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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. |  | 
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 CHAPTER XIII.PASCAL'S PROVINCIAL LETTERS
           The field was lost for the Port Royalists; but their leaders thought it
          possible that, by means of a skilful diversion, a considerable portion of the
          ground from which they had been driven might be recovered. It was resolved to
          attempt this by assailing with the shafts of satire—weapons at all times of
          peculiar potency in France—the most vulnerable points of the enemy’s position.
          Such was the object of the Lettres écrites à un provincial par un de ses amis, commonly called the ‘Provincial Letters’, the
          first of which appeared on the 23rd of January, 1656, while the question of Arnauld’s
          condemnation was still under discussion at the Sorbonne. They were written by
          Pascal, at the instigation, and partly with the assistance, of Arnauld himself.
          At first they were published without any name; afterwards the author assumed
          that of Louis de Montalte. The “provincial” to whom
          they were addressed was M. Perier, Pascal’s
          brother-in-law, a magistrate of the Cour des aides at Clermont.
           In the first and second of these letters, Pascal
          ridicules the technical phrases “pouvoir prochain” and
          “grace suffisante”; which, so far as mere phraseology is concerned, were
          perhaps fair subjects for raillery. They expressed, however, important
          theological truths; truths involving the entire discrepancy between the views
          of Jansenius and the received teaching of the Church. That man, in his
          regenerate state, possesses in a certain true sense the power or capacity of
          keeping the Divine commandments, was almost universally acknowledged among
          orthodox Catholics; though, from the infirmity which still remains in our
          nature, that power is not always carried out in action. The grace which gives
          such power was known by various names;—“adjutorium sine quo non,” “gratia possibilitatis,” “grace
          suffisante,” “grace excitante,” “potential grace.”
          It was thus distinguished from “efficacious grace,” namely that by which the
          will is not only empowered, but moved and determined to the actual fulfilment
          of the law. This distinction was not admitted by the Jansenists; they held that
          all grace which is “sufficient” must be “efficacious” also; from which it followed
          that such a measure of grace as does not absolutely determine the will is not
          sufficient for obedience; so that when a just man falls into sin, he has no
          power to avoid it.
           The particular epithet in question was open to
          exception; and, in the hands of Pascal, the “grace suffisante qui ne suffit pas” became irresistibly grotesque. Yet the idea is
          not really paradoxical, though it has that appearance. An army may be sufficient,
          in point of numbers, courage, and science, to reduce a given fortress; but it
          does not follow that it will actually capture it. A statesman may possess
          sufficient talent and experience to lead the House of Commons; but it does not
          follow that he will in fact succeed in leading it. In St. Augustine’s words,
          “Non est consequens, ut qui potest venire, etiam veniat, nisi id voluerit atque fecerit.” 
           The third letter is an indignant protest against
          Arnauld’s condemnation, which had at length been published. Pascal denounces
          the sentence as unjust, preposterous, and nugatory, inasmuch as it was passed
          under coercion, and in the absence of a large body of dissentients. “It was
          not Arnauld’s opinions that were declared heretical, but his person; it was a
          personal heresy. He was a heretic, not on account of what he had written, but
          solely because he was M. Arnauld. St. Augustine’s doctrine of grace would never
          be the true one, so long as it was defended by Arnauld. It would at once become
          true if he happened to oppose it. Indeed this would be the surest, perhaps the
          only, way to establish Augustinianism and to destroy Molinism.”
