|  | 
| THE GALLICAN CHURCH.A HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF FRANCE FROM THE CONCORDAT OF BOLOGNA, A.D. 1516, TO THE REVOLUTION, A.D. 1789. |  | 
| CHAPTER XVIII.The Controversy on Quietism
           In the midst of the excitement caused by these
          attempts to resuscitate the half-extinguished embers of the strife on the Five
          Propositions of Jansenius, another theological conflict was proceeding
          simultaneously, which involved circumstances of a specially painful character,
          though in its results it was not lastingly injurious to the Church. This was
          the memorable dispute on Mysticism, or Quietism.
               The peculiar form of devotional religion known under
          these names was not, as most readers are aware, the offspring of the
          seventeenth century. It rests, in fact, on a substratum of truth which is
          coeval with man’s being, and expresses one of the elementary principles of our
          moral constitution. Although, in the course of ages, that truth was overlaid
          and obscured by successive accretions of error, it survived by its intrinsic
          vitality; and its manifold modifications served at once to attest its Divine
          origin, and to exhibit the industry of man in applying it, sometimes rightly,
          sometimes wrongly, to the details of his interior life and experience. The
          system of the Mystics arose from the instinctive yearning of man’s soul for
          communion with the Infinite and the Eternal. Holy Scripture abounds with such
          aspirations—the Old Testament as well as the New; but that which under the Law
          was “a shadow of good things to come,” has been transformed by Christianity
          into a living and abiding reality. The Gospel responds to these longings for
          intercommunion between earth and heaven by that fundamental article of our
          faith, the perpetual presence and operation of God the Holy Ghost in the
          Church, the collective “body of Christ,” and in the individual souls of the
          regenerate. But a sublime mystery like this is not incapable of
          misinterpretation; and history teaches us that no Christian century has been
          exempt from one or another of the endless fallacies and extravagances for which
          it has been made the pretext. The Church has ever found it a difficult matter
          to distinguish and adjudicate between what may be called legitimate or orthodox
          Mysticism and those corrupt, degrading, or grotesque versions of it which have
          exposed religion to reproach and contempt. Some Mystics have been canonized as
          saints; others, no less deservedly, have been consigned to obloquy as
          pestilential heretics.
               It was in the East—proverbially the fatherland of
          idealism and romance—that the earliest phase of error in this department of
          theology was more or less strongly developed. We find that in the fourth
          century the Church was troubled by a sect called Massalians or Euchites, who
          placed the whole of religion in the habit of mental prayer; alleging as their
          authority the Scriptural precept “That men ought always to pray, and not to
          faint.” They were for the most part monks of Mesopotamia and Syria; there were
          many of them at Antioch when St. Epiphanius wrote his Treatise against
          heresies, a.d. 376. They held that every man is from his birth possessed by an evil
          spirit or familiar demon, who can only be cast out by the practice of continual
          prayer. They disparaged the Sacraments, regarding them as things indifferent;
          they rejected manual labour; and, although professing to be perpetually engaged
          in prayer, they slept, we are told, the greater part of the day, and pretended
          that in that state they received revelations from above; on the strength of
          which they uttered predictions, which were proved to be false by the event.
          They believed, moreover, that it is possible for man to attain in this life to
          a condition in which he is not only like God, but equal to Him; and that those
          who reach this summit of perfection are altogether incapable of sin, even of
          thought, or of ignorance. The Massalians did not openly separate from the
          Church; they were condemned, however, by two Councils—one at Antioch in 391,
          the other at Constantinople in 426.
               Delusions of the same kind were reproduced from time
          to time in the Oriental Church; and, as is commonly the case, the originators
          of error were followed by a race of disciples who advanced considerably beyond
          them. The Hesychasts, or Quietists of Mount Athos in the fourteenth century,
          seem to have been fanatics of an extreme type. They imagined that, by a process
          of profound contemplation, they could discern internally the light of the
          Divine Presence—the “glory of God”—the very same which was disclosed to the
          Apostles on the Mount of Transfiguration. Hence they were also called
          Thaborites. The soul to which this privilege was vouchsafed had no need to
          practise any of the external acts or rites of religion, but remained in
          imperturbable and ineffable repose in perfect union with God. Such, they
          maintained, is the Beatific Vision enjoyed by saints and angels. They admitted,
          however, that this supernatural Light was not of the actual essence of the
          Godhead, though it was uncreated and incorruptible; and that in all instances
          in which the Almighty has revealed himself to mankind, they have not beheld His
          essence, but only this mysterious Effulgence distinct from it. They called it
          His energy, or operation. The strange and self-contradictory notions of these
          Greek ascetics were vehemently combated by Barlaam, a Calabrian monk of great
          learning, and were as strenuously defended by Gregory Palamas, Archbishop of
          Thessalonica. Councils were held repeatedly to discuss the intricate questions
          thus raised concerning the Divine Essence. The principal opponents of the
          Thaborites belonged to the Latin communion ; and hence the affair assumed the aspect
          of an international quarrel between the two great sections of Christendom. The
          decision was in favour of the visionaries of Mount Athos, whose doctrine was
          declared to be part of the authoritative teaching of the Greek Church; and
          Barlaam was finally condemned at Constantinople in 1351.
               The theory of abstract contemplation, with the
          extraordinary fruits supposed to be derived from it, travelled in due course
          into the West, and there gave birth to the far-famed school of the Mystics, of
          which there were various ramifications. The earliest exponent of the system in
          France was John Scotus Erigena, the contemporary and friend of Charles the
          Bald; who, by his translation of the treatises ascribed to Dionysius the
          Areopagite, and by his original works, greatly promoted the growth of that
          transcendental idea of personal religion which was afterwards so widely
          accepted in the Latin Church. Erigena sought to engraft the Neo-Platonism of
          Alexandria upon the dogmatic theology of Rome; an attempt which succeeded to a
          certain point, but which involved throughout a dangerous tendency. In insisting
          on the perfectibility of human nature through assimilation and union with the
          Deity, he lost sight of the essential distinction between matter and spirit,
          and lapsed insensibly into the snares of Pantheism. Erigena incurred the
          censures of the Holy See; but the results of his teaching were permanent. A
          current of thought and feeling set in from bis time, which, while in some minds
          it inspired much genuine devotion and exalted saintliness, betrayed itself
          elsewhere in outbursts of extravagant enthusiasm and deadly self-deception.
               The Mystics, or Theosophists as some style them,
          attained a position of high renown and influence at Paris towards the close of
          the twelfth century. Here two of the ablest expositors of the learning of the
          middle age, Hugh and Richard of St. Victor, initiated crowds of ardent
          disciples into the mysteries of the “via interna,” and of “pure love”—that
          marvellous quality by which the soul, sublimated and etherealized, ascends into
          the very presence-chamber of the King of kings; which is the bond of ecstatic
          and indissoluble union between the creature and the Creator. The school of St.
          Victor opposed itself vigorously to the dry disputatious spirit of the
          dialectic philosophy, and became a real and lasting power in the Gallican
          Church. The path thus traced was trodden by many who were to take rank
          eventually as the most perfect masters of spiritual science; among them are the
          venerated names of Thomas a Kempis, St. Bonaventura, John Tauler of Strasburg,
          Gerson, and St. Vincent Ferrier. It was the same burning consciousness of
          supernatural intuition—of immediate intercourse with the Unseen through the
          power of Divine love—that produced in later days a St. Theresa, a St. Jean de
          la Croix, an Ignatius Loyola, an Alfonso Rodriguez, a St. François de Sales, a
          St. Jeanne Françoise de Chantal.
               But, on the other hand, it is not less true that
          emotional religion has been found to degenerate, in modern as well as in
          ancient times, into manifold forms of moral aberration. The fallacy originally
          engendered by Manichean Dualism has proved more or less seductive in every age.
          To exalt above measure the dignity and privileges of the spiritual element in
          man carries with it the danger of disparaging the material part of our nature;
          and this results in the preposterous notion that, provided the soul be absorbed
          in the contemplation of things Divine, the actions of the body are unimportant
          and indifferent. How often the Church has combated and denounced this most
          insidious heresy is well known to all who have a moderate acquaintance with its
          history. Under the various appellations of Beghards, Fratricelli, Cathari,
          Spirituals, Albigenses, Illuminati, Guerinets, and Quietists, the self-same
          delusion has been sedulously propagated in different parts of Christendom, and
          with the same ultimate consequences. A revival of the last-named sect, the Quietists,
          took place in Spain about the year 1675, when Michel de Molinos, a priest of
          the diocese of Saragossa, published his treatise called ‘The Spiritual Guide,’
          or, in the Latin translation, ‘Manuductio spiritualis.’ His leading principle,
          like that of his multifarious predecessors, was that of habitual abstraction of
          the mind from sensible objects, with a view to gain, by passive contemplation,
          not only a profound realisation of God’s presence, but so perfect a communion
          with Him as to end in absorption into His essence. This spiritual perfection
          supersedes all conscious exercise of the reason, and all definite acts of
          penitence, faith, and devotion; it implies an utter abandonment of the active
          faculties to God, so that the soul rests in silent immoveable tranquillity on
          Him, absolutely indifferent to everything except His inward voice and
          operation. But while the inner man was thus concentrated upon the
          Invisible—while self was thus immolated and annihilated, to the extent of
          suppressing every movement of the natural intellect and the natural will—it was
          apparently forgotten that the grand principles of distinct personality and
          direct moral responsibility were in the same ratio obscured and disowned. The
          door was opened, in fact, for a renewal of the wildest disorders of ancient
          Gnosticism.
               The danger, however, was quickly discovered, and the
          remedy applied with promptitude and vigour. Cardinal Caraccioli, Archbishop of
          Naples, in a letter to the Pope in January, 1682, laid before his Holiness the
          peculiar tenets and practices of the rising sect, and the scandals which he
          apprehended from them in his diocese; and in February, 1687, Cardinal Cibo,
          Prefect of the Congregation of the Holy Office, addressed a circular upon the
          subject to the bishops, directing them to institute the necessary enquiries
          with a view to judicial proceedings which had been already determined on. These
          measures of the Roman authorities are said to have been instigated by Louis
          XIV, who ordered his ambassador, Cardinal d’Estrées, to urge upon the Pope the
          imperative duty of crushing the new upgrowth of resuscitated heresy. Persons of
          the highest distinction—Cardinals, Inquisitors, nay, even Pope Innocent
          himself—were suspected of sharing these dangerous opinions. Molinos was arrested
          and imprisoned, and in due time the Inquisition condemned sixty-eight
          propositions from his works; a sentence which was confirmed by a Papal bull in
          August, 1687. Having undergone public penance, he was admitted to absolution;
          after which, in merciful consideration of his submission and repentance, he vas
          consigned for the rest of his days to the dungeons of the Holy Office. Here he
          died in November, 1692.
               Many of the sentiments maintained by Molinos are
          highly reprehensible, both in themselves and in the conclusions towards which
          they tend by legitimate inference; but it seems doubtful whether his own mind
          was corrupted by them. Many writers describe him as personally a man of
          blameless life and sincere piety. It is asserted that his followers were betrayed
          into immoral excesses, and very probably some such cases occurred; though even
          this is strenuously denied by his apologists.
