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| THE GALLICAN CHURCH.A HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF FRANCE FROM THE CONCORDAT OF BOLOGNA, A.D. 1516, TO THE REVOLUTION, A.D. 1789. |  | 
| THE GALLICAN CHURCHA HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF FRANCE,FROM THE CONCORDAT OF BOLOGNA, A.D. 1516, TO THE REVOLUTION, A.D. 1789.ANTOINE ARNAULD
              
               CONTENTS
               VOLUME I PDF /// PDF VOLUME II
 CHAPTER I. Commencement of the Reformation
                  CHAPTER II. Strength of Protestantism in France
                  CHAPTER III. The “Catholic League” or “Holy Union”
                  CHAPTER IV. Conversion of Henry IV
                  CHAPTER V. Results of the “Wars of Religion”
                  CHAPTER VI. Assassination of Henry IV
                  CHAPTER VII. Louis and the States of Béarn
                  CHAPTER VIII. Vincent de Paul
                  CHAPTER IX. Revival of the Benedictine RuleCHAPTER X. Ecclesiastical Policy of Richelieu
                  CHAPTER XI. Commencement of the Jansenistic ControversyCHAPTER XII. The Bull “ Cum occasione ”
                  CHAPTER XIII. Pascal’s ‘Provincial Letters’
                  CHAPTER XIV. The Clergy and the Formulary.VOLUME II CHAPTER XV. Extension of system of SeminariesCHAPTER XVI. The "Droit de Regale"CHAPTER XVII. The "Avertissement Pastoral" to the ProtestantsCHAPTER XVIII. The Controversy on QuietismCHAPTER V. The Gallican Church at the opening of the eighteenth century CHAPTER VI. Efforts to condemn Quesnel's Reflexions CHAPTER VII. New Conseil de Conscience. Rise of Fleury CHAPTER VIII. Deterioration of the Gallican Clergy CHAPTER IX. Attack on the revenues and immunities of the clergy CHAPTER X. Fall of the Jesuits -------------------------------------HISTOIRE DU CARDINAL RICHELIEU (1585-1642)Life, religious opinions and experience of Madame Guyon, including an account of the personal history and religious opinions of Fénelon, archbishop of CambrayLife Of Madame GuyonAutobiography of Madame Guyon t1 The life of St. Jane Frances Fremyot de ChantalLife of S. Jane Frances de Chantal : foundress of the Order of the VisitationThe devotion to the Heart of Jesus with an introduction on the history of JansenismThe Jansenists : their rise, persecutions by the Jesuits, and existing remnant : a chapter in church historyLes premiers Jansénistes et Port-RoyalLes derniers Jansénistes depuis la ruine dePort-RoyalFrench JansenistsINTRODUCTION I.
               Religious Nationality—religion in a shape peculiar to one section of the
              human family, or one territorial circumscription of the globe—is, prima
                facie, an idea foreign to the genius of Christianity. Nations, viewed in
              the light of the new federal relations established by the Gospel, are not
              independent, but interdependent. Judaism was a national religion, localized,
              isolated, geographically limited; but the Kingdom of Christ is worldwide. The
              Church Catholic takes no note of any distinctions of physical race, except to
              obliterate and extinguish them. That vast “net which is cast into the sea” of
              the moral creation, and “gathered of every kind,”—that common home of redeemed
              humanity, “where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor
              uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free”—is essentially the same to
              all whom it embraces, however widely they may differ as to primitive descent or
              social organization. They who “by one Spirit are all baptized into one body,
              and have been all made to drink into one Spirit,” are strictly “fellow
              citizens” in the Christian sense of the word, whether their lot be cast in the
              temperate or the torrid zone—whether they be classified, after the order of
              nature, as Celtic or Teutonic, Aryan or Aramean. The curse of Babel is revoked
              by the Pentecostal benediction; and “the whole earth,” in so far as it is
              Christian, is again “of one language and of one speech.”
                 At the same time it is clear that Christianity, while
              unchangeable in essence, is to a certain extent plastic in application. It
              admits of some variety in outward development and administrative detail. It is
              not uninfluenced by the innate qualities of the soil in which it grows; it
              adapts itself to the material with which it has to deal. The Church Catholic,
              wherever it has fixed its sojourn among men, has been coloured more or less by
              the moral atmosphere and other exceptional influences with which it has been
              brought into contact. Such distinctions have arisen in all lands, and in all
              ages, from the very facts of ethnology—from the diversities of natural origin.
                   In this sense, then, a certain element of nationality
              is not only admissible in religion, but inevitable; and the existence of “Gallicanism,”
              properly so called, is no surprising phenomenon. Gallicanism is (or, to speak
              more accurately, was) the Christianity of the French people. It may be
              expected, then, à priori, to exhibit traits corresponding with the idiosyncrasy
              of that noble race; features reflecting and illustrating its characteristic
              self-reliance, its love of liberty, its impatience of foreign domination, its
              reverence for traditional authority and time-honoured usage.
               Thus the question of Nationalism in religion resolves
              itself into one of degree and detail. The principle is legitimate within
              certain limits; but what are those limits?
                   Manifestly they must be so defined as to leave intact
              the field of essential theological doctrine. Within that sacred area there is
              no scope for Nationalism. Peculiarities which touch the foundations of the
              Faith—the Catholic tradition of all ages—the “quod semper, quod ubique, quod
              ab omnibus,”—such peculiarities are well-nigh synonymous with heresies. To say
              that the tenets known as “Gallican” are not of this complexion may seem almost
              superfluous; yet such is the predominant tone of thought and feeling in the
              Roman Communion of our day, that the statement is not altogether uncalled for.
              It is notorious that the profession of Gallican opinions is now, and has long
              been, treated in certain quarters as if it were all but equivalent to a denial
              of the Faith. What, however, is the real character of those opinions? They
              belong to the domain of ecclesiastical polity; relating chiefly to the nature
              and extent of the authority vested in the Apostolic See, and in the individual
              person of its Bishop. They maybe said, also, to comprehend many collateral
              issues, radiating from this central point—issues affecting jurisprudence,
              legislation, discipline; the status and rights of the Episcopal Order in
              general; the legitimate terms of alliance between a National Church and a
              Christian State.
                   Now these are questions, doubtless, of considerable
              magnitude; but they are not of fundamental or indispensable moment. They are
              not questions de fide. The systematic exaggeration of their importance
              by the extreme partisans of Rome is one of the most unfortunate features of
              modern controversy. It is difficult to see how the cause of religion can be
              served by insisting on the dogma of Papal absolutism as if it were the cornerstone
              of the whole Christian fabric—the “articulus stantis vel cadentis Ecclesiae.” Such a
              theory clashes with incontestable facts. If this be an article of necessary
              faith, how is it that it has never been imposed upon the conscience of
              Christendom by the authority of any one undisputed Ecumenical Council? How is
              it that no such definition is to be found among the decrees of Trent? How is it
              that those who reject it have never in any age been branded with the anathemas
              incurred by formal heresy?
               The champions of Gallicanism are scarce in the
              nineteenth century; but in days bygone, when it was first attempted to introduce
              the system now so well known as that of the Roman Curia, they exhibited no lack
              of energy and ardour. Collisions were inevitable; and the thunders of the fray,
              on certain memorable occasions, reverberated through the very heart of
              Christendom. It is satisfactory to reflect, however, on looking down the vista
              of ages, that the truths so strenuously contended for by the far-famed school
              of Gallican divines were maintained without any open breach of Catholic
              communion or dereliction of the Rule of Faith. Nor, although the current may
              seem to have set in an opposite direction in the Latin Church of our own and
              one or two preceding generations, is there any cause for apprehension as to the
              enduring vitality of their theology. Principles which have survived the desolations
              of the great Calvinist schism, the corroding ulcer of Jansenism, and the
              hurricane of an infidel Revolution, can scarcely have much to fear from the
              ravages of time.
                   II.
                   The Gallican Church, from the very dawn of its
              history, cordially recognized the primacy, and in a certain sense the
              supremacy, of Rome among the Episcopal Sees of Christendom. It was to Eleutherus, Bishop of Rome, that the Martyrs of Lyons
              addressed a celebrated letter, appealing to him for aid in confuting the
              heresy of Montanus. The bearer of that letter was
              Irenaeus, then a Presbyter, afterwards Bishop of Lyons, and one of the
              brightest luminaries of the early Church in Gaul. From a much-contested passage
              in the treatise of this father “Against heresies” we may at least infer (after
              making every allowance for the imperfect state in which the work has come down
              to us) that he regarded the Roman See—“that greatest and most ancient Church
              founded by the two glorious Apostles, Peter and Paul”—with deep reverence and
              honour, both on account of its pre-eminent dignity, and on account of the
              fidelity with which it had preserved and handed down the Divine Deposit through
              twelve successive episcopates. Similar conclusions may be drawn from the
              proceedings of the First Council of Arles (ad. 314). The fathers there assembled transmitted their canons with profound
              respect to Pope Sylvester, in order that (as they express it in their synodical
              epistle) “by him, who presided over the greater dioceses, they might be
              notified to the Christian world.” At the same time it is evident, both from
              their words and acts, that they considered the Council to possess inherently
              all necessary power of legislation, apart from any exercise of authority on the
              part of the Roman Pontiff.
               The all-important principle of appeal to the Apostolic
              See in the “causae majores”—the pivot, as it proved
              eventually, of the whole system of Papal domination—began to prevail in Gaul in
              the early part of the fifth century. Mention is made of it in a decretal
              epistle of Pope Innocent I to Victricius, Bishop of
              Rouen, a.d. 404. In reply to certain enquiries of that prelate on matters of discipline,
              the Pope directs, among other things, that ecclesiastical causes shall be
              judged, according to the canons of Nicaea, by the Provincial Council, and that
              none shall be permitted to decline its jurisdiction in order to seek justice
              elsewhere;—“without prejudice,” he adds, “to the rights of the Roman Church,
              for which in all proceedings due respect must be observed. If greater causes should
              arise, they must be reserved, after the sentence of the bishops has been
              pronounced, to the Holy See, in pursuance of the injunctions of the Council.
              Not many years afterwards we meet with a remarkable instance of appeal to Rome
              on the part of a Gallican bishop, the results of which went far to settle the
              usage of the Western Church in this particular.
               A dispute of long standing existed between the bishops
              of Arles and Vienne with regard to precedency and metropolitical jurisdiction.
              The question was brought before a Council at Turin in the year 401, when it was
              decided, for the sake of peace, that the dignity of metropolitan should belong
              to that prelate who could prove his see to be the
              civil capital of the province; and that, meanwhile, each should execute the
              office in the dioceses nearest to his own. The strife was thus suspended for
              the time; but in 417 Patroclus, Bishop of Arles, addressed himself to Pope
              Zosimus, to obtain restitution of the rights which he maintained to be
              originally inherent in his see ; and that Pontiff, probably without sufficient
              examination, granted his request. He wrote to the bishops of Gaul, directing
              that the Bishop of Arles should exercise metropolitan jurisdiction over three
              provinces, Vienneusis and Ima and 2da Narbonensis; that he should
              preside at the consecration of their bishops; that all clergy travelling
              abroad should obtain from him “litterae formatae,” or commendatory letters; and that he should
              decide ecclesiastical causes, with the exception of those which were important
              enough to be reserved to the cognizance of the Pope himself. These distinctions
              he declared to rest upon the Apostolic foundation of the See; Trophimus having been despatched from Rome to be the first
              Bishop of Arles, and the Christian faith having been diffused from that
              original source throughout Gaul.
               But this judgment by no means put an end to the
              dispute. The very complicated case of Hilary, Bishop of Arles, during the
              Pontificate of Leo the Great, reopened the whole question; and all parties
              interested recurred repeatedly to Rome. Hilary was accused to the Pope of
              assuming primatial authority over the whole Gallic Church, and in particular,
              of having unlawfully deposed Celidonius, apparently
              a bishop of the province of Vienne. Celidonius appealed to the Pope; and Hilary himself proceeded forthwith to Rome, where he
              demeaned himself towards his superior in a somewhat-arrogant and unbecoming
              style. Leo assembled his Council, reversed Hilary’s judgment, and reinstated Celidonius, who seems to have been innocent of the offence
              imputed to him. Hence we may infer that the regulations of the Council of
              Sardica on appeals were at this period either unrecognized or very imperfectly
              observed. Had they been in full operation, Hilary would not have been justified
              on his part in complaining of Celidonius for carrying
              his suit to Rome, nor, on the other hand, could the Pope have adjudicated the
              cause without previously referring it to a Commission on the spot for a second
              examination. Leo, however, was not content with rescinding Hilary’s decision;
              he visited him with severe censure, deprived him of the Primacy granted to his
              predecessor, declared him to be severed from the communion of the Holy See, and
              intimated that it was a matter of favour that he was not deposed from his
              office. It was on this occasion, too, that the Pontiff procured from
              Valentinian III an edict affirming his supremacy in the government of the
              Church, forbidding the bishops, whether in Gaul or other provinces, to vary
              from ancient custom without his permission, and enjoining his officers, civil
              and military, to enforce submission to the Pope in case of need.
               The question between Arles and Vienne was decided by
              Pope Leo in the year 449. He observes, in reply to a memorial from the bishops
              of the province of Vienne, that the two Sees had enjoyed precedence
              alternately; special privileges having been conferred sometimes on the one,
              sometimes on the other. For this reason he judged it right to make a division
              of the contested jurisdiction. He assigns to the Bishop of Vienne the four
              neighbouring dioceses of Valence, Tarantaise,
              Geneva, and Grenoble; the remaining sees of the same province being placed
              under the authority of the Bishop of Arles. Subsequent Pontiffs, however,
              conferred various important prerogatives on the Metropolitans of Arles. They
              were appointed Vicars and Legates of the Holy See; invested with the pallium as
              the symbol of that office; and empowered to convoke and preside at Councils
              throughout Gaul. St. Caesarius was the first who received the distinction of
              the pallium. Pope Symmachus confirmed to him at the same time (a.d. 513)
              all the privileges belonging to his See and exercised by his predecessors, and
              even extended his jurisdiction into Spain.
               From the time of Leo the Great the Popes may be said
              to have possessed a generally acknowledged patriarchal authority throughout the
              Gallic Church. Nor does it appear that the administration of the Roman
              Patriarch, in the form established in those early ages, was on the whole
              inconsistent with the legitimate principles of Church Government. On the
              contrary, it tended materially to the maintenance of unity and discipline in
              times of great political disorder and social danger. The Pope was universally
              admitted to be the first bishop of Christendom; but his government was that of
              a constitutional, not of an absolute, monarch. His Patriarchal dignity was held
              in common with that of four other Patriarchs, and was not as yet developed
              into a Primacy of universal jurisdiction. He did not claim to be the sole
              source of ecclesiastical legislation; he did not pretend to be independent of
              Councils and canons. The Popes of those days were in the habit of reiterating
              on all occasions, and with every variety of expression, the fact that they were
              the guardians of the statute law of the Church; that they had no power to alter
              or abrogate those statutes; that it was the peculiar characteristic and glory
              of the Roman See to maintain inviolate the tradition of antiquity and the
              canonical decrees of Councils. A great Gallican doctor, Jean de Launoi, has taken the pains to collect a series of sixty-three declarations to this effect from the writings of different Popes; in
              which they acknowledge themselves to be bound, by special obligations, to
              conform personally to the legislation of the Church, and to enforce its
              authority throughout the Christian world. The same principle is further illustrated,
              with singular force, by the ‘Liber diurnus Romanorum
              Pontificum’, which contains the formulas by which the Popes of all ages have engaged,
              at their inauguration, to observe to the very letter the decrees of the
              Ecumenical Councils; to affirm and teach whatever the Church in her legislative
              assemblies has affirmed and taught; to condemn and reject whatever has been synodically condemned and rejected by the same authority.
              That any Pope should deliberately violate or set aside the enactments of
              general Councils was a contingency scarcely contemplated by the ancient
              Church. For such enactments were presumed to be made under the immediate
              sanction and direction of the Roman Patriarch; so that, in opposing them, he
              would be resisting and annulling his own acts.
               It was only in proportion as these grave truths began
              to be forgotten in the rapid aggrandizement which was almost thrust upon the
              Papacy after the fall of the Carolingian Empire, that National Churches found
              it necessary to recur to the provisions of immemorial discipline, and to insist
              on the observance of their ancient “liberties.”
                   Ecclesiastical “liberty” is a phrase which has become
              in great measure identified with the history of the Church in France; but it
              must be observed that, in the claims originally advanced in that behalf, there
              was nothing peculiar to any single member of the Christian Commonwealth. All
              that was demanded was this; that the constitutional charter—the common law of
              the Church should be obeyed in practice. Freedom of episcopal election; the
              unshackled exercise of metropolitical jurisdiction; the regular celebration of
              Councils, especially of Provincial Councils; the administration of discipline
              through the ecclesiastical courts, unimpeded either by the arbitrary control
              of the State or by the indefinite multiplication of appeals to Rome;—such were
              the franchises vindicated by Gallican theologians  not, however, as belonging
              exclusively to France, but as component parts of that Divinely-bequeathed
              heritage which is the property of the Church universal. The self-same objects
              were anxiously pursued in other quarters of the Christian world; but nowhere
              was the resistance to innovation so steadily sustained, so discriminating, or
              on the whole so successful, as in France. Hence the special significance of the
              term “liberty” as applied to the Gallican branch of the Church Catholic. Other
              nations of Europe fell into excesses in opposite directions; excesses either of
              blind abject submission to the Papal autocracy, as in Italy and Spain; or of
              rebellion ending in the disruption of visible unity, as in Germany and England.
              The tone maintained in France was for the most part dignified, temperate,
              respectful; combining a resolute assertion of the principles both of civil and ecclesiastical
              freedom, with profound devotion to the Patriarchal See of the West, and with
              obedience to its occupants in all things lawfully enjoined.
                   Thus the distinctive truths illustrated by the
              Gallican Church of former days were principally these:—that a National Church,
              while following the broad track of Latin tradition as to the primacy of the “Cathedra
              Petri,” may witness at the same time to the co-ordinate power of government
              which resides by Divine right in the whole Episcopal college; that the Canon
              Law, not the will of a personally infallible Pontiff, is the standard of the
              Church’s jurisprudence ; that it is possible to hold the doctrinal creed
              committed to the Church from the beginning, without acquiescing in Roman
              usurpations in other departments of the ecclesiastical economy;—in short, that,
              in order to be Catholic, it is not absolutely necessary to be Ultramontane.
                   It cannot be denied, however, that Gallicanism may be
              contemplated from a very different and far less advantageous point of view.
              The position occupied by France in regard to the Papacy was not devoid of
              serious countervailing drawbacks. The Gallican Church freed itself, to a
              certain extent, from the tyrannical yoke of Rome; but this partial
              emancipation was purchased only at the price of momentous concessions to the
              State. “Gallican liberty”—if it signified that constitutional autonomy which is
              the birth right of the Church Catholic,—was indeed worth any sacrifice; but
              what if liberty should be craftily transformed into servitude by the
              domineering action of the civil power? The Pope, though he might sometimes make
              an oppressive and mistaken use of his prerogatives, was nevertheless the chief
              Pastor of the Church—one whose spiritual character and Divine commission could
              not be disputed. But in proportion as attempts were made to repress the
              exorbitant pretensions of ambitious Pontiffs, the door was opened for
              intrusion on the part of another Element, which, although sovereign in things
              temporal, possessed no spiritual authority or jurisdiction whatever.
                   Hence arose an arduous struggle, which was prolonged
              for centuries, if indeed it can be said even now to be finally decided. Its
              general result is written on the face of history too plainly to be mistaken.
              Whatever was wrested from the Pope was appropriated by the Crown. So that, in
              process of time, while stoutly protesting against any recognition of Pontifical
              supremacy in things temporal, the French Church found itself reduced to the
              anomalous necessity of accepting the Royal supremacy in many things
              intrinsically spiritual.
                   Under such circumstances, it is not to be wondered at
              that the phrase “Gallican liberty” has become ambiguous, and is used in two
              different acceptations. In its primary and genuine sense it implies the right
              of the Gallican Church (as of all national churches) to administer its own
              government within certain limits—those limits being determined by the canons
              of Councils and the practice of the purest ages of antiquity. But the same term
              was applied, in later times, to the assumptions of the State in matters
              extraneous to its proper province, under pretence of maintaining national
              independence as against the usurpations of the Papacy. Ultramontane
              controversialists are glad to avail themselves of this convenient equivoque.
              They studiously ignore the ancient, unadulterated Gallicanism, and seek to
              persuade us that the system known by that name was fabricated by a royal despot
              and his sycophant bishops towards the close of the seventeenth century. They
              confound the abuses which arose from the absolutism of the Crown with that
              primitive organization which in all ages has confronted the absolutism of
              Rome.
                   Against this artifice the reader will do well to be on
              his guard. We hear it loudly proclaimed in these days that Gallicanism is the
              base-born offspring of a degenerate age—a “schism in disguise”—an outbreak of
              the spirit of insubordination—incoherent, illogical. The reply to such
              assertions is best made by distinguishing between the apocryphal version of it which was imposed upon the world by despotic monarchs,
              arrogant ministers, and obsequious parliaments, and that pure theological
              tradition which was coeval with the Church of France. Gallicanism (in its true
              sense) does not date from the “age of Louis XIV.” It did not originate with
              the  Declaration” of 1682. It was not
              created by the Concordat of Francis I. It was not first formulated in the
              “Pragmatic Sanction” of Bourges. Nor was it even a happy invention of the
              illustrious Jean Gerson and those other kindred spirits who piloted the Church
              with such consummate skill through the shoals and quicksands of the “Great Schism.” It sounds like a truism to say so, but the truism is
              necessary—the Gallican Church was always Gallican. It was not, indeed, always
              in an attitude of active protest against the supremacy of the Roman Pontiff;
              for that supremacy, rightly understood and administered, is an integral part of
              the Gallican polity. But it asserted from the beginning those great laws and
              principles, the infraction of which in later times led to the divergence
              between the old and the new ecclesiastical discipline. If Gallicans began at a
              certain period to dissent from Rome, it was because Rome at that period had
              become other than she was. Ultramontanism, not Gallicanism, was the innovation.
              The Papacy, in the shape which it now wears, is only defensible on the plea
              that the original laws of the Christian kingdom are subject to development—or
              rather transformation—according to the presumed needs of successive ages. Gallicanism
              is a perpetual appeal to those same laws before the evolutionary process
              commenced. In other words, it is an appeal to the judgment and practice of the
              primitive Church. But there are those who would fain identify it with a system
              by which, in comparatively recent times, the Church was robbed of her dearest
              prerogatives; by which the free election of her bishops was abrogated, the
              voice of her Legislative Councils silenced, her judicial and disciplinary
              authority annulled. This was neither genuine Gallicanism nor genuine
              Christianity. According to Gallican theology, it is no less, but rather far
              more, repugnant to the spirit of the Gospel that the Church should be
              subjected, within the sphere of her divinely-ordained functions, to the
              arbitrary dictation of kings and parliaments, than that she should be ruled by
              the irresponsible will of her chief Bishop. The Church’s “liberty” has always
              consisted, and must for ever consist, in being governed by her own canonical
              legislation; in the equitable administration of that sacred code by the Episcopate; and in its being frankly recognized and effectually protected by the civil
              power.
               Once more, then, the reader is warned against the
              stratagem, now so commonly practised, of representing Gallicanism as a mere
              modern expedient for converting the Church into a hireling and a bondslave to
              the State. It is true that, under the pseudonym of Gallicanism, the ancient
              independence of the Church in its relations to the State was practically subverted;
              but Gallicanism is not answerable for this monstrous perversion of its
              principles. “Look on this picture and on that.” Compare the portrait drawn by
              Pierre Pithou at the close of the sixteenth century
              with the cherished ideal of such men as Hincmar of Reims, Ivo of Chartres, Agobard of Lyons, and Bernard of Clairvaux. The one is a
              caricature of the other. The great mediaeval doctors rest their cause on
              principles which date from the very foundation of the “City of God,” and which
              are therefore opposed alike to Papal and to secular Caesarism. The modern
              programme is virtually an abnegation of the most important of those
              principles, forced upon the Church by the unscrupulous aggressions of the
              State.