           These three earlier letters, together with the
          seventeenth and eighteenth, which conclude the series, are all that treat
          directly of the Jansenistic controversy. In the
          fourth, the argument is transferred from the region of dogmatic to that of
          moral theology; the object of attack being the system of casuistry practised by
          the Jesuits. This is criticised with exquisite wit and trenchant force. The
          principle upon which the Society acted with regard to the use of the Sacraments seems to have
            guided them likewise in the department of Christian morals; namely that of
            softening the strictness of the Gospel rule, so as to accommodate it to the
            habits of ordinary men of the world. That rule, under their treatment, acquired
            an amount of elasticity which made it practically indulgent to human infirmity,
            not only in small matters, but to a dangerous extent. Many of the most eminent
            writers on casuistical divinity in the latter half of the sixteenth and
            beginning of the seventeenth centuries were Jesuits; such as Lessius, Sanchez, Bauny, Emanuel
            Sa, Vasquez, Suarez, and Antonio Escobar. In proportion as the fame and
            influence of the Order increased, its confessors were perpetually brought into
            contact with religious doubts, scruples, perplexities, and emergencies of every
            description; and were thus almost compelled to provide themselves with a code
            of ethics embracing, so far as it was possible to embrace, all the numberless
            problems and minute distinctions of moral responsibility. Nevertheless, it must
            be recollected that the science of casuistry was not the invention of the
            Jesuits. In their hands, no doubt, it received an extreme and in many respects
            mischievous, development. But long before the days of Loyola this was accounted
            an essential branch of theological study; and, indeed, from the moment when the
            Church enforced auricular confession as a universal duty, it became
            indispensable to the clergy in the instruction and guidance of souls. It would
            be easy to produce a long list of Roman divines of all shades of opinion, who
            have devoted themselves to the examination of cases of conscience, and have
            published professed treatises on the subject; among such may be named, as
            altogether unconnected with the Jesuits, Bartolomeo Medina, Dominic Soto, John Nieder,
              and Diego Alvarez, all of the Order of Dominicans, and Miguel Salon, an
              Augustinian.
               The theory of “probabilism” is impeached by Pascal in
          the fifth letter, as the main source and basis of the corrupt morality
          propagated by the Jesuits. According to this system, it is lawful to follow the
          less probable opinion, though it be the less sure, provided it has been held by
          any one doctor of high repute for learning and piety. And further, a doctor is
          justified in giving advice which is contrary to his own conviction, if such
          advice has been sanctioned by other doctors, whenever it appears more
          favourable and acceptable to the person applying for direction. Nay, he may
          tender an opinion which is held probable by some eminent divine, even when he
          himself is persuaded that it is absolutely false, f In like manner, a confessor
          ought to absolve a penitent who follows a probable opinion, although personally
          he may entertain the contrary sentiment. To refuse absolution in such a case
          would be mortal sin. Pascal goes on to show, in a series of instances, how,
          with the help of this ingenious hypothesis, the plainest precepts of the Divine
          law may be evaded, and excuses may be found for delinquencies of all kinds.
          Simony, sacrilege, usury, dishonesty, robbery, and even homicide in certain
          cases, are justified on this slippery principle.
           In the seventh letter the casuists are attacked with
          reference to their method of “directing the intention;”—a species of mental
          chicanery which undermined the very foundations of social faith and duty. “ If
          one can direct the mental intention to a permitted object, one may act in
          whatever way is most convenient or pleasant. Thus men are enabled at once to
          satisfy the requirements of the Gospel, and to comply with the received usages
          of worldly life. They please the world by their conduct, and at the same time
          they conform to the primary rule of the Gospel by purifying their inward intentions. This
            is, in other words, that most pernicious maxim, that “the end justifies the
            means which has become, though somewhat unfairly, proverbially identified with Jesuitry. The same sophism is used by the casuists to
            defend prevarication, lying, perjury, and unfaithfulness to engagements of all
            kinds; for “no promise is binding when one has not the inward intention of
            becoming bound by it.”      
             Pascal describes, in the ninth and following letters,
          other expedients invented by the casuists for making the way of salvation
          smooth and easy, especially as regards the duties of devotion. He quotes from a
          manual called Le Paradis ouvert, by Father Bauny, rules which make devotional religion to consist
          chiefly in paying homage to images of the Virgin, saying the “Petit chapelet des dix plaisirs de la Vierge,”
          pronouncing frequently the name of Mary, desiring to build more churches in her
          honour than have ever been built by all the monarchs in the world, saying to
          her “bon jour” and “bon soir” every morning and
          evening, and repeating every day the “ Ave Maria ” in honour of the “ heart of
          Mary.” Directions are cited which tend to reconcile with the law of Christ all
          the vices to which our depraved nature is most prone—vanity, envy, sloth,
          luxury, unchastity; and various artifices are exposed by which the discipline
          of the confessional may be rendered wholly nugatory in the case of persons
          living in habitual sin.