               The principles of Quietism had struck root so deeply,
          that they were not to be soon dislodged either by the terrors of the Inquisition
          or by the well-merited denunciations of the Vatican. The system was
          irresistibly fascinating to minds of a certain order. Among those who were
          dazzled by it was the celebrated Jeanne Marie De la Mothe Guyon—a lady of good
          family, of superior talents carefully cultivated, attractive in person and
          manners, impulsive, energetic, ambitious of social power. Married, when
          scarcely more than a child, to a man of mature age and uncongenial temper,
          Madame Guyon’s early life had been one of disappointment and isolation. She was
          left a widow while still young; and was no sooner free from the matrimonial
          yoke, than, disdaining the prosaic sphere to which she had hitherto been
          confined, she soared into the regions of supernatural illumination and ideal
          perfection. Nor was she content to pursue this exalted track in selfish
          solitude. She believed that she had an extraordinary vocation; she felt herself
          destined to be the instrument of converting others; to become the foundress of
          a school or an Order, after the example of Madame de Chantal; to originate
          great works of charity; to be the guide, the counsellor, the oracle, of
          enquiring souls. Her first step in this career was taken under the auspices of
          the Bishop of Geneva, Mgr. d’Arenthon, who invited her to join an establishment
          which he was forming at Gex for the conversion of Protestant females in that
          district. Here Madame Guyon made the acquaintance of the Superior, a Barnabite
          monk named Lacombe. His zeal for Mysticism was as fervent as her own; but he
          was a man of feeble judgment, and altogether of inferior mental calibre. A
          close friendship sprung up between them; Lacombe, from having been the
          director, became ere long the devoted disciple of Madame Guyon; and her
          connexion with this brainsick fanatic was the circumstance which first exposed
          her to the blasts of obloquy and persecution. The Bishop of Geneva became
          dissatisfied with Lacombe, and removed him from the institution at Gex; upon
          which Madame Guyon followed him to Thonon in the Chablais, and there exerted
          herself in various ways as a religious instructor, giving lectures, holding
          discussions, visiting the sick, and encouraging people of all classes to come
          to her for private advice. She travelled for like purposes in the north of
          Italy and the south of France ; sojourning for some time at Grenoble, where her
          treatise called ‘Moyen court et très facile pour l’oraison’ was printed in
          1685. At length, in 1686, she arrived in Paris, accompanied by Father Lacombe.
               It was precisely at this moment that the scandal
          connected with the case of Molinos had reached its height. The French bishops
          were busily employed in hunting down his adherents (who were believed to be
          still numerous) and uprooting the remains of the proscribed heresy. Lacombe
          soon made himself notorious by his eccentricities; he was denounced to the
          Archbishop of Paris (De Harlai), and that prelate, apprehensive of an attempt
          to revive the worst features of Quietism, procured an order for his arrest.
          Through the malicious intrigues of a relation, Madame Guyon became implicated
          in the charges against her confessor; she was arrested in January, 1688, by
          virtue of a lettre de cachet, and conducted to the Convent of the
          Visitandines de Ste. Marie.
           Strictly speaking, it was unjust to prosecute her as a
          pupil of Molinos; for it appears that she had no acquaintance whatever either
          with that individual or his writings. Their ideas, however, were essentially
          the same, having been drawn from the same source, namely, the works of the
          Spanish Mystics, particularly those of St. Theresa and St. Jean de la Croix.
          The resemblance between the ‘Moyen court’ and the ‘Guide Spirituelle’ was too
          manifest to be mistaken. Another of Madame Guyon’s works, the ‘Cantique des
          Cantiques, interprété selon les sens Mystiques,’ was a further development of
          the same theory; and in the ‘Torrents Spirituals,’ which at this time existed
          only in manuscript, she laid bare the most esoteric depths of the system. But
          the prejudice against her seems to have arisen in the first instance not so
          much from any critical examination of her writings as from a general imputation
          of religious extravagance, including some suspicion as to incorrectness of
          morals.
               Madame Guyon’s first imprisonment lasted eight months.
          She regained her freedom through the influence of Madame de Maintenon, who had
          conceived au interest in her from the accounts given by the inmates of the
          convent of her edifying conduct and many engaging qualities. A reaction now
          ensued in her favour. Recommended by the patronage of one who, in all but the
          name, was Queen of France, she found herself admitted on a footing of
          confidential friendship into some of the highest circles of the capital. She
          became a frequent guest at the hotel of the Duke de Beauvilliers, governor of
          the Duke of Burgundy, a councillor of state, and one of the most distinguished
          ornaments of the Court. Here she speedily made herself the centre of
          attraction, and captivated all around her. The three sister Duchesses of
          Beauvilliers, Chevreuse, and Mortemart, (daughters of the minister Colbert),
          yielded to her ascendency, hung upon her words, and almost worshipped her as a
          messenger direct from heaven. Even the soberminded Madame de Maintenon, who was
          in habits of constant intercourse with this great family, was smitten with the
          prevailing fascination. Here, too, Madame Guyon enjoyed the society of one who
          was to be the most illustrious of her adherents, the Abbe de Fenelon, at that
          time recently appointed preceptor to the “children of France.”
               Such was the impression made by Madame Guyon upon the
          mind of Madame de Maintenon, that after a time the latter introduced her to the
          “dames de St. Louis,” who presided over a semi-conventual establishment which
          she had founded at St. Cyr, near Versailles. These ladies received her with the
          utmost distinction, listened in breathless excitement to her “conferences,” and
          encouraged her to take a leading part in the religious instruction of the
          place. This injudicious proceeding led to complications which must for ever be
          regretted. It so happened that a cousin of Madame Guyon’s, Madame de la Maisonfort,
          was at the head of the educational staff at St. Cyr, and a special favourite
          with Madame de Maintenon. She embraced the views of her kinswoman with
          enthusiasm, and propagated them both among teachers and pupils. Ere long the
          whole house was permeated by the atmosphere of Quietism. The books and
          manuscripts of Madame Guyon were passed eagerly from hand to hand. The language
          of the Mystics became vernacular among the nuns; they were perpetually
          discussing the state of contemplation, passive prayer, holy indifference,
          self-annihilation, the trials of the saints, and disinterested love. The
          contagion spread to the soeurs converses, who neglected their household
          work in their anxiety to scan these mysteries, which were all the more
          attractive in proportion as they were abstruse and unintelligible.
           At St. Cyr Madame Guyon frequently met with Fenelon,
          who was confessor to Madame de la Maisonfort, and was in fact, though not ostensibly,
          the ecclesiastical director of the institution. That two spirits of such an
          order should have been instinctively drawn towards each other is surely nothing
          marvellous. To some writers it seems unaccountable that one in the position and
          with the intellectual superiority of Fenelon should have been accessible to the
          spells of a woman who, however talented and accomplished, had shown herself
          strangely deficient in judgment, and was looked upon in many quarters as a
          deluded visionary. They have remarked, with a view to explain it, that Fenelon,
          with all his erudition, all his eloquence, all his refinement, all his
          spirituality, was not thoroughly trained in theological science; that he lacked
          precision of thought; that he was rather an orator than a philosopher; rather
          an idealist than a logician; rather persuasive than profound. Without denying
          that there is justice in this criticism, it is important that we should not exaggerate
          the amount of influence obtained by Madame  Guyon over Fenelon. Their relations have been
          misrepresented; as if hers had been the governing mind, while he was little
          more than an apt scholar; she the heaven-sent guide, and he the submissive
          disseminator of her teaching. This is a false colouring of the case. No one who
          approached Madame Guyon could be insensible to the peculiar charm of her
          personal character; and Fenelon appreciated it equally with others. Moreover,
          the natural bias of his mind, and the direction of bis studies from his youth
          up, predisposed him to sympathize with her views of experimental religion; but
          these very circumstances qualified him, in an eminent degree, to judge of their
          soundness and truth. Though not, perhaps, a consummate master of theology in
          its widest range, Fenelon was deeply versed in one important branch of it,
          namely, the theology of the Mystics; and he was therefore better able than most
          others to decide how far Madame Guyon was in accord with those whom the Church
          had authorized to speak on such matters in her name, and how far she was the
          dupe of her own overwrought feelings and exuberant imagination. That his
          admiration of her genius, and his predilection for the characteristic features
          of Mysticism, did not prevent him from discriminating between the true and the
          false, the laudable and the questionable, both in her writings and her conduct,
          is a fact of which we have abundant evidence. In his ‘Reponse a la Relation sur
          le Quietisme,’ and in his correspondence with Madame de Maintenon and M.
          Tronson, he gives a transparently candid account of the rise and progress of
          his acquaintance with Madame Guyon, and explains his mature view of her case in
          all its bearings. At first, he says, he was prejudiced against her, from what
          he had heard reported about her travels. These impressions were dispelled by
          the perusal of a letter from the Bishop of Geneva; that prelate declared that
          he esteemed and honoured Madame Guyon infinitely; that he could not in
          conscience speak otherwise than in the highest terms of her piety and morals;
          and that he had but one fault to find with her, namely, that she sought to
          introduce her own system into all the religious houses of the diocese,
          irrespectively of the rules and statutes of their foundation. This, observes
          Fenelon, was merely the indiscreet zeal of a woman who was too anxious to communicate
          to others things winch she deemed salutary and edifying.
           “I never had any natural inclination,” he writes
          again, “either towards her person or her writings. I never remarked anything
          extraordinary about her, which might tend to prepossess me in her favour. While
          in the perfect enjoyment of her liberty, she explained to me her religious
          experience, and all her sentiments. There is no need to discuss her peculiar
          language, which I do not defend, and which is of no great consequence in a
          woman, provided the meaning be Catholic. She is naturally prone to
          exaggeration, and incautious in her mode of speaking. She is even apt to place
          too much confidence in those who question her. I count for nothing her
          pretended prophecies and revelations; and I should have but a poor opinion of
          her if I thought that she esteemed them very highly. A person who is devoted to
          God may mention incidentally something which has passed through her mind,
          without forming any positive judgment upon it, or wishing that others should
          consider it seriously. It may he an impression from God, for His gifts are
          inexhaustible; but it may also be a baseless imagination. The principle of
          loving God exclusively for His own sake, absolutely renouncing all self-interest,
          is a principle of pure faith, which has no sort of connection with miracles and
          visions. No man can be more circumspect or dispassionate than I am on that
          point.”
               In another letter he says, “I saw Madame Guyon often,
          as all the world knows; I esteemed her, and I allowed her to enjoy the esteem
          of persons of high eminence, whose reputation is dear to the Church, and who
          had confidence in me. It was impossible that I should be ignorant of her
          writings. Although I did not examine them all completely, I became acquainted
          with them sufficiently to feel in doubt about her, and to question her with the
          greatest strictness. I repeatedly made her explain to me what she thought upon
          the topics in agitation. I demanded of her the precise value of each of the
          terms of that mystical phraseology which she employed in her writings. I
          ascertained distinctly, on each occasion, that she understood them in a sense
          perfectly innocent and perfectly Catholic... Let others, who know nothing of
          Madame Guyon but her writings, interpret them, if they please, with rigour; I
          do not interfere; I do not defend or excuse either her person or her writings.