               The gradual metamorphosis of the Gallicanism of the primitive
              type into the hybrid system which latterly usurped its name—and which was not
              far removed from sheer Erastianism—is to be traced
              amid the vicissitudes of many centuries. Some account of it will be attempted
              in the course of the present work. The author does not pretend, however, to
              furnish a complete explanation of a series of transactions which, in many
              instances, were carefully masked under a veil of plausible deception, and which
              have been involved in further obscurity by conflicting historical testimony.
              There are problems connected with the fortunes of the Church in France which
              probably will never be solved with absolute certainty so long as the world
              lasts.
               IIIThe Church of France was distinguished for many ages
              by its zeal for the independence and purity of ecclesiastical elections. Under
              the first and second Frankish dynasties the Church was the main source and
              principle of civilization—the dominant power of society. All
                important acts of legislation emanated from its Councils. Its prelates
              were Ministers of State; its priests were civil magistrates; justice was
              ordinarily dispensed through its tribunals. Church and State were in fact so
              intimately blended, as to be scarcely distinguishable the one from the other.
              During this period, the right of the Church to freedom of action in the choice
              of its chief pastors was fully admitted in theory; and elections to the
              episcopate were made, according to primitive usage, by the suffrages of the
              clergy and faithful laity of the diocese; subject always to the regulations of
              the canons, and to the approval of the sovereign. It is true that this practice
              was often interfered with, especially under the later Merovingian princes; but
              such cases were exceptions and abuses. Freedom of election was the universally
              acknowledged rule, and was more or less exactly followed until after the fall
              of the Carolingian Empire.
               Thus, for example, the First Council of Auvergne, a.d. 535,
              expressly condemns any attempt to attain the episcopal dignity through the
              favour and patronage of princes, rather than by personal merit and the
              universal suffrage of the faithful. The Fifth Council of Orleans, in 549,
              decrees that bishops shall be chosen, with the consent of the king, by the
              votes of the clergy and people, as enjoined by the ancient canons; and
              thereupon consecrated by the Metropolitan and his comprovincials. “Let it not
              be lawful for anyone to obtain the episcopate by means of bribery or simoniacal contract. Let no man be appointed bishop over an
              unwilling flock; nor let any pressure be exercised by persons in authority, to
              procure the consent either of citizens or of clergy,—a thing shameful to speak
              of. If any such case should occur, let the bishop who has thus been ordained
              through violence, rather than by legitimate decree, be for ever deposed from
              the pontifical dignity.” The Fifth Synod of Paris, a.d. 557, enacts in its eighth
              canon, that the election of bishops shall be conducted freely by the clergy and
              people; that no one shall be intruded into a see by the command of the
              sovereign, or without the consent of the Metropolitan and comprovincial ; that
              if any one shall venture to assume the episcopal dignity in virtue of a royal
              nomination, he shall not be recognized as bishop by the prelates of the
              province. Again, it was declared by the great National Synod held at Paris in
              615, under Clothaire II, that episcopal elections
              made without consent of the Metropolitan, the comprovincials, the clergy and
              laity of the diocese, as also those obtained through violence, intrigue, or
              simony, are absolutely null and void. The king, by an edict, confirmed this canon;
              adding, however, a clause to the effect that the crown was to authorise the act
              of consecration.
               The same rule prevailed under the Carolingian dynasty.
              It was frequently infringed, indeed, by Charlemagne, who, in virtue of the
              quasi-ecclesiastical character which he assumed under the express sanction of
              the Holy See, exercised supreme control over the whole external administration
              of the Church. But the right of canonical election is explicitly affirmed by
              this monarch in a capitulary of the year 803. “Being not ignorant of the sacred
              canons, in order that in the name of God Holy Church may the more freely enjoy
              her just privileges, we have signified our consent to the ecclesiastical order,
              that bishops shall be elected by the choice of the clergy and people, according
              to the canons, from the diocese where the vacancy occurs, without respect of
              persons or gift of presents, on the sole ground of meritorious life and
              pre-eminent wisdom”.  This capitulary was
              republished verbatim by Louis le Debonnaire soon
              after his accession. In process of time it became customary to solicit from
              the crown permission to proceed to an election; and an officer, called the
              Visitor, usually one of the bishops of the province, was appointed to preside
              over the proceedings, and make a report on the event to the Metropolitan; the
              latter, in his turn, giving information to the king. If the Visitor reported
              that the election had been misconducted—that there had been bribery, simony,
              violence, or the like—the nomination became void, and the patronage, for that
              time, devolved upon the crown.
               The way was thus opened for a further extension of the
              royal prerogative with respect to the disposal of the highest ecclesiastical
              dignities. It appears that, under the later Carolingians, the practice of
              applying to the crown for license to elect led to that of royal recommendations
              of the individual to be elected. Persons in office about the court, the relatives
              of the nobility, of military chiefs, and other powerful retainers, naturally
              obtained the preference; and it required more courage than the electors
              possessed to reject candidates so protected, however slenderly they might be
              furnished with personal qualifications. Abuses thus arose, which were exposed
              and resisted with undaunted resolution by the famous Hincmar, Archbishop of
              Reims. On one occasion that prelate remonstrated in the plainest language with
              Louis III, in whose name an unworthy pastor had been intruded into the
              episcopate; bidding him not to imagine that when permission was requested from
              the sovereign to proceed to an election, it followed that the bishops, clergy,
              and people were bound to fix upon the person whom he had thought fit to nominate.
              “This,” said the archbishop, “would be no election according to the terms of
              the Divine law, but a lawless usurpation of human power. And if the
              circumstances be such as I have heard, without doubt the same malignant spirit
              who, in the guise of a serpent, deceived our first parents and caused the loss
              of paradise, has by means of similar flatterers whispered these delusions in
              your ear.”
                 The development of Feudalism brought with it important
              innovations affecting the hierarchy of the Church. Bishops, abbots, and all the
              higher dignitaries, became, in respect of their large landed possessions,
              feudatories to the crown and other secular suzerains; and as such, liable to
              the charges imposed on territorial property by feudal law. Certain prelates,
              holding estates in the “domaine royal,” were invested
              with temporal peerages. The Archbishop of Reims, the bishops of Laon and Langres, were created dukes; the bishops of Beauvais,
              Noyon, Châlons sur Marne, obtained the title of count. The Bishop of Senlis, also, was at one period a peer of France. Next in
              order came the prelates who held fiefs of the dukes of Normandy, Britanny, Burgundy, or of the counts of Champagne,
              Flanders, and Toulouse ; these, in feudal language, were “arrière-vassaux” of
              the crown. Lower in the scale were the abbots—regular, secular, and
              commendatory — most of whom enjoyed feudal baronies.
               The six great ecclesiastical peers took precedence of
              all other prelates, and of all lay peers except the princes of the blood royal.
              They possessed seats and votes in the Parliament of Paris, since that court was
              held to represent the ancient court of Peers, originally the supreme tribunal
              of the monarchy. The abbots of Cluny and of St. Denis “en France” were also members ex officio of the Parliament of Paris*
               All these clerical potentates were entitled to
              exercise the rights of sovereignty within the limits of their own territories;
              to coin money, impose taxes, make laws, declare war and peace, and administer
              justice by their local courts and officers. Considering the vast extent of
              their civil and political powers, it was essential to discover some expedient
              by which they might be kept in due subordination and allegiance to the crown.
              For this purpose advantage was taken of the feudal ceremony of investiture. The
              oath of homage was exacted from the holders of spiritual fiefs, as from all
              other vassals; and when the new prelate had thus pledged his fealty to his
              suzerain, the latter granted to him the investiture of his fief, by delivering
              to him the crozier and the ring. These, however, were the appropriate ensigns,
              not of temporal dignity, but of the pastoral office. It was a plausible
              proceeding in appearance, but in reality it carried with it a most dangerous
              invasion of the liberties, and even of the constitution, of the Church. For it
              implied, in the first place, that the nomination to the highest ecclesiastical
              dignities formed part of the inherent prerogative of the crown; and the right
              of free election by the clergy and people was thus ignored. But further, it
              suggested the idea that investiture conferred, not only the episcopal status in
              the feudal hierarchy, but also the episcopal office; i.
                e. that lay hands conveyed a purely spiritual jurisdiction. It was from the
              prevalence of such grave misconceptions that the celebrated contest arose in
              the eleventh century, known as the “War of Investitures.’'
                 During this great struggle (the course of which was
              far less violent, however, in France than elsewhere) the Gallican Church
              vindicated its rights with courage, and on the whole with success. Gallican
              divines seem to have admitted that the sovereign was entitled to confer on
              bishops the investiture of their temporal fiefs held of the crown, provided
              that the ecclesiastical election and consecration had taken place previously;
              and provided, also, that the oath exacted was that of “hommage simple,” not of “hommage lige.”
              These conditions, it was held, sufficiently excluded the notion that lay
              investiture had any share in the transmission of the spiritual powers of the
              episcopate. Such was the view taken by the great canonist Ivo, Bishop of
              Chartres, as appears from his correspondence with the Papal Legate Hugues,
              Archbishop of Lyons; and again, by Hugues de Fleury, in his treatise “De regia potestate et sacerdotali dignitate.”
               The practice, thus guarded and limited, became
              eventually prevalent in France. The Bishop was first canonically elected; the
              election was then published, and confirmed by the Metropolitan; then followed
              the consecration; and lastly, the new prelate took the oath of allegiance to
              the sovereign, upon which he was put into possession of the temporalities of
              his see. This order was indeed violated in later times as to one most important
              particular. When the Crown had succeeded in monopolizing the patronage of the
              higher Church dignities, the oath of homage was commonly made to precede,
              instead of following, the act of consecration;—an abuse against which the
              French clergy did not fail to protest on various occasions.
                   In the course of this agitating controversy, the cause
              of ecclesiastical independence was resolutely defended by several great
              Councils held in France:—at Clermont, in 1095, in the presence of Pope Urban
              II; at Troyes, in 1107, under Pope Paschal II in person; at Vienne, in
              Dauphine, in 1112, where the bishops repudiated the pusillanimous concessions
              of Paschal to the Emperor Henry V; and at Reims, in 1119, where Pope Calixtus
              II, at the head of thirteen archbishops and more than two hundred bishops,
              prohibited all investitures at the hands of laymen. This last imposing
              exhibition contributed probably to bring about the compromise called the
              “Concordat of Worms,” which shortly afterwards terminated the strife.
                   Towards the close of the twelfth century, the system
              of ecclesiastical elections underwent a still further modification. From the
              time when the election of the sovereign Pontiff was restricted to the College
              of Cardinals, the Cathedral Chapters laid claim to the exercise of a corresponding
              privilege in the choice of their diocesans, to the exclusion not only of the
              laity, but of the parochial clergy. This assumption was ratified in express
              terms by the 24th Canon of the great Lateran Council, in 1215; and the right
              was generally recognized thenceforward as belonging to the capitular bodies.
              The elections were made by three different forms of procedure—by “inspiration,”
              by “compromise”, or by scrutiny”;—terms borrowed from those in use in the Roman
              conclave. The choice of the Chapter was then confirmed by the Metropolitan,
              with an appeal, in case of dispute, to the Pope. This practice continued during
              the greater part of three centuries; but it was subject to frequent
              interruptions, and was attended with serious evils. On the one hand, gross
              unblushing simony was induced by the perpetual intervention of the Crown in
              favour of its own candidates; while on the other, appeals to Rome became so
              common, on the ground of alleged informality or defect in the elections, that
              the patronage in numberless instances passed into the hands of the Pope. By
              means of “devolutions”, “reserves”, “apostolical mandates”, “expective graces”,
              and other specious expedients, the Court of Rome gradually acquired a
              predominant influence in the disposal of all the higher preferments in France.
                   The first attempt of any importance to apply a remedy
              to these anomalies was made by St. Louis; who, in the year 1268, promulgated
              his famous Ordonnance called the Pragmatic Sanction. That monarch, though a
              devoted son of the Church, full of affectionate veneration for the Holy See,
              did not hesitate to insert in this remarkable statute provisions aimed directly
              against notorious evils which had arisen from Papal usurpation; and claimed
              both for Church and State in France a certain character of independent
              nationality. The Pragmatic Sanction of St. Louis has been styled “the
              foundation stone of the Gallican liberties.” It is comprised in six articles.
              The first declares that the prelates, patrons, and ordinary collators to benefices
              in the kingdom shall fully enjoy their rights, and that the jurisdiction
              lawfully belonging to each shall be maintained. The second guarantees to
              cathedral churches the right of free episcopal election. The third directs that
              the “pestilential crime of simony” be altogether banished from the kingdom. The
              fourth ordains that ecclesiastical promotions and appointments of whatever kind
              be made conformably to the common law, the canons of Councils, and the ancient
              institutions of the Fathers. The fifth prohibits the heavy pecuniary burdens
              imposed by the Roman Court upon the Church of France, “whereby our kingdom has
              been lamentably impoverished”; and provides “that none shall be hereafter
              levied, unless for a reasonable, pious, urgent, and indispensable necessity,
              and with the free consent of the king and the said Church of France.” By the
              sixth and last article, the king “renews, approves, and confirms all the
              franchises, prerogatives, rights, and privileges granted by himself and his
              predecessors to the churches, monasteries, religious orders, and ecclesiastics
              of the realm.”
                   But the legislation of St. Louis—honourable as it was
              to his own motives and character—produced little or no permanent effect.
              Unworthy intrigue, simoniacal corruption, bitter dissension,
              even tumultuous violence, became matters of common scandal in the capitular
              elections. The interference of Rome was perpetually invoked in contested cases
              ; and it was this that led by degrees to the practice of reserving to the Pope
              the presentation to certain benefices, and to various other methods of
              alienating preferment from the lawful patrons. Pontiffs of the stamp of
              Boniface VIII and John XXII usurped as a right what their predecessors had
              resorted to only under circumstances of exceptional urgency, for the purpose of
              redressing abuses which were bringing the Church into disgrace and contempt.
               IV.A second principle affirmed with marked emphasis from
              time to time by the Gallican Church was that of the independence of its local
              Councils, and the free exercise of canonical Jurisdiction by its Metropolitans.
              In no part of the Christian world have Councils been more frequent than in the
              Church of France; a circumstance highly favourable, at first sight, to its
              disciplinary condition, inasmuch as it is by Councils that the Church speaks,
              acts, and judges, in its corporate capacity. But it will be found on
              examination that their character and mode of action varied materially from age
              to age; and that their history, as a whole, presents a faithful epitome of the
              fluctuating fortunes of the Church, in its relations to the Roman supremacy on
              one side, and to the domination of the civil authority on the other. In early
              times, while complete harmony and union prevailed between Church and State,
              Gallican synods were energetic, vigilant, and influential. But to this palmy
              period succeeded one of lamentable laxity, which continued till the ignominious
              downfall of the first Frankish dynasty. Under the “rois faineants” synods were
              gradually disused, and the functions of Metropolitans became almost extinct. A
              brief resuscitation followed under the Carolingians; but at a later date, when
              their empire began to sink into decay, the legislative system of the Church was
              fatally attacked by the innovating policy of Rome, which reduced Councils into
              dependence on the arbitrary will of the Pope, and sapped their authority
              through the abuse of the privilege of appeals. At length the spirit of
              medievalism was compelled to yield to the steadily-sustained aggression of the
              French monarchs of the “third race”; and in the sixteenth century Gallican
              synods underwent a change of organization so essential, that; although the
              clergy were still permitted to assemble by representation, their meetings lost
              their original designation, which indeed would have been a misnomer under such
              circumstances. The Pope had enslaved the Councils of the Church; the Crown
              suppressed them.
                   Diocesan Synods—consisting of the clergy of a single
              diocese under the presidency of the bishop—were held originally twice in the
              year, in spring and autumn; in later times only once a year. Provincial Synods,
              consisting of the Metropolitan and Comprovincial bishops, together with some
              few clergy of the second order selected by them, were in like manner celebrated
              in the early ages twice every year, as ordered by the canon of Nicaea;
              apparently without interference on the part of the secular Government, either
              in convoking or confirming them. The Provincial Council, according to the
              invariable Gallican tradition, was the ordinary tribunal for the decision of
              all ecclesiastical causes; it was the court of appeal from Diocesan synods, and
              appeal from it was allowed, in certain cases and under well-defined
              restrictions, to the Roman See. Yet in process of time, through the same
              conflicting influences which proved successful in annulling the freedom of
              elections, this great and wise institution of antiquity fell into disuse in
              France. The clergy urgently and constantly petitioned for its restoration, and
              sometimes with partial success; but it was never permanently re-established.
                   A third form of ecclesiastical assembly obtained from
              a very early period, namely that of the National Synod. These were originally
              meetings of the bishops of the seventeen provinces which formed the political
              “Diocese of Gaul.” Hence they are alluded to in the Theodosian Code as
              “Diocesan Synods.” “A Diocesan Synod,” says the commentator Godefroi,
              “is composed of prelates belonging to several provinces, gathered together
              under the presidency of a patriarch, primate, or exarch. These Councils,” he
              continues, “are called Universal. Such were those of Africa, of Gaul, of Spain,
              of Britain, and the like.” From the middle of the fourth century the Gallican
              episcopate was accustomed thus to meet in synod for the dispatch of
              ecclesiastical affairs, under the direct sanction and summons of the Imperial
              Government. Such were the Synod of Arles in 353; of Beziers two years
              afterwards; of Paris in 362; of Valence in 374; of Bordeaux in 385; of Treves in
              386. An Imperial rescript was addressed to the Patriarch, Primate, or
              Metropolitan, who thereupon cited the prelates within his jurisdiction to
              attend at a given time and place. But these larger gatherings by no means
              superseded or obstructed the celebration of Diocesan and Provincial Councils.
              On the contrary, they enforced them as essential to sound discipline, and
              enjoined them on the bishops under severe penalties.
               During the decline of the Empire, the power of
              convoking these national Councils was claimed by the Metropolitan Bishops of
              Arles, to which city the seat of civil government had been transferred on the
              destruction of Treves by the Vandals. The ambitious Hilary insisted upon this,
              among other prerogatives, as belonging to his See, and induced the Second
              Council of Arles to pass a canon to that effect. Pope Hilarius,
              in 462, expressly conferred the right of summoning Councils on Leontius, Bishop
              of Arles; Pope Symmachus made a similar decree in favour of St. Caesarius; and
              again, Pope Vigilius iu favour of St. Aurelian. But the Barbarian conquerors, in proportion as they
              made good their footing in Gaul, assumed the same authority in ecclesiastical
              concerns that had been exercised by their predecessors; and ere long it was
              made necessary to the bolding of a National Council that their consent should
              be first obtained. Thus the great Council of Agde (Agathense) in 506, at which St. Caesarius presided, was
              celebrated “by permission of Alaric king of the Visigoths.” Avitus, Bishop of
              Vienne, held the Council of Epaone under the
              authority of Sigismund king of the Burgundians. The first Council of Orleans (a.d. 511)
              assembled by order of Clovis, and presented its canons to that prince, with a
              request that he would confirm and publish them in his quality of sovereign.
              The second Council of Orleans states in like manner, in the preface to its
              Canons, that it was convened “by command of the most glorious sovereigns”—i.e.
              of Theodoric, Childebert, and Clothaire, the sons of
              Clovis. Sigebert, King of Austrasia, in a letter to Desiderius, Bishop of Châlons,
              reproves the bishops for having met in synod without the previous sanction of
              the Crown; and intimates that such proceedings must not be repeated. “Though
              desirous to respect the Canons and Constitutions ecclesiastical, he had
              determined, with the concurrence of his nobles, that no Synod should be held in
              his dominions without his knowledge. If his permission were requested, and
              sufficient cause assigned, it would not be refused.”
               The records of Councils during the fifth and sixth
              centuries, and the early part of the seventh, give ample testimony to the zeal of the Gallican Episcopate both for exactness of
              discipline and purity of doctrine. The liberties of the Church were, however,
              grievously invaded by the later Merovingian princes; they violated the freedom
              of elections, set at nought the decrees of Councils, practised simony, and
              encouraged abuses which, unless corrected, would have been fatal to the ecclesiastical
              constitution.
               So long as the laws of the Church were outwardly
              respected, and ecclesiastical authority was substantially upheld by the civil
              ruler, it would seem that the Popes of this period forbore to meddle with the
              practice of National Churches as to synods and other details of discipline. But
              when the sceptre had fallen into the degenerate hands of the last descendants
              of Clovis, they failed not to interpose with the vigour and fearlessness which
              befitted their office.
                   Thus Gregory the Great, hearing that synods were
              systematically neglected in Austrasia, wrote in strong language to Queen Brunechilde, exhorting her to lose no time in calling a
              General Assembly of the prelates of the realm. Bailing of success, the Pontiff
              despatched letters to the Metropolitans of Arles, Lyons, Vienne, and the Bishop
              of Autun bidding them employ all their influence at court to procure the
              required Council. Subsequently he appointed Virgilius,
              Bishop of Arles, his Vicar-General throughout the empire of the Franks, (with
              an express reservation, however, of the rights of Metropolitans) and
              authorized him to convoke bishops in Council for the adjudication of ecclesiastical
              causes; enjoining an appeal, in cases of special difficulty, to the Apostolic
              See.
               It will scarcely be denied, on a candid consideration
              of the circumstances, that such action was originally taken by the Popes out of
              zeal for the efficient administration of the Church. Contemporary evidence
              shows that the intervention of Rome was occasioned by the incapacity and
              unfaithfulness both of the civil authorities and of the local episcopate. It is
              true that this movement resulted eventually in a wider development of the power
              of the Papacy, both spiritual and temporal; but that result cannot be ascribed
              with justice to a mere sordid love of self-aggrandisement, or a systematic
              pursuit of power for its own sake.
                   In spite of all efforts and remonstrances, few
              Councils were held in Gaul during the latter part of the Merovingian period.
              Only twenty are recorded during the whole of the seventh century; and through
              this culpable laxity on the part of its responsible rulers, the Gallo-Frankish
              Church sank into a deplorable state of corruption and decay.
                   The accession of the Carolingian dynasty brought with
              it a remarkable revival of discipline. The “second race” of Frank sovereigns
              formed an intimate alliance with the Roman Pontiffs; and the latter, perceiving
              that their acquisition of power might prove of infinite service to the Church,
              supported them with the whole weight of their authority, and invested them, in
              fact, with functions which were purely ecclesiastical. Carloman,
              the son and successor of Charles Martel, commenced the work of reformation by
              convening a National Council, known as that “of Germany,” in the year 742. The
              great S. Boniface, archbishop of Mayence, presided on
              this occasion, under a special commission as Legate from Pope Zacharias. The
              canons then enacted were republished in the following year at another Council
              held at Leptines, also under the presidency of S.
              Boniface. The same course was pursued by Pepin-le-Bref;
              in whose reign the Council of Verna enjoined that two Assemblies should be held
              every year; the first in the month of March, in the presence of the king, and
              at the place which he should appoint; the second in October, at Soissons or
              elsewhere, as the bishops might determine when they met in the spring. The
              first of these was a mixed assembly, consisting not of bishops only, but also
              of the counts and other lay nobles; the latter was an ecclesiastical synod,
              composed of metropolitans, bishops, abbot, and priests. It was convoked by the
              metropolitans, and all persons summoned by them were canonically bound to
              attend.
               The government of Charlemagne presented a singular
              specimen of the complete fusion or amalgamation of Church and State. The
              national assemblies of his reign were virtually, though not in strict form,
              Councils of the Church; while, on the other hand, the bishops, in their quality
              of “Missi dominici,” were
              employed as actively in the concerns of political government as in the spiritual
              administration of their dioceses. It must be observed, however, that during the
              life of Charlemagne these assemblies had little or no direct authority in
              legislation, whether political or ecclesiastical. They were scarcely more than
              consultative bodies; the Emperor retained in his own hands the initiative of
              measures to be discussed, and also the power of final decision. The See of Rome
              expressly sanctioned, instead of opposing, this course of action; and it must
              be acknowledged that the interests of the Church could hardly have been
              confided to worthier hands than those of Charlemagne. His zeal for the exact
              observance of synodal legislation was unbounded. His ‘Capitularies’ are full of
              passages quoted from the ancient councils, such as those of Nicaea, Chalcedon,
              Antioch, Ancyra, Sardica, Gangra, Carthage, and Neocaesarea—which
              he applies and enforces as laws of the Empire. The clergy of all ranks trusted
              him implicitly, and had abundant cause for doing so. They regarded the Imperial
              decrees with scarcely less reverence and submission than they paid to the
              canonical legislation of the Church. They styled them the handmaids of the
              canons and were accustomed to transcribe and adopt them verbatim in the
              proceedings of Provincial and Diocesan Synods. Hence we find frequent extracts
              from them in the collection of Canon Law by Ivo of Chartres, and in the ‘ Decretum ’ of Gratian.