           The sixteenth letter is devoted to a refutation of the
          calumnies of the Jesuits Meynier and Brisacier against the community of Port Royal, whom they
          charged with denying the Real Presence in the Eucharist, and other Calvinistic
          heresies. Pascal also undertakes to vindicate the Abbe de S. Cyran and Antoine
          Arnauld from the imputation of being in league with Geneva and the Huguenots
          for the destruction of the Catholic faith; noticing especially an absurd fable
          called the “ Conspiracy of Bourg-Fontaine,” at which place it was alleged that
          the Jansenist leaders, mysteriously congregated in a dark wood, had pledged
          themselves to a revolutionary enterprise which was to subvert not only the
          Roman Church, but Christianity itself. This is on the face of it so wildly
          improbable, that it is needless to enter on an examination of the arguments on either side.
           The two concluding numbers—published at the distance
          of a full year from the commencement of the work, and addressed to Father
          Annat—revert to the original subject-matter of the Jansenist controversy.
          Pascal now lays aside his sarcastic style, and embarks on a lengthened
          argumentation with the view of rebutting the charge of heresy from himself and
          his associates, and showing that the Papal censures were directed against a
          mere chimera, or, at all events, against tenets which had never been held' by
          the Jansenists. These seventeenth and eighteenth Letters bear marks of anxious
          thought and patient labour; the latter is said to have been rewritten no less
          than thirteen times. They contain many passages of majestic eloquence,
          entitling their author to take eminent rank among the masters of rhetoric. Nor
          are they to be despised as specimens of learning; for Pascal produces a long
          list of references to Councils, historical precedents, and the works of
          standard theologians, to prove that the Pope and the Church are not infallible
          in judging of matters of fact, but solely in dogmatic definitions de fide. The
          meaning of a particular author, he contends, is simply a question of fact. Upon
          such a point the Pope may be mistaken; and consequently it cannot be heresy,
          though it may be presumption, to differ from the opinion propounded by his
          Holiness. The Church is protected by Divine authority in the exposition of the
          whole body of revealed doctrine—the “faith once delivered to the saints”; but
          with regard to other matters, not affecting revelation, mankind are left to
          the guidance of natural intellect and reason. If upon such subjects the Church
          should define and exact any belief as exclusively true, she would be exceeding
          her lawful powers, and imposing upon the faithful a yoke which God has never
          sanctioned. The Jansenists, then, were no heretics for merely questioning
          whether Jansenius did or did not entertain a given opinion. This is not a point
          of theology, but of historical fact; and therefore the “sense of Jansenius,”
          now so violently debated, is in reality a matter of indifference, upon which men are fully at liberty to take opposite
            views, as they may in estimating the published works of any other author.
             Pascal inveighs fiercely against the attempt of Father
          Annat to identify the “sense of Jansenius” with the theory of the heresiarch
          Calvin; quoting various passages from the Augustinus to the effect that grace may always he resisted, and that the human will has at
          all times the power to consent to the suggestions of the Divine Spirit.* He
          also insists that the Jansenistic doctrine as to the
          efficacy of grace is one and the same with that of St. Thomas Aquinas ;
          forgetting, apparently, that the Thomists distinctly inculcated the “gratia sufficiens,” whereas in one of the earlier ‘Provinciales’ that term had been satirized without mercy
          and scornfully rejected.
           The work concludes with a fervid peroration, charging
          all the scandal of the existing dissensions on the Jesuits, and imploring
          them, if not from charity towards their opponents, at least out of compassion
          for the sufferings of the Church their mother, to exchange their persecuting
          policy for one of conciliation and peace.