          But, for my own part, I am bound in equity to judge of the meaning of her
          writings by her sentiments, with which I am intimately acquainted, rather than
          to pronounce upon her opinions from the literal sense of her expressions—a
          sense which she never meant them to convey.”
               These testimonies prove that Fenelon’s approbation of
          Madame Guyon was, from the first, reserved and qualified. He regarded her as
          one who had made great advances in the spiritual life, and as a dutiful
          daughter of the Church in intention and principle; but he was fully alive to
          her failings in the way of unmeasured language, though he thought her entitled
          to considerable indulgence even on that score; first by reason of her sterling
          integrity, and secondly by reason of her sex. It must be remembered, also, that
          Fenelon had seen only the printed works of Madame Guyon, and knew nothing
          whatever of her manuscript productions—the ‘Torrents,’ the ‘Autobiography,’ the
          ‘Exposition of the Apocalypse,’ and others;—the latter of which were far more
          objectionable than the former, both in point of rhapsodical style, and as to
          heterodox speculation in doctrine. In a word, the relations of Fenelon to
          Madame Guyon were those of one self-reliant and independent mind to another. He
          was drawn towards her by congeniality of natural taste, and by a sympathetic
          interest in the deepest and most inscrutable mysteries of personal religion;
          but it were a mistake to suppose that he blindly surrendered his judgment to
          hers, or that he ever exchanged the dignity of his office as a priest for the
          character of a proselyte or a disciple.
               Nevertheless it was natural, and perhaps inevitable,
          that as soon as the name of Madame Guyon became notorious in society, and she
          was known to have been the cause of serious discord and commotion at St. Cyr, a
          certain amount of suspicion should fall upon Fénélon, who was supposed, and
          with reason, to be her most influential supporter in that institution. Symptoms
          of the coming storm appeared in 1693. The Bishop of Chartres, Godet-Desmarais,
          in whose diocese St. Cyr was at that time situated, viewed with alarm the
          morbid tone of sentiment which had invaded the sisterhood, and felt it his
          duty, both as bishop of the diocese and as the spiritual adviser of Madame de
          Maintenon, to warn her against what he deemed an evil of no common magnitude.
          There is no need to take it for granted, with some writers, that he was actuated
          in this step by jealousy of Fenelon. The question of Mysticism (particularly
          the development of it then prevalent) was one upon which conscientious
          Churchmen might take opposite sides without any infusion of unworthy feeling,
          simply from the incentive of zeal for truth, or cogent sense of duty. Bishop
          Godet held Fenelon in sincere regard. For bis sake he long delayed to impart
          his misgivings to Madame de Maintenon ; and, when he did so, he scrupulously
          avoided saying anything which could implicate his friend in the errors which he
          denounced. Madame de Maintenon was slow to be convinced. She was familiar with
          the ‘Moyen court’ of Madame Guyon (which had been recommended to her by
          Fenelon), and had even read some part of it to the king; but Louis, who was “not
          sufficiently advanced in piety to relish such a method of perfection,” had
          dismissed it as dreamy and fantastical. The monitions of her confessor opened
          her eyes to the danger; yet, from her great esteem for Fenelon, she refrained
          from moving in the affair until she had taken the opinions of other divines of
          the highest standing. She consulted Bossuet, de Noailles, Bourdaloue,
          Brisacier, Joly the superior of St. Lazare, and Tronson, under whom Fenelon had
          studied at the Seminary of St. Sulpice. Their verdict was unanimous against
          Madame Guyon and her system; and Madame de Maintenon hesitated no longer. She
          notified to Madame Guyon that her visits would not be acceptable for the future
          at St. Cyr. The sisters were forbidden to read her books; her manuscripts,
          together with certain papers written by Fenelon, were withdrawn from
          circulation; and it was hoped that by these vigorous measures order and
          tranquillity would soon be re-established. The Bishop of Chartres seemed
          satisfied with this submission to his pastoral authority; and there was no
          disposition to proceed further against Madame Guyon, could she have been
          content to take her dismissal quietly, and to remain in silence. But,
          unfortunately, she now appealed to the arbitration of Bossuet; who, with his
          masculine straightforwardness and logical rigidity of mind, was of all men the
          least likely to judge her leniently. She was determined to this step by the
          advice of Fenelon, who induced her to submit to the Bishop of Meaux not only
          her published works, but also her manuscript effusions, which she had never
          communicated even to himself. Bossuet spent several months in perusing them,
          and was shocked to find that they abounded with preposterous absurdities,
          betokening a mind in a state of chronic disorder. Some of her pretensions were
          precisely those of the Spiritualists of our own times. She claimed to be “clairvoyante;”
          she saw into the innermost depths of souls; and not only so, but she possessed
          “ a miraculous authority both over the bodies and the minds of those whom the
          Lord had given to her, so that their internal condition seemed to be wholly in.
          her hands.” She was a reservoir of superabundant grace, the overflowings of
          which she dispensed, by a somewhat materialistic process, to those who were
          placed in personal contact with her. It was in this way that she obtained
          relief when half-suffocated by the redundance of her spiritual gifts. She spoke
          of herself as the appointed instrument of God’s most marvellous operations; as
          invested with a prophetical, or rather an Apostolical, mission; as the minister
          of a new dispensation. “That which I bind shall be bound, and that which I
          loose shall be loosed ; I am that stone fixed by the holy Cross, rejected by
          the master-builders.” In her ‘Commentary on the Apocalypse’ she indulged in
          flights of fancy of an equally exorbitant kind.
           However startled and scandalized, Bossuet seems to
          have treated Madame Guyon on this occasion with much forbearance. He wrote
          letters to her replete with weighty reasoning and fatherly counsel. He held a
          lengthened interview with her, in which he earnestly laboured to dispel her
          illusions, combating more especially her strange notion that to implore
          anything of God (for instance, the pardon of our sins) is an act of
          selfinterest, incompatible with “pure love” and entire conformity with the
          Divine will. He was unable to disabuse her of this error; but she made repeated
          promises of submission to his instructions, and engaged to remain for a time in
          retirement, according to his advice.
               Bossuet next visited Fenelon, with whom he was still
          on terms of intimacy, and strove to open his eyes to Madame Guyon’s
          hallucinations, by laying before him extracts from those parts of her writings
          which he had never before seen. He expected that his friend’s opinion of these
          extracts would have agreed altogether with his own; but instead of this he was
          met with extenuations, qualifications, and evasions; and in the end he went his
          way without success, mourning over the eclipse of such a noble mind.
               The march of events, however, had already convinced
          Fenelon of the necessity of caution. After 1693 his communications with Madame
          Guyon were extremely rare. He resigned the office of confessor to Madame de la
          Maisonfort. He requested that the letters of spiritual counsel which he had
          written for the benefit of certain inmates of St. Cyr might be suppressed; and
          he explained his principles at length to Madame de Maintenon, guarding himself
          against unwarrantable inferences, defending himself from the charge of
          innovation, and professing all reverent submission to the tradition of the
          Church. He was evidently conscious that he had become an object of mistrust;
          and it was soon apparent that his favour and position at court were seriously
          in jeopardy.
               Still, if Madame Guyon could have acquiesced in the
          advice which she had voluntarily solicited, and remained in patient seclusion,
          these unfavourable impressions would probably have died away without leaving
          injurious results. But in 1694 her restlessness returned; and she petitioned
          the king, through Madame de Maintenon, for a commission, half clerical and half
          lay, to report, not only on the soundness of her writings, but on the truth of
          rumours which she alleged to be current against her moral character. As to the
          lay commissioners this request was refused, since the vague calumnies referred
          to were credited by none; but three ecclesiastics were named to undertake the
          theological enquiry—Bossuet, De Noailles, and Tronson; and they proceeded to
          hold a series of conferences, extending over many months, at a country-house at
          Issy, belonging to Tronson as Superior of the congregation of St. Sulpice. These conferences were conducted in strict secrecy.
            Even the Archbishop of Paris, to whose jurisdiction as diocesan the affair
            properly belonged, was not consulted. He took offence in consequence, and
            showed his feelings by forestalling, in a pastoral ordonnance of October 16,
            1694, the judgment of the commissioners on the matter in hand. He condemned a
            treatise on Mental Prayer by Father Lacombe, and the two principal works of
            Madame Guyon, as containing false and pernicious doctrine, long since censured by
            the Councils of Vienne and Trent; and pointed out that they were essentially
            opposed to Christianity, by encouraging contempt for external duties and
            observances, by disparaging mortification and rules of asceticism, by
            prescribing indifference to those means which are the best calculated to
            promote holiness and salvation, and by fostering the mistaken persuasion that
            God may be possessed even in this life as He is in Himself, without any
            intermediate instruments.* Bossuet and his colleagues took little notice of
            this manifesto of their metropolitan. They pursued their task, observing that
            it was not their intention to act in the way of episcopal jurisdiction, but
            simply to lay down doctrinal conclusions for the guidance and satisfaction of
            those who had shown confidence in them by naming them to compose the
            commission.
             But what was the part reserved for Fenelon in an
          investigation which concerned him so nearly, and which, in respect of deep
          knowledge of the questions in debate, he was more competent to direct than any
          one of the triumvirate at Issy? His name was excluded from the Commission;
          partly because there was too much reason to regard him as a partisan of Madame
          Guyon, and partly because his friends (among whom Bossuet must still be
          reckoned) wished to prevent his having the opportunity of compromising himself
          further at this critical moment. The authority of Bossuet was paramount in the
          Commission; and indeed the spirit of ecclesiastical dictatorship, which by this
          time had become habitual to him, was but too manifest throughout the
          proceedings. Conscious, however, that he had but a slight acquaintance with
          mystical theology, he applied to Fenelon to furnish him with extracts from
          ancient and modern sources to assist the Commissioners in forming their
          conclusions, especially with regard to the cardinal point at issue, that of the
          disinterested love of God. Fenelon accordingly collected a catena of
          authorities on this subject from Mystics of the highest repute, from St.
          Clement of Alexandria down to St. Francois de Sales, which he forwarded to
          Bossuet, together with copious comments of his own, for the purpose of proving
          that writers of this peculiar stamp are not always to be understood literally;
          that exaggeration of style is one of their characteristic features, and that
          after making all due allowance on that score, the result would be more than
          amply sufficient to establish the doctrine of pure love, and to satisfy all
          those who, while zealous for true Mysticism, were equally alive to the dangers
          of illusion. This humble office Fenelon fulfilled with all his native sincerity
          and simplicity; expressing himself at the same time in terms of almost abject
          deference to the judgment of Bossuet, and declaring that, whatever might be the
          ultimate decision, his own suffrage could not fail to conform to it. “Be under
          no anxiety about me,” he writes; “I am in your hands like a little child. You
          are kind enough to say you desire that we should be of one mind; for my part I
          am ready to go further, and to say that we are already agreed beforehand, in
          whatever sense you may decide. Even if what I have read should seem to me more
          clear than that two and two make four, I should consider it less clear than my
          obligation to distrust my own understanding, and to prefer to it that of a
          prelate like yourself. Do not take this for a mere compliment; it is a serious
          and literal truth.” f Bossuet having apparently hinted some doubts as to the
          orthodoxy of his views, Fenelon protests that he only desires to be instructed;
          that he is ready to retract and abandon the slightest error, and that even if
          the judgment of his superior should be mistaken, he should obey with the utmost
          docility and confidence, from the principle of supreme devotedness to the
          guidance of the Church. These assurances from a friend to whom he was still
          attached, though he believed him to be treading on dangerous ground, had
          doubtless much weight with Bossuet; nor could lie refuse to admit, on the
          strength of the evidence adduced by Fenelon, that the consensus in favour of
          certain maxims to which he was personally disinclined was more emphatic than
          he had hitherto imagined. Hence he was led to hope that existing differences
          might in time disappear, and that he might be the means, on the one hand, of
          saving the reputation of his friend, and on the other of establishing disputed
          truths on a firmer foundation, to the edification of the Church.