               In the last year but one of his reign Charlemagne
              convoked five great Councils simultaneously in the metropolitical cities of
              Arles, Mayence, Reims, Tours, and Châlons. They
              legislated in a spirit of unqualified subjection to the Crown; they submitted
              their canons in distinct terms to the judgment of the Emperor, requesting him
              to alter and correct whatever he might disapprove, and to confirm and give
              effect to whatever he might think wise and profitable.
               But the system of government pursued by Charlemagne
              was exceptional and transient. When the Empire, under the rule of his incapable
              successors, was manifestly falling into decrepitude and dissolution, the Popes
              began a second time to interfere with decisive energy in the internal
              administration of the Gallican Church. They now asserted an absolute right to
              receive appeals in all ecclesiastical causes, and that even previously to the
              sentence of the local tribunals. They claimed the power of convoking Councils
              at their pleasure—of presiding over them either in person or by “legates a latere”—of confirming or disallowing their decisions, and
              even of annulling them altogether. These pretensions were not wholly new; for,
              as we have already seen, the principle of appealing to Rome in the “causae majore” was recognized at
              least as early as the fifth century. Leo the Great had censured and disallowed
              the legislation even of an (Ecumenical Council; and the proceedings of
              Provincial synods had been revised and reversed in various instances of an
              equally remote date. But this system was now more extensively developed and
              more stringently applied; and the circumstances of the Church, both external
              and internal, were such as to promote its reception. Secular government—no
              longer directed by the master-mind of Charlemagne—was sinking into a state of
              collapse, and society was threatened with anarchy and chaos. The Crown was
              powerless to protect the Church; while the great lay vassals, struggling among
              themselves for ascendency, had every inducement to embarrass its action. The
              clergy, meanwhile, especially the bishops, possessed a considerable share of
              power, arising not only from their superiority in intellect and education, but
              from the vast extent of their domains, and the high rank which they held in the
              feudal aristocracy. The Popes, doubtless, perceived that this power, skilfully
              consolidated and efficiently administered, might prove the providential means
              of restoring unity and order, both social and religious. They saw that Rome, at
              such a moment, was the true rallying-point—the true source of moral
              regeneration. To rivet more closely the links which bound all orders of
              ecclesiastics to the See of Peter was to concentrate, and therefore
              immeasurably to increase, the energies and resources of the Church. This
              policy—often so severely reprobated as an inexcusable usurpation—does not
              appear to have sprung from any deliberate design either to intrude upon the
              just prerogatives of the Crown or to curtail the liberty of the Church,
              according to the sense in which it was then understood. The problem of the
              moment was how to save both Church and State by enabling them to make head
              against the surging flood of semi-barbarous revolution. It was a necessity, at
              such a crisis, that the ecclesiastical element, as embodied in the Papacy,
              should assume grander and more dominant proportions, in order to avert a
              general cataclysm. Nor, perhaps, ought we to be surprised that the Popes, in
              the face of such difficulties, should have overstepped the bounds of precedent
              and ignored the legislation of former ages. For any such modification of existing
              usage a plausible excuse was always at hand in the abnormal circumstances of
              the times. “Salus populi suprema lex.”
               The appellate jurisdiction of Rome—involving as it did
              questions of crucial importance as to the rights of metropolitans and the
              authority of provincial Councils—was the mainspring of the agitation which
              prevailed during the ninth and tenth centuries. The Gallican episcopate, under
              the leadership of Hincmar, Archbishop of Reims, steadily defended the supremacy
              of the ancient Canon Law, which they maintained to be unalterably binding. The
              Pope, on the contrary, seems to have held that the legislation of primitive
              times might be made to square with considerations of expediency, and adapted to
              the successive needs of the Church. Hence arose a conflict between the old and
              the new discipline; the former based on the decrees of the great Ecumenical
              Councils—the latter derived chiefly from the rescripts of individual Pontiffs,
              or rather from a series of documents purporting to be such, but which are now
              known to be spurious—the “Pseudo-Isidorian”
              Decretals. Hincmar, the champion of the constitutional system, was not only an
              accurate canonist, but a man of remarkable administrative power, and the
              foremost statesman of the age. He was confronted, however, by one who was at
              least his equal in genius and energy, and who had formed a broader conception
              of the requirements of the Church at a moment of special embarrassment. This
              was Pope Nicholas I. The struggle which ensued was keen and lengthened; but the
              Papal policy triumphed in the end.
               Several typical cases occurred at this period,
              illustrating the change of relation between the Papal See and the metropolitan
              and diocesan episcopate. The first is that of Rhotad, Bishop of Soissons. Here
              the conduct of Pope Nicholas was manifestly contrary to the existing statutes
              and long-established practice of the Church. Rhotad had been cited by his
              Metropolitan, Hincmar, to answer certain charges before a provincial Council at Senlis. He refused to appear, and appealed to the
              Pope; which, according to the canons, he had no right to do until after the
              synod of the province had pronounced its sentence. Being summoned to attend a
              second Council at Soissons, he again declined; whereupon he was arrested by the
              King’s order, deposed from office, and confined in a monastery. The Archbishop
              and his suffragan were both politically and personally obnoxious to each other;
              and there can be no doubt that the treatment experienced by Rhotad, even if
              justifiable by the letter of the law, was harsh and extreme. His appeal was
              eagerly received at Rome, and the Pope wrote to Hincmar requiring him to
              reinstate the accused prelate within thirty days, on pain of suspension; or, as
              an alternative, to send him forthwith to Rome, together with commissioners on
              his own behalf, that the case might be re-argued in the presence of the
              Pontiff. But these were unconstitutional demands. Hincmar, in his reply, which
              is worded with the utmost respect, reminds the Pope of the forms of procedure
              with regard to appeals to Rome, as prescribed by the Council of Sardica, upon
              whose decrees the practice mainly rested. He states that, in the causes majores
              affecting bishops, if the accused appeals to the Holy See, it is the duty of
              the provincial Synod, after pronouncing judgment, to report to the Pope; and
              that, if his Holiness should so determine, the cause must be heard a second
              time. The Pope, however, does not arbitrate in person—far less does he restore
              such accused prelate by virtue of his sole prerogative; but he issues a
              commission to the comprovincial bishops, or to other special legates, desiring
              them to institute a fresh trial on the spot; their decision being final.t Such,
              undoubtedly, were the regulations then in force; and hence we see that the
              Gallican Bishops still adhered to those wise provisions of antiquity, by which
              the Church had drawn a distinction between autocratical supremacy and a limited
              Patriarchal jurisdiction.
               Nevertheless, since the Pope persisted in requiring
              the personal appearance of Rhotad at Rome, he was at length permitted to
              proceed thither. Nicholas, after waiting several months, but in vain, for the
              commissaries whom he had ordered Hincmar to send to represent him, proceeded to
              restore the deposed bishop in due form, and despatched a legate to France, by whom
              the sentence was carried into effect. Rhotad continued to govern the see of
              Soissons till his death.
                   All the circumstances connected with this case of
              Rhotad deserve careful examination. It appears that the Council which deposed
              him had submitted to the Pope that the Bishop’s appeal was inadmissible
              according to the laws of the Empire. In reply to this, Nicholas gave them to
              understand that “temporal laws are not always to be applied to ecclesiastical
              causes, inasmuch as they are often at variance with the provisions of the
              canons.” Further, he instructs them that in causes of this nature the
              jurisdiction of the Pope is paramount; his sentence, the highest and
              irrefragable expression of the Church’s judicial authority. “Even if Rhotad had
              not appealed, you ought not to have deposed a bishop without consulting the
              Pope, in violation of so many decretals and precepts of our predecessors, which
              the Roman Church reverently preserves among its archives.” And whereas it was
              objected (in all probability by Hincmar) that these decretals were not to be
              found in the Code of Canons, and therefore were not obligatory, Nicholas
              declares that all injunctions of the Pope are of equal authority, equally
              binding on the faithful, whether included in the collection of canons or not. The
              obvious tendency of such a doctrine was to render the Pope independent of the
              legislation of Councils and, in fact, to supersede the legislative functions of
              the Church altogether.
                   It appears, then (1), that the practice of referring causae majores, such as the deposition of a
              bishop, to the judgment of Rome in the first instance, was unsanctioned by the
              Code of Canons (that of Dionysius Exiguus) at this time received in the
              Gallican Church. And (2), that the practice was said to be justified by certain
              decretal epistles of ancient Pontiffs, which, nevertheless, had not been
              inserted in the authorized body of Canon law. Baronius and most historians
              infer that the decretals thus alluded to are none other than the documents
              which had then recently made their appearance under the name of “Isidore
              Mercator,” and which long afterwards were discovered to be forgeries. There is
              no reason to suppose, however, that Nicholas was aware that they were forged;
              indeed, since he never quotes from the Isidorian collection, and since it was first circulated in a part of Europe far distant
              from Rome, it is probable that he had never seen it. On the other hand,
              supposing these documents to be genuine, they would, of course, have possessed
              considerable weight and authority towards determining the points in debate.
              Presumably, in the absence of proof to the contrary, they were genuine; and
              accordingly Hincmar, though he may have had his private suspicions, did not
              object to them publicly on the score of authenticity, but because, in the first
              place, these epistles were sometimes inconsistent with themselves, and next,
              because in some cases they were at variance with the ancient canon law. The
              latter was the principal gravamen. It was a question of comparative and
              relative authority. There might exist, not improbably, whether at Rome or
              elsewhere, decretal epistles of the early Popes, in addition to those which had
              been collected by Dionysius, and embodied in his Codex Canonum. Any and all such utterances of the Apostolic See, if agreeable to the
              legislation of Ecumenical councils, Hincmar declared himself ready to accept
              with the utmost veneration. But he declined to invest these dicta of individual
              Pontiffs with an authority co-equal with that of the Church in her legislative
              synods. It was this latter portentous assumption of the Papacy that formed the
              strain of the contest so gallantly sustained by Hincmar and his suffragans, and
              by several successive generations of the Gallican hierarchy. The controversy,
              in the ninth and tenth centuries, did not turn upon the genuineness of the
              particular collection of decretals edited by the Pseudo-Isidore (for it would
              seem that in those days there was not sufficient critical skill to detect the
              fraud) but upon the degree of ecclesiastical force and obligation attaching to
              any documents of that nature, when put in competition with the synodical
              statutes of the Church.
               Pope Nicholas showed a similar spirit of encroachment in
              the matter of certain priests who were deposed by a provincial council at
              Soissons in the year 853, as having been uncanonically ordained by Ebbo, a
              former Archbishop of Reims, who had himself been deprived for taking part in
              the treasonable conspiracy against Louis le Debonnaire.
              They appealed to the Apostolic See; and the Pope—although there was no just
              ground of exception to the proceedings at Soissons, which had been confirmed by
              his predecessor—ordered the Bishops to meet a second time and revise their
              sentence. Hincmar behaved on this occasion with remarkable moderation and
              forbearance. He pointed out that it was impossible to cancel the decrees of the
              former synod, which had been passed by legitimate authority, and were fully
              justified by the facts ; but at the same time he suggested that in virtue of
              the power conferred upon them by the Pope’s commission, it was open to them to
              commute a sentence which his Holiness considered too severe, and to satisfy the
              requirements of discipline by the “more excellent way” of charity. Accordingly
              the Council, while carefully maintaining the validity of the previous acts in
              condemnation of the accused, restored them to the priesthood as a measure of
              “indulgence,” and out of deference to the wishes of the Holy Father.
               Under Adrian II, who succeeded Nicholas, the Gallicans
              again contended for the lawful jurisdiction of their local Councils in the case
              of Hincmar, Bishop of Laon, a nephew of the Metropolitan of Reims. The younger
              Hincmar, a turbulent, headstrong man, finding that he was likely to be condemned
              by the sentence of his brethren, availed himself of the resource which was
              found more and more convenient by those who sought to evade justice, and
              appealed to the Pope. The appeal was disregarded by the French prelates, who,
              at the Council of Douzi in 871, pronounced Hincmar
              guilty, and deposed him from his see; the sentence of deposition being signed
              by eight Archbishops and thirteen Bishops. In their synodical epistle to Pope
              Adrian, these prelates begged his Holiness, if he should think proper to revise
              their proceedings (which they did not anticipate), to do so in the form
              prescribed by the Canons—namely, by appointing commissioners to examine the
              affair afresh in the province to which it belonged; and demanded that Hincmar
              should not be reinstated prior to such investigation. “For up to this time,”
              said they, “no decree of antiquity has ever been admitted in derogation of this
              privilege in the Gallican and Belgic churches.” Adrian, in reply, insisted on
              the prerogative of his See; commanded Hincmar to attend personally at Rome to
              pursue his appeal; and in the meantime forbade any fresh appointment to the See
              of Laon. But the resolute opposition which he encountered both from the King
              (Charles the Bald) and the episcopate induced him ere long to change his tone.
              “Let me remind you,” said the King, in a letter evidently dictated by Hincmar,
              “that the prerogative of St. Peter is in force, as St. Leo declares, when his
              decrees are founded on the laws of equity; whence it follows that if unjust
              they are of no authority.” And the bishops significantly remarked that before
              pronouncing sentence upon Hincmar, they had caused the canons of Sardica to be
              read in synod. The Pope now made an important concession; he promised that if
              Hincmar were permitted to proceed to Borne he would forbear to decide upon the
              case, and would cause it to be finally adjudicated in the province. The result
              was that the deposition remained valid, and a successor was appointed to the See
              of Laon. The unfortunate Hincmar was afterwards treated with barbarous rigour;
              he was kept a close prisoner, and was deprived of his eyesight.
               The influence of Hincmar of Reims was again clearly
              predominant in a council held at Pontyon in the year
              876; when the Gallican prelates resisted the pretensions of Ansegisus, Archbishop
              of Sens, who had been appointed by Pope John VIII primate and Vicar Apostolic
              in Gaul and Germany. The newly-crowned Emperor, Charles the Bald, who had
              lately returned from Rome, was present on this occasion, together with two
              Papal legates. The Pope’s letter was read, constituting Ansegisus his
              representative in France, empowering him to convoke councils, and to exercise
              a general superintendence over ecclesiastical affairs. The Bishops desired
              leave to read the document for themselves; but the Emperor refused to allow
              this, and demanded their unqualified submission to the mandate. Upon this they
              replied that they were ready to obey the Pope’s commands, provided always that
              they were in conformity with the ancient canons, and with those decrees which
              the Popes themselves had promulgated as enacted by the Councils. They were
              pressed by the Emperor and the legates at several successive meetings to
              accept the appointment unconditionally, but to no purpose; nothing was to be
              obtained from them beyond their former carefully guarded answer. The Bishop of
              Bordeaux, who was ambitious of being translated, through the favour of the
              Emperor, to the Archbishopric of Bourges, was the only prelate who expressed
              himself willing to acquiesce in the demand. The Emperor, much irritated,
              declared that he had authority from the Pope to carry his orders into effect in
              the matter, and proceeded to install Ansegisus in a chair of state next to the
              legates, thus establishing his primatial dignity in the face of the assembled
              episcopate. Hincmar protested against this as a violation of the Canons.
              Renewed efforts were made subsequently to induce the bishops to recognise
              Ansegisus in his new position; “but he obtained nothing more at the conclusion
              of the Council than he had done at the beginning.” There cannot be a clearer
              proof of the paramount importance attached by the Gallican Church to the
              principle of synodical legislation, and to the authority of the primitive
              system of ecclesiastical jurisdiction. Hincmar inculcates this doctrine at
              great length and with singular power in one of his epistles. “If,” he says, “in
              this humble synod of ours anything has been superadded or sanctioned, through
              the complaisance of two or three prelates, the silence of others, or the pride
              of imperial power, in contravention of the sacred canons, or of Pontifical
              decrees promulgated agreeably to those canons, or at variance with the ancient
              privileges secured to every Metropolitan by the self-same laws—if any such
              crude and inconsiderate measure has been broached, it must be understood that
              the great majority of our body did not consent to it, but most resolutely
              rejected it with heart and mouth; and the judgment of the majority carried with
              it due weight and effect—an effect which, with the help of God, will last for
              ever. For, as S. Leo writes to Maximus, Bishop of Antioch, whatever may have
              been attempted, or for a time extorted by violence by any one, in opposition to
              the statutes of Nicaea, can do no prejudice to those inviolable decrees. Far
              easier were it to dissolve the bonds of any other compact, be the contracting
              parties whom they may, than that the regulations of the aforesaid canons
              should be in any particular abrogated.”
               Thus the Pontifical rescript in favour of Ansegisus
              remained practically null and void. The Archbishops of Sens assumed from that
              time forward the title of “Primates of Gaul and Germany;” but it was a mere
              nominal distinction, unattended by jurisdiction or authority.
                   The circumstances attending the deposition of Arnulf,
              Archbishop of Reims, in 991, afford another proof of Gallican tenacity in
              adhering to the regulations of the ancient discipline. Arnulf, a natural son of
              King Lothaire, had been convicted of high treason
              against Hugh Capet, and was in consequence deposed by a Council held at the
              monastery of St. Bale, near Reims, f It was urged in his defence that the
              Council had proceeded irregularly; that the affair ought to have been notified
              in the first instance to the Pope, and that it was for him to summon a council
              to take cognizance of the charge and pronounce judgment. The Bishop of
              Orleans, who conducted the prosecution, replied that the Pope (John XV) had
              been informed, that during many months the bishops had awaited his answer, and
              that, since none had arrived, they were justified in acting on their own
              authority. “The Church of Rome,” said this prelate, (or rather Gerbert, who, no
              doubt, composed the speech which he attributes to him), “is for ever to be
              honoured in memory of St. Peter; and the decrees of the Popes are to be duly
              respected, saving always the canons of Nicaea and of other councils, which must
              remain eternally in force. For we must take good heed that neither the silence
              nor the new constitutions of the Pope are allowed to prejudice the ancient
              canons of the Church. If his silence is to prevail, it follows that all
              laws—all the decrees of antiquity—must be suspended so long as he remains mute.
              But if we are to be bound by his new constitutions, where is the use of
              enacting laws at all, since they may be rescinded at once by the will of a
              single individual? Do we, then, wish to detract from the just prerogatives of
              Rome? By no means. But, alas! how pitiable is the condition of Rome at present!
              The throne of the Leos and the Gregories, of Gelasius
              and of Innocent, is occupied by monsters of licentiousness, cruelty, and
              impiety. Let us pray for the conversion of our superiors; but, meanwhile, let
              us look for advice and direction to some other quarter than Rome, where all is
              corrupt, and justice is bartered for gold.” The bishop then proceeds to comment
              upon the famous dicta of Popes Innocent and Gelasius, to the effect that Rome
              is the judge of the universal Church, while she herself cannot be judged at
              all; that all the world is entitled to appeal to Rome, but that from her
              judgment there is no appeal. “If this be so,” says the orator, “we have at
              least a right to demand that the Roman Pontiff shall be one capable of pronouncing
              an indisputable judgment; whereas it is reported that, at present, Rome is
              given up to the most barbarous ignorance. But, even supposing that the present
              Pope were a Damasus,” he continues, “what have we done to contravene his
              decree?! We never attempted to decide this cause until no hope remained of our
              obtaining a decision from Rome. And as to holding a council without bis
              permission, the Council of Nicaea, so specially reverenced by Borne herself,
              ordains that councils shall be held in each province twice every year, without
              any mention of the authority of the Pope. In short,” he concludes, “to avoid
              further disputing, if the judgment of Rome be just, we will accept it
              willingly; but, if unjust, let us obey the Apostle, and refuse to listen even
              to an angel from heaven, if he should command anything contrary to the Gospel.
              If Rome is silent, as in the present case, let us consult the laws of the
              Church. What other course is open to us, since Rome appears to be abandoned by
              all aid, divine and human, nay, even to have abandoned herself?”
               The bishops and clergy of the province elected, as
              successor to Arnulf, the accomplished Gerbert, then President of the
              Ecclesiastical College at Reims, afterwards Pope Sylvester II.
                   Pope John XV denounced these proceedings as
              uncanonical, and ordered another council to meet and reconsider the judgment.
              The bishops assembled accordingly at Chelles, and
              resolved that the former sentence must be confirmed; declaring, moreover, that
              they regarded as null and void whatever the Pope might ordain in opposition to
              the decrees of Councils. Upon this the Pontiff held a synod at Rome, annulled
              the deposition of Arnulf and the appointment of Gerbert, and excommunicated
              all the bishops who had taken part in those acts, including Gerbert himself.
              The French prelates, instigated by Gerbert, set at nought the sentence of
              interdict; and Gerbert indulged on the occasion in grossly insubordinate and
              abusive language against the Pope. John XV, roused into energy, sent a legate
              into France, who held a council at Mouson in 996,
              when Gerbert was suspended from his archiepiscopal functions, until sentence
              should be definitively passed upon him at a future council convoked at Reims.
              Hugh Capet, who had warmly supported Gerbert, died at this juncture; and the
              loss of his patron seems to have determined the archbishop to relinquish the
              contest. He absented himself from the Council of Reims, and that body, under
              the dictation of the Pope’s legate, pronounced his deposition from the see, and
              replaced Arnulf in his former dignity, cancelling the proceedings against the
              latter prelate, on the ground that a bishop could not be condemned without the
              consent of the Pope. This exposition of the existing discipline was apparently
              correct in the case of a metropolitan. On the other hand, if an accused prelate
              agreed to accept his episcopal brethren as his judges (which Arnulf seems to
              have done),f he thereby forfeited the right of appeal to Rome, and the verdict
              of the provincial court was final.
               This whole case is much embarrassed by the political
              intrigues and rivalries which prevailed at the time. Arnulf represented the
              dethroned Carolingians; Gerbert was the partisan of the Capetian family, who
              had just succeeded to power. So long as Hugh Capet lived, the Gallican bishops
              were resolute in asserting their synodical rights, and in protesting against
              attempts to subvert them by the introduction of rules of discipline hitherto
              unheard of; and Arnulf, accordingly, was kept in prison, while Gerbert occupied
              the archiepiscopal throne. But no sooner had the crown descended to King Robert
              on the death of his father, than he entered into a secret compromise with the
              Pope, by which he agreed to sacrifice Gerbert, provided a dispensation were
              granted him for his marriage with Queen Bertha, which was objected to at Rome
              on the score of affinity. In consequence of this understanding, the royal
              influence was brought to bear upon the Council of Reims, and this, in
              conjunction with the powerful pressure exercised by the legate, produced the
              change of sentiment in that assembly, by which Gerbert was displaced and Arnulf
              re-established. The transitional character of the epoch, and the feebleness of
              the new dynasty, contributed greatly to the success of the Papal tactics on
              this and other like occasions. The first Capetian monarchs were but feudal
              chieftains, surrounded by a host of nominal vassals very little, if at all,
              inferior to themselves in possessions and authority. To a prince thus situated
              it was an object of no common importance to secure the support of the reigning
              Pontiff; and not unfrequently it was found convenient to purchase it by
              conniving at acts which were grievously prejudicial to the rights and welfare
              of the National Church.