           Such is a brief outline of this celebrated work; which
          has done more to perpetuate the fame of Pascal than any of his scientific or
          philosophical productions, though these last are of far weightier calibre.
   The immediate success of the Letters was almost unexampled.
          A dry ecclesiastical controversy, hitherto confined to the cloister, the
          schools, and the Sorbonne, suddenly converted into a theme for plaisanterie and badinage, was a spectacle inexpressibly
          diverting to the Parisian mind. Thousands in different classes of society, who
          up to this time had viewed these intricate speculations with apathy or
          contempt, found themselves irresistibly attracted towards them now that they
          were recommended by all the graces of a faultless style, and accommodated to
          the level of an ordinary intellect. Public indignation was at once and
          vehemently excited against the Jesuit moralists; and as a natural consequence,
          a temporary reaction ensued in favour of the persecuted Jansenists. Harsh proceedings had been commenced against
            them by the Government just before the appearance of the ‘Provinciales;’
            the nuns of Port Royal were forbidden to add to the number of their novices and
            boarders; the Solitaries had been expelled from their retreat, and their
            schools abruptly closed. Further severities were averted by the vigorous
            castigation administered to their enemies by Pascal; and a remarkable incident
            of a different kind, which occurred at this critical moment, contributed not a
            little to re-establish for a season the declining fortunes of the Port
            Royalists. This was the miracle of the “Sainte Epine.”
             Among the “pensionnaires,”
          or boarders, at Port Royal de Paris, was Marguerite Perier,
          a girl about eleven years of age, daughter of M. Perier the magistrate at Clermont, and niece of Blaise and Jacqueline Pascal. She had
          been afflicted for upwards of three years with fistula lacrymalis in the left eye. The disease was of a virulent character, and had made fearful
          ravages; the bones of the nose and palate had become carious; and the discharge
          of matter from the wound was so constant and offensive as to make it necessary
          to seclude the patient in great measure from the other inmates of the house.
          All medical treatment had proved unavailing. The child grew worse, and it. was
          arranged, as a last resource, to apply the cautery, though the surgeon gave but
          slender hope of a successful result. Meanwhile the sisterhood received from an
          ecclesiastic named La Poterie a precious reliquary
          containing a portion of the Crown of Thorns which pierced the head of the
          Redeemer. It was carried in procession to the altar of the convent chapel on
          the 24th of March, 1656, being the Friday of the third week in Lent. The nuns,
          each in her turn, kissed the sacred relic; and, when the pensionnaires approached for the same purpose, their governess, Sister Flavia, desired
          Mademoiselle Perier to commend herself to God, and
          apply the
            reliquary to the diseased eye. She did so, and became conscious of a complete
            and instantaneous cure.
             Whether on account of the strict discipline observed
          during the season of Lent, or from some other unexplained cause, the occurrence
          was not mentioned in the convent till the next day, nor was it generally known
          till a week afterwards. On the 31st of March, the surgeon, M. Dalence, called to see his patient. Such was the alteration
          in her appearance, that, when she entered the room, he did not recognize her;
          and it was not till after minute examination, and on the most positive evidence
          of her identity, that he was at length convinced that a cure had taken place,
          which he did not hesitate to declare supernatural. The news now circulated like
          lightning through the city. The queen despatched her own surgeon to Port Royal
          to verify the facts; and a statement was drawn up by him, in concert with the
          other medical witnesses, attesting the reality of the cure, and pronouncing
          such a phenomenon to be beyond and above the operation of mere natural causes.
          Their testimony was confirmed by the ecclesiastical authorities; the Grand
          Vicars of the diocese, in the absence of the exiled Archbishop, published a
          formal recognition of the truth of the miracle. Solemn thanksgivings for this
          signal mercy were offered in the church of Port Royal; the Holy Thorn was
          presented to the convent in perpetuity ; it was exposed every Friday for the
          veneration of the faithful; and a long list of additional instances followed,
          in which its healing virtues were exerted for the relief of the afflicted.