               Under these circumstances, the reports which were
          beginning to prevail to the discredit of Fenelon were for a time checked and
          silenced; and, on the recommendation of Madame de Maintenon, he was nominated
          to the archiepiscopal see of Cambrai in the spring of 1695.
               No sooner was he designated to the highest order of
          the ministry, than it became plain that he could no longer be confined to the
          subordinate place which he had hitherto occupied with regard to the
          deliberations at Issy. He was admitted, therefore, ostensibly to the
          conferences on a footing of equality with the other commissioners; but in point
          of fact their labours were already terminated; and almost immediately
          afterwards the famous ‘ Articles of Issy were presented to Fenelon for signature,
          though he had no share in drawing them up. This unceremonious treatment did not
          prevent him from expressing his readiness to accept the Articles, provided
          certain alterations and additions were adopted, which he specified. His
          suggestions were agreed to, and the 12tb, 13th, 33rd, and 34th articles were
          inserted in order to meet his views. Upon this he declared that he was “willing
          to sign them with his blood.” No doubt he spoke sincerely; he regarded the
          Articles as a correct exposition of the authorised doctrine, so far as they
          went, on the truths in question, and as a test whereby true Mysticism might be
          discriminated from the false, the sound from the corrupt and dangerous. One of
          them, the 33rd, contains a statement which, we may be perfectly sure, owed its
          admission to the personal solicitation of Fenelon. It runs thus:—“It is also
          allowable to encourage, in truly pious and humble souls, a submission and
          consent to the will of God, even if, by an entirely false supposition, it
          should please Him to keep them in eternal torments instead of that eternal
          blessedness which He has promised to the righteous; without depriving them,
          notwithstanding, of His grace and His love. This is an act of perfect
          abandonment, and of pure love practised by the saints; and by souls truly
          perfect it may be usefully practised with the special grace of God; without
          detracting at the same time from the obligation of other acts of piety which we
          have already defined as essential to Christianity.” The Bishop of Mirepoix
          wrote to Bossuet to express his surprise that he should have assented to this
          article, which appeared to sanction one of the most unwarrantable speculations of
          the Mystics.* Bossuet replied that he had well reflected on it, and that he
          found the sentiment in the works of so many approved authors (among whom he
          instances St. Chrysostom, Theodoret, St. Isidore of Damietta, St. Theresa, and
          St. François de Sales), that he thought it was not possible to call it in
          question. After all, he says, it was only affirming, in other words, that the
          love of God is in itself far more desirable than all imaginable torments are
          revolting to our nature.
               It would appear, then, that the Articles of Issy were
          conceived in a spirit of forbearance and mutual concession; and as such, might
          well be regarded as a treaty of pacification. They were signed by the
          commissioners and by Fenelon on the 10th of March, 1695; and there is reason to
          believe that this act was understood on all hands as the seal of a cordial
          reconciliation.
               The fate of Madame Guyon remained to be determined.
          She had voluntarily placed herself, with Bossuet’s consent, in a convent at
          Meaux, during the examination of her writings, in order to be completely under
          his eye and control. Here her conduct was in every respect commendable; the
          Superior and sisterhood attested that they had been edified by her perfect
          regularity, sincerity, humility, gentleness, and patience, and by her deep
          devotion towards the mysteries of the Catholic Faith. During this time she
          underwent more than one examination before the commissioners, at which Bossuet
          is said to have treated her with some severity. When the Conferences
          terminated, that prelate dictated to her an act of submission, by which she
          accepted the thirty-four Articles, and condemned with heart and mouth
          everything contrary to them, together with all other errors, whether in her own
          works or elsewhere. She repudiated all writings attributed to her, with the
          exception of the ‘Moyen court’ and the ‘Cantique des Cantiques,’ renouncing
          these likewise except in so far as they agreed with the Catholic and Apostolic
          Faith, “from which she had never intentionally swerved for a single instant.”
          She assented to the condemnation of her books pronounced by the Bishops of
          Meaux and Châlons in their pastoral ordonnances. Lastly, she engaged to obey
          the injunctions of the Bishop of Meaux, which forbade her for the future to
          write books, to teach dogmatically in the Church, or to undertake in any shape
          the guidance of souls; professing her desire to live henceforth in entire
          separation from the world, and in the practice of “a hidden life with Jesus
          Christ.” In a further statement, appended to Bossuet’s pastoral letter, Madame
          Guyon protested a second time “ that she had never intended to advance anything
          at variance with the doctrine and spirit of the Catholic and Roman Church, to
          which she had ever been obedient and submissive, and would so continue, with
          God’s help, to the last hour of her life.”
               Upon the faith of these declarations, which, as we
          have said, were prescribed by Bossuet himself, that prelate delivered to Madame
          Guyon, on her quitting his diocese, a certificate, expressed as follows:—“We,
          Bishop of Meaux, certify to all whom it may concern, that, in consequence of
          declarations of submission signed by Madame Guyon, and of the prohibition which
          she has accepted to write, teach, or dogmatize in the Church, or to circulate
          her works in print or manuscript, or to engage in any way in the guidance of
          souls; having regard also to the testimonies which have been made to us in her
          favour during the six months which she has passed in the convent of St. Mary in
          our diocese, we continue to be satisfied with her conduct, and have confirmed
          her in that use of the Holy Sacraments in which we found her. We declare,
          moreover, that she has always expressed herself in our presence as detesting
          the abominations of Molinos, and others elsewhere condemned, in which it does
          not appear to us that she was ever implicated; and we did not intend to include
          her in the mention made of those errors in our ordonnance of April 16, 1695.
          Given at Meaux on the 1st of July, 1695.”
               It cannot be denied that this document has in great
          measure the air of a justification of Madame Guyon, with reference both to her
          principles and her conduct. It proceeds upon the fact that she had candidly
          acknowledged and renounced her errors; it attests the purity of her morals and
          her many Christian virtues, and it acquits her of all complicity in the
          excesses of Molinos and other apostles of Quietism. Fenelon, therefore, had
          good reason to testify his amazement, on a subsequent occasion, that such a
          voucher should have been given to her, if Bossuet conscientiously believed her
          to be guilty of the grave delinquencies which he afterwards laid to her charge.
          If the Bishop of Meaux, who had scrutinized the whole of her writings, and had
          subjected her to searching examinations viva voce, could excuse her on the
          ground that her intentions were harmless and that she had always been orthodox
          at heart, why might not a similar line of vindication be open to the Archbishop
          of Cambrai, who knew only those of her publications which were admitted to be
          the least worthy of censure?
               For the time, however, all differences seemed at an
          end. Bossuet expressed a strong desire to officiate at the consecration of
          Fenelon ; and persisted in seeking an arrangement to that effect, in spite of
          certain impediments which at first seemed likely to prevent it. The ceremony
          was to take place at St. Cyr, in the diocese of the Bishop of Chartres, and the
          question arose whether that prelate could yield precedence to another, on an
          occasion when by his office he would be naturally entitled to preside. High
          authorities pronounced in the negative; but Bossuet cited ancient Councils to
          prove that a diocesan bishop may, even within his own jurisdiction, give way to
          his senior in the episcopate, when both belong to the same province; and
          although there were other points on which difficulties were suggested, these were
          overruled, and the matter was finally settled according to his wishes. Fenelon
          was consecrated Archbishop of Cambrai in the chapel of St. Cyr on the 10th of
          June, 1695. Bossuet was the consecrating prelate; the Bishop of Châlons (De
          Noailles) acted as first assistant; and the third place was filled by the
          Bishop of Amiens, who was substituted for the Bishop of Chartres.
               But notwithstanding this demonstration of restored
          harmony, there still lurked in the mind of Bossuet a residuum of doubt as to
          the soundness of Fenelon with regard to those great principles of Christian
          ethics which he believed to be imperilled by the Quietism of the day. He had
          not been perfectly satisfied with his conduct at the time of the signing of the
          Articles. Fenelon had promised absolute submission; yet when the Articles were
          tendered to him he had hesitated and demurred, proposed alterations, stipulated
          for additions. His subscription was looked upon as a recantation in disguise,
          and with some justice; but Bossuet was not contented with this qualified
          success. He was seriously alarmed at the progress of the fanatical notions
          which were identified with Madame Guyon, and which seemed to spread more and
          more widely in proportion to the efforts made to repress them. He knew that Fenelon
          was supposed, though perhaps unjustly, to favour these errors, and he felt that
          the Church was likely to derive damage rather than profit from bis elevation to
          one of its highest dignities, unless the propagators of false doctrine were
          precluded, once for all, from sheltering themselves under the sanction of his
          name. He resolved, therefore, to give him a fresh opportunity of renouncing,
          distinctly and positively, the “evil communications” which had exposed him to
          so much sinister criticism; and for this purpose he begged him to signify his
          approval of a new work in which he was engaged in refutation of the false Mystics. This was his famous ‘Instruction sur les états
            d’oraison.’
             In his pastoral letter of April 1695, Bossuet had
          promised to put forth a more ample exposition both of the truths to be embraced
          and of the errors to be shunned, with regard to the obscure points of theology
          then so vehemently debated. To this work he applied himself with his
          characteristic energy, and was employed upon it during the latter half of 1695
          and part of the following year. It contains a minute philosophical analysis of
          the state of the soul in the exercise of devotion, and especially in the
          so-called “passive prayer.” The author shows, from the writings of approved
          mystics, that, while they recognize a condition in which the soul is so
          absorbed in the contemplation of God that conscious ratiocination and other
          mental acts are for the time excluded, yet this does not imply a total or
          permanent, but only a temporary, suspension of the ordinary faculties. The
          suppression of “discursive acts” is limited to the duration of the passive
          prayer; instead of which, the modern mystics maintained that this “passivity”
          was a fixed condition, upon which they entered by an “acte perpetuel,” or
          “universel,” which had no need to be repeated; thus doing away with the duty of
          practising devotion by any conscious and deliberate movement of the will.