                   The new principle propounded by Nicholas I and his
              successors, on the strength of the pseudo-Decretals, that no Council was
              legitimate unless sanctioned by the Holy See, rendered it necessary to extend
              largely the system of legations ; and this became one of the most marked features
              of the Papal policy during the middle ages. Prom the eleventh century the legates
                a latere were the ordinary means of communication
              between Rome and the provinces of the West; their powers were lavishly
              augmented, and all ecclesiastical affairs of any importance passed through
              their hands. They were authorized to convoke Councils throughout the provinces
              within their legations; and in these Councils they presided, taking precedence
              of the Metropolitan and all other prelates. They could suspend or depose any
              bishop who was bold enough to question their mandates; they might reserve to
              the judgment of the Holy See any point upon which they could not persuade the
              provincial synod to endorse their views. In this way the canonical
              jurisdiction of the Episcopate was virtually superseded. There were instances,
              doubtless, in which the legatine functions were discharged to the manifest
              advantage of the Church; such as that of Hildebrand (afterwards Gregory VII),
              who, being sent to France in that capacity by Pope Victor II, fulfilled the
              mission with such exemplary zeal as to effect a complete revival, both
              doctrinal and disciplinary, among the clergy of all ranks. Nor is it to be
              denied that much was done by .this means towards effecting general unity of
              ecclesiastical action—an object of essential moment, if the Church was to hold
              her own in the great impending struggle against feudal despotism.
              Nevertheless, the practice of governing by legates was not established without
              considerable opposition in France. Sometimes this arose from the zeal
              displayed by the Papal representatives in their efforts of reform, and the
              severe penalties which they inflicted upon clerical offenders; as in the case
              of Hugues, Bishop of Die, legate of Gregory VII, who deposed the three
              Metropolitans of Reims, Lyons, and Sens, for simony, concubinage, and other
              delinquencies. But more frequently they provoked resistance by overstraining
              their authority, and innovating upon the usages of antiquity. Ivo of Chartres
              was more than once brought into collision with the legate Hugues, Archbishop of
              Lyons, who held the office under several Pontiffs in succession. Hugues, on one
              occasion, had summoned the Gallican prelates to meet in a general synod,
              although Pope Urban II himself had already presided at two Councils in France
              within the same year. Thereupon Ivo was consulted by the king (Philip I) as to
              the lawfulness of such a proceeding. He replied without hesitation that it was
              contrary to Apostolic institution, and to the received custom of the Church;
              and that it was the king’s duty, after taking counsel with the bishops of the
              realm, to repel such acts of injustice and oppression. Again, the same legate
              refused to confirm the appointment of a newly elected Archbishop of Sens,
              except on the condition that he should previously acknowledge upon oath the
              primacy of the See of Lyons, which was a contested point between the two
              Metropolitans. The archbishop-elect declining to comply, Hugues forbade the
              bishops of the province to proceed to his consecration. This piece of
              presumption drew from Ivo of Chartres a letter full of dignified rebuke. He
              told the legate that he and his colleagues entertained profound respect for the
              authority which he represented, and were ready to execute at all hazards the
              orders of the Holy See regarding the preservation of the Faith and the
              correction of morals; but he bade him beware of imposing obligations as to
              matters indifferent, to the prejudice of the canons of the Church and the
              authorized customs of the Fathers. He reminded him of the celebrated maxim of
              Pope Zosimus, that it is not in the power even of the See of Rome to ordain
              anything contrary to the constitutions of the Fathers, or to make any
              alteration in them. The canons, he observed, contain precise directions as to
              the mode of consecrating a Metropolitan; he was surprised, therefore, at the
              attempt to enforce on the new prelate an oath of subjection to the Archbishop
              of Lyons as primate, when it was notorious that no such declaration had ever yet
              been required, either in the province of Sens or elsewhere. In conclusion, he
              exhorted Hugues to turn his attention to the really important objects connected
              with his mission; and warned him of the danger and scandal of contending about
              trifles, while the weightier matters of the law are systematically neglected.
               The same high-spirited prelate addressed a stern
              remonstrance to Pope Paschal II, who had annulled certain acts of a Gallican
              Council upon a representation made by the legate. “Of what use will it be”, he
              asks, “to celebrate Councils for the future, since their judgments, though
              supported by the gravest weight of authority, are liable to be reversed at any
              moment on the complaint of a single individual? Wherefore we entreat your
              Holiness to consider carefully the relative advantages and disadvantages
              attending such interference, and to embrace a wiser policy; so that synodical
              sentences may not be rescinded except in extreme cases; and that the apostolic
              constitutions may be more scrupulously observed.”
                   The excessive amount of power enjoyed by the legates
              gradually rendered them odious in France, especially to the bishops, who found
              themselves almost dependent on the pleasure of these intrusive functionaries
              for their continuance in office. Their luxurious habits of living, their
              covetousness, their arrogant demeanour, their corrupt administration of
              justice, added to the general aversion they inspired; and by the time of St.
              Bernard of Clairvaux, the legatine office had become the source of some of the
              most crying evils that infested the Church. The French monarchy, in proportion
              as it acquired strength and stability under the kings of the “third race,”
              applied itself vigilantly to the task of checking these abuses; an object which
              was successfully attained before the close of the fifteenth century. It
              appears that, from the first, the legates could not exercise their office
              without the express consent of the crown. The Pope ascertained beforehand that
              the mission of the proposed legate would be acceptable to the sovereign; and
              the latter, in his turn, made request to the Pope whenever be desired the
              presence of a special envoy from Rome. No sooner had the constitution acquired
              its modern shape, than the Courts of Parliament were charged with the duty of
              examining the Papal bulls appointing legates; and of making such regulations as
              to the discharge of their functions as might be judged needful to the security
              of the realm. Clauses were inserted by their authority in the act of verification
              of the royal letters patent, which stipulated that the office of the legate
              must be executed in conformity with the canons, the prerogatives and ordinances
              of the king, the laws of the realm, the liberties of the Gallican Church, and
              the privileges of the Universities. The legate was warned that if any
              infraction of these rules should occur, the illegal act would be treated as
              null and void, and that upon complaint being made to the Parliament, it would
              be cancelled as “abusif.” In course of time the
              following were also laid down as constitutional maxims in France: That the
              Pope’s legate has no jurisdiction as an ecclesiastical ordinary; that he may
              not supersede, nor in any way disturb, the lawful jurisdiction of metropolitan
              and diocesan prelates; that he cannot take cognizance, in first instance, of
              any cause affecting the clergy; that he cannot cite before him any of the
              king’s subjects, nor assume any sort of judicial or magisterial authority over
              them. In consequence of these jealous precautions, the Pontifical legates found
              themselves ere long comparatively powerless. Subsequently to the reign of
              Philip the Fair, or at all events from the middle of the fourteenth century,
              Gallican synods were but rarely held under their presidency; while on the other
              hand Provincial Councils, canonically celebrated by the Metropolitans and their
              suffragans, were frequent during the same period.
               During the troubles of the “great Schism,” the Church
              of France distinguished itself by a series of memorable Councils, the results
              of which decided the national policy, and, indeed, the general course of
              ecclesiastical affairs in Europe, in those disordered times. It must be
              remarked, however, that the composition of these celebrated assemblies was
              somewhat irregular; they were not, strictly speaking, ecclesiastical synods,
              but rather gatherings of all the personages most eminent in rank and authority,
              both in Church and State. They were convened by the Crown. The right of
              suffrage upon the purely religious questions in debate was assigned to the
              prelates and clergy; the decisions at which they arrived were reported to the
              king, and, after having received the sanction of the royal council, were
              carried into effect by the joint action of the civil and spiritual authorities.
              The same mode of procedure was followed at the great national assembly of
              Bourges in 1438, which enacted the second “Pragmatic Sanction.”
                   The organic change which practically abolished the
              Councils of the Church in France dates from the era of the Reformation. It
              appears to have originated in the pecuniary necessities and tyrannical
              exactions of the Crown during the “Wars of Religion.” At the Colloquy of Poissy (December, 1561), the clergy entered into an
              engagement with the Government to pay the interest of one of the principal
              public securities—the “Rentes de l’Hôtel de Ville,”
              for the space of six years ensuing. This tax, together with an immense addition
              for other purposes, having been duly acquitted, the same contribution was
              imposed for a further period of ten years; and in the sequel it became a
              permanent assessment on the property of the Church, under the name of the “decime ordinaire.” It was resisted, however, with
              considerable spirit, in 1579; when deputies were despatched from every province
              and diocese to petition Henry III to call a general assembly of the
              ecclesiastical order for the settlement of the affair. With much difficulty the
              king was induced to consent ; and the clergy were summoned to meet at Paris,
              with an express proviso that not more than three representatives were to be
              elected for each province. They assembled at Melun, and forthwith proceeded to
              discuss two questions in which their order was vitally interested at that
              day—the promulgation of the Council of Trent and the revival of free episcopal
              election. Their object, doubtless, was to extort concessions from the
              Government upon these points, in exchange for any further sacrifice of
              temporalities which it might be in contemplation to demand from them. They
              urged their wishes on the king by repeated deputations, and in most importunate
              terms; but altogether without satisfaction. Thus provoked, the Assembly
              declared in the name of the clergy that they would no longer be answerable for
              the annuities of the Hotel de Ville. Symptoms of popular irritation followed;
              the Parliament interfered, and the clergy were compelled to yield. They agreed
              to guarantee the dividends in question for an additional period of ten years;
              and, moreover, to pay the king an annual subsidy of 1,300,000 livres for six
              years. From this date the “General Assembly of the Clergy of France” was held
              regularly once in ten years; and besides the decennial sessions, called “Assemblies
              du Contrat,” an intermediate meeting, the “Assemblée
              des Comptes,” took place every five years, for the
              purpose of auditing the accounts of the receiver-general. The former consisted
              of four representatives for each ecclesiastical province, two from the
              episcopal and two from the priestly order; making in all sixty-four members.
              The deputies of the second order were ecclesiastics beneficed within the
              province which elected them. They had the privilege of being reputed resident
              on their cures while attending the assembly, and during the session were exempt
              from arrest and civil process. The assembly nominated one or more of the
              prelates, being deputies, to act as presidents.
               The Assembly of the clergy could not meet but by the
              king’s command. Commissioners on behalf of the crown were appointed to open its
              sitting, and were the bearers of a royal missive demanding a renewal of the “contrat,” and also the “don gratuit,”
              a heavy impost disguised under that ironical name. The commissioners also
              communicated to the assembly the affairs which the king desired to bring under
              its notice; these were chiefly matters of external Church policy, which, having
              been discussed in the Council of State, were referred to the clergy for the
              benefit of their advice. All questions of theology, however, or of a purely
              spiritual character, were left to the discretion of the ecclesiastics
              themselves.
               The question was mooted on several occasions, whether
              deputies of the second order possessed a judicial voice in discussions upon
              doctrine, or whether their functions were consultative only,—the decision
              resting solely with the bishops. This was at length determined by the Assembly
              of the year 1700, which ruled that pastors of the second order had no right, in
              virtue of their ecclesiastical status, to act as judges of doctrine; but that
              if their constituents distinctly stated, in the official return, that they
              empowered them to take part in such deliberations, in that case the Assembly
              would admit the claim. The power, however, must be conferred in positive terms.
                   It is scarcely necessary to point out that these modern
              convocations of the clergy were by no means equivalent to synods of the
              ancient normal typE. In the first place, the bishops were not present as a
              body, in virtue of their office as rulers of the Church, but only by a
              deputation of two of their number for each province; and the representation of the
              priesthood was still more glaringly defective—two deputies only being returned by
              the parochial clergy of an entire province, and these, almost invariably,
              members of the Cathedral Chapters. It is true that the principle of
              representation was not unfairly carried out; since a preliminary meeting was
              held, called the “assemblée diocésaine,”
              at which the beneficed clergy of each diocese nominated two of their body to
              act in the “assemblée provincial” and by the votes of
              the latter the deputies were elected who were to serve in the “assemblée générale” at Paris. The
              scantiness of numbers was remedied to some extent by the practice of applying
              to bishops, and other persons of eminent station and merit, not being members
              of the Assembly, for their advice in cases of difficulty. This course was
              commonly taken when the Assembly was about to pass censure on books containing
              heterodox doctrine.
               Again, the subject-matter treated of in these
              Assemblies was for the most part of a temporal nature; their principal business
              consisted in voting supplies for the service of the Crown, and apportioning the
              amount to be raised among the different dioceses. It was for this reason that
              the Government permitted them to be held with such unfailing regularity ;
              while on the other hand, the celebration of provincial synods,—recommended as
              it was by the immemorial prescription of the Church,—was, from the sixteenth
              century downwards, systematically discouraged, if not prohibited, by the civil
              authority.
                   And lastly, although these Assemblies were
              plenipotentiary, and could not be appealed from, in all affairs connected with
              the taxation of the clerical body, their doctrinal decisions carried with them
              no conciliar prestige, and were not regarded as binding on the conscience of
              the faithful. They were not empowered to enact canons; and their manifestos,
              though received with the respect inseparable from the position of their
              authors, by no means commanded the invariable and universal acquiescence of the
              Church.
                   In the interval between the quinquennial sessions of
              the Assembly, the affairs of the clergy were managed by two officers called
              “agens-généraux du clergé,” whose functions were of considerable importance.
              They were named by the ecclesiastical provinces in rotation, and held office
              for five years. Their duty was to watch over the interests of the Church
              generally, and in case of any infraction of its liberties, or other proceeding
              tending to its detriment, they were to forward an immediate complaint to the
              Crown; for which purpose they were entitled to claim personal access to the
              Council-board of the sovereign. In any sudden emergency requiring prompt
              action, the agens-généraux were authorized to apply to the bishops who might be
              in Paris or at the Court, who thereupon held an extraordinary meeting to
              determine the course to be taken under the circumstances. These private
              episcopal conferences were often of essential service to the Church. They were
              not recognized by the State, inasmuch as the prelates assembled on these
              occasions were not formally deputed to represent their brethren. Nevertheless
              the influence of the government of the day was not unfrequently brought to bear
              upon them for the attainment of some political object;—a pressure which could
              hardly be resisted. This was instanced very notably at more than one critical
              period of the Jansenist controversy.
                   It must not be forgotten, that in addition to these
              various forms of synodical and quasi-synodical action, the Church of France
              anciently possessed a direct means of making its voice heard in the national
              councils. The clergy constituted one of the Estates of the realm, and ranked
              first in order of precedence. As often as the States-General were convoked, the
              clergy of each bailliage met, at the summons of the Governor of the province,
              and proceeded to elect deputies to represent them in the supreme legislature.
              They had the right, in common with the other two orders, of presenting to the
              throne a “cahier de doleances,” or memorial setting
              forth their views upon any or all branches of the public administration, and
              urging their demands of reformation or redress. Moreover, a certain number of
              clerical councillors (conseillers-clercs) were
              attached to nearly all the courts of Parliament throughout the kingdom; whose
              authority in civil causes was equal to that of the lay magistrates. In the
              reign of Philip VI. there were fifty conseillers-clercs in the Parliament of Paris alone.
               V.
                   The supremacy of the Church in her judicial capacity—and
              indeed the entire system of ecclesiastical polity elaborated by Gregory VII,
              and other Pontiffs of like calibre—was accepted in France for many ages with
              the same submission as in other parts of Christendom; and the clergy shared
              largely in the general ascendency which thus accrued to their order. The essential
              principles of that system were proclaimed by none with more clearness and
              ability than by the great Gallican theologians of the twelfth century;—such as
              Geoffrey of Vendome, Hugh of St. Victor, Ivo of Chartres, Hildebert of Le Mans, and Bernard of Clairvaux. These writers teach that the temporal
              power, no less than the spiritual, is ordained by God; they maintain the
              distinction, and the mutual independence, of the two elements; but they concur
              in extolling the spiritualty as immeasurably superior to the temporalty; and
              affirm that, in consequence, the Church must exercise a certain dominant
              influence over the whole economy of human government. Some few theorists of
              extreme views (for instance, John of Salisbury, Bishop of Chartres) went so far
              as to attribute to the Church, or rather to the Pope, a direct authority, of
              Divine right, over the administration of all temporal affairs. But the more common
              opinion reduced it to an indirect influence, arising from the unquestionable
              prerogative of the Church as the instructor and guide of conscience. All
              baptized Christians, it was argued, are subject to the control of the Church in
              matters of faith and religious duty. The Gospel is not one thing for the
              multitude and another perfectly different thing for monarchs and nobles. The
              prince, in common with his meanest vassal, is committed to the pastoral
              oversight of those whom Christ commissioned to feed His flock; and it belongs,
              therefore, to them to inform and direct his conscience as to the right
              administration of his trust. As a Catholic, he is the son of the Church, not
              its governor; in things pertaining to religion, it is his place to be a
              learner, not a teacher. Such was the simple basis of a system which, in its
              organized application to the details of government and the diversified
              realities of life, ruled the world for upwards of five centuries.
               Though founded on a great and indisputable truth, it
              became dangerous at length, by reason of the false deductions which were drawn
              from it. For it was inferred that, in case of serious delinquency in faith or
              morals, a sovereign was amenable to corrective discipline; and that, as a last
              resource, he might be excommunicated. Now, according to the prevailing belief
              of those days, the ban of excommunication carried with it penal consequences,
              not only of a spiritual, but of a temporal and civil nature. A monarch under
              such an infliction, being cut off from the unity of the Christian body, was
              deemed no longer fit to bear rule over Christians. From this latter fact, then,
              an extreme conclusion was arrived at, radically subversive of all monarchical
              authority ; namely, that if the offender remained stubbornly impenitent, it was
              competent to the Pope to absolve his subjects from their oath of allegiance,
              and practically to depose him from the throne.
                   Nor were these mere theoretical maxims, confined to
              dry treatises of theology, to the conventual cloister, or the lecture rooms of
              Universities. The world beheld them, in many memorable instances, logically
              reduced to practice. Several Carolingian princes—Louis le Debonnaire, Lothaire, Charles the Bald—were dethroned by the
              authority of Gallican synods; and the legality of the proceeding was questioned
              by no man; nay, was acknowledged by the deposed monarchs themselves. King
              Robert, again, was excommunicated by Pope Gregory V. Philip I by Gregory VII;
              Philip Augustus by Innocent III, who, moreover, kept the whole of France under
              an interdict for eight months. Even the heirs of the Caesars—Henry IV, Henry V,
              Frederick II—had cause to rue the day when they presumed to measure themselves
              against the mysterious theocracy represented by the Vicar of Christ.
               Geoffrey, Abbot of Vendome and Cardinal, a.d. 1095, is
              said to have been the first to point out the mystical significance of the “two
              swords” in the Gospel of St. Luke. This fanciful interpretation soon became
              popular with ecclesiastical writers; and an argument was derived from it which
              was seriously regarded as establishing the supremacy of the Pope over both
              worlds, spiritual and temporal. Such is the use made of the allegory by St.
              Bernard, in a well-known passage of his treatise “De Consideratione,”
              addressed to Pope Eugenius III. “If anyone should deny that the material sword
              belongs to you, I think he cannot have paid attention to the words of Christ,
              who commanded Peter to put up his sword into the sheath. This sword, then, is
              assuredly yours, to be drawn at your demand, although by other hands than
              yours. If it were not at your disposal, when the Apostles said, Lord, behold
              here are two swords, our Lord, instead of answering, It is enough, would have
              said, It is too much. The two swords, then, belong to the Church—the spiritual
              and the material. It is for the Church herself to draw the spiritual sword, by
              the hands of the sovereign Pontiff; the material sword is to be drawn in
              defence of the Church, by the hands of the soldier, at the solicitation of the
              Pope and by order of the prince.” Again, in a letter to the Cardinals who had
              just elected Pope Eugenius, Bernard exclaims, “God forgive you! what have you
              done ? Was there no man to be found of greater wisdom and experience, who would
              have been better qualified for so high an office? In truth it seems ridiculous
              to choose a poor creature covered with rags (Eugenius was a Cistertian monk) to rule over princes, to give laws to bishops, to dispose of kingdoms and
              empires. Was this a man to gird on the sword and execute vengeance on the
              people—to bind their kings in chains and their nobles with links of iron?”
               A remarkable statement to the same effect occurs in
              the writings of Hugh, Abbot of St. Victor at Paris, another mediaeval doctor of
              high repute. Speaking of the two principles of government, “the one,” he says,
              “is called the temporal, the other the spiritual; both contain different orders
              and degrees of power; but on each side they are dependent on a single head,
              from which they derive as from their source and root of unity. The temporal
              power has for its head the prince; the head of the spiritual is the sovereign
              Pontiff. To the royal authority belong all things which are earthly and
              connected with the natural life; all that is spiritual, all that appertains to
              the spiritual life, is placed under the government of the supreme Pontiff. But
              by how much the spiritual life is nobler than the earthly, and the soul than
              the body, in that proportion the spiritual power exceeds in honour and dignity
              that which is earthly or secular. For to the spiritual power it belongs both to
              establish the earthly, that it may exist, and to judge it, if it should act
              amiss. But the spiritual power itself is instituted by God alone, and if it
              should err, it can be judged by none but Him; as it is written, The spiritual
              man judgeth all things, but he himself is judged of
              no man.” He then shows from the Old Testament history that the priestly office
              was first instituted by God, and the royal authority afterwards organized
              through its ministry. “Hence in the Christian Church the bishops still
              consecrate kings, both sanctifying their power by benediction, and forming it
              by institution. If then, according to the Apostle, he who blesseth is greater than him. who is blessed, it follows manifestly that the temporal
              power is inferior to the spiritual, from which it receives benediction.”
               It was easy thus to define in words the comparative
              nature and functions of ecclesiastical and political authority; but, in
              practical operation, the system was found to involve insuperable difficulties.
              The spiritual and the temporal are ideas distinct in theory, but as a matter
              of experience neither element confines itself strictly to its proper sphere.
              Who will undertake to fix the precise point where the purely spiritual ends
              and the purely temporal begins? It is probably impossible, under any
              circumstances, that the balance should be maintained at an exact equipoise. It
              has been in all ages a history of alternate action and reaction—of aggression
              and repulse. Nay, even the theory of the Hildebramline school is inconsistent with itself; for, if once it be admitted that the
              Church, represented by the Pope, possesses a directive power over the civil
              ruler, and may take cognizance of his acts judicially in case of alleged error,
              the independence of the two principles, however affirmed in words, is in fact
              overthrown. Such a prerogative is capable of indefinite extension. It may be so
              exercised as to be a means of perpetual interference with the ordinary
              administration of civil affairs; for what human government is exempt from
              error? If every instance. of mistaken judgment, every act of unwise or unjust
              policy, on the part of a civil ruler, were liable to be arraigned and corrected
              by the magisterium of the Church, an utter subversion must follow of the
              Divinely-ordained scheme of government. The temporal power would be neutralized
              and absorbed by the spiritual.
               A tendency towards anomalies of this kind was early manifested
              in the dealings of the Papacy with the great monarchies of Europe. For
              instance, Innocent III, in the year 1199, attempted to impose his arbitration
              on the kings of France and England, under the plea that peace was necessary in
              order that they might turn their combined arms against the infidel. On this
              occasion the Pontiff explained at length, in a letter to the Gallican bishops,
              that he did not pretend to adjudicate disputed questions about feudal rights,
              but claimed to decide “concerning sin,—the censure of which belongs, beyond all
              doubt, to us, and we are bound to exercise it in respect of all persons
              whatsoever.” He founds this claim upon the precept of our Lord, “If thy brother
              trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault,” &c... “And if he neglect
              to hear them, tell it unto the Church; but if be neglect to hear the Church,
              let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican.”  “Let not the king, then,” continues Innocent,
              “account it injurious to his dignity to submit himself to the judgment of the
              Apostolic See in this matter, after the example of Valentinian, Theodosius, and
              other illustrious princes. For we do not rely on any human constitution, but
              on the Divine law; our authority is not from man, but from God. No man of sane
              mind is ignorant that it appertains to our office to correct any and every
              Christian in respect of mortal sin; and if he should despise our correction, to
              enforce it by means of ecclesiastical penalties.” The right thus insisted on to
              pronounce and execute judgment in all cases “in respect of sin,” gave an
              incalculable advantage to the ecclesiastical over the temporal authority. Any
              intrusion of the lay element into the spiritual domain was an act of
              sacrilege—of impious rebellion against the Divine economy; whereas, on the
              other hand, the Pope possessed the means of exercising, though indirectly, unlimited
              jurisdiction in things temporal; he might interpose in the concerns of civil
              government as often as he judged it necessary either for the personal welfare
              of the sovereign or for the general interests of the Church. This extraordinary
              system— which in the great war of Investitures had triumphed over the combined
              antagonism of the proudest dynasties of Europe—was destined to receive its
              death-blow in France. The crisis arrived in the opening years of the fourteenth
              century. The events which then occurred were of extreme gravity, not only as
              regards the history of the relations between Church and State in France, but as
              practically decisive of the entire question between secular and Pontifical
              authority throughout the world.