           In every point of view the miracle of the “Sainte
          lupine” happened opportunely for the interests of Jansenism. How could Port
          Royal be a nest of heretics when Heaven itself interfered to work marvels in
          its favour ? Was not the arm of the Most High visibly stretched forth to
          protect this much maligned community, and to vindicate its orthodoxy in upholding
          the efficacy of His sovereign grace? The cause of Port Royal was demonstrated to be the cause of God; within
            those walls was the chosen home and sanctuary of the Truth. Thus reasoned, not
            only the superstitious multitude, but even the intelligent and educated
            classes; and the impression produced upon the public mind was such that the
            Government could not venture to disregard it. The decrees which had gone forth
            against Port Royal were hastily revoked; as early as the month of May Arnauld
            d’Andilly received permission to return to his beloved retreat in the valley of
            Chevreuse; thither he was soon followed by Antoine Arnauld, Nicole, and Antoine
            Le Maitre; the other members of the fraternity
            reappeared by degrees, and the schools were ere long again in full operation.
            Viewed in combination with the extraordinary result of the Provincial Letters,
            this was an epoch of legitimate triumph for the Jansenists. Their popularity
            was greatly enhanced, the number of their disciples multiplied; and, although
            their opponents by no means slackened in activity, the minority on the whole
            maintained their ground with success. An interval of some years ensued, during
            which they were not molested by any further measures of forcible repression.
             Two centuries have not sufficed to settle the
          questions arising from this singular episode of ecclesiastical history; those
          questions being, in the first place, whether the cure of Marguerite Perier was real; and if real, whether, secondly, it was
          supernatural. The truth is that questions of this nature can seldom be positively
          determined. Except by minds of a peculiar bias, “ ecclesiastical miracles ”
          (as they are called to distinguish them from those recorded in Holy Scripture)
          will always be regarded with insurmountable prejudice. Persons, not otherwise
          sceptically inclined, will reject with a smile of contempt the notion of
          supernatural agency as manifested in the Church of any age subsequent to that
          of the Apostles. The whole stream of Christian history, they urge, “abounds
          with instances both of visionary delusion and of fraudulent fabrication for
          unworthy ends; and, under such circumstances, the weight of presumption against
          the genuineness of any particular miracle is all but overpowering.
           Yet surely it cannot be logically maintained that,
          because the miracles of our Lord and His Apostles are distinct in character
          from those ascribed to the uninspired ages, therefore these latter were not in any sense manifestations of a
            power beyond and above nature. Nor, again, because we find in history many
            cases of spurious miracles, or “pious frauds,” will it follow that all modern
            occurrences involving miraculous pretensions are to be consigned to the same
            category. Nothing can be more unphilosophical than to found our opinions on
            such matters on mere a priori assumption or arbitrary prejudice. The true is
            to be discriminated from the false (in points not ruled by Infallible
            Authority) by patiently weighing the force and value of conflicting evidence,
            by scrutinizing motives and interests, by applying the tests of sound and
            enlightened criticism.
             The prodigy of the “Sainte Épine” is supported by evidence which, if adduced to prove any ordinary fact, would
          probably be held conclusive. The various theories suggested for explaining it
          on merely natural grounds are scarcely less difficult to accept (some of them
          are more so) than the account of the Port Royalists themselves. Is it
          conceivable, for instance, that a sister of Mademoiselle Perier,
          who was also residing in the convent, was substituted for the real sufferer,
          and that the medical certificates attesting the cure were thus obtained by
          means of a gross deception ? Or again, is it easy to believe, with M. Sainte Beuve, that the application of the reliquary was made with
          so much force as to burst the morbid tumour, which thereupon dispersed so
          rapidly as to leave within the space of a few days no trace whatever of disease
          ?