          Again, he combats the mischievous notion that explicit acts of faith are
          unnecessary for those who pursue this novel road to perfection; that the
          mysteries of the Trinity and the Incarnation, the Divine attributes, the
          articles of the Creed, the petitions of the Lord’s Prayer, are no longer proper
          objects of direct contemplation to the soul which is already in union with the
          very essence of the Godhead.* It was pretended that our Lord’s humanity need
          not, and cannot, be kept distinctly in view in such a state, because it is
          merged in his Divine Personality. “He who thinks of God,” says Molinos, “thinks
          of Jesus Christ;” and he adds that “no one continues to make use of the means
          when once he has obtained the end.” Another point attacked in this treatise
          with conclusive force is the abuse of the doctrine of self-abandonment and
          self-annihilation. The “holy indifference” vaunted by Quietists was such that
          the soul experienced no impulsion either on the side of enjoyment or of
          privation; although its love of God was immeasurable, it nevertheless had no
          desire of Paradise, either for itself or others; no solicitude for the success
          of anything done either for its own salvation or that of its neighbour. It
          cannot be distressed either by its own perdition or by that of any other
          creature. The soul must will nothing except what God himself has willed from
          all eternity. Lastly, Bossuet demolishes the false position that the state of “passive
          contemplation” is essential in all cases to Christiau perfection. He points out
          that, according to the great masters of theology, this state does not belong to
          justifying grace,—“gratia gratum faciens,”—but, like the gifts of prophecy,
          tongues, or miracles, to extraordinary grace,—“gratia gratis data;” otherwise
          it would follow that some of the most admirable saints were but imperfect and
          inexperienced in the ways of God; for to St. Basil, St. Gregory Nazianzen, St.
          Ambrose, St. Augustine, St. Chrysostom, St. Bernard,—whom the Church honours as
          the brightest examples of spirituality,— this perpetual state of contemplation,
          with its “mystical incapacities,” was utterly unknown. St. Theresa, speaking of
          these peculiar conditions of prayer—the prayer of “quietude,” of “union,” and
          the like,—says that superiority of merit does not depend upon the possession of
          these gifts, inasmuch as there are many saintly persons who have never received
          them, and that many have received them who have never become saintly; to which
          she adds that such gifts may be highly profitable towards advancement in
          virtue, but that he who acquires them by his labour is far more meritorious.
          The same doctrine is inculcated by St. François de Sales, who, though he had no
          personal experience of the special grace in question, attained incontestably to
          the loftiest degrees of the pure love of God.
           Having completed this elaborate justification of the
          Articles of Issy, Bossuet sent it in manuscript to the Archbishop of Cambrai,
          taking it for granted, apparently, that he would not hesitate to sanction it
          with his approval, in common with the Bishop of Châlons (now advanced to the
          See of Paris) and the Bishop of Chartres. He felt that he had a right to expect
          this; first, because Fenelon had subscribed the Articles, upon which the ‘Instruction’
          was only an extended and methodical commentary; and next, because he had
          solemnly, repeatedly, and with every demonstration of sincerity, declared his
          resolution to abide by the judgment of Bossuet and his colleagues upon the
          matters in debate. To his great surprise, however, the Archbishop declined to
          approve the work, and returned it after a very hasty examination,! through the
          Due de Chevreuse, whom he commissioned to explain his reasons. The ground of
          refusal was that the ‘Instruction’ was a tissue of personal attacks upon Madame
          Guyon. With regard to fundamental doctrine, he declared that he could not
          perceive a shadow of discrepancy between himself and Bossuet; but he could not
          in conscience assent to such a rigorous condemnation of a person for whom he
          had entertained high esteem, and whom he believed (as, indeed, her accuser
          himself had formerly acknowledged) to be innocent of any evil intent.
               The whole force of this objection evidently turns upon
          the meaning of the phrase “personal attacks.” It was impossible for Bossuet, in
          laying bare the nature of a system which he deemed to be fraught with peril to
          religion and to society, to avoid alluding to the circumstances which had led
          to the inquiry; and among these he could not but refer to the works which had
          been published to the world by Madame Guyon, as well as to those of Molinos,
          Malaval, and other extreme mystics, which had latterly excited so much
          attention. These works constituted the overt facts which had occasioned the
          conferences of Issy; and it was in refutation of the errors therein propounded
          that the Commissioners had drawn up their XXXIV. Articles, to which Fenelon, in
          concert with them, had affixed his signature. If Fenelon was not prepared to
          condemn Madame Guyon,  he ought never to
          have signed those articles; and the truth is, that he placed himself in a false
          position by so doing. Having signed them, he became identified with the
          opponents of a system of which Madame Guyon had been one of the most
          enthusiastic advocates; and it is clear that he could not abruptly dissociate
          himself from their subsequent proceedings without laying himself open to the
          charge of inconsistency. Was there anything in Bossuet’s treatment of the
          controversy in his ‘Instruction’ that exonerated the Archbishop from adhering
          to the course to which his previous acts had pledged him? It would be difficult
          to maintain the affirmative. Bossuet had made frequent quotations, indeed, from
          the ‘Moyen court’ and the ‘Cantique des Cantiques,’ for the purpose of exposing
          what he considered to deserve censure in their principles and tendencies; but
          he cannot be said to have indulged in offensive imputations against the author.
          Nothing is spared in the way of acute and telling criticism of the mistaken
          theory upon which these books are based; but there is no attempt to fasten upon
          Madame Guyon the charge either of culpable motives or of discreditable conduct.
          To affirm, then, that he had represented her as a prodigy of wickedness, as the
          author of a “ monstrous system which, under the pretence of spirituality,
          subverted the Divine law, established fanaticism and impurity, confounded the
          distinctions between virtue and vice, destroyed all social subordination, and
          sanctioned every species of hypocrisy and falsehood—such assertions savoured
          strongly (to say the least) of misapprehension and exaggeration.
           Moreover, it must not be concealed that the
          Archbishop’s personal estimate of Madame Guyon was in no small degree
          self-contradictory. At one moment he spoke of her as a poor ignorant woman,
          whose books he would not attempt to defend directly or indirectly, since he
          considered them censurable in their true and literal sense; at another, when
          asked to join his episcopal brethren in denouncing the doctrine of those books,
          he replied that to do so would be to violate his conscience, and to “insult
          without cause a person whom he has revered as a saint,” and from whose
          character and example he has derived “infinite edification.” “I am not
          obliged,” he cries, “to censure all the bad books which appear, particularly
          those which are absolutely unknown in my own diocese. Such a censure could not
          be demanded of me except for the purpose of removing suspicions which may have
          arisen as to my opinions; but I have other and more natural means of dispelling
          such suspicions, without going out of my way to torment a poor woman against
          whom so many others have already fulminated, and with whom I have been on terms
          of friendship. Nor is it expedient that I should make any distinct declaration
          against her writings; for the public would not fail to conclude that it was a
          kind of abjuration which had been extorted from me. Such a personal censure
          would not be required of me even by the Inquisition; and I will never consent
          to it unless out of obedience to the Church, whenever she may think fit to draw
          up a Formulary on the subject, as was done in the case of the Jansenists.”
           But it is not difficult to read “between the lines” of
          Fenelon’s correspondence, especially of his letters to Bossuet, that there were
          secret reasons which prompted his conduct at this moment of embarrassment,
          besides those which he openly assigned. He had been wounded to the quick by
          fresh measures of inexcusable rigour which had been taken against Madame Guyon.
          That unfortunate person had been arrested for the second time, and was
          committed prisoner to Vincennes in December 1695. Orders were given to treat
          her well, but at the same time not to permit her to hold communication with any
          human being, either personally or by letter. It was soon known that this act of
          cruelty had been instigated by Bossuet. “It was a thunderstroke,” says St.
          Simon, “for M. de Cambrai and his friends, and for the little flock.” Not the
          slightest intimation had been vouchsafed to any one of them beforehand ; and
          the Archbishop must have felt from that moment that his place in Madame de
          Maintenon’s favour, and his general prospects of worldly prosperity, were
          dangerously compromised.
               Madame Guyon, after her departure from the convent at
          Meaux, had failed to fulfil the engagements into which she had entered with
          Bossuet. Instead of proceeding, according to her promise, to a watering-place
          in the country, she returned clandestinely to Paris, and concealed herself in a
          lodging in the Hue St. Antoine, deceiving Bossuet as to her place of abode by
          giving him a false address. She continued to see her friends, to disseminate
          her doctrines, and to attract fresh proselytes. She was even indiscreet enough
          to exhibit the certificate of the Bishop of Meaux, as a proof that her
          orthodoxy was guaranteed by that all-powerful prelate. This provoked Bossuet;
          and he persuaded Madame de Maintenon, and through her the king, that it was not
          safe to allow such an accomplished propagandist to remain at liberty. Such was
          his ascendency at this period, that although Madame de Maintenon, Archbishop de
          Noailles, and even Louis himself, would have preferred a gentler treatment, his
          advice prevailed, that she should be immured in a State prison.
               Madame Guyon was by no means so tractable on this
          occasion as before. She was examined repeatedly; but, far from betraying fear
          or promising submission, she defended herself with remarkable spirit and
          pertinacity. With a view to induce her to recant, Fenelon was appealed to with
          increased urgency to condemn her doctrine publicly; but this course, as we have
          seen, he resolutely rejected. At length, in the hope of being released from
          confinement, she consented to sign a form of general submission to her
          diocesan, the Archbishop of Paris. This document was drawn up by Fenelon, and
          approved by M. Tronson; and the prisoner, after signing it, was transferred
          from Vincennes to a house at Vaugirard, where she enjoyed comparative comfort.
          She was, however, strictly watched and guarded.
               The effect of these events was to place Fenelon more
          and more prominently before the eyes of the world as the patron of an odious
          sect, and especially as the indulgent apologist of Madame Guyon. The public
          could not appreciate his over-refined distinctions between condemning her
          doctrines and attacking her person; between the positive inculcation of error
          and mere venial slips of hyperbolical language. He had allowed himself to be
          drawn into an equivocal position; and in spite of all the resources of rhetoric
          and special pleading, it was inevitable that a certain amount of opprobrium
          should henceforth attach to his name.
               On the other hand, he gained admiration from his
          contemporaries, and posterity has amply confirmed their verdict, for his generous
          adherence to a friend whom he believed to be the victim of injustice, even at
          the risk of personal reputation and worldly success. From this time must be
          dated his estrangement from Bossuet;—an estrangement which was too soon to be
          converted into active antagonism.
               Fenelon was not content with rejecting the imperious
          demands of the Bishop of Meaux in a case in which he considered (though perhaps
          over-scrupulously) that his own honour was at stake. He felt it necessary to
          put forth, in self-justification, a statement of his views as to the true
          meaning of the Articles of Issy. Such was his object in undertaking the
          memorable treatise entitled ‘Explication des maximes des saints sur la vie
          interieure.’ His plan was to arrange, in separate paragraphs, first those
          canons of mystical theology which had been accredited as orthodox, and secondly
          the false deductions, misinterpretations, and abuses which had served to bring
          Mysticism into suspicion and contempt in modern times. Nothing could have been
          better devised, had the subject been one upon which no previous action had been
          taken by those in authority; but under existing circumstances it only served to
          provoke dissension in the episcopate, and to make confusion worse confounded. Fenelon’s
          first care was to submit his composition, with unreserved frankness, to the
          judgment of the Archbishop of Paris (De Noailles) and M. Tronson, as two of the
          commissioners who had framed the Articles of Issy. The Archbishop scrutinized
          it throughout, with the assistance of his confidential theologian M. Beaufort;
          he suggested certain alterations, which were immediately adopted by the author
          in his presence; and in the end he pronounced the book “correct and useful,”
          adding that Fenelon’s only fault in his eyes was that of being “ too docile.”