               Philip the Fair and Pope Boniface VIII, the principal
              combatants on this memorable occasion, were well matched, both in point of
              ability and resolution; each alike confident of the justice of his cause; the
              one no less determined to establish the independence of his throne and temporal
              sovereignty than the other to uphold what he considered the indefeasible
              liberties of the Church, and the supremacy of its “magisterium” over all orders
              and ranks of Christians.
                   The Pope, however, laboured under one disadvantage,
              and it was fatal. The principles for which he strove were indeed the very same
              that his predecessors, Gregory VII, Alexander III, Innocent III, Innocent IV,
              Gregory IX, had illustrated with such marvellous success. But the times were
              not the same; the tide of public feeling had turned, and was setting powerfully
              in an opposite direction; and whereas the decrees of former Pontiffs had been
              accepted with unreasoning submission, Boniface was destined to be met by
              reckless criticism, insolent rebuke, and even by vindictive violence. Moreover
              his personal character was unhappily such as to aggravate the difficulties of
              his situation. Arrogant, irritable, peremptory, headstrong, his every movement
              fanned the flame of strife, and infused into it a bitterness which forbade the
              hope of accommodation. Such has been the case repeatedly in the most eventful
              conjunctures of the world’s history. Inability to read the signs of the times,
              want of tact, want of calm judgment, of moderation, of perception of the proper
              moment, manner, and limits of concession,—these are faults which have proved
              the ruin of empires quite as often as misdeeds of deeper dye; and it was
              through such faults that the vast fabric of Roman supremacy in things temporal
              was shaken to its centre by the despotic monarchy of France.
                   With regard to the original ground of quarrel, Philip
              was clearly in the wrong; for his favourite tax, the “maltote,”
              having never been sanctioned by the Pope, could not be imposed upon the clergy
              according to the existing provisions of the law. In condemning this irregular
              proceeding, then (by the bull “Clericis laicos”), Boniface did no more than enunciate a principle
              which was confessedly in force, although it had been repeatedly violated in
              practice. But the tone and language which he employed in doing this were so
              extravagant, that the King could hardly recede without compromising his
              dignity. He persisted, therefore, in asserting his right, as a matter of
              principle, to tax the clergy; but he argued a priori, as if there had been no
              legislative enactments in existence on the subject. “The kings of France,” he
              said, “have always possessed the power of taking necessary measures for the
              defence and preservation of the realm against its enemies. The Church does not
              consist of the clergy only, but of the laity also. Christ purchased freedom
              from sin and from the yoke of the ancient law for clergy and laity alike; and
              therefore the clergy have no right to appropriate to themselves exclusively
              that liberty which belongs to the whole Christian body. Special privileges have
              indeed been granted to the ministers of the Church by the Popes, at the
              instance or with the consent of secular princes; but such privileges cannot deprive
              the sovereign of what is indispensably required for the good government and
              integrity of his dominions. The clergy are subjects of the crown, members of
              the body politic, like other men; and are in consequence bound to contribute
              towards its preservation. It is contrary to the law of nature to excuse them
              from this obligation, while they are permitted to waste the property of the
              Church in luxuries of dress and equipage, in banquets and other worldly
              vanities.” These were truths undeniable in themselves, but inconclusive in the
              case in hand; for it was a notorious fact that the clergy were not, with
              respect to liability to State taxation, on the same footing with other
              classes; that they were exempted from it by long continued usage, resting on
              the canons of Councils, which had been recognised and confirmed by the State
              itself. The gist of Philip’s argument was, that they ought not to enjoy such
              exemption; in other words, that the legislation of past ages was mistaken, and
              required amendment. His object was to make a radical change in the system as it
              stood; to do away with all distinction between clergy and laity, so far as
              concerned the duty of replenishing the public exchequer. This might be a
              politic enterprise in the interest of royalty; but it was one which the Pope,
              from his point of view, might not unfairly resist.
               Moved, however, by the representations of the
              Archbishop of Reims and his clergy, who anxiously deprecated a collision
              between the Church and the civil power, Boniface, in a second bull, put forth a
              conciliatory explanation of the first. His prohibition, he said, was meant to
              apply to compulsory imposts, not to voluntary contributions. It did not
              include, again, the customary payments due from bishops and other ecclesiastics
              in respect of their temporal fiefs held under the Crown. Nor did it touch the
              case of a great and sudden exigency, when all the resources of the kingdom were
              required to repel the invasion of a foreign foe. These concessions, though somewhat
              tardy, were graciously received by Philip; he expressed himself satisfied, and
              the misunderstanding was apparently at an end.
                   But a fresh breach was occasioned not long afterwards
              by the affair of Bernard de Saisset, Bisbop of Pamiers; and here the
              consequences were more serious. Boniface had erected Pamiers,
              heretofore a convent of Canons Regular, into an Episcopal See; and had
              nominated Bernard de Saisset the first bishop, by his
              own sole authority, without consulting with the Metropolitan of the province,
              or the king. This proceeding Philip allowed to pass in silence. The new
              prelate, an ambitious, violent man, assumed the temporal lordship of Pamiers, to the prejudice of the Comte de Foix, to whom it
              had been granted by the Crown. Finding the Count too strong for him, he sought
              assistance from the Pope; and Boniface appealed to Philip to support the refractory
              bishop against his lawful superior. It is not surprising that the monarch
              declined a request so totally opposed to all the principles of feudalism. Upon
              this Boniface proceeded, in a spirit of singular bad taste and gratuitous
              insolence, to appoint Saisset, whom the king could
              not but regard as a rebellious vassal, his legate or nuncio at the court of
              France. In this quality it appears that Saisset was
              guilty of offensive and even treasonable language against Philip; who, losing
              patience, caused the bishop to be suddenly arrested, and committed to the
              custody of his Metropolitan, the Archbishop of Narbonne. A special envoy,
              Pierre Flotte, was then despatched to Rome, to demand
              that the prisoner might be forthwith degraded from the episcopal office and
              stripped of every privilege belonging to the clerical order, so that the king
              might cause justice to be done upon him by the secular arm, as an incorrigible
              offender.
               Philip damaged his cause by these precipitate acts. To
              arrest the Pope’s nuncio was a violation of the law of nations, to say nothing
              of the acknowledged privileges of the clergy; and what could be more palpably
              unjust than to summon the Pope to degrade his own representative, upon a mere
              vague charge unsubstantiated by proof ? Boniface was fully justified in
              resisting the demand; and had his resistance been conducted with moderation,
              there is reason to believe that it would have terminated in his favour. As it
              was, he allowed himself to be hurried by resentment into a series of measures
              which, after exposing him to unparalleled indignities, at length brought his
              life to a pitiable close.
                   On one and the same day, December 5, 1301, the angry Pontiff
              despatched five separate bulls or rescripts to France. The first contained a
              request or command to Philip to set the Bishop of Pamiers immediately at liberty, to restore to him all his possessions which had been
              seized on his arrest, and to permit him to proceed freely to the Pope’s
              presence at Borne. This document was not intemperately worded, though it
              intimated that the king had incurred the sentence of excommunication by laying
              violent hands upon a bishop. But it was accompanied by others couched in a more
              trenchant style. By the “Salvator mundi,” Boniface
              revoked all the privileges which he had granted to Philip, alleging that they
              had been scandalously abused. The “Ausculta, fili,” commenced with an unqualified assertion of the
              subordination of the temporal authority to the spiritual. “God has set me,
              though unworthy, above kings and kingdoms, having imposed upon me the yoke of
              Apostolic servitude, to root out and to pull down, to destroy and to throw
              down, to build and to plant, in His name. Wherefore let no man persuade you
              that you have no superior, or that you are not subject to the supreme head of
              the ecclesiastical hierarchy. He who thinks so is a madman, and, if he persists
              in his error, is convicted as an infidel.” The Pope then enters on an elaborate
              detail of his .complaints against Philip. “Although it is certain that the
              nomination to all benefices belongs to the Pope, and that you can have no right
              to any such patronage without the consent of the Holy See, you oppose our
              collations, and claim to act as judge in your own cause. You drag before your
              tribunals the bishops and other clergy of your kingdom, both regular and
              secular, even for matters concerning property which they do not hold from you
              in fief. You exact from them tenths and other imposts, although lay men have no
              authority whatever over the clergy. You hinder the bishops from employing the
              spiritual sword against offenders, and from exercising their jurisdiction over
              conventual houses. You observe no moderation in disposing of the revenues of
              vacant episcopal sees, which you call, by an abuse, the ‘ droit de regale.’ You
              squander these revenues, and then turn into plunder what was intended as a
              means of preserving them intact.” He announces, in conclusion, that, out of
              pastoral solicitude for his soul’s health, and for the reputation of a kingdom
              which is dear to him, he has summoned the archbishops and bishops, the abbots,
              and superior clergy of France, to appear before him at Rome, that he may there
              deliberate upon the affairs of his realm with persons devoted to its interests,
              and whom he (the king) could have no reason to suspect.
               The bull convoking the French prelates and clergy to
              assemble in Council at Rome was expedited on the same day.
                   The “ Ausculta, fili,” convinced Philip that the real drift of the Pope’s
              policy was nothing less than to destroy the substantive reality of monarchical
              power; and that he must either prepare to fight the battle to the last
              extremity, or consent to hold his crown as a dependency of the Holy See. He
              took his measures with characteristic vigour. He caused the Nuncio, Jacques des Normands, who had brought the obnoxious bulls to
              France, to be conducted under a guard to the frontier, in company with the
              Bishop of Pamiers, whom he banished for ever from the
              realm. The “ Ausculta, fili”
              (or, as some historians think, an abridgment of it, expressed in still more
              insulting terms) was publicly burnt at Paris. And lastly, on the 10th of April,
              1302, the king held a grand Parliament, or meeting of the three estates of the
              kingdom, in the cathedral of Notre Dame, and frankly asked the advice of his
              people in the critical state of his relations with the Holy See. Was it their
              opinion that the sovereign was subject to the Bishop of Rome, not only in
              spirituals, but as to the conduct of his temporal government? Was the kingdom
              of France an independent monarchy, or was it held in feudal vassalage from the
              Pope? To this question the nobles and the deputies of the commons responded,
              with unanimous enthusiasm, that the crown was held of God alone, and that they
              were ready to sacrifice both property and life rather than submit to the outrageous
              usurpations of Pope Boniface, even if the king himself were not disposed to
              withstand them. The clergy, however, hesitated. They were not incapable, as
              they had often shown, of resisting the unconstitutional claims and exactions of
              the Popes ; but on the other hand, they entertained no small apprehension of
              the despotic character of Philip, and shrunk from the prospect of a struggle
              which might possibly end in a violent severance of the National Church from the
              centre of unity. At first they endeavoured to evade a direct reply; urging that
              the Pope’s language had been misunderstood, and that he by no means intended to
              assume any supremacy in things temporal over the Crown and Government in
              France. This explanation, however, was not accepted; and such was the
              prevailing exasperation against Boniface, that the representatives of the
              clergy were constrained at length to give in their adhesion to the votes of the
              other two orders. They entreated the king to allow them to proceed to Rome
              according to the Pope’s citation; but this was positively refused. They then
              addressed a pathetic letter to the Pope, to acquaint him of the imminent danger
              of a schism between France and Rome, and of a rupture between the clerical
              order and the people. “The laity shun us,” they said, “and exclude us from
              their society, as if we sought to betray them. They despise the censures of the
              Church, by whomsoever pronounced, and use every precaution to make them
              ineffectual. In this extremity we have no resource but to appeal to your
              prudence; and we implore you, with tears in our eyes, to preserve the ancient
              union of the Church with the State, and to consult our safety by revoking the
              orders you have sent us to repair to your presence.” Boniface, in reply,
              rebuked them for their pusillanimity in yielding to the dictation of a
              tyrannical prince and his council, and threatened them with punishment if they
              disobeyed his summons to Rome. “To deny the subjection of the temporal power to
              the spiritual,” said he, “and to assert that they are independent powers, is
              nothing less than to set up two contradictory principles, like the Manichean heretics.”
               An attempt was now made to adjust the quarrel by means
              of negotiation and mutual explanation. Four French prelates were despatched to
              Rome for this purpose. The Pope, receiving them in full consistory, expatiated
              in a bland and conciliatory tone on his anxious desire to preserve the harmony
              which had existed in all ages between the realm of France and the Apostolic
              See. To pretend that he had ever laid claim to any superiority over Philip as
              to temporal jurisdiction was, he declared, a malicious falsehood, invented by
              Pierre Flotte for his own wicked purposes. He had
              never advanced any such senseless opinion, well knowing that the power of
              temporal and of spiritual government are alike ordained of God. “At the same
              time,” continued Boniface, “the King cannot deny that he owes submission to the
              Roman Pontiff in respect of sin”.
               This phrase, “in respect of sin,” so frequent in the
              mouths of the Popes of the middle age, contains the key to their whole line of
              policy with regard to the question in dispute. It is true that they did not
              claim any direct jurisdiction over princes as to their administration in things
              temporal; but indirectly, in virtue of their functions as supreme directors in
              matters of conscience, their pretensions amounted nearly, if not altogether,
              to the same thing. Kings, in common with all other Christians, were responsible
              to the Church “in respect of sin”—that is, in respect of her right to guide the
              conscience. Upon this plea it is obvious that the Pope might claim to arbitrate
              in any and every case within the range of human action. It belonged to him to
              judge how far, under any given circumstances, the parties concerned had
              incurred the guilt and penalties of sin. The keys of the Kingdom of Heaven were
              in his custody; it was for him to bind or to loose, to condemn or to absolve,
              according to his view of the requirements of due spiritual discipline. As a
              dogma of the Catholic Church, this was incontestable in the abstract; the
              existence of such power was universally admitted, and was believed to reside
              essentially in the person of the Pope. But its application, with reference to
              limits, method, and detail, was a matter of infinite delicacy and difficulty.
              The Pope might exaggerate, misconstrue, or abuse this power; and if he should do
              so to an exorbitant or scandalous degree, a hostile reaction was sooner or
              later inevitable. The elements of such a reaction had long been in course of
              preparation both in France and elsewhere; and the actual outburst was merely a
              question of time.
                   The French envoys failed to obtain any concession from
              Boniface as to the convocation of the Council at Rome. It was held accordingly
              at the time appointed; and was attended, in defiance of the King’s prohibition,
              by four archbishops, thirty- five bishops, and six abbots, of the Gallican
              Church. Immediately afterwards appeared the famous constitution, “Unam sanctam”—a document which in style and language was insufferably
              provoking, although in point of doctrine it contained nothing that had not been
              repeatedly advanced before, and expressed, indeed, the common belief of
              Catholics at that day. It commences by asserting the unity of the Church as the
              body of Christ, and that it is governed under Christ by St. Peter and his
              successors. Then follows a quotation of the well-worn passage from St. Bernard,
              concerning the “two swords” and their mutual relations. The Bull goes on to
              state that it belongs to the spiritual power to establish the temporal, and to
              judge it if it fails in its duty; according to the words of the Almighty by the
              prophet, “Behold, I have set thee over nations and kingdoms,” &c. When the
              temporal power errs, it must be judged by the spiritual; when an inferior
              spiritual power transgresses, it must be judged by its superior; but if the
              supreme authority shall be in fault, it is accountable to God alone; it cannot
              be reached by human judgment, as the Apostle testifies—“He that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he himself is judged of no man.”
              This authority is not human, though exercised by human hands; but rather
              Divine, having been divinely granted to Peter and his successors in the words,
              “ Whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth, &c. Whosoever resists the authority
              which God has thus constituted, resisteth the
              ordinance of God. To deny this is nothing less than the Manichean heresy of two
              coordinate principles. Wherefore we declare, define, and pronounce, that it
              is necessary to the salvation of every human being to be subject to the Roman
              Pontiff.” This conclusion was not so formidable, after all, as might have been
              expected from the premises. From such an unqualified statement of the
              subjection of earthly authority to spiritual, the Pope might have drawn the
              inference that civil rulers are answerable to the Church, and to the judgment of
              its bead, for the entire conduct of their ordinary government. Instead of this,
              he contents himself with a general declaration of the necessity of obedience
              to the Apostolic See—a sentiment which in that age was disputed by no man, but
              to which, nevertheless, different individuals began to attach different
              meanings.
               The bull “Unam sanctam” was
              followed by a sentence of excommunication against all persons, of whatever
              degree, who should molest, despoil, or impede those who desired to proceed to
              or return from Rome. This was, of course, directed against Philip, although it
              did not designate that prince by name. He had seized and confiscated the
              property of the bishops who chose to obey the Papal summons contrary to the
              commands of their temporal sovereign.
                   Philip replied to these denunciations by holding a
              second great Council on the 1st of December, 1302, when it was enacted that no
              French subject could leave the kingdom without the King’s consent, under pain
              of imprisonment and forfeiture of goods; and a renewed prohibition was
              published against exporting from France money, jewels, horses, and munitions
              of war.
                   The crisis was evidently at hand. But before resorting
              to extremities, Boniface sent the Cardinal Le Moine,
              by birth a Frenchman, as his legate to Philip, charged to make certain
              propositions by way of satisfaction to the Apostolic See. The following were
              the principal articles insisted on:—That the King should revoke his prohibition
              to the clergy to proceed to Rome; and should acknowledge that the Pope has the
              right to nominate to all benefices, to dispose of their revenues, and to levy
              duties upon them. He was further to own that no sovereign can lawfully seize
              the property of the Church, nor summon ecclesiastics to lay tribunals, either
              in personal actions or in regard to estates which were not held of him in fief.
              Moreover, he was to engage to correct the prevalent abuses of the droit de
              regale, and to preserve the revenues of vacant churches for the future
              incumbents. He was to remove all hindrances to the due exercise of
              ecclesiastical discipline. He was to repair the evil which he had committed by
              debasing the coinage of the realm; and, finally, he was to treat the city of
              Lyons and its territory as independent of the crown of France. It was not
              likely, and probably was not expected, that a prince of Philip’s imperious
              temper would accept such terms in their full extent. He replied, however, in a
              tone of moderation. It was from no want of respect for the Church that he had
              forbidden the prelates to quit France, but simply by reason of circumstances
              which appeared to him of a dangerous nature. He was willing to restore the
              property of those who had gone to Rome without his permission. Far from wishing
              to obstruct the liberty of the spiritual sword, he was prepared to support it,
              so long as it observed the bounds of law and established usage. If any of his
              officers had abused their powers in this respect, he was ready to punish them
              and to rectify their mistakes. If anyone had been wronged in the administration
              of the droit de regale, he offered to satisfy him by reimbursement. With
              reference to the disposal of benefices, the seizure of temporalities, and the
              citation of ecclesiastics before the civil courts, he had followed, and would
              always follow, the customs generally received in the realm. As to the
              alterations in the coinage, he had been forced to adopt them by the necessities
              of the State, but he had already taken steps for remedying the evils caused by
              that measure. Finally, he declared himself sincerely desirous to maintain the
              ancient union between the Roman See and France, and he entreated the Pope not
              to imperil it by attacking the liberties and privileges of the Gallican Church.
               We have in this last sentence one of the earliest symptoms
              of that wilful misapprehension of the “Gallican liberties,” which became in the
              sequel so convenient an instrument of royal despotism. The faults of Pope
              Boniface were neither few nor small. He might have been justly accused of
              striving to exalt the dominion of the spiritual power to a pitch incompatible
              with the rights and functions of the crown; but certainly he was not chargeable
              with seeking to abridge the liberties of the Church, as they were then
              established by general usage. It was the King, not the Pope, who was labouring
              to extinguish the immunities immemorially enjoyed by the ecclesiastical order.
              The “liberty of the Church,” in the sense in which it was invoked by Philip and
              other subsequent monarchs of like character, signified in reality that the
              clergy, instead of being as heretofore dependent on the Pope, were to be
              practically subject to the crown. In the very act of redressing grievances
              arising from a jurisdiction which, though wrongly exercised, was in its essence
              . real and true, they substituted for it the yoke of another jurisdiction
              which had no legitimate foundation whatever.
                   The professions of Philip may or may not have been
              made with perfect sincerity. In any case they ought to have called forth
              further exertions on the part of Boniface to effect an understanding. Instead
              of this, he now ordered his legate to excommunicate the king by name; including
              in the sentence all nobles, prelates, and magistrates who might support or countenance
              him. Philip, unmoved by thunders which had scared some of the boldest of his
              predecessors, summoned forthwith his Council at the Louvre, and caused a formal
              act of accusation to be published against the Pope, charging him with having
              usurped his office, with heresy, with simony, infidelity, and other monstrous
              offences. He declared his intention to procure with all despatch the
              convocation of a General Council, as the proper tribunal to take cognizance of
              so grave a cause, and appealed to its decision, and that of a legitimate Pope,
              on the questions in dispute. The ecclesiastics present, as well as the other
              two orders, signified their assent to this impeachment of Boniface, though they
              expressed their belief that he would fully clear himself from the crimes
              imputed to him. Twenty-six prelates, with eleven abbots, signed the act of
              appeal; and no fewer than nine cardinals concurred in the measure.
                   Boniface repudiated with contemptuous scorn the notion
              that he could be arraigned judicially before a General Council. “ What?” he
              said, “do they demand a Council to sit in judgment on the Pope? No Council can
              be assembled but by me, and with me.” Philip, however, urged on by the “legistes,”—a class rapidly rising into power, and
              rancorous in its hostility to Boniface and the Holy See—persisted in his
              scheme, canvassed actively for support in Spain and other foreign countries,
              and sent special envoys to the Italian cardinals to secure their adhesion and
              their presence at the forthcoming Council, which it was proposed to hold at
              Lyons. Guillaume de Nogaret, one of the most
              unscrupulous of Philip’s councillors, was charged, or charged himself, with the
              task of personally summoning the Pope to attend at the appointed time and
              place. In case of resistance to this mandate, his Holiness was to be forcibly
              compelled to submit.
               Boniface, upon this, retired from Rome to Anagni, and
              prepared to launch against his adversary that most tremendous bolt of the
              Pontifical artillery, a bull releasing Philip’s subjects from their allegiance,
              and declaring him deposed from the throne. His kingdom was bestowed upon
              Albert, King of the Romans.
                   This document was to have been solemnly promulgated in
              the cathedral of Anagni on the 8th of September, 1303, the festival of the
              Nativity of the Virgin. But on the day preceding, Nogaret,
              who had prevailed upon the principal citizens of Anagni to favour his design,
              entered the town at the head of 300 soldiers, invaded the palace, and presented
              himself abruptly before the aged Pontiff, whom he found seated on his throne,
              and wearing the tiara and other ensigns of his Apostolic office. Sciarra Colonna, who accompanied Nogaret,
              assailed him with savage reproaches, and is said to have been brutal enough to
              strike him on the face with his iron gauntlet. Boniface was seized forthwith,
              and committed to prison, in order, as his captors said, to ensure his
              appearance at the Council at Lyons. The people of Anagni, however, resenting
              these outrages against the French, drove them with severe loss from the city,
              restored the Pope to liberty, and conducted him in triumph to Rome. But his
              fate approached. At the age of upwards of eighty, it was scarcely possible that
              he should rally from the shock of the violence and barbarous treatment to which
              he had been subjected. The iron had entered into his soul. He was attacked by
              fever, which produced delirium and frenzy; and death released him from his
              sufferings on the 11th of October, 1303.