           Admitting, however, that the facts of the case are
          well authenticated, it by no means follows that the Jansenists were justified
          in the inferences which they drew from them. They argued that such an event not
          only marked out Port Royal as a spot singularly privileged by Heaven, but also
          that it established incontestably the truth of the peculiar doctrines which
          Port Royal represented. It proved, beyond all further dispute, that Jansenius
          was orthodox; that Arnauld was innocent; that St. Cyran was a persecuted saint;
          that Innocent X was a misguided tyrant; that the Sorbonne was a conclave of
          benighted dotards. Such a conclusion was simply preposterous. The miraculous
          cure (if such it was) testified to the infinite benevolence of that Being,
          whose “tender mercies are over all His works;” but it were mere fanaticism to
          interpret it as a decision from above, on one side or the other, of a vexed
          question in polemical theology.
           Father Annat, in a vigorous pamphlet, entitled ‘Rabat-joie
          des Jansenistes,’ contested the genuineness of the
          miracle, denied the consequences deduced from it by the Port Royalists, and
          even maintained that, so far from proving anything in their favour, it was
          rather to be looked upon as a fresh call to repent of their heretical
          aberrations. To this an anonymous reply was published, which is attributed to
          Pascal, and inserted among his works; but there is reason to believe that he
          was largely assisted by the Abbe de Pontchateau, one
          of his brother solitaries, and perhaps by others.
   Marguerite Perier (the miraculee, as she was called by her friends)
          survived to the age of eighty-seven, and died at Clermont in the year 1733,
          preserving to the last an immovable conviction of the reality of the
          restoration wrought by the Sainte Épine.
           The storm of clamour against the casuists—excited by
          the Provinciales—was not easily appeased. The
          parish priests of Rouen, at a meeting held on the 28th of August, 1656, denounced
          the moral teaching of the Jesuits to their Archbishop, De Harlai.
          That prelate referred their complaint to the convocation of clergy then
          sitting at Paris; and upon this the cures of the capital came forward in
          support of their brethren, and drew up a list of forty propositions, extracted
          from the works of the principal casuists, which they submitted to the judgment
          of the Assembly. A committee of bishops was appointed to report on it; but the
          synod was on the point of separating, and there was no time to enter oil a
          discussion of such serious importance. The house contented itself with ordering
          an edition of St. Charles Borromeo’s ‘Instructions to Confessors’ to be printed
          at its expense, and circulated in every diocese, “to servo as a barrier for arresting the spread of novel opinions tending to the
          destruction of Christian morals.” This must have been mortifying to the
          Jesuits, since it was well known that Arnauld’s book, ‘De la frequente Communion,’ was derived principally from this
          very treatise of St. Charles, which was thus recommended as a text-book for
          the clergy throughout France.
           But the contest was renewed shortly afterwards, by the
          appearance of an unlucky ‘Apologie pour les Casuistes contre les calomnies des Jansenistes,’ from
          the pen of the Jesuit F. Pirot. This ill-judged
          effusion consisted chiefly of vulgar ridicule and personal abuse; in point of
          reasoning it was wretchedly feeble; and its effect was to injure instead of
          furthering the cause it meant to advocate. A violent outcry arose against it
          from all parts of the country. The cures of Paris and Rouen put forth a series
          of factums or memorials on the subject, which were composed in reality by the
          Port Royalists—Pascal, Arnauld, Nicole, and Hermant,
          being the principal writers. The ‘Apology’ was disavowed officially by the
          Jesuits, according to their custom in such emergencies. They declared that Pirot had acted on his own responsibility, contrary to the
          advice of his superiors; and the unfortunate author was so deeply wounded by
          this treatment, that he fell into a lingering sickness which brought him to his
          grave. His work was referred to the Sorbonne, and was condemned by that body
          in July, 1658. This was followed immediately by a censure from the
          vicars-general of the Archbishop of Paris; t and corresponding measures were
          taken in all the other dioceses, with some few exceptions, to express the
          strong disapproval with which the French clergy viewed the corrupt principles
          and practices complained of. The Bishops of Pamiers, Alet, Comminges, Angers, and Vence,
          all well known for their Jansenist sympathies, distinguished themselves by
          strongly-worded mandements on this occasion. In 1659
          the ‘Apology’ likewise incurred the censure of the Inquisition at Rome.