          He recommended, however, that the opinion of some other professed theologian
          should be taken; and Fenelon accordingly consulted the Abbé Pirot, one of the
          most eminent doctors of the Sorbonne, and well-known to be a personal friend of
          Bossuet. That experienced critic, after an attentive perusal, declared that the
          ‘Explication’ was “a golden book.”
           But the intended publication was kept a profound
          secret from Bossuet; and this was a fatal mistake. Bossuet had been President
          of the Commission at Issy. With what propriety could a detailed commentary on
          the acts of that Commission be published by one who had taken part in them,
          without previous communication with him? Fenelon pleaded that it was impossible
          for him to ask Bossuet to sanction his forthcoming work, when he had just
          refused to approve that prelate’s ‘Instruction.’ But the misfortune was, that
          he should ever have allowed himself to be placed in this invidious position.
          One false step entails another. Was it wise to separate himself, in a
          transaction so important, from such distinguished colleagues in the episcopate,
          to whose judgment he professed the highest possible deference? His excuse was,
          that the ‘Instruction’ was a libellous attack on Madame Guyon. But if so, why
          did he not press the objection to the work at the time he was asked to approve
          it? We have the assurance of Bossuet himself that, had he done so, anything in
          the way of reasonable alteration or suppression would have been agreed to in
          order to give him satisfaction. Was this, again, the sole motive of his refusal
          ? Was there not, besides, an unwillingness, when it came to the point, to join
          in a positive condemnation of Madame Guyon’s opinions; although, in private
          conversation and correspondence, he had often declared that he by no means
          agreed with them? Had he taken a more consistent course, the way would have
          been opened, in all probability, for explanations and concessions on the part of
          those who differed from him, which would have spared the Church the scandal of
          the melancholy scenes which followed.
               As it was, the “eagle of Meaux” naturally resented the
          attempt to ignore him by re-opening, without his knowledge or consent, a
          controversy which he regarded as already terminated. Although Fenelon had not
          informed him of his purpose, he was perfectly well aware of it. “I hear,” he
          writes to the Abbé de Maulevrier, “that M. de Cambrai is writing on spirituality.
          I feel sure that this proceeding will cause great scandal; first, because after
          what he obliged me to say of his refusal to approve my book, he will never be
          willing to condemn Madame Guyon’s writings, and this would be to introduce a
          new distinction between the ‘ droit ’ and the ‘ fait,’ implying that M. de
          Paris and 1 condemned that lady without understanding her real meaning. I could
          not in conscience tolerate this; and shall feel compelled to point out that the
          books which he seeks to support contain a doctrine subversive of true piety.
          Secondly, I perceive, from M. de Cambrai’s letters and speeches, that he will
          strive to establish the possibility of perpetual passivity;— an idea leading to
          illusions which are past endurance. I am assured that he will leave in doubt and obscurity articles upon which it
            is indispensably necessary, at the present conjuncture, that he should explain
            himself. And if this be so, how can I be excused from making known to the whole
            Church the great danger of such dissimulation ? It is clear that, since there
            has been no mutual concert among us as to what ought to be said, the object is
            to show that M. de Paris and I were wrong in condemning Madame Guyon; which I
            would acknowledge without hesitation if it were true. I am reduced to this
            dilemma; either it is intended to set forth the same doctrine which I have taught,
            or it is not. If it be the same, the unity of the Church requires that we
            should come to a previous understanding ; if it be different, I am compelled
            either to write against it, or to abandon the truth.”
             The Archbishop of Paris requested Fenelon to abstain
          from publishing his ‘Explication’ until the work of Bossuet on the same
          subject, which had been so long in preparation, should have issued from the
          press. Fenelon assented; but the Duc de Chevreuse and other friends, in their
          eagerness to secure for him the advantage of being heard before the attack of
          his opponent, hurried forward the printing of the book, and it appeared,
          without Fenelon’s knowledge, in January 1697, about a month before Bossuet’s ‘Instruction.’
               It was received with a general clamour of
          disapprobation. “Scarcely any one except theologians,” says St. Simon, “could
          understand it; and they only after reading it three or four times. It had the
          misfortune to be praised by no one; and the connoisseurs pronounced it to
          contain, under a barbarous phraseology, pure Quietism, divested indeed of
          everything gross and offensive, but obvious at first sight; together with
          various subtleties quite novel, and extremely difficult both to comprehend and
          to practise. I am not giving my own judgment upon what is so far beyond me,
          but relating the universal sentiment expressed at the time; and nothing else
          was then talked of, even among the ladies; à propos to which people
          repeated Madame de Sevigne’s witticism in the heat of the disputes upon
          grace,—‘I wish religion could be made a little thicker; for it seems in the way
          to evaporate altogether by dint of being subtilized.’ The book offended
          everybody; the ignorant, because they understood nothing about it; the rest,
          from the difficulty of comprehending and following the line of argument,
          especially in a barbarous and unknown dialect; the prelates opposed to the
          author, on account of the magisterial air assumed in distinguishing the true
          from the false maxims, and by reason of the errors which they detected in those
          which were pronounced to be sound.”
           Bossuet, in his ‘Relation sur le Quietisme,’ paints in
          vivid colours the scene of excitement that prevailed. “The city, the Court, the
          Sorbonne, the religious communities, the learned, the ignorant, men, women, all
          classes without exception, were indignant, not at the affair itself, which few
          were acquainted with, and which none understood thoroughly, but at the audacity
          of such an ambitious decision, at the over-refinements of expression, at the
          unheard-of novelties, at the entire uselessness and ambiguity of the doctrine.
          Then it was that the public outcry reached the sacred ears of the king, and he
          learned what we had so sedulously concealed from him; he learned, from a
          hundred mouths, that Madame Guyon had found a defender at his Court, in his
          palace, and near the persons of the princes his children; with how much
          displeasure, may be estimated from the piety and wisdom of that great monarch.
          We spoke the last; everyone knows that we were met with just reproaches from so
          good a master, for not having sooner disclosed to him what we knew.”
           Great, indeed, must have been the amazement and
          indignation of Louis, when a prelate like Bossuet, in whom he placed unbounded
          confidence as the veteran and invincible champion of orthodoxy in France, threw
          himself at his feet, and implored pardon for having hitherto concealed from his
          sovereign the “fanaticism” of his unhappy brother. Hating, as he did, sects,
          controversies, intrigues, and religious novelties of all kinds, the idea that
          he had unwittingly entrusted the education of his grandchildren and the
          government of a vast diocese to one who might prove to be a second Molinos, was
          unspeakably abhorrent to his mind. He had always disliked Fenelon, the loftier
          qualities of whose character he was incompetent, to appreciate, though he had
          sufficient sagacity to discern its weaknesses; and this announcement doubtless
          convinced him that such a man could no longer safely discharge the office of
          Preceptor to the princes.
               Fenelon complains, in the ‘Reponse a la Relation,’
          that Bossuet made no attempt, at this crisis of his fortunes, to soften and
          dispel the royal apprehensions. A word from him, he says, would have sufficed
          for this purpose; but he refused to utter it. Had he stated that the ‘Explication
          des maximes’ was about to be revised a second time, by enlightened prelates and
          divines, and that they fully hoped to come to an understanding with the author,
          and persuade him to retract the ill-advised language and objectionable
          sentiments which had justly alarmed the Church, the king would have been
          pacified, the mouths of scandalmongers stopped, and concord in the end
          restored. Bossuet, certainly, made no such representations to the throne. Under
          the keen feelings of irritation which Fenelon’s conduct had provoked, it was
          not natural that he should do so; and we may presume, moreover, that he did not
          deem it consistent with his duty. 
           It was at once resolved to make every possible
          exertion to induce the Archbishop of Cambrai to retract his errors. But the
          means chosen for this purpose were such as had little chance of success.
          Bossuet proposed, at first, to communicate to Fenelon privately, in writing,
          his remarks upon his book, and that they should afterwards examine them
          together, in company with the Archbishop of Paris, M. Tronson, and M. Pirot,
          with a view to mutual explanation and satisfaction. But
            Fenelon declined to meet Bossuet for this purpose. He was
              reduced, he said, to the painful necessity of no longer treating with him
              personally, in consequence of his unfriendly behaviour for several years past.*This
              widened the breach between them; and Bossuet, abandoning the hope of arriving
              at a pacific solution, felt himself forced into an attitude of open hostility.
              The result was that Fenelon, instead of excluding his opponent, was himself
              excluded from the proceedings instituted for the consideration and correction
              of his work. Bossuet withheld his promised “remarks” from month to month; and,
              meanwhile, arrangements were made for a series of conferences at the
              archiepiscopal palace in Paris, between the Archbishop, the Bishop of Meaux,
              the Bishop of Chartres, M. de Beaufort, and the Abbé Pirot; and here the ‘Explication
              des maximes’ was dissected with unsparing rigour, all leanings towards a more
              indulgent treatment being overruled by the commanding authority of Bossuet.
               The general impressions under which Bossuet entered
          upon this investigation may be gathered from the following extract from a
          letter to his nephew, the Abbe Bossuet, dated March 24, 1697:—“ The book is
          indefensible and abandoned. The Jesuits, who at first supported it, now only
          talk of the best means of correcting it; and those which have been proposed
          hitherto are but feeble. Father La Chaise has told the king that one of their
          fathers, said to be a great theologian, has discovered in it forty-three
          propositions requiring emendation. There are in this book several statements
          directly contrary to the Thirty-four Articles which the author has signed;
          among others, to the 8th and the 11th. The doctrine which pervades the book as
          to indifference to salvation, and the involuntary distress of the inferior
          nature in Jesus Christ, is erroneous and full of ignorance. The absolute
          sacrifice of salvation, and positive acquiescence in perdition and damnation,
          is manifestly impious, and censured by the 31st Article subscribed by the
          author. A species of love which in one place is termed impious and sacrilegious,
          is described in another as a preparation towards justification. You will find,
          about page 97, the pure essence of Quietism; that is to say, the notion of
          waiting indolently for grace, under the pretext that it must not be
          anticipated. Many passages cited as from St. Francois de Sales are either not
          to be found in the writings of that saint, or are wrested from their meaning,
          or even manifestly garbled. The primary definitions upon which the system turns
          are false and erroneous. The Advertisement, and the whole style of the work,
          seem unspeakably arrogant; and such is the over-refinement from beginning to
          end, that most persons cannot understand it at all. After reading it, nothing
          remains except the pain of finding religion reduced to mere phrases,
          subtleties, and abstractions. I write all this with grief, on account of the
          scandal which falls on the Church, and the dire disgrace which threatens one in
          whom I had hoped to find the most valued of my friends, and whom I still love
          sincerely. I am not at liberty to keep silence after what he says in his
          Advertisement—that his object is to expound the doctrine which M. de Paris and
          I established in the Thirty-four Articles. We should be prevaricators were we
          to hold our peace, and the doctrine of the new book would be imputed to us. For
          the rest, he has assured the king and all the world that he means to be as
          docile as a child, and that he is ready to retract forthwith, if it can be
          shown that he has fallen into error. We shall put him to the proof; for it is
          with himself that we intend to commence. I will only add that the work of this
          prelate abounds with contradictions, and that the true and the false are
          mingled together throughout.” 