               The opposition excited by the abuse of power, whether
              spiritual or temporal, is seldom satisfied with redressing the particular
              grievance from which it arose. When thus far successful, it is commonly
              impelled forward, and occupies fresh ground; it advances unjust pretensions,
              invades established rights, and becomes in its turn intolerably oppressive. The
              victory of Philip over Boniface—the violent recoil of that Pontiff’s extravagance
              upon his own head—was no mere isolated episode of history ; it was a turning
              point in the constitutional system of Europe. It was the commencement of a
              widespread reaction, on the part of the laity, against ecclesiastical
              predominance. From that time forward may be traced a clear and continuous
              current of opposition, not merely to the uncanonical encroachments of the
              Papacy, but to the rightful independence of the Church, and the legitimate exercise
              of its jurisdiction. The uniform tendency of legislation in France, from the
              fourteenth century downwards, was to reduce the Church into subservience and
              subjection to the Crown. Under colour of repressing Ultramontanism, protecting
              the Gallican liberties, and reforming abuses, the State succeeded in
              transferring to itself nearly the whole of the external dominion enjoyed by the
              hierarchy during the preceding ages.
                   VI.
                   The ecclesiastical courts had acquired extensive powers
              from a very early period of history. The Emperor Constantine authorized the
              bishops to act as judges in matters affecting their clergy; and it was declared
              lawful for lay citizens to appeal in civil causes (not in criminal) to the
              episcopal tribunals; the sentences thus pronounced being enforced by the State.
              These provisions were gradually enlarged by successive enactments, until at
              length the administration of justice throughout the empire was concentrated in
              great measure in the hands of the clergy. By the Code of Justinian the bishops
              were constituted the legal guardians of orphans, widows, minors, lunatics,
              paupers, prisoners, and generally of all who were comprehended in the category
              of “miserabiles personae.” All testamentary and
              matrimonial questions—all matters relating to bankers, usurers, Jews,
              Lombards—everything involving contracts and engagements upon oath—all cases
              arising out of the Crusades—the management of hospitals and other charitable
              institutions—all charges of sacrilege, perjury, incontinence, and in short,
              all proceedings originating in human delinquency or sin—were consigned in
              course of time to the judicial arbitration of the Church.
               This vast development of spiritual jurisdiction became
              a prolific source of abuse; and it was the work of the fourteenth and
              fifteenth centuries to curb and curtail it. An attempt bad been made, indeed,
              by the feudal aristocracy, during the reign of St. Louis, to confine the
              competence of the episcopal courts to charges of heresy, usury, and matters concerning
              the sacrament of marriage. But the reactionary movement acquired greater force
              in the time of Philippe de Valois, as appears from the account of a memorable
              conference held in the presence of that monarch in 1329, when the whole
              question of civil and ecclesiastical jurisdiction was argued between Pierre de
              Cugnières, Avocat-General in the Parliament, on behalf of the Crown, and the
              Archbishop of Sens and the Bishop of Autun, as defenders of the Church. De
              Cugnières contended that the spiritual and the temporal power have each a
              separate province; that the two jurisdictions cannot be exercised in
              conjunction; and that, consequently, the bishops ought to relinquish the
              judicial functions incidental to their rank as feudal lords, and restrict
              themselves to those belonging properly to the pastoral office. To this it was
              replied, by the Bishop of Autun, that although the two jurisdictions are
              distinct, they are by no means incompatible; but may be united in the same
              hands, whenever that arrangement may be judged conducive to the general
              welfare. He cited various instances from Scripture in support of this view. The
              discussion was kept up with spirit and ability on both sides. The king’s
              advocate exhibited a catalogue of sixty-six gravamina, or articles in which he alleged
              that the ecclesiastical courts bad exceeded their powers. The officials of the
              bishops, he said, asserted a right to take cognizance of causes relating to
              landed property, to the exclusion of the civil jurisdiction. They cited laymen
              to their bar even in personal actions, and if the parties declined to plead,
              they compelled them by means of excommunication to submit to their illegal
              proceedings. “If a person excommunicated for debt fails to pay the sum
              required by the sentence, the fine is forthwith augmented, and the secular
              judge is enjoined, under spiritual censure, to enforce the payment by seizure
              of goods. If he demurs, he is pronounced excommunicate, and cannot obtain
              absolution except by satisfying the whole demand.” Other articles complained
              that the bishops, in order to enhance their power, were in the habit of giving
              the clerical tonsure to persons manifestly disqualified;—to children under age,
              to married men, to those of illegitimate birth, to the grossly ignorant, to
              many who sought the privileges of the Church merely for the sake of screening
              themselves from the just punishment of crime. The episcopal baillis and prevots, designedly chosen from the clergy, incurred debt
              and practised every kind of extortion with impunity, since there was no means
              of bringing them to justice. These officers, whenever they chose to treat
              persons as excommunicate, rightly or wrongly, prevented all men from trading
              with them, working for them, or holding any sort of intercourse with them;
              whence it often happened that the land remained uncultivated. It was a common
              case for twenty, thirty, forty, or more individuals to be brought up and fined
              in different amounts for the offence of having associated with those who lay
              under the ban of the Church. The Bishop of Autun manfully combated these
              charges upon various grounds;—alleging the provisions of statute law, ancient
              custom, the permission of the Crown, the superiority of the clerical order in
              legal knowledge and general character. No immediate changes resulted from this
              remarkable debate. The king declared that he had no intention whatever to
              attack the acknowledged privileges of the clergy. The bishops assured him that
              all well-founded grievances should be redressed without delay; and they were
              ultimately dismissed with an intimation that sufficient time would be allowed
              for the fulfilment of their promise, but that, in case of failure to observe
              it, the king would be compelled to take the affair into his own hands.
               From this date the aggressions of the civil power upon
              the spiritualty became more and more frequent and determined; and in course of
              time all matières profanes were assigned to the sole cognizance
              of the royal courts. Gradually, by means of various subtle distinctions, such
              as that between “délits communs” and “cas privilegiés” the clergy were brought within the
              ordinary limits of secular authority. Laymen were forbidden to resort to the
              ecclesiastical judges; and the Crown assumed jurisdiction in causes affecting
              the temporalities of the Church, upon the ground that they constituted a
              beneficial interest which was subject to the control of the law of the land,
              like any other property.
               It was not long before a decisive blow was aimed
              against the jurisdiction of the Church in France, by the claim advanced by the
              Crown, or rather by the Parliaments, to hold a tribunal of appeal from the
              judgments of the ecclesiastical courts. The institution of the “appel comme d’abus”
              subjected all judicial acts of the officers of the Church to the revision and
              correction of secular law. The invention of this expedient has been attributed
              to the redoubtable Pierre de Cugnières; at all events it originated early in
              the fourteenth century, though a considerable time elapsed before it became,
              general. The appel comme d’abus, in its most common acceptation, was a
              complaint preferred against the ecclesiastical judge, on the plea that he had
              exceeded or abused his legitimate powers. The appeal lay to the Grande Chambre
              of the Parliament in civil, and to the Chambre de la Tournelle in criminal, actions; its effect was that, when admitted by the court, the case
              was thereupon heard and adjudged afresh, such adjudication being final. The
              authority of Popes and Councils was alleged in justification of the practice;
              e. g. that of the great Lateran Council under Innocent III, which enacted, in
              its forty-second canon, that “as the laity are forbidden to usurp the rights
              of the clergy, so the clergy must take care not to intrude upon the privileges
              of the laity. Wherefore we prohibit all clerks from employing any pretext of
              ecclesiastical liberty as a means of enlarging their own power at the expense
              of the secular jurisdiction.”
               The appel comme d’abus was ultimately
              established as admissible against the Church courts in the four following
              cases:— 1. When the spiritual power had encroached upon the temporal
              jurisdiction. 2. When there was a manifest contravention of the ancient canons,
              the liberties of the Gallican Church, or the ecclesiastical constitutions
              received in the kingdom. 3. When the ecclesiastical judge had infringed any
              royal ordonnance duly promulgated. 4. When a decision had been given contrary
              to the arrets of the sovereign courts of Parliament. It was ruled, moreover, that
              the appeal could not be entertained unless the matter in question was of real
              importance and evident public interest; and further, that the abuse complained
              of must be patent and notorious. But these restrictions were disregarded in
              subsequent practice. The right of appeal to the Parliaments was extended
              indefinitely to matters great and small, and that upon pretexts transparently
              frivolous; so that, instead of acting as a wholesome check on any inordinate
              stretch of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, its general tendency was to obstruct
              that necessary exercise of discipline without which Church authority is little
              more than a name. The clergy in their assemblies made repeated remonstrances
              on this subject to the crown, representing that the practice led to contempt
              and hatred of the spiritual jurisdiction, encouraged vice, shackled and
              thwarted the administration of things sacred, and overburdened the consciences
              of the secular judges. They also prayed that the cases might be precisely
              specified, in which an appeal from spiritual to lay courts was held allowable;
              but the reply was always vague and evasive. They were reminded that
              circumstances might arise which were unforeseen and unprovided for; and that
              conflicts might occur in consequence between the civil and ecclesiastical
              authorities. The French monarchs, it is true, gave injunctions from time to
              time to the officers of their courts to beware of transgressing the bounds of
              their legal competence in the matter of appeals; but practically, the appel comme d’abus became the favourite resource of all persons
              disaffected to the Church, for the purpose of defeating any attempt to put in
              force the regulations of her ancient discipline.
               It was a disputed point, whether the appel comme d’abus had a “suspensive,” or only a “devolutive,” effect; that is, whether the execution of the
              sentence appealed against was suspended during the prosecution of the appeal,
              or whether it remained in force, and the case was merely transferred to the
              superior court for a fresh hearing. The general opinion was that with regard to
              sentences for the correction of manners and ordinary ecclesiastical
              discipline, the appeal had no suspensive force.
                   It is to be observed that the appel comme d’abus was available
              reciprocally as a remedy against the temporal courts, in case of abuse of power
              or unlawful intrusion into the province of the Church. This is laid down by
              Pierre Pithou in his enumeration of the “liberties of
              the Gallican Church and De Marca refers to it as the constitutional method of
              obtaining redress for any encroachment of the civil power on the rights of the
              Church or of its ministers. Instances are on record of its being exercised with
              full effect. An ecclesiastic, if cited before the temporal court for a matter
              not legally within its competence, might demand to have the case sent back to
              be tried before the bishop’s official; and if this were refused, he was
              entitled to appeal, comme d’abus, to the Grande Chambre of the Parliament.
               At the Council of Trent the appel comme d'abus was vehemently
              attacked by theologians of various nations, and was as pertinaciously defended
              by the ambassadors of Charles IX of France. The result was that it was
              maintained in full vigour; and, indeed, it was not to be expected that the
              Crown, having once succeeded in establishing so effectual an engine for neutralizing
              the judicial action of the Church, should afterwards be induced to relinquish
              it. Accordingly, although the ancient ecclesiastical jurisdiction in France,
              like the rest of the mediaeval organization, was swept away by the torrent of
              the great Revolution, the usage of the appel comme d’abus has
              survived to our own times. Proceedings of this kind still take place occasionally
              before the Imperial Council of State.
               In proportion as Feudalism declined, the French Crown
              assumed to itself all those rights, prerogatives, and emoluments connected with
              the Church, which had previously been enjoyed by the local seigneurs.
              The most important of these was the droit de régale (jus regaliae), which gave to the lay suzerain the
              administration of the revenues of episcopal sees while they remained vacant,
              together with all the patronage belonging to them; though this latter was held
              to apply properly only to those benefices which had no cure of souls. The régale was a point on which the kings of France
              became especially jealous, and which they vindicated with the utmost energy on
              many memorable occasions. It seems to have been fully established in the time
              of Philippe le Bel, who gave the following explanation of it in a letter to the
              Bishop of Auxerre: “As in the case of the vacancy of a lay fief, it is legally
              held by the seigneur, together with its revenues; and
              this occupation continues, according to the universal custom of our realm,
              until another vassal succeeds, who may do feudal service in place of the
              former; so, during the vacancy of a cathedral church, we and our predecessors
              have taken possession both of the temporal jurisdiction and of the temporal property,
              the fruits of which belong to us for the time being. Nor is it only as to the
              property of bishops that we exercise this power; we dispose in like manner of
              the temporal jurisdiction and revenues appertaining to vacant prebends and
              dignities of all kinds.”
               By a famous ordinance of Philippe de Valois, known as
              “the Philippine,” the droit de regale was asserted still more dogmatically,
              and made to extend not only to benefices vacant de facto, but also to
              those which ought to be vacated de jure; i.e. those which . were held without a
              legitimate canonical title.! This proceeding called forth strenuous
              remonstrances from Pope Benedict XII., as contrary to all principles of justice
              and ecclesiastical liberty. The same Pontiff protested against the misconduct
              of the royal officers, who, under shelter of the regale, were accustomed to waste,
              alienate, and destroy the temporal possessions of the Church, often damaging
              the vacant benefices seriously and permanently. It is evident, indeed, that by
              wantonly prolonging a vacancy, an unscrupulous monarch might easily convert the
              droit de regale into an instrument of indefinite spoliation and oppression.
               VII.Such were some of the vicissitudes to which the Gallican
              Church was subjected, in its relations both to the Apostolic See and to the
              civil government, down to the middle of the fourteenth century. The great
              Schism of the West (a.d. 1378-1429) formed so critical ail epoch in its history, and led ultimately to
              consequences so momentous, that it is necessary to examine it with some
              minuteness of detail.
               This grave calamity is distinctly traceable to the
              ill-advised secession of the Popes to Avignon, in the person of Clement V. That
              Pontiff is commonly supposed to have obtained the tiara by means of a simoniacal contract with Philip the Fair, which bound him,
              among other articles, to take up his residence in France. But this account,
              which rests mainly on the authority of the Ghibelline historian Villani, has
              been partially discredited by more accurate researches in our own day; and it
              seems probable that the change of residence was made voluntarily, for the
              purpose of escaping from the violent contentions which were raging at the time
              at Rome between the rival Orsini and Colonna factions.t Be this as it may, the
              step was fatal to the independence of the Papal throne. Having once taken
              refuge on Cisalpine territory, Clement could not avoid acting with more than
              common deference to the wishes and interests of the King of France. This was
              notoriously his motive in the most important transactions of his reign—in the
              judicial proceedings against the memory of Boniface VIII,—in the iniquitous
              suppression of the Templars,—and in his support of the princes of Anjou in the
              Kingdom of Naples. Moreover (and it was upon this that subsequent events
              chiefly turned) a French Pope was naturally disposed to create French
              cardinals; and prelates of that nation accordingly figured almost exclusively
              in the promotions to the conclave during this period. Thus they formed in
              course of time a decided majority of the sacred college.
               The luxury, pride, avarice, and tyranny of the Popes
              who sat at Avignon are proverbial in history. The kings of France connived at
              their excesses, and pressed them to remain permanently in their new capital;
              obtaining the more readily, by this policy, Pontifical sanction for the
              exactions and usurpations which they themselves practised on the National
              Church. The general result was a lamentable degradation of the supreme
              spiritual authority. Protection and security was all that was afforded to the
              Pontiffs ostensibly; but their real condition for seventy years was one of
              splendid vassalage to the French Crown.
                   Bitter were the lamentations poured forth by the
              Romans over this “second Babylonish captivity,” and earnestly did they implore
              the successor of St. Peter to resume the natural and only legitimate seat of
              his primacy. Gregory XI, overcome by their importunities, returned to Rome in
              1377, and died there early in the following year, mournfully forecasting the
              misfortunes which were soon to fall upon the Church.
                   There were at that moment twenty-three Cardinals, of
              whom eighteen were Frenchmen. Of these, however, six had remained at Avignon,
              and one was absent in Tuscany; so that the actual conclave by which the Pope
              was to be chosen consisted of no more than sixteen members. Nevertheless, if
              the French had been united, they might have commanded the election ; but they
              were divided by a jealousy against the Limousins, to
              which province three preceding Pontiffs had belonged. The consequence was that
              the minority of the French coalesced with the Italians, and secured a
              preponderance. Considerable pressure was also exercised on the conclave by the
              magistrates and citizens of Rome, who clamoured tumultuously for “a Roman
              Pope,” or, at all events, for a native-born Italian. It was under this stress
              of circumstances that Bartolomeo Pregnano, a Neapolitan,
              Archbishop of Bari, was elevated to the Papal chair in April, 1378, and took
              the title of Urban VI. But after an interval of some months the French
              cardinals, anxious above all things to retain the Pontifical court in their own
              land, and irritated, moreover, by the tyrannical severity of Urban’s
              government, retired to Fondi in the Kingdom of
              Naples, declared the former election void by reason of constraint and intimidation,
              and conferred the tiara upon Robert Cardinal of Geneva, who was immediately crowned
              under the name of Clement VII. A deplorable schism ensued. The King of France,
              after instituting a lengthened and rigorous inquiry at Rome, and holding
              repeated consultations with his prelates and the theologians of Paris,
              determined to support Clement, who was thenceforward recognised by the French
              as rightful Pope. He obtained afterwards, chiefly through French influence, the
              adhesion of Spain, Scotland, Savoy, and Sicily. The rest of Europe acknowledged
              the authority of Urban VI.
               It was natural that Clement should fix his abode in
              proximity to the most powerful of the sovereigns who had embraced his cause. He
              established himself at Avignon, where he was surrounded by thirty-six
              cardinals, almost without exception French; and as it was necessary to provide
              these dignitaries with revenues befitting their rank, their claims became a
              burdensome tax on the ecclesiastical property of the realm. The Popes of
              Avignon had laid heavy hands on the endowments of the Gallican Church, even
              while they enjoyed the undivided allegiance of Christendom; but the evil was
              vastly intensified when their jurisdiction was confined to France and some few
              neighbouring countries. The system of disciplinary abuses was now carried to
              its most scandalous extreme. By means of reserves, expectatives,
              and dispensations, Clement accumulated all the higher preferments on his own
              devoted partizans; and the clergy were shamefully
              pillaged by multifarious devices in order to enrich the Pontifical exchequer.
              The oppressive impost called annates, or the first-fruits of benefices, was
              largely augmented, and enforced with extortionate rigour. It was assessed not
              only on “benefices consistoriaux,” but on all
              preferments indiscriminately; and the demand was at last trebled in amount, the
              emoluments of three years being swallowed up in succession, instead of the
              first year’s income only. By this proceeding incumbents were not unfrequently
              reduced to absolute want, and compelled to become vagabonds and mendicants.!
              Another exaction, that of the “decimes,” or tenths,
              which was levied without mercy upon the entire temporalities of the Church, provoked
              a formidable resistance from the University of Paris.
               It is impossible to describe adequately the profound
              perplexity, dismay, and confusion which arose from this protracted warfare
              between the rival vicars of Christ. With regard to the intrinsic merits of the
              dispute there was much to be pleaded on both sides; nor has the Church ever
              thought fit to decide the question authoritatively. It is obvious, however, that
              if either Pope had been canonically chosen, the other was a mere pretender;
              and the latter, in that case, was not only himself schismatical,
              but had involved all his adherents in the guilt and penalties of schism. The
              only alternative hypothesis—namely, that both Popes were alike uncanonical—was
              still more distressing; for if so, then the Catholic body possessed no
              legitimate visible head—a state of things which, according to the theology of
              that day, was so abnormal as to be almost subversive of its Divine
              constitution.
               It was felt to be imperative that measures should be
              taken towards the removal of evils which threatened nothing less than the total
              disintegration of organized Christianity in the West; and the distinction of
              having inaugurated a practical movement to that end, which was substantially,
              if not completely, crowned with success, belongs without question to the
              Church of France.
                   The remedy proposed was that of appeal to a General
              Council, as the supreme tribunal of Christendom;—competent, should the
              necessity arise, to pass judgment even on the Pope himself. This is commonly
              quoted as one of the peculiar principles of Gallicanism ; but in point of fact
              it is an original constitutional law of the Church Catholic. It was not
              contended, even by the strictest Gallicans, that the Church ought to be
              governed, under ordinary circumstances, by a succession of General Councils;
              but that such a legitimate method of final decision existed, and that the
              schism was an emergency which justified and necessitated its application. The
              Church possessed, by the charter of her Divine foundation, powers which had
              been granted for the express purpose of preserving her organic unity ; and if
              she had hitherto forborne to exercise those powers under the existing calamity,
              it was all the more important that they should not be suffered to fall into
              further disuse and oblivion, while every day was adding to the inveteracy of
              the evils which they were designed to counteract.
                   The University of Paris—at this time the most
              celebrated school of theology in Europe—interposed, and laboured with indefatigable
              zeal to procure the reunion of the distracted Church. Its Chancellor was Pierre d’Ailly (Petrus de Alliaco),
              afterwards Cardinal and Bishop of Cambrai. Its leading divines were the
              illustrious Jean Gerson, who succeeded D’Ailly in the post of Chancellor,
              Nicolas de Clemangis, Gilles Deschamps, and Jean de Courtecuisse. The first movements of these energetic
              reformers were visited with severe censure, and even punishment, by the corrupt
              court of Charles VI. One of their body, a learned professor named Jean Rousse,
              was arrested and imprisoned by the Regent, the Duke of Anjou, merely for having
              suggested that the only effectual means of healing the schism was the convocation
              of a General Council. His colleagues obtained bis release with difficulty, and
              on the express condition that they would henceforth support the Pope of
              Avignon, Clement VII. So powerful were the ties of interest which attached the
              French monarchy to the Cisalpine Pope, that anything like scepticism as to Clement’s legitimacy was treated as a serious crime. It was
              notified to the heads of the University that no further mention must be made of
              the election of another Pope, or the calling of a General Council, under pain
              of the King’s signal displeasure.
               D’Ailly and his brethren, nothing daunted, persevered
              in their endeavours to pave the way for a pacification; and eventually they
              wrung from the Government a reluctant permission to summon a special meeting of
              the whole academical body, to deliberate on the expedients for extinguishing
              the schism.
                   Consultations were held accordingly in the year 1394.
              The result was that the plans proposed reduced themselves to the three
              following:—1. The voluntary resignation of both Popes; after which the two
              colleges of cardinals might unite and proceed to a fresh election. 2. A
              compromise by means of arbitration; and 3. The convocation of a General
              Council, which, it was argued, would derive from the universal consent of the
              faithful irrefragable authority to pronounce judgment under the circumstances.
              The first of these methods—the vote de cession —was that preferred by the
              University. Their views, having been embodied in an elaborate memorial admirably
              drawn up by Nicolas de Clemangis, one of the most
              accomplished scholars of his time, was presented by a deputation to the King.
              Its contents were likewise communicated to Pope Clement; who forthwith
              declaimed against it in full consistory as a “defamatory libel on the Holy
              See, saturated with the poison of calumny.” Such was the violence of his
              agitation that a fit of apoplexy ensued, of which he died on the 16th of
              September, 1394.
               An attempt was now made to dissuade the cardinals of
              Avignon from proceeding to a fresh election; but in vain. Determined at all
              hazards to prolong the schismatical succession, they
              gave their votes to Pedro de Luna, a man of overbearing and obstinate temper,
              who assumed the title of Benedict XIII.
               The labours of the Gallican theologians began at
              length to bear important fruit. In February, 1395, the king convoked an
              extraordinary assembly of prelates, clergy, princes, and nobles, at Paris,
              sufficient in numbers and dignity to represent the nation in Church and State,
              to discuss the proposals of the University as set forth in their Memorial. The
              Council decided in favour of the “voie de cession”,
              and, in consequence, a distinguished embassy, including the king’s uncles the
              Dukes of Burgundy and Berry, and his brother the Duke of Orleans, was
              dispatched to Avignon, to tender this unpalatable advice to Pope Benedict. But
              after a long course of illusory negotiation, it was found impossible to
              persuade the two antagonists to embrace this mode of settling their
              differences. Benedict met the remonstrances of the French court and clergy
              with coarse abuse and furious menaces; and after a time, wearied by his
              perverseness and duplicity, the Gallican Church took the decisive step of
              withdrawing from his obedience. The royal edict to that effect appeared on the
              27th of July, 1398, and was registered by the Parliament on the 29th of August
              following. All the acts of Benedict were thereby pronounced null and void.
              Appeals to the Pope during the “soustraction d’obedience” were to be dealt with as if the pontifical
              chair were vacant; they were to be heard by the Metropolitan, and in the last
              resort were to be carried before the Provincial Council. Various regulations
              were adopted for reviving the ancient forms of election,—for abolishing
              reservations and expective graces,—and for replacing the collation and
              institution to benefices in the hands of the lawful ordinaries. In short, a
              restoration was proclaimed of the primitive franchises and discipline of the
              Gallican Church.