           The ‘Provinciales’ thus
          enabled the Port Royalists to turn the tables with damaging effect on their
          opponents, and also did good service to the Church at large by exposing the
          dangerous sophistries of false teachers. There were, however, considerable
          deductions from the completeness of this triumph. It was felt in many quarters,
          that although individual authors might have been extravagant and reprehensible
          in treating casuistical questions, and might have sanctioned doctrines of an
          injurious tendency, it
            would be grossly unjust to throw the blame of this, exclusively and undividedly, upon the Jesuit body. Casuistry was not a
            science peculiar to the Jesuits, although it was true that members of that
            Society had cultivated it with pre-eminent success. The charge of teaching
            false morality might be substantiated quite as easily from the writings of
            Dominicans, Franciscans, and other religious schools, as from those of the
            disciples of Loyola. Considering the multitude of divines who had handled the
            subject at various times and in different countries, it would be strange if
            they had not been occasionally misled into erroneous decisions; but the
            Jesuits, as an Order, could not fairly be held responsible for these mistakes;
            that Society had repudiated and condemned them, by the sentence of its highest
            authority, long before they had fallen under the lash of Port Royal. It was
            alleged, moreover, that in numbers of instances the author of the ‘Provinciales’ had been guilty of misquotation,
            mistranslation, and malicious perversion of the true sense of the writings
            which he criticized; and that the worst imputations against the Casuists were
            founded on mere fragments detached from their context, and cited in that form
            solely for the sake of exciting odium. These complaints, which were to a
            certain extent supported by clear proof, were not without weight in the mind of
            the more calmly-judging part of the community, though insufficient to
            counterbalance the general effect of Pascal’s inimitable Letters. The feeling
            against them first found public expression in a decree of the Parliament of
            Aix, in Provence, in March, 1657, which stigmatized the volume as “full of
            calumnies, falsehoods, forgeries, and libels,” and condemned it to be burnt by
            the executioner. After this, several prelates animadverted upon it in their
            pastoral addresses; and in September, 1657, it was branded by the censure of
            the Inquisition, and placed on the Index, in company with the two famous
            letters of Antoine Arnauld. Two years later Pascal’s work, which had been
            admirably translated into Latin, with notes, by Nicole, under the assumed name
            of Guillaume Wendrock, was denounced by the Parliament of Bordeaux; and the case
              having been argued, the court determined, before giving judgment, to refer the
              book to the Theological Faculty of the University for its opinion. That body,
              after due examination, pronounced the Letters of Montalte to be free from doctrinal heresy, and, with regard to morals, commended them in
              the highest terms. Upon this the Jesuits, who were still all-powerful at Court,
              procured a royal ordonnance naming a Commission of bishops and divines to
              scrutinize the work afresh; and in time a report appeared, affirming that the
              heresies of Jansenius, already condemned by the Church, were maintained and
              defended in the Letters of Montalte, in the Notes of Wendrock, and in the Disquisitions of Paulus Irenaeus
              (another sobriquet adopted by Nicole), and that accordingly these writings had
              justly incurred the legal penalties against heretical and libellous
              publications. Thereupon an arret of the Council of State ordered the said
              writings to be publicly tom and burned by the “Executeur de haute justice,” which sentence was carried into effect on the 14th of
              October, 1660.