             In subsequent letters he thus relates the progress of
          the examination:—“We have continued our conferences—M. de Paris, M. de
          Chartres, and myself—and have fixed upon the propositions which we consider to
          deserve censure, and which are somewhat numerous; intending to send them at the
          earliest moment to M. de Cambrai, together with the precise grounds on which we
          object to them. We shall afterwards do whatever may be requisite, in the spirit
          of charity, for the defence of the truth. The good intentions of M. de Cambrai
          being well known to us, wo cannot doubt that he will explain himself to the
          satisfaction of the Church; and it would be deeply painful to us to be
          compelled to forward information to Rome in denouncement of errors which tend
          to the subversion of religion.” Shortly afterwards he writes, “As to the affair
          of M. de Cambrai, there is no further need to make a mystery of it. He has
          thought fit to write to the Pope on the subject; and he has done rightly, if he
          has written with all due submission and sincerity. But, since we have reason to
          fear that he may equivocate, and are convinced that we ought not to allow his
          book to circulate, we feel ourselves obliged to inform the Pope of the
          importance of the case, and of the motives which induce us to communicate our
          views to his Holiness. We see that M. de Cambrai persists in defending Madame
          Guyon, whom we believe to be a Molinosist, and whose books we cannot permit to
          remain unsuppressed without endangering the whole of religion. We have
          exercised all possible patience, and have made every effort to terminate the
          affair by methods of charity; but, since we are driven to Rome, it will be
          necessary to speak out in spite of ourselves, and to show that we are by no
          means disposed to spare a colleague who has put religion and truth in
          jeopardy.”
               Fenelon had, indeed, taken the bold step of appealing
          to Rome for a judgment on his book, which, as he thought, had no chance of
          being fairly dealt with in France. He was not disposed to accept the extrajudicial
          arbitration of three prelates, however eminent, to whom he owed no canonical
          obedience, and whose verdict, moreover, he looked upon as a foregone conclusion.
          For, although the Archbishop of Paris and the Bishop of Chartres showed an
          inclination from time to time to relent in his favour, such symptoms were
          always peremptorily repressed by Bossuet, who was now stern and almost
          rancorous in his determination to coerce him into submission. He resolved,
          therefore, to anticipate their sentence by demanding the interposition of the
          Apostolic See. His letter to the Pope for this purpose is dated April 27, 1697. 
           He explains to the Holy Father the reasons which had
          led him to write on the inward life and contemplation. There were those, he
          says, who had abused the approved maxims of the saints by attempting to
          introduce pernicious errors, which the ignorant and worldly turned into
          derision. The doctrines of Quietism had been favoured, unconsciously, by many
          mystical writers of sincere piety and the best intentions, from want of
          caution in their terminology, and from pardonable ignorance of theological
          science. It was this which had impelled two illustrious prelates to promulgate
          the Articles of Issy, as also to condemn certain little books, some passages of
          which, taken in their obvious sense, deserved censure. But, as men are for ever
          falling from one extreme into another, this proceeding had been made a pretext
          for decrying, as chimerical and extravagant, the pure love of the contemplative
          life. Hence he felt called upon to do what in him lay towards fixing the boundaries
          between the true and the false, between the ancient and safe and the novel and
          dangerous. He then sketches in outline the contents of his book. “I have
          condemned,” he says, “the ‘permanent act’ of the Quietists, showing that it
          engenders spiritual indolence and lethargy. I have asserted the indispensable
          necessity of the distinct exercise of every virtue. I reject that doctrine of
          passive prayer which excludes the co-operation of free-will in meritorious
          actions. I disallow all ‘quietude’ except that inward peace through which the
          acts of the soul are performed ‘ in such a way as to appear to simple persons
          not distinct acts, but an abiding condition of union with God.’ I maintain
          that, in all grades of perfection, the Christian grace of hope must be
          cultivated as essential to salvation; that we must hope for, desire, and seek,
          salvation, and that as a personal boon and blessing, inasmuch as God wills it,
          and comma'nds that we should will it as tending to His glory.* Lastly, I have
          taught that this state of pure and perfect love is very rarely attained; and
          that, though habitual, it is subject to interruption and fluctuation. It is
          not inconsistent with daily sins of infirmity, nor with acts which, although
          good, are in a lower degree pure and disinterested.”
               
           Such, according to the testimony of the author
          himself, are the salient points of this celebrated brochure. In a memorial to
          the Nuncio at Paris, Fenelon protested that his object throughout had been to
          conform to the Articles of Issy; that he believed ex animo the doctrine
          there enunciated; and that he was ready to prove before the Holy Father that he
          had never in any instance contradicted them. “As I hope,” he says in the same
          document, “to obtain the king’s permission to make a journey to Rome, which is
          necessary for my peace of conscience and for the honour of my ministry, I
          promise to submit with entire docility and without reserve to the decision of
          his Holiness, after he has condescended to hear me. God is witness that I have
          no prepossession in favour of any suspected book or suspected person. God, who
          searches the heart, knows that I have never held any belief beyond what is
          expressed in my book. I condemn and detest any interpretations of an impious
          or deceptive tendency which may have been assigned, without just reason, to
          this work. I am ready to condemn whatever doctrine and whatever writing his
          Holiness may think fit to condemn. If he should judge it necessary to condemn
          my book, I shall be the first to assent to its condemnation, to prohibit it in
          the diocese of Cambrai, and to publish a mandement embodying his censure.”
           It is, nevertheless, incontestable that there are
          discrepancies which cannot easily be reconciled between the ‘Explication des maximes’
          and the Articles of Issy. Not to mention other instances, the ‘ Explication ’
          teaches that under certain circumstances the soul may carry self-sacrifice to
          such an extreme as to abandon the desire of salvation, and to acquiesce in its
          own eternal perdition, if such should be the Divine will. Whereas the Articles
          declare, on the contrary, that all Christians, in whatever condition, are bound
          to desire and seek eternal life as a direct object; that indifference to
          salvation, under whatever circumstances, is inadmissible; that souls under
          corrective suffering are not permitted to acquiesce in feelings of despair and
          the prospect of perdition. Fenelon, it is true, acknowledges that the happiness
          of heaven is the object of desire to the perfect Christian; but he draws a
          distinction between the formal object and the actuating motive. Salvation, he
          says, is to be desired, not as a personal boon, not as our own deliverance from
          eternal misery, not as the reward of our merits, not as the greatest of all our
          interests, but because it conduces to the glory of God—because He wills it, and
          requires us to will it for His sake. The key to his system lies in the
          definition of the term self-interest. He seems to have meant by it the natural
          principle of self-love, or selfishness, which, without being positively
          vicious, is mercenary, and belongs to the “old Adam.”
               But it was argued on the opposite side, that this
          theory of disinterestedness destroys the exercise of Christian hope;—a grace which can
            hardly be conceived to exist independently of the motive of eternal beatitude.
            The Apostle says, “We are saved by hope”; now hope implies of necessity some
            admixture of self-interest; so that, if the pursuit of heaven is to be separated
            from any such consideration, it would follow that one of the three great “theological
            virtues” must be eliminated from the character and condition of the perfect
            Christian. This was, in fact, the capital error charged against Fenelon’s
            teaching both by Bossuet and by the Bishop of Chartres. The “Pastoral Letter of
            the latter prelate exposes the fallacies into which lie had fallen on this
            subject perhaps more forcibly than anything that appeared in the course of the
            controversy.
             It was soon significantly intimated to the author of
          the ‘Explication des maximes,’ that, whatever might be the issue of his appeal
          to the Pope, he was already condemned by Louis XIV. He had written to the king
          to request that he might be permitted to proceed to Rome to defend himself in
          person; promising to see no one but the Pope and those whom he might appoint to
          conduct the examination, to live in perfect privacy, and to return immediately
          after the conclusion of the affair. His Majesty, in his reply, dated August 1,
          1697, rejected his petition; and moreover, ordered him to quit Versailles
          immediately, to repair to his diocese, and not to leave it without permission.
          Fenelon obeyed the mandate; but was so distressed by its suddenness and
          severity that he fell ill before reaching Cambrai. Resolved, however, that his
          cause should not suffer at Rome for want of a well-qualified advocate, he lost
          no time in sending thither the Abbe de Chanterac, Archdeacon of Cambrai, his
          relation and intimate friend; one whose wisdom, learning, and virtue fully
          entitled him to such a mark of confidence. Bossuet, on his part, was already
          provided with a representative at the Papal Court, in his nephew the Abbe
          Bossuet;—a person whose savage animosity against Fenelon, and neglect of the
          ordinary rules of self-restraint, added tenfold bitterness to this deplorable
          strife. He was seconded by the Abbé Phélipeaux, canon and grand-vicar of Meaux;
          who drew up a complete account of the controversy, leaving an injunction in his
          will that it should not be published till twenty years after his decease.
               There is no apparent ground to doubt (though the
          contrary has been maintained) that the two principals in this theological duel
          were governed by motives equally conscientious, equally worthy of their
          position and profession. Both were alike convinced that they were defending
          truths of the profoundest moment, and forwarding the best interests of
          Christianity. “This is no question of personal honour,” says Fenelon, “nor of
          the opinion of the world, nor of the pain which must naturally follow from the
          humiliation of defeat. I believe that I am acting with sincerity; I am as much
          afraid of being presumptuous, as I am of being feeble, time-serving, and timid
          in the defence of truth. If the Pope condemns me, I shall be undeceived, and by
          that means the vanquished will reap all the real advantages of victory. If, on
          the other hand, my doctrine is not condemned, I shall endeavour, by respectful
          silence, to appease those of my colleagues whose zeal has been roused against
          me, and who have imputed to me a doctrine which I hold in no less horror than
          themselves. Perhaps they will be induced to do me justice, when they witness my
          good faith... Let us not regard the purposes of men, nor their proceedings; let
          us see nothing in all this but God alone. Let us be children of peace, and
          peace will abide with us; it may be bitter, but it will be all the more pure.
          Let us not mar the uprightness of our intentions by perverseness, by passion,
          by worldly machinations, by natural eagerness to justify ourselves. Let us
          simply establish our good faith; let us allow ourselves to be corrected, if it
          be necessary; and let us endure correction, even if we deserve it not.”
           Nor would it be less unjust to attribute to the
          high-souled Bossuet the petty vice of jealousy towards a rival star which was
          supposed to threaten his own supremacy in the ecclesiastical hemisphere. He was
          incapable of such weakness. Standing, as he did, on the highest pinnacle of
          professional fame—crowned with the well-earned laurels of a life of
          conflict—secure of the confidence of his sovereign—the undisputed dictator of
          religious policy in Prance—he had nothing left to desire in the way of external
          honour and pre-eminence. His appreciation of Fenelon’s powers was always frank
          and generous; he acknowledged without hesitation that he possessed genius
          superior to his own. “As for those,” he says, “who cannot believe that zeal in
          the defence of truth may be pure and without thought of temporal interest, or
          that it is sufficiently attractive to be the sole motive of exertion, let us
          not be angry with them. Let us not suppose that they judge us with
          predetermined malice; and after all, as St. Augustine says, let us cease to be
          surprised if they impute to human beings the imperfections of humanity.”
