discussed in the language which they knew; and the themes
ennobled the language, the language was never allowed to degrade the themes.
And there was no tongue and no people that he influenced more than the French.
Calvin made Bossuet and Massillon possible; as a preacher he found his
successor in Bourdaloue;
and a literary critic who does not love him has expressed a doubt as to whether
Pascal could be more eloquent or was so profound. And the ideal then realised in Geneva
exercised an influence far beyond France. It extended into Holland, which in
the strength of the Reformed faith resisted Charles V and his son, achieved
independence, and created the freest and best educated State on the continent
of Europe. John Knox breathed for a while the atmosphere of Geneva, was subdued
into the likeness of the man who had made it, and when he went home he copied its
education and tried to repeat its Reformation. English Reformers, fleeing from
martyrdom, found a refuge within its hospitable walls, and, returning to
England, attempted to establish the Genevan discipline,
and failed, but succeeded in forming the Puritan character. If the author of
the Ordonnances Ecclésiastiques accomplished,
whether directly or indirectly, so much, we need not hesitate to term him a
notable friend to civilization.
The Consistory.
The Consistory may be described as Calvin’s method for
moralizing through the Church the life of man and the State to which he
belonged. He may in the manner of the jurist have imagined that regulation by
positive law was the most efficient means of governing conduct; but if he
legislated as a jurist, he thought and purposed as a Reformer. It is here,
where injustice is easiest, that we ought to be most scrupulously just. Calvin
was resolved, so far as he had power, to make the Church what it had not been but
what it ought to be, an institution organized for the creation of a moral
mankind. For this reason he claimed for it the right of excommunication and the
power to excommunicate. But as he conceived the matter, the exercise of the
power which followed from the possession of the right, while spiritual in
essence and in purpose, might yet be civil in certain of its effects. The
Consistory was a body appointed to be the guardian of morals, and therefore
possessed of the power to excommunicate.
It was composed of six ministers and twelve elders.
The elders were to be elected annually, and were to be men of good and
honorable conduct, blameless and free from suspicion, animated by the fear of
God and endowed with spiritual wisdom. They were to be chosen, two from the
Smaller Council, four from the Council of Sixty, and six from the Great
Council; they were to be elected at the same time as the magistrates, were to
be capable of re-election, and were to take the oath of allegiance to the State
and fidelity to the Church. They represented the idea that Geneva was a
Church-State; and their duties were to have their eyes upon every man, family,
or district, to have their ears open to every complaint, to punish every
offence according to a carefully-graduated scale, and to enforce purity
everywhere. The Consistory’s jurisdiction was not civil, but spiritual; the
sword which it wielded was not Caesar's but Christ's, yet it had rights of
entry and investigation that were not so much Christ's as Caesar's. It was a
judicial body and sat every Thursday to examine charges of misconduct or
immorality, to pass sentences from which there was no appeal, and where
necessary to hand the guilty over to the magistrates to be punished according
to law. If any offender refused to appear, a civil officer was sent to bring
him; and so every ecclesiastical offence became an act of civil disobedience.
Thus, obstinate refusal to communicate was regarded as a punishable crime; so
were frivolous or continued absence from church, disrespect to parents,
blasphemy, and adultery. One young woman who sang profane songs was banished,
and another who sang them to psalm-tunes was scourged. Heresy became as much an
offence as immorality. If a creed or confession becomes a law of the State as
well as of the Church, to speak or agitate against it becomes treason. In other
words, if opinion is established by law, heresy is turned into crime. And this
Geneva soon discovered. Castellio’s doubts
as to the canonicity of Solomon's Song, and as to the received interpretation
of Christ's descent into Hades, Bolsec’s criticism
of predestination, Gruefs suspected
skepticism and possession of infidel books, Servetus’ rationalism and
anti-Trinitarian creed, were all opinions judged to be criminal. Infallibility
is not the only system that makes heresy culpable and the heretic guilty. If
the Church will be a State, and enforce its laws, which must affect both
conduct and belief, by the only method a State can follow, then it must bear
the reproach of being more cruel, and therefore more unjust, than any purely
civil power. The heretic may be a man of irreproachable character; but if
heresy be treason against the law, a character without reproach may aggravate
rather than extenuate the crime. The man of imperfect morals may be too feeble
of will to differ in opinion from the constituted authority, and his
intellectual conformity may save him from the sentence which his moral weakness
deserves. And time alone was needed to make it obvious how imperfectly Geneva
could attain either unity of faith or purity of life by turning her Church into
a city governed by positive law.
Many points remain of necessity undiscussed. The merits and defects of Calvin as a writer
of polemical treatises; his work as a statesman, and his appreciation of
political questions in lands so unlike his own as England; his qualities as a
correspondent who feels no affairs of State too large to grapple with, and no
personal concern too small to touch; his worth and wisdom as an adviser who
loves the great of the earth for the good they can do, and judges that the
higher a person is placed the more need there is for plain and candid speech,
but who forgets not the humble and the poor, and can pause amid the mightiest
concerns to hear their plaints; his attachment and tenderness as a friend,
whether in his brilliant youth or his sadder age, when he loved to unbosom himself to his
strenuous comrade Guillaume Farel,
or his devoted companion Pierre Viret could
have justice done them only were the limits of our space wholly different from
what they are.
But there are three things that may be emphasized in
conclusion. The first is Calvin's irenical services
to Protestantism. He made the Reformed Church less antithetical to the
Lutheran, and the Lutheran leaders better understood among the Reformed. His
doctrine of the Lord's Supper may be described as a spiritual doctrine of the
Real Presence; he escaped the miserable perplexities which lurked in the
scholastic notion of Substantia, and
were used to justify Transubstantiation on the one hand, and Consubstantiation
on the other. Where faith was, there the Lord was, and where it was not there
could be no idea of Him, and no image or symbol could speak of His presence.
Secondly, mention must be made of Calvin’s services to the French tongue. He
perhaps more than any other man made it a literary vehicle, a medium for high
philosophical and religious discussion. The Institutio has been said to be the
first book written in French which can be described as logically composed, built
up according to a consecutive and proportioned plan. The style is the man,
exact, sober, precise, restrained; sad perhaps, or a trifle cold, but full of
conviction and reason. The French he speaks is a natural product, an evolution
and a new phase of the medieval French, refreshed, vivified, made simpler and
more living by baptism in its original source, classical Latinity. Thirdly, his
services to the cause of sacred learning must not be forgotten. These it is
hardly possible to exaggerate; he is the sanest of commentators, the most
skilled of exegetes, the most reasonable of critics. He knows how to use an age
to interpret a man, a man to interpret an age. His exegesis is never forced or
fantastic; he is less rash and subjective in his judgments than Luther; more
reverent to Scripture, more faithful to history, more modern in spirit. His
work on the Psalms has much to make our most advanced scholars ashamed of the
small progress we have made either in method or in conclusions. And his work is
inspired by a noble belief; he thought that the one way to realize Christianity
was by knowing the mind of Christ; that this mind was expressed in the
Scriptures; and that to make them living and credible was to make indefinitely
more possible its incorporation in the thoughts and institutions of man. It is
by his service to this cause that Calvin must be ultimately judged.
CHAPTER XIITHE CATHOLIC SOUTH. |