               Such, however, is the transcendent power of genius,
          that neither royal commissions, nor judicial condemnations, nor even the
          thunders of the Vatican itself, prevailed to dethrone the Provincial Letters
          from their lofty place in popular estimation. The attempts made on the part of
          the Jesuits to refute them showed so decided an inferiority of intellectual
          gifts, that for the most part they were utter failures. The only apologist for
          the Order who seems to have produced any impression on the public mind was
          Father Daniel, author of the well-known ‘History of France’; who, in his ‘Entretiens de Cleanthe et d’Eudoxe,’ written in 1694, exposed with considerable force
          the mistakes and unjust imputations into which Pascal had been betrayed. This
          book was eagerly read, the whole of the first edition disappearing almost
          instantaneously. It was reprinted several times, and was translated into Italian
          and other languages.
           The style was judicious, the reasoning powerful, the
          facts adduced indisputable ; and yet all these recommendations failed to secure
          a permanent triumph over such an antagonist as Pascal. Father Daniel
          established beyond contradiction many particular instances of
          misrepresentation, exaggeration, calumnious aspersion, and malicious
          suppression of the truth; but of the multitudes who had laughed over the libel,
          not one in a thousand ever saw the reply by which it was demolished; nor,
          indeed, could it be expected that cold, sober, unimpassioned argument should
          undo the effect which had been created by brilliant wit and scathing sarcasm.
          Hence the verdict originally pronounced on the Provincial Letters by the
          generation to which the writer addressed himself has never since been reversed.
           Whether the theory based on the subtle distinction
          between the “droit” and the “fait” was ever really embraced by the
          singularly candid mind of Pascal is a point of psychology which we have no
          means of determining with certainty. It is probable that on first embarking in
          the controversy, he adopted, without examination, the line of defence devised
          by his Jansenist friends, conscious that he was not sufficiently well versed in
          theology to frame a system for himself. But it is a remarkable fact that subsequently,
          as the result of mature thought, he was led to a very different conclusion. In
          the seventeenth of the Provincial Letters he admits, like all the rest of the
          party, that the Five Propositions were heretical and rightly condemned, but
          denies that they expressed the opinions of Jansenius; upon this latter point,
          being a question of fact, he contends that it is lawful to demur to the
          decision of the Holy See, since the gift of infallibility extends only to
          matters of dogmatic faith. But in the sequel he abandoned this position as
          untenable; and declared that the Vatican had condemned the doctrine of
          efficacious grace, which was undoubtedly the doctrine of Jansenius, and not
          only of Jansenius, but of St. Augustine and St. Paul. He held, accordingly, that
          the Popes had erred, not in a question of fact, but in an article of faith:
          that they had condemned an essential Christian verity. And, in consequence,
          the faithful could not, in his judgment, accept a Formulary which solemnly
          abjured all that the
            Apostolic See had condemned, without expressly excepting the so-called “sense
            of Jansenius” as to the Five Propositions. This change of sentiment placed
            Pascal in opposition to the Port Royalists, and caused a certain coldness and
            estrangement between them. Various explanatory statements were exchanged, but
            Pascal’s views were now those of sincere personal conviction, and he maintained
            them unflinchingly to the end. His sister Jacqueline (Soeur St. Euphemie), a person of eminent saintliness of
            mind and character, had discovered, as she conceived, the true force of the
            Papal decision before it became apparent to her brother; hence the famous
            Formulary, which was imposed on the Church in 1660 as an anti-Jansenist test,
            was to her an object of conscientious and profound abhorrence. Yielding, after
            a long struggle, to the authority and specious reasoning of her spiritual
            guides, the noble-minded Jacqueline subscribed the Formulary in July, 1661; but
            the mental distress occasioned by this act, and the remorse which followed,
            rapidly undermined her health, and on the 4th of October in the same year she
            sank into the grave. This tragical end of a sister to whom he was tenderly
            attached made an ineffaceable impression upon Pascal, and no doubt shortened
            his own life. A scene of ostensible, but, as it would seem, incomplete,
            reconciliation with Arnauld and Nicole took place in his dying chamber; and,
            without retracting his dissent from the authoritative sentence of the
            Sovereign Pontiff, Pascal expired on the 19th of August, 1662. But we are
            anticipating the order of events.
             
 CHAPTER XIV.THE CLERGY AND THE FORMULARY
 
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