          Again;— “I have no quarrel with M. de Cambrai, except that which exists between
          him and all the bishops, and the whole Church, on account of bis mistaken
          doctrine. I beg therefore that you will call the attention of the Cardinal f to
          the injustice which he would do me by representing this affair as if it were at
          all personal to myself. You may tell him that I have not, and never have had,
          any private dissension with the Archbishop of Cambrai, to whom I have at all
          times shown every sort of kindness—a fact of which all the world, and the king
          himself, are witnesses.” “M. de Cambrai,” he writes to the same correspondent,
          “continues to publish everywhere that it is I, and I alone, who am stirring up
          the cabal against him. The only cabal that I have engaged in consists in having
          striven to detach him from the obstinacy of Madame Guyon—in which I only
          seconded the efforts of Madame de Maintenon, to whose patronage he owes
          everything;—and in having concealed his errors from the king, in the hope that
          he might be induced to retract them. The king reproved me, and with too much
          reason, for having caused, through my reticence on this painful topic, his
          promotion to the Archbishopric of Cambrai. This is the whole extent of my
          offences against him; this is all my cabal.”
           Bossuet expressed from the first his confidence that
          Fenelon’s book would be condemned. He believed in the justice of his cause, and
          in the force of truth; but, in addition to this, he was secretly acquainted
          with the purpose of his royal master, and knew that he was prepared to exercise
          any amount of pressure upon the oracle of the Vatican, in order to extort the
          response which he desired. Louis had already written an autograph letter to the
          Pope,§ in which he described the ‘Explication’ as having incurred grave censure
          from Gallican prelates and divines, and intimated, in terms not to be mistaken,
          that he should not be satisfied unless their judgment were confirmed by that of
          the Holy See. The “Declaration” of the three prelates was, by his order, made
          public at the same moment, and delivered to the Nuncio for transmission to
          Home. This was a clear and powerful statement of the whole case as viewed by
          the adversaries of Fenelon; summing up his errors in the two comprehensive
          charges of disparaging the virtue of Christian hope, and of pressing the duty
          of self-abnegation to the extreme of indifference to salvation. It was a
          counter-appeal to the arbitration of the Apostolic See; which was thus
          spontaneously invoked by both parties, and that in a cause which, according to
          strict Gallican principles, ought to have been decided within the jurisdiction
          of the home episcopate. The inconsistency was pointed out to Bossuet; who
          replied that, since Fenelon had been the first to seek the decision of the
          Pope, a corresponding step on his part was inevitable; and that it would have
          been far more imprudent to hazard the discussion of such a theme in a
          provincial Synod, or an Assembly of the clergy, which, from the multiplicity of
          private interests and passions, might have proved unmanageable. At all events
          the worst course that could be taken would be that of abandoning the defence of
          the truth on account of the uncertainty of success. What could be said for the
          zeal and courage of bishops, if it should fail them in such an emergency ? Moreover,
          there was every reason to believe that the sentence on the book would be one of
          condemnation.
               Unforeseen difficulties, however, for a time
          obstructed and retarded this result. Fenelon found friends among the Jesuits.
          He had never been connected with them previously; so far from it that in his
          earlier years he was suspected of sympathizing with the Jansenists, and was
          twice excluded from promotion on that account. The ‘Explication des maximes,’
          however, was zealously supported by some of the most eminent Jesuits, including
          Fathers La Chaise and de Valois; and (so far as they dared) the Order intrigued
          at Rome to procure the acquittal of the author. His cause was also
          energetically advocated by Cardinal de Bouillon, who had just succeeded
          Cardinal Forbin Janson as French Charge d’ Affaires at the Pontifical court. De
          Bouillon was a vain, pretentious, arrogant man, who had made himself ridiculous
          by affecting the style and privileges of a sovereign prince, and was in
          consequence no favourite with Louis XIV. The Dukes of Beauvilliers and
          Chevreuse had obtained for him the appointment at Rome; and in acknowledgment
          of the obligation, he engaged to employ all the influence of his office in
          furthering the interests of their friend the Archbishop of Oambrai. His private
          feelings impelled him in the same direction. Between the houses of De Noailles
          and De Bouillon there was an ancient grudge, which the Cardinal would very
          gladly have indulged by disconcerting and discomfiting the Archbishop of
          Paris. Bossuet was obnoxious to him by the dazzling lustre of his genius, and
          the oppressive ascendency which he exercised in Church and State. He was
          jealous, again, of the growing credit of the Bishop of Chartres, and his
          confidential relations with Madame de Maintenon. And finally, he was a devoted
          partisan of the Jesuits. All these considerations concurred to strengthen his
          resolution to support Fenelon, though he had little or no real acquaintance
          with the merits of the question in dispute.
               On the whole, then, there appeared some prospect that
          the book might, after all, escape condemnation. Despite the pressing instances
          of Louis, the examination was conducted with all the deliberate tediousness
          prescribed by Roman usage. Sixty-four sessions, of several hours each, wore
          held between October, 1697, and September, 1698; but little progress was made towards
          a decision. The examiners were the “ Consultors ” of the Holy Office, ten in
          number; and five of these uniformly declared in Fenelon’s favour. The Pope,
          perplexed by this division of sentiment, and unwilling to condemn a prelate
          whose virtues and talents were the theme of universal admiration, referred the
          case to the Congregation of Cardinals of the Inquisition; and fresh debates
          commenced, which were continued with the utmost assiduity during many months.
               These delays irritated the king and the whole party
          opposed to Tension. Bossuet, during this tantalizing interval, betrayed his
          impatience by pouring forth, with feverish impetuosity, a multitude of
          controversial treatises, which were all marked by his accustomed power of
          thought and language, but which, to his infinite mortification, were invariably
          met with equal acuteness, and sometimes with superior felicity of argument, by
          his accomplished antagonist. The warfare not only arrested the attention of the
          learned, but excited intense interest among all classes of society in France,
          and even abroad. On Bossuet’s side the chief publications were his ‘ Summary of
          the Doctrine of the Explication,’ which appeared in Latin and French, and was
          laid before the examiners at Rome; his ‘ Preface sur l’Instruction pastorale de
          M. de Cambrai;’ three tracts in Latin, entitled ‘Mystici in tuto,’ ‘Schola in
          tuto,’ and ‘ Quietismus Redivivus;’ and lastly, the famous ‘Relation sur le
          Quietisme,’ perhaps the ablest of his productions in this conflict, but withal
          characterized by an amount of personal acrimony and invective which cannot be
          defended. Fenelon replied to these attacks with astonishing rapidity. Every
          shaft from the enemy’s lines called forth a swift and incisive missile in
          return; ‘Letters in Answer to the Bishop of Meaux,’ ‘Letters to Archbishop de
          Noailles,’ criticisms on the Pastoral of the Bishop of Chartres, and, above
          all, the ‘Reponse a la Relation sur le Quietisme,’ with the ‘ Reponse aux
          Remarques de l’Eveque de Meaux;’— a series of productions which carried the
          fame of Fenelon as a master of polemical science to the highest point.
               These last-mentioned efforts belong to the final stage
          of the contest, when, through the lengthened procrastinations of the court of
          Rome, a grievously embittered state of feeling had set in on both sides.
          Bossuet’s party were provoked by the difficulties which impeded, and threatened
          to frustrate, their design. They felt that it was necessary to strike a
          crushing blow, in order to convince the Pope and the Cardinals that, although
          Fenelon might still possess some few enthusiastic partisans, his disgrace in a
          political sense at Versailles was irrevocable. For this purpose it was at one
          time in contemplation to remove the excellent Due de Beauvilliers from his
          place at court and at the Council-board; but, before taking such a serious
          step, the king fortunately consulted Archbishop de Noailles; and that prelate,
          highly to his honour, represented matters in such a light as to induce him to
          abandon the idea.* The duke’s services, therefore, were retained; but several
          functionaries of a lower rank were abruptly dismissed from office, solely
          because they were relatives or friends of Fenelon, and supposed to sympathize
          in his opinions. These were the Abbe de Beaumont, Fenelon’s nephew,
          sub-preceptor to the princes; the Abbé de Langeron, reader; and Dupuis and LÉchelle,
          gentlemen of the chamber to the Duke of Burgundy. This malignant spite was even
          carried so far as to strip Fenelon’s brother of the petty appointment of an
          exempt of the “garde du corps.”
           The action of Bossuet was of a severer kind. He
          extracted twelve propositions from Fenelon’s work, and caused them to be
          presented in an irregular way, by personal solicitation, to the doctors of the
          Sorbonne, accompanied by a form of censure which they were requested to
          subscribe. Sixty signatures were thus obtained from compliant members of the
          Faculty; and the document was immediately despatched to Rome, as a proof that
          theological opinion in France was decidedly adverse to the doctrine in
          question. It was not an official corporate act of the Sorbonne, but simply of
          the three-score individual doctors who were induced to sign it; such as it was,
          however, it made the designed impression upon the minds of many in authority at
          the Papal court. The censure was drawn up by M. Pirot, the same divine who, on
          a former occasion, had described the ‘ Explication ’ as worthy of the warmest
          consideration.
               These angry impulses, again, prompted Bossuet to
          publish two letters addressed to him, under the seal of confidential
          friendship, by De Rancé Abbot of La Trappe, in which the work of the Archbishop
          of Cambrai, and the sect with which he was supposed to be in alliance, were
          denounced in terms of unmeasured indignation. “If the dreams of these fanatics
          are to be received,” said De Rancé, “ it will be necessary to close the volume
          of Holy Scripture; to set aside the Gospel, with all its sacred and essential
          precepts, as if they were practically useless; and even to count for nothing
          the life and example of Jesus Christ, all adorable as it is. This is a
          consummate piece of impiety, veiled under a strange and affected phraseology,
          devised for no other purpose than the deception and seduction of souls.”
          Bossuet showed this, with other letters, to Madame de Maintenon, who agreed
          with him that it would be desirable to make them public. This was done
          accordingly, without previous reference to De Rancé for his consent; and copies
          were circulated far and wide, much to the injury of Fenelon in the minds of
          those who, while incapable of forming a judgment personally, knew how to appreciate
          that of so celebrated an authority as the Abbot of La Trappe. The abbot himself
          was infinitely annoyed by this unwarrantable breach of propriety.
               Meanwhile the persecution of Madame Guyon was revived;
          for it was hoped that, by raking up fresh suspicion against her character and
          proceedings, some portion of the scandal might recoil indirectly upon Fenelon.
          Every vestige of her former influence had been eradicated from St. Cyr. A
          rigorous search was made for her letters and other manuscripts, every fragment
          of which was removed from the convent. To make assurance doubly sure, the king
          expelled three of the sisters who showed a disposition to resist these measures
          of arbitrary repression, and ordered that they should never, under any
          circumstances, be permitted to return. Among them was Madame de la Maisonfort,
          who, on quitting St. Cyr, placed herself under the direction of Bossuet at
          Meaux; retaining, nevertheless, her warm admiration and veneration of Fenelon,
          the loss of whose instructions she never ceased to lament.
               Immediately afterwards (September, 1698) Madame Guyon
          