               But the existing crisis of affairs was by no means
              propitious to the execution of such wholesome measures, particularly as regards
              the re-establishment of free elections. It was found that the mere act of
              repudiating the authority of the Pope did not ipso facto redintegrate the
              Church in the enjoyment of her independence. On the contrary, the State took
              advantage of the interregnum to extend its sphere of intrusive action in the
              domain ecclesiastical; and the clergy soon discovered that they had only
              exchanged the oppression of a spiritual despot for the still more questionable
              domination of the civil power. The nominees of the sovereign and his ministers
              monopolised the higher preferments; the Courts Christian were impeded in the
              exercise of discipline; the Parliaments assumed a wider jurisdiction; and the
              power of the clerical order declined apace.
                   The “subtraction of obedience,” though adopted after
              mature deliberation, was the work of an extreme party, of the doctors of the
              Sorbonne. It was viewed with misgiving and regret by the more moderate, that is
              the majority, of the national clergy, who saw that its inevitable tendency was
              to weaken and depress the Church in her relations with the civil Government.
              Pope Benedict had been besieged and imprisoned in his palace at Avignon by the
              royal forces; and this harsh treatment added to their dissatisfaction. So
              strong was the reaction that at length, through the influence of the Duke of
              Orleans, supported by D’Ailly, Gerson, and Clemangis,
              it was resolved to restore the allegiance of France to Benedict. This act was
              proclaimed by royal edict on the 30th of May, 1403; the Pope having solemnly
              engaged, as a preliminary condition, to resign in the event of the death,
              abdication, or deposition of his opponent.* He promised likewise to confirm
              all ecclesiastical appointments made during the interregnum ; to summon without
              delay a Council of his obedience to treat for the termination of the schism; and
              to abide faithfully by the decision of that assembly. The Pope, however,
              violated these articles without scruple; fresh opposition was stirred up in
              consequence; and at a third great convocation of clergy (December 21, 1406) the
              decisive conclusion was arrived at that it was indispensably necessary to have
              recourse to a General Council for the reformation of the Church in its head and
              its members. This was followed up by a royal declaration to the effect that,
              if the unity of the Church were not restored by the Feast of the Ascension next
              ensuing, the kingdom of France would finally renounce both Popes, and assume a
              position of neutrality. Upon this the two popes opened a negotiation,
              ostensibly with a view to an accommodation by the method of cession; but their
              behaviour soon led to the conviction that they were secretly leagued together
              to prolong the schism. An act of inconceivable rashness on the part of
              Benedict, who launched a bull threatening the University and the whole realm
              with interdict and the king with deposition, produced a burst of vehement
              indignation in France; where, in August, 1408, the Government published a
              second withdrawal of obedience, abandoning the “voie de cession” as hopeless, and declaring itself in a state of neutrality until
              the meeting of the General Council, which had been convoked at Pisa by the two
              colleges of Cardinals for the spring of the following year.
               On this occasion the French Church carefully renewed
              its regulations of internal discipline to be observed during the suspension of
              intercourse with the Holy See. The different grades of appellate jurisdiction
              were precisely defined. From the Archdeacon the appeal lay to the Bishop ;
              from the Bishop to the Metropolitan; from the Metropolitan to the Primate, or
              (where no primatial authority was recognized) to the Provincial Council. Each
              Metropolitan was to assemble the Council of his province every year; its
              duration was never to be less than a month. Free election was to be the rule
              for all dignities which by their nature or by ancient institution were
              elective. The election of Bishops to be confirmed by the Metropolitan; that of
              metropolitans by the Primate or the Provincial Council. Other articles
              prescribed the mode of proceeding as to dispensations, absolution from
              ecclesiastical censures, and the decision of cases specially reserved to the Pope.
              It was expressly announced that the spiritual courts would take the common law
              as their standard of jurisprudence in preference to the precepts of the Roman
              Chancery, wherever there was a divergence between the two codes.
                   These arrangements show that the first theologians of
              that age, however strongly attached to the Roman patriarchate and the Petrine
              primacy as traditional principles of government, did not deem them
              indispensable to the life, authority, and normal functions of the Church. Such,
              indeed, were the obvious lessons of this disastrous schism.
                   The authority of the forthcoming Council of Pisa lay
              open to serious question. In the first place, it was the received doctrine of
              that day that a General Council could be convoked only by the supreme Pontiff,
              and moreover, that he must preside over it either in person or by his legates.
              Neither Pope could do this while the schism existed; since the very purpose of
              resorting to the Council was to determine between their conflicting pretensions,
              and to appoint a legitimate head of the Church. It had been argued, again, that
              under such circumstances the duty of convening the Council devolved upon the
              cardinals; but this led to a further difficulty; for, if it were doubtful who
              was the true Pope, it was doubtful likewise whether the cardinals were lawfully
              appointed, and whether they had the right to initiate such proceedings. These
              problems, however, were met and solved in a masterly manner by such
              clear-sighted reasoners as D’Ailly and Gerson. The latter, in his famous
              treatise ‘De auferibilitate Papae’,
              pointed out that the Church must of necessity possess the same power which
              belongs to every other corporate society, namely that of removing a chief
              officer who is unable or unworthy to execute his functions, and providing
              another in his place. “All positive laws,” says Gerson, “are subject to
              modification according to the exigency of successive wants; and the present is
              one of those occasions when it is wiser to regard the spirit than the mere
              letter of the law, and to be governed by those primary sanctions which- are unchangeable and divine.”
               D’Ailly, in like manner, demonstrated that in certain
              cases, one of which is that of a schism, rendering it difficult to determine
              between rival claimants of the Papacy, the ultimate appeal must unquestionably
              be to a General Council. That supreme tribunal, if the pretenders should
              obstinately refuse to resign, might depose them, and afterwards proceed to the
              election of a Pope who would be recognized throughout the Church.
                   The Council met at Pisa on the Feast of the
              Annunciation, 1409, amid intense excitement throughout Christendom. The
              preponderance of the French Church on this great occasion as manifest and
              irresistible. It was represented by eight cardinals, the titular Patriarch of
              Alexandria, Simon de Cramault, the Metropolitans of
              Lyons, Bourges, Toulouse, Tours, Narbonne, and Vienne,—thirty bishops present
              in person, and the proctors of forty-six others who were unable to attend,—a
              vast multitude of abbots, canons, heads of orders, and other dignitaries,
              together with deputations from the Universities of Paris, Orleans, Angers,
              Toulouse, and Montpellier.
               Following the course indicated by the Parisian
              doctors, the Synod proclaimed, in its 14th session, that it represented the
              Church Universal, and had authority to decide the questions of the union of the
              Church and of the schism. It next proceeded in due form to depose Popes
              Benedict XIII and Gregory XII, as schismatical,
              heretical, perjured and incorrigible; released all Christians from the
              obligation to obey them ; and declared the Holy See to be vacant. The election
              of a new Pope followed immediately. The Cardinals entered the Conclave on the
              15th of June, each having previously signed an agreement which pledged him, in
              case he should be chosen, to continue the Council until it should have effected
              a substantial reformation. The choice fell upon the Cardinal of Milan, Peter
              of Candia, who took the title of Alexander V. The new Pontiff engaged at his
              election to continue the Council of Pisa for the avowed purpose of dealing with
              the crucial question of the reformation of the Church. Ultimately, however, he
              prorogued that assembly for three years, postponing the project of reform
              until it should resume its labours. Alexander held the Papal chair scarcely a
              year, and was succeeded, in May, 1410, by Balthazzar Cossa, under the name of John XXIII. It was under the
              presidency of this pontiff that the celebrated Council of Constance, styled the
              Sixteenth Ecumenical, commenced its sittings on the 5th of November, 1414.
               The master-spirit of this assembly was Jean Gerson,
              now Chancellor of the University of Paris; who impressed upon it, by force of
              character as well as of argument, those irrefragable views of ecclesiastical
              polity which for so many years he had energetically laboured to establish. A
              large part of Gerson’s works is occupied by an elaborate exposition of the
              rights and functions of Ecumenical Councils. This was necessary under the
              circumstances of the time; for the expedient which he advocated,
              notwithstanding the well-known practice of the Church in earlier ages, was
              strange to the existing generation ; it was of a tentative character, and had
              somewhat the air of being a contrivance pro re nata.
               “It may be asked,” writes Gerson to his friend
              Cardinal D’Ailly, immediately before the opening of the Synod, “it may be asked
              whether this Council is above the Pope. I reply, certainly it is. It is
              superior to the Pope in authority, superior in dignity, superior in office.
              From the decisions of such a Council there is no appeal. Such a Council has
              power to enact new laws, and to abrogate existing and ancient laws. The
              constitutions and decrees of such a Council are incapable of being changed or
              dispensed with by any power inferior to itself. The Pope cannot, and never
              could, dispense with the sacred canons framed by a General Council, unless the
              Council itself, for some weighty reason, should specially authorize him to do
              so. The Pope cannot alter, nor even interpret, the acts of the Council, much
              less can he dispense with them; since they are like the Gospels of Christ, over
              which the Pope has no jurisdiction whatever. Let the Catholic Church take heed
              above all things never to concede to the Pope, under any pretext, the power of
              dispensing with the canons of a General Council, or even of altering or
              interpreting them; this ought to be done solely by another council, to be
              convoked from time to time for the reformation of the Church. For it is plain
              as daylight that the greater part of what was done and ordained by the four
              great (Ecumenical Councils, and others subsequent, has been almost annihilated
              and cast into oblivion by the growing avarice of Popes, cardinals, and
              prelates; by means of papal reservations, the iniquitous practices of the
              Apostolic Chamber and chancery, by corrupt dispensations, indulgences, and the
              office of the “Penitentiary.”
                   “The first object of the Council,” he continues, “is
              the election of one universal and unquestioned Pastor, approved by the whole
              Church; and, in the next place, there must be made a certain limitation and
              modification of the power of the said pastor; which power is at present
              excessive, and has grievously impaired and damaged the rights of other
              prelates.”
                 The same maxims were asserted, but in more unmeasured
              language, by Gerson’s colleagues, the doctors deputed to the Council by the
              University of Paris. “The Church militant,” they observed,  is more necessary than the Pope; for men can
              be saved without the Pope, whereas beyond the Church there is no salvation. The
              Church is better than the Pope; because the Pope is made for the Church ; now,
              as Aristotle teaches, the end is superior to the means. The Church is more
              honourable than the Pope ; for Christ multiplies upon her gifts and graces without
              number, which cannot be said of the person of the Pope. The Church is stronger
              than the Pope ; since the gates of hell, that is the vices and heresies of
              mankind, have never prevailed against her; whereas they have often prevailed
              against the Pope. The Church is more steadfast in the faith than the Pope; for
              the Pope has sometimes departed from the faith, which can never be the case
              with the universal Church. The Pope receives from the Church the trust of
              sovereign authority; for he derives it through the ministry of those who elect
              him. It follows that the power which belongs actually to the Pope belongs habitually
              to the universal Church. The Church lawfully assembled can in certain cases
              arraign, condemn, and even depose the Pope; because, since the Pope acquires
              his power from the Church, the Church can deprive him of it, should it be
              abused. The Church, represented by a General Council, has more authority than
              the Pope, because the Council can frame decrees which the Pope is bound to
              observe. Hence St. Gregory declared that he would not believe the Gospels
              unless he were determined to such belief by the authority and witness of the
              Church.” The Parisian divines affirmed in conclusion that the Church could not take
              any more effectual step towards its own thorough reformation than to prescribe
              the regular continuation of General Councils; at the same time by no means
              omitting the due celebration of Provincial Councils.
               The strong predominance of Gallican opinion at
              Constance found expression in the well-known decrees passed by the Council in
              its fourth and fifth sessions, in spite of vehement opposition from the
              cardinals and bishops of the Italian “nation.”
                   “This holy Synod of Constance, being a General Council
              lawfully assembled in the name of the Holy Ghost, and representing the Church
              militant, has received immediately from Jesus Christ a power to which all
              persons of whatever rank and dignity, not excepting the Pope himself, are bound
              to submit in those matters which concern the faith, the extirpation of the
              existing schism, and the reformation of the Church in its head and its
              members.”
                   “Whosoever, be his dignity what it may, without
              excepting the Pope, shall obstinately refuse to obey the statutes, ordinances,
              and precepts of the present Council, or of any other General Council lawfully
              assembled, shall be subjected, unless he repent, to proportionate penance, and
              punished according to his deserts, recourse being had, if necessary, to the
              assistance of the secular arm.”
                   By other articles it was declared that the Council
              could not be transferred or dissolved without its own consent: and all the
              ecclesiastical acts of John XXIII, from the day of his flight from Constance,
              were pronounced null and void. It was likewise enacted that a second
              Ecumenical Council should be held five years after the dissolution of the
              present; another at the expiration of seven years after the second, and
              thenceforward one at the interval of every ten years.
                   Such was the first synodical definition made by the
              Western Church as to the relative powers and jurisdiction of the Pope and a
              General Council. The position of affairs at that crisis rendered such an
              utterance needful and unavoidable; but it cannot be denied that an element of
              strife was thus introduced, which developed step by step into a series of
              calamitous results.
                   From this moment may be dated the formal divergence of
              the .Cisalpine or Gallican from the Ultramontane theology. Every ingenious
              device has been exhausted by the latter school in order to evade and nullify
              the force of these memorable decrees of Constance. But the attempt is in no
              slight degree embarrassing. For, on the one hand, it would be suicidal to deny
              the authority of the Council, because the deposition of John XXIII, the
              election of Martin V, and the succession of subsequent Popes, would thereby be
              invalidated. Yet, on the other, these acts of the fourth and fifth sessions, if
              taken in their widest sense, are felt to be fatal to the theory of the Pope’s absolute
              monarchy. Various arguments have been advanced to meet the difficulty. It is
              alleged that the Council did not intend to lay down a theological truth of
              universal obligation, but only to assert a rule of discipline applicable to
              abnormal circumstances, such as prevailed during the schism. It is obvious,
              however, that the Fathers of Constance go further than this; they predicate of
              “any other General Council lawfully assembled” the same authority, legislative
              and judicial, which they claimed for their own tribunal then sitting. And, moreover,
              among the famous articles of reformation which were adopted in their fortieth
              session (Oct. 30, 1417), and which the Pope elect engaged to propose for
              consideration at the meeting of the Council next ensuing, was one (art. 13)
              entitled “Propter quae et quomodo Papa possit corrigi et deponi.” Whence it is clear that the possibility was
              contemplated of circumstances which might compel the Church again to exercise
              its juridical power over the Pope, as it had done on the late occasions. This
              seems decisive as to the mind and purpose of those who framed the decrees of
              Constance.
               But it is asserted, again, that the obnoxious
              definitions were never confirmed by the Pope, and consequently have no canonical
              authority. Martin V, who was elected in November, 1417, and presided in the
              four concluding sessions of the Council, expressed his approval in general
              terms of all its acts which had been passed “conciliariter;”
              but Bellarmine and others contend that the particular acts in question were
              not such, inasmuch as they were not preceded by full and mature synodical
              discussion. They therefore consider that the acts referred to in the bull of
              confirmation were those only by which the Council condemned the heresies of Wickliff and John Huss.
               It will be allowed, however, that among the conciliar
              acts which were confirmed by Martin V, that of the deposition of John XXIII,
              his predecessor, must be included; for, unless that was a canonical proceeding,
              he himself was not the lawful occupant of the Apostolic See. Yet that act
              demonstrated the supremacy of a General Council over the Pope ; and that not
              over a doubtful Pope, but over one acknowledged by the Council itself to be the
              true and rightful successor of Peter. Implicitly, therefore, Martin confirmed
              the doctrine asserted by the Council, even supposing that he did not expressly
              confirm the definitions of the fourth and fifth sessions.
                   This argument was pressed against him with conclusive
              effect by Gerson in his treatise on the right of appeal from the Pope to a
              General Council. “If it be not lawful,” he says, “to appeal from the individual
              Pope to a Council which represents the whole Church Catholic, then such a
              Council is not the supreme tribunal of the Church; but if the Council is not
              possessed of such sovereign jurisdiction, then the Council of Constance had no
              right to depose John XXIII; consequently he is still the legitimate Pope, and
              his Holiness Martin V, in that case, is no more than a pretender.”
               Upon the whole, the language of Pope Martin, both on
              the occasion above referred to, and in his bull of February 22, 1418, must be
              held to signify the assent of that Pontiff to all doctrinal definitions made at
              Constance, including those which have since been so warmly controverted. Nor
              does it appear, after all, on a dispassionate view of the case, that anything
              is propounded in those definitions which is either beyond or beside the immemorial
              tradition of the Church. Was it a novel doctrine, that an (Ecumenical Council
              has authority to make laws for the whole Christian community, and that the
              Pope, more directly than any other individual, is bound to conform to them, to
              maintain their integrity, and to enforce their observance? Had not this truth
              been acknowledged most emphatically by the Popes themselves for ages anterior
              to the Council of Constance? Do not their official professions and
              protestations on this subject occupy page after page in the collected code of
              ecclesiastical jurisprudence ? The decrees of Constance, fairly construed,
              amount to no more than this, that it is obligatory on the Pope to obey the
              canons of Ecumenical Councils. Why should such a declaration be less acceptable
              to Popes of the fifteenth century than it was to those of the fifth ? Why
              should Martin and Eugenius hesitate to sanction it, while it is endorsed by the
              concurrent testimony of their predecessors of happy memory, Zosimus, Boniface,
              Gelasius, S. Leo, S. Gregory, Leo IV, and many others?
                   But although the doctrine of the supremacy of General
              Councils, thus authoritatively proclaimed, is of the deepest importance as a
              rule of ecclesiastical polity, De Marca and other authors warn us against the
              mistake of supposing that the so-called “liberties of the Gallican Church”
              consist wholly, or even chiefly, in the maintenance of this abstract principle.
              The true liberty of the Church, whether in France or elsewhere, lies in its
              being governed in conformity with the ancient canons, and with those laws which
              from time to time are enacted synodically, in accordance
              with the original principles of its constitution.
               In pursuance of the arrangement made at Constance, a
              Council was convened at Pavia in 1423; but after a few weeks it was transferred
              to Sienna, and thence subsequently to Basle. Eugenius IV, who succeeded
              Martin, apprehending probably that this assembly, if permitted to proceed
              independently, would follow in the track of that of Constance, and apply itself
              with indiscreet zeal to the work of reform, attempted to dissolve it, and
              proposed that it should meet a year later at Bologna, where it would have been
              in great measure under his own dictation. This led to a rupture between the
              Pope and the Council; and years of confused strife ensued (into the details of
              which it is unnecessary to enter) totally frustrating the measures so urgently
              required for the purification of the Church.
                   The position assumed by the Gallican Church at this
              juncture was peculiar, and in some respects questionable. It declared decidedly
              in favour of the Council of Basle; many French prelates repaired thither, and
              ambassadors were sent by the King, Charles VII, to Pope Eugenius, to beseech
              him to support the authority of the Synod, and to protest against its
              dissolution. The Fathers stood firm at their post, appealing to the principles
              solemnly asserted at Constance, that the Pope is bound in certain specified
              cases to submit to an Ecumenical Council, and that the latter cannot be
              translated, prorogued, or dissolved, without its own consent. The gift of
              infallibility, they affirmed, resides in the collective Church. It does not
              belong to the Popes, several of whom have erred concerning the Faith. The
              Church alone has authority to enact laws which are binding on the whole body of
              the faithful. Now, the authority of General Councils is identical with that of
              the Church. This was expressly determined by the Council of Constance, and
              acknowledged by Pope Martin V. The Pope is the ministerial head of the Church,
              but he is not its absolute sovereign; on the contrary, facts prove that he is
              subject to the jurisdiction of the Church; for well-known instances are on
              record of Popes being deposed on the score of erroneous doctrine and immoral
              life, whereas no Pope has ever attempted to condemn or excommunicate the
              Church. Both the Pope and the Church have received authority to bind and loose;
              but the Church has practically exerted that authority against the Pope,
              whereas the latter has never ventured to take any such step against the Church.
              In fine, the words of Christ himself are decisive of the question—“If any man
              neglect to hear the Church, let him be unto you as a heathen man and a
              publican.” This injunction was addressed to St. Peter equally with the rest of
              the disciples.
                   The Council proceeded to cite Eugenius by a formal monition
              to appear in person at Basle; and on his failing to comply, they signified that
              on the expiration of a further interval of sixty days, ulterior means would be
              put in force against him. Their firmness, added to the pressing solicitations
              of the Emperor Sigismund, at length induced the Pope to yield. He reconciled
              himself with the Council in December, 1433; acknowledged that it had been
              legitimately convoked ; approved its proceedings up to that date; and
              cancelled the act by which he had pronounced its dissolution.
                   Elated by this triumph, the Basilian fathers commenced
              in earnest the task of church reform, and passed several decrees of a
              character vexatious to the Pope, particularly one for the total abolition of
              annates. A second breach was the consequence. Eugenius, under’ pretence of
              furthering the negotiation then pending for the reunion of the Greek and Latin
              branches of the Church, published in 1437 a bull dissolving the Council of
              Basle, and summoning another to meet at Ferrara. The assembly at Basle retorted
              by declaring the Pope contumacious, and suspending him from the exercise of
              all authority. Both parties proceeded eventually to the last extremities. The
              Council, after proclaiming afresh, as “Catholic verities,” that a General
              Council has power over the Pope, and cannot be transferred or dissolved but by
              its own act, passed a definitive sentence in its thirty-fourth session (June
              25, 1439) deposing Eugenius from the Papal throne. The Pope retaliated by stigmatizing
              the fathers of Basle as schismatical and heretical,
              cancelling their acts, and excommunicating their president, the Cardinal
              Archbishop of Arles.
               Meanwhile an energetic and independent line of action
              was adopted by the government in France. The Crown, in concert with the heads
              of the Church, availed itself of a train of events which had so seriously
              damaged the prestige of the Papacy, to make a decisive advance in the path of
              practical reform, and to establish the long-cherished Gallican privileges on a
              secure basis. For this purpose Charles VII. assembled a great National Council
              at Bourges, in July, 1438, at which he presided in person, surrounded by the
              princes of his family, and by all the most eminent dignitaries spiritual and
              temporal; and here was promulgated the memorable ordinance known as the
              “Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges.”
                   The French Church, it must be observed, did not
              recognise the deposition of Pope Eugenius, but adhered to his obedience,
              rejecting Felix V., whom the Council of Basle elected to succeed him, as a
              pretender. I continued, nevertheless, to support the Council, and to assert its
              supreme legislative authority. Hence there arises a considerable difficulty in limine as to the character of the proceedings at
              Bourges. For the deposition of Eugenius was either a rightful and valid
              exercise of conciliar authority, or it was not. If it was not—if the Council
              had wrongfully and uncanonically condemned the successor of Peter—how could it
              be infallible ? and why should its legislation in other particulars be
              indisputable? On the other hand, if the deposition was a valid one, with what
              consistency could the French continue to regard Eugenius as their legitimate
              pastor? It was a knotty dilemma.
               The position, however, though logically open to
              objections, was not without its practical advantages. For, since France
              maintained a good understanding with both the contending parties, both found it
              conducive to their interest to send deputations to the Council of Bourges; Pope
              Eugenius, with a view to obtain its support for the rival council which he had
              opened at Ferrara; the fathers of Basle, in order to make known their decrees,
              which, as agreeing with the received doctrine of Gallican theologians, would,
              it was hoped, meet with a cordial welcome throughout France. The assembly at
              Bourges did not fail to profit by these exceptional circumstances. It accepted
              the decrees of Basle, yet not absolutely, but after critical examination, and
              with certain modifications;—a course which, by implication, asserted a right to
              legislate for the concerns of the French Church even independently of a General
              Council acknowledged to be orthodox. The following explanation of this
              proceeding was inserted in the preamble of the celebrated statute finally
              agreed upon by the authorities at Bourges. It is there stated that this policy
              was adopted “not from any hesitation as to the authority of the Council of
              Basle to enact and promulgate ecclesiastical decrees, but because it was judged
              advisable to adapt those decrees to the usages, circumstances, and
              requirements of the French realm and nation.” So that it appears, on the whole,
              that while the French professed great zeal on this occasion for the dogma of
              the superiority of a General Council over the Pope, the principle practically
              illustrated at Bourges was that of the supremacy of a National Council over every other ecclesiastical authority. Such were the anomalies which arose
              out of the strange necessities of the time.
               The Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges embraces
              twenty-three articles. The first treats of the authority of General Councils,
              and of the time and manner of convening and celebrating them. The second
              relates to ecclesiastical elections, which are enjoined to be made hereafter in
              strict accordance with the canons, by the cathedral, collegiate, and conventual
              chapters. Reserves, Pragmatic Sanction legalised the nomination by the Crown
              to the bishoprics and other Church dignities; and he describes this as
              constituting the “Gallican liberties.” On the contrary, that edict restored,
              in distinct terms, “the canonical elections to all metropolitan, cathedral,
              collegiate, and conventual churches, according to the provisions of annates,
              and “expective graces,” are abolished; the rights of patrons are to be
              respected, provided their nominees be graduates of the Universities, and
              otherwise well qualified. The Pope retains only a veto in case of unfitness or
              uncanonical election, and the nomination to benefices “in curia vacantia,” i.e.,
              of which the incumbents may happen to die at Rome, or within two days’ journey
              of the Pontifical residence. The King and other princes may occasionally
              recommend or request the promotion of persons of special merit, but without
              threats or violent pressure of any kind.
               Other articles regulate the order of ecclesiastical
              appeals, which, with the exception of the “causae majores ” specified by law, and those relating to the elections in cathedral
              and conventual churches, are henceforth to be decided On the spot by the ordinary
              judges; appeals are to be carried in all cases to the court immediately superior;
              no case to be referred to the Pope “omisso medio,” i.e.,
              without passing through the intermediate tribunals. The remaining clauses
              consist of regulations for the performance of Divine service, and various
              matters of discipline.
               The reader will remember that Pope Eugenius, on the
              occasion of his temporary reconciliation with the Council of Basle in 1433,
              expressed his approbation of all its synodal acts up to that date; and this
              sanction of their validity is held by Galileans to extend to the period of the
              second and final rupture in 1437. It follows that the provisions of the
              Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges, so far as they coincide with the decrees of
              Basle prior to 1437, were authorized by the Holy See; and this includes them
              all with two exceptions, the common law.” It was this right of canonical
              election that formed the keystone of the “liberty” of the Gallican Church; the
              practice of Royal nomination was a contravention, evasion, and abuse of that
              invaluable franchise. In order to obtain a statutable right to nominate the
              prelates of the realm, the Crown was obliged to abolish the Pragmatic Sanction,
              which was replaced by the Concordat of Bologna.
                   The Pragmatic Sanction was registered by the
              Parliament of Paris on the 13th of July, 1439; becoming thereby part of the
              statute law of France. Its publication caused universal satisfaction
              throughout the kingdom. At Rome, on the other hand, it was indignantly censured
              and resolutely opposed. Eugenius IV vainly strove to obtain the King’s consent
              to an alteration of some of its details. Nicolas V protested against it without
              effect; but the superior genius and subtle measures of Pius II were more
              successful. This Pontiff denounced the Pragmatic at the Council of Mantua in
              1460, as
                 …“a blot which disfigured the Church of France; a
              decree which no Ecumenical Council would have passed, nor any Pope have
              confirmed; a principle of confusion in the ecclesiastical hierarchy. Since it
              had been in force, the laity had become the masters and judges of the clergy;
              the power of the spiritual sword could no longer be exerted except at the good
              pleasure of the secular authority. The Roman Pontiff, whose diocese embraced
              the world, whose jurisdiction is not bounded even by the ocean, possessed only
              such extent of power in France as the Parliament might see fit to allow him.”
               The ambassadors of Charles VII, however, reminded his
              Holiness that the Pragmatic Sanction was founded on the canons of Constance and
              Basle, which had been ratified by his predecessors; and when the Pope proceeded
              to threaten France with an interdict, and to prohibit all appeal from his
              decisions to a future council, the King caused his procureur-general, Jean Dauvet, to publish an official protest against these acts
              of violence, concluding with a solemn appeal to the judgment of the Church
              Catholic assembled by representation. While awaiting that event, Charles
              declared himself resolved to uphold the laws and regulations which had been
              sanctioned by previous Councils.
               Louis XI, urged by alternate menaces, entreaties, and
              flattery from Rome, revoked the Pragmatic Sanction shortly after his accession.
              The step accorded well with his own arbitrary temper; for he could not endure
              the privilege of free election by the cathedral and monastic chapters; nor was
              he less jealous of the influence exerted, under the shelter of that privilege,
              by the high feudal nobility in the disposal of Church preferment. He seems to
              have expected, moreover, that while ostensibly conceding the right of patronage
              to the Apostolic See, he should be able to retain the real power in his own
              hands. The event disappointed his calculations. No sooner was the decree of
              Bourges rescinded, than the Pope resumed and enforced his claim to the
              provision of benefices in France. Simony, and the whole train of concomitant
              abuses, reappeared more scandalously than ever; and Louis found himself
              despised by his subjects as the dupe of Papal artifice.
                   The Parliamentary Courts, meanwhile, assumed a
              determined attitude in defence of the right of election guaranteed by the Pragmatic
              Sanction. They pronounced the abolition of that act illegal, and treated it as
              null and void; they insisted on their own authority in entertaining appeals
              against ecclesiastical abuses; they eagerly supported anyone who showed a
              disposition to withstand the pretensions of Rome in the matter of patronage.
              The king, smarting under the trickery of the Pope, made no attempt to restrain
              them in this line of conduct; and the result was that the repeal of the
              Pragmatic Sanction was never fully executed, having never been legalized by the
              forms of the Constitution. On the other hand, the Popes so far maintained the
              advantage they had extorted from Louis, that the ancient franchise of the
              Church as to elections became virtually extinct in France.
                   Things remained in this unsettled state during the
              reigns of Louis XI, Charles VIII, and Louis XII. The latter prince, on coming
              to the throne, published an edict re-establishing the Pragmatic Sanction; and
              this step, added to his ambitious enterprises in Italy, brought him into
              hostile collision with Pope Julius II. The king, unwilling to make war on the
              head of the Church without some semblance of ecclesiastical sanction, convoked
              a Council at Tours in September, 1510, and consulted the clergy on a series of
              questions arising out of the disturbed state of his relations with Rome. They
              decided, in accordance with the known views and wishes of the sovereign, that
              it is lawful for an independent prince, if unjustly attacked, to defend himself
              against the Pope by force of arms—to withdraw for a time from his obedience—to
              take possession of the territory of the Church, not with the purpose of
              retaining it, but as a temporary measure of self-protection—and to resist the
              pretensions of the Pontiff to powers not rightfully belonging to him. Citations
              to appear at Rome might, under such circumstances, be safely disregarded; as
              also Papal censures, which would be null and void. If the emergency should
              arise, the Council added, the king ought to be governed by the ancient
              principles of ecclesiastical law, as confirmed and re-enacted by the Pragmatic
              Sanction.
                   The Gallican clergy sent a deputation to Pope Julius
              on this occasion, to entreat him to adopt a more conciliatory policy towards
              the princes of Christendom; and they determined, in case their advice should be
              fruitless, to demand the convocation of a General Council, to take cognizance
              of the Pope’s conduct, and prescribe the measures necessary for the guidance
              and welfare of the Church.
                   An ecclesiastical congress, calling itself a
              Council-General, but altogether unworthy of that august title, was held, in
              fact, in the following year at Pisa, under the auspices of the King of France
              and the Emperor Maximilian. The Pope refused to appear there, and convoked a
              rival synod at Rome, summoning the cardinals who had authorized the meeting at
              Pisa to present themselves at his court within sixty days. On the expiration of
              this term he publicly excommunicated them, degraded them from their dignity,
              and deprived them of their preferments.
                   Thus the Western Church once more exhibited the
              spectacle of a “house divided against itself,” as during the scandalous strife
              between the synods of Basle and Florence; and for some time a formal schism
              appeared imminent. The so-called Council of Pisa consisted of the four
              rebellious cardinals, twenty Gallican prelates, several abbots and other
              dignitaries, the envoys of the King of France, deputies from some of the French
              Universities, and a considerable number of Doctors of the Faculty of Paris.
              This assembly justified its position on the ground that there are extraordinary
              cases in which a Council may be called without the intervention of the Pope;
              and that, since the present Pontiff had neglected to obey the decree of the
              Council of Constance which enjoined a similar celebration at the interval of
              every ten years, the cardinals were bound to take the initiative in the matter,
              according to a solemn engagement which they had made in the conclave when
              Julius was elected. After repeating the stereotyped formula concerning the
              supreme authority of General Councils, and the imperative necessity of a
              reformation of the Church in its head and in its members, the fathers addressed
              themselves professedly to the herculean task thus indicated; but little or
              nothing was effected of any practical importance.
                   Political emergencies compelled them ere long to
              transfer their sessions to Milan; and here, on the 21st of April, 1512, they
              had the hardihood to publish a decree suspending Pope Julius from all
              Pontifical functions, as “a notorious disturber of the Council, the author of
              schism, contumacious, incorrigible, and hardened.”
                   Louis XII accepted this sentence by a special edict,
              and ordered it to be registered and published by the Parliament of Paris; upon
              which the Pope replied by excommunicating the king, laying the whole of his
              dominions under an interdict, and absolving his subjects from their oath of
              allegiance. Louis protested against this bull, and further expressed his
              indignation by causing coins to be struck bearing the arms of Prance encircled
              by the menacing legend, “Perdam Babylonis nomen.”
               Victory declared eventually for the Pope. He succeeded
              in organizing a formidable coalition against the French; they were expelled
              ignominiously from the Milanese; the terrified members of the pseudo-council
              crossed the Alps in precipitate haste, and took refuge at Lyons, where their
              situation and pretensions were little short of ridiculous.
                   In the meantime the fifth Council of Lateran, styled
              by the Roman Church oecumenical, though its right to that title was scarcely
              better than that of the assembly at Pisa, commenced its sittings on the 10th of
              May, 1512. The Pope presided in person, at the head of fifteen cardinals, and
              upwards of a hundred prelates, almost all Italian. Here the acts of the schismatical assemblies at Pisa, Milan, and Lyons were solemnly
              condemned and annulled, and the censures pronounced on the King of France were
              confirmed. In the fourth session (December 10, 1512) a vigorous attack was made
              on the Pragmatic Sanction. The letters-patent of Louis XI were read, by which
              it had been suppressed at the instance of Pius II; after which a monition was
              published summoning all supporters of that act, of whatsoever rank or dignity,
              to appear at Rome within sixty days, and show cause why it should not be
              finally revoked and abolished. The fifth session was not held till the 16th of
              February, 1513; and a few days afterwards the turbulent reign of Julius II. was
              brought to a close by death. The views and policy of his successor, Leo X, were
              of a totally opposite character. He made it his first object to restore peace
              to Christendom; and circumstances soon enabled him to arrive at a definitive
              adjustment of the perplexing questions which had been so long pending with the
              Government of France. Unfortunately, that adjustment amounted to a deliberate
              betrayal of the first principles of the constitution of the Church; principles
              which the Apostolic See ought to have defended and enforced at all hazards.
               Louis XII, who was greatly dishearten by his late
              reverses, lost no time in signifying his desire to effect a reconciliation with
              the new Pope. This was granted him on easy terms. The French ambassadors
              attended the eighth session of the Lateran Council, and renounced in their
              master’s name the pretended Councils of Pisa, Milan, and Lyons, accepting that
              of the Lateran as the sole legitimate and indubitable Council, and engaging that
              the assembly still in session at Lyons should separate within one month. It was
              also promised that a deputation of the French clergy should repair to Rome to
              solicit absolution. The fulfilment of this latter article was delayed upon
              various pretexts, and the Pope, as an act of indulgence, postponed it to the
              eleventh session of the Council, which was not held till the 19th of December,
              1516. Meanwhile the abolition of the Pragmatic Sanction, an object which the
              Court of Rome pursued with extraordinary energy, remained in suspense. But an
              event occurred ere long which wonderfully facilitated the desired arrangement.
              Louis XII expired in January, 1515, and was succeeded by Francis I.
                   It was after the splendid triumph of the French arms
              at Marignano that Leo judged it advisable to negotiate a final treaty of
              reconciliation with the Gallican Church. The young monarch, flushed with
              victory, was at that moment in a position to demand advantageous terms; and it
              was plain that any agreement must be of the nature of a compromise. Antoine Duprat, Chancellor of France, to whom Francis entrusted the
              management of this delicate business, was a diplomatist well capable of
              pressing the terms of a bargain in a sense corresponding with his master’s
              interests; and, knowing that the paramount point with Rome was the abrogation
              of the Pragmatic Sanction, he exacted, as the price of it, a boon which
              legalized and perpetuated the predominance of the Crown in directing the
              administration of the Church.
               The celebrated Concordat of Bologna bears date the
              18th of August, 1516. Many of its provisions were identical with those of the
              Pragmatic Sanction, for which it was substituted ; but there were some
              conspicuous exceptions. The most important article is that relating to the
              right of nomination to bishoprics and other “benefices consistoriaux”;
              this was transferred in express terms from the capitular bodies to the Crown.
              The king was to present, within six months after the vacancy, a doctor or
              licentiate in divinity to the Pope, who was thereupon to confirm the
              appointment and confer canonical institution;—a veto being thus secured to the
              Holy See upon any choice which did not satisfy the requirements of the canons.
              The Pope was still to nominate to benefices “in curia vacantia”; and it was
              further agreed that every private patron having from ten to fifty benefices in
              his gift should place one presentation at the disposal of the Pope for the time
              being, or two, if the number exceeded fifty. Papal “reservations” and “expective
              graces” were abolished. The right of University graduates to preferment was
              recognized, and their privileges considerably extended. Ecclesiastical causes
              were to be decided within the realm by the ordinary tribunals, or by
              commissioners named by the Pope in the case of “causae majores” statutably reserved to his cognizance.
               But the omissions from the Concordat were of crucial
              significance. Entire silence was observed with respect to the memorable
              decrees of Constance, Basle, and Bourges, which had established the superiority
              of Councils over the Pope. No mention was made of the annates, which the
              Pragmatic Sanction bad suppressed; and in consequence of the tacit
              understanding between the contracting parties on this head, the claim to that
              impost was immediately revived by the Pope, who regarded it as a right
              inherently annexed to his See. “Thus,” as Mezerai remarks, “the Pope surrendered to the king a purely spiritual privilege, and
              obtained in return a purely secular advantage.”
               This arbitrary measure excited an outcry of
              indignation throughout France, and the mandate for its registration was most
              stubbornly resisted by the Parliament of Paris. After ten days of discussion,
              the magistrates came to a resolution that it would be contrary to their duty to
              accept the new ordinance; they appealed against it to “the Pope better
              informed,” and to the next General Council lawfully assembled. Meanwhile they
              declared that the Pragmatic Sanction ought to be observed more strictly than
              ever. If the king was absolutely determined to enforce the reception of the
              Concordat, they begged that he would cause it to be promulgated in the same way
              as in the case of the Pragmatic Sanction, namely, by a lawfully convened
              Council of the Gallican Church. The new decree was combated in like manner by
              the University of Paris. That body posted notices throughout the city forbidding
              all booksellers and printers to print and publish it. They drew up an elaborate
              memorial, setting forth the manifold evils which had arisen from the disuse of
              free election; tracing to that source the ignorance, incompetence, and depraved
              morals, which disgraced the higher clergy, as well as the spoliation of the
              National Church by the inordinate exactions of Rome. In conclusion, the
              University appealed to the Pope “better informed,” and to a future legitimate
              Council freely assembled. The act of appeal stated that, “although the Pope
              holds his authority immediately from God, he is not on that account incapable
              of error; that if he should command anything contrary to the precepts of Divine
              law, the faithful are not bound to obey him; and that if he shall persist in
              attempting to enforce submission, the only remedy is to appeal from him to the
              decision of the Church Universal—a right which none can gainsay, since it is
              founded on the law of God and that of nature.” Francis, much irritated, issued
              an edict annulling these proceedings as seditious, and insisting on the
              immediate acceptance of the obnoxious ordinance. At first the command was
              disregarded; but the despotic power to which the monarchy had been steadily
              advancing ever since the time of Philip the Fair prevailed in the end.
                   In the eleventh session of the Lateran Council
              (December 19, 1516), Leo X promulgated the bull “Pastor aeternus,”
              by which the Pragmatic Sanction was finally abrogated and annulled. It begins
              with a pompous eulogy of the Christian virtue of obedience; after which it
              recites that the late Pope Julius, finding that the Pragmatic Sanction (“which
              might well be called the depravation of the kingdom of France”) was still in
              force, to the peril of souls and the detriment of the Holy See, had caused it
              to be examined by a Commission of Cardinals, and had cited the French bishops,
              chapters, and Parliaments, to appear as parties to the cause at Rome. The Pope
              goes on to state that, after the death of his predecessor, be had judged it
              right to pursue the same course, and had summoned the parties interested by
              repeated monitions; in spite of which no one had yet appeared to allege reasons
              in defence of the measure in question. Under these circumstances he had
              determined to abolish it altogether, after the example of Leo the Great, who,
              at the Council of Chalcedon, revoked what had been rashly ordained by the
              second Council of Ephesus in opposition to the Catholic faith. The fact that
              the Pragmatic Sanction had been authorized by the councils of Bourges and
              Basle was no obstacle to its revocation; for it had not been accepted until
              after the translation of the latter Council by Eugenius IV, which destroyed its
              validity; since the sovereign Pontiff has plenary power over Councils, to
              convoke, translate, and dissolve them. In fine, he declares that the Pragmatic
              Sanction has no authority whatever; he cancels all the decrees, statutes, and
              regulations, contained in it; he condemns and annuls all that was done with
              respect to it in the assembly of Bourges. And forasmuch as it is necessary to
              salvation that all Christians should be subject to the Roman Pontiff, according
              to Holy Scripture, the Fathers, and the constitution of Boniface VIII, “Unam sanctam,” he therefore renews that constitution, without
              prejudice to that of Clement V, beginning “Meruit,” and forbids the faithful, clergy
              and laity, regular and secular, of whatever order, rank, or condition, to make
              use of the Pragmatic Sanction for the future, or to decide any cause in
              conformity with its provisions. The penalty denounced was the greater
              excommunication and deprivation for ecclesiastics, and the forfeiture of fiefs
              and all dignities in the case of civilians. Another bull, substituting the
              Concordat for the Pragmatic Sanction, was read in the same session.
               The Parliament of Paris persisted in its opposition
              until it was on the brink of an open rupture with the sovereign. A royal message,
              on the 12th of March, 1517, warned the magistrates that, if the new edict was
              not registered and published without further discussion and delay, his Majesty
              would be compelled to resort to extremities which would give them cause for
              regret. It was now felt that it would be dangerous further to resist the
              king’s pleasure; the Parliament, therefore, yielded in form; but this was done
              in the most reserved and qualified terms possible, under protest that it was
              purely an act of submission to the crown, and that the Parliament by no means
              designed thereby to authorize or approve of the Concordat. The magistrates also
              declared that they would continue to adjudicate appeals in ecclesiastical
              matters in accordance with the Pragmatic Sanction as heretofore.
                   Nor did this forced surrender terminate the struggle.
              The execution of the Concordat was vigorously contested for years afterwards.
              Cathedral and monastic chapters proceeded to elect bishops and abbots under the
              provisions of the Pragmatic Sanction; and every such case became a fresh
              source of exasperation between the contending powers. The disputed elections
              were referred for arbitration, according to the views and feelings of the
              parties interested, sometimes to the Council of State, sometimes to the
              Parliament of Paris. Conflicting judgments were pronounced; the Royal Council
              decided for the royal nominee; the Parliament ruled that the individual on whom
              the choice of the chapter had fallen was duly elected. But the Parliament,
              though clamouring loudly for the “Gallican liberties,” and making a gallant
              stand for national independence as against the usurpations of Rome, was unable
              to maintain its ground against the overpowering despotism of the Crown. The
              monarchical authority ultimately achieved a complete triumph. In 1527 a
              peremptory royal ordinance prohibited the courts of Parliament from taking
              further cognisance of causes affecting elections to consistorial benefices and
              conventual priories; and all such matters were transferred to the sole
              jurisdiction of the Council of State. After this the agitation against the
              Concordat gradually subsided.
                   But although, in virtue of its compulsory registration
              by the Parliament, the Concordat became part of the law of the land, it is
              certain that the Gallican Church never accepted this flagrant invasion of its
              liberties. On the contrary, the clergy lost no opportunity of protesting
              against it, and petitioned the crown unceasingly for the restoration of freedom
              of election. In their assembly at Melun in 1579 they adopted a “remonstrance”
              to Henry III, demanding this privilege as belonging to the Church by Divine
              right. “It would have been for the interest of the Pope and of the kings of
              Prance,” they argued, “if the Concordat had never come to pass. Since that time
              the Church of France has declined; heresy made its appearance at the same
              moment, and has gained ground to the extent which we now witness. The condition
              of the Church while the elections were in force, as compared with that which
              has resulted from the royal nominations, shows that it was vitally important to
              maintain the primitive rule; and the foresight of our Parliament has thus been
              fully vindicated, in its refusal to approve the abolition of the Pragmatic
              Sanction; which law it justly regarded as the main safeguard against the abuses
              which have since been prevalent.” Similar representations were made to the
              throne by the synod of 1588, when the Bishop of S. Brieux reminded his Majesty
              that his grandfather, Francis I, when lying on his death-bed, had acknowledged
              to his son, Henry II, that “there was nothing which weighed so heavily upon
              his conscience as the measure by which he had suppressed the free elections, and
              assumed the nomination to cathedrals and monasteries.”
                 The practical working of the Concordat seems to have
              been, in some respects, preferable to that of the system of capitular election,
              which had engendered scandalous abuses. But it was attended with one signal
              disadvantage. Under the new order of things both those who attained and those
              who aspired to the high places of the Church became, almost inevitably,
              courtiers; their spiritual character was in perpetual danger of being merged in
              that of temporal grandees and political functionaries. The bishops were
              unquestionably more national in their views and tendencies under the modern
              arrangement—more vigilant in resisting the aggressions and encroachments of
              the Papacy; but, in the same proportion, they were less capable of opposing any
              effectual barrier to the strides by which the monarchy was marching towards
              absolute dominion. They dared not assume the attitude of fearless champions of
              the constitutional rights of their order, and of the Divine economy of the
              Church; they contracted a tone of servile dependence, unqualified admiration,
              and fulsome flattery, in their communications with the sovereign. In addition
              to this, the “haute noblesse” were enabled, by means of the new system, to establish
              almost a monopoly of the richer Church preferments. Bishoprics and abbacies
              became practically hereditary in certain great families, and were regarded as
              the ordinary provision for younger sons. This grave abuse was palpably fostered
              by the article of the Concordat which declared princes of the blood royal and
              persons of noble birth eligible for preferment without being graduates of the
              Universities.! A race of dignitaries was thus created who rarely owed their
              promotion to any claims on the score of theological attainment or pastoral
              efficiency.
                   Although it would be difficult to imagine anything
              more diametrically opposed than the Concordat to the primitive institutions of
              the Church, the circumstances under which it was obtained were such that it
              might be colourably described as a national protest against certain usurpations
              and exactions hitherto practised by the court of Rome. This operated, in great
              measure, as a veil to its true character. So keen was the satisfaction caused
              by the removal of some of the heaviest burdens under which the Church had
              groaned for centuries through spiritual misgovernment, that the immense
              increase of power which was thrown at the same time into the hands of the civil
              ruler was comparatively overlooked. Thus the Concordat was complacently quoted
              by its admirers as establishing the “Gallican liberties”; whereas it was, in
              fact, the most formidable blow that had yet been dealt towards their
              extinction. The interests which it really served were those of modern pseudo-Gallicanism;—a
              system of which it is no exaggeration to say that it proved ruinous to the
              National Church of France.
                 
               CHAPTER I.COMMENCEMENT OF THE REFORMATION.
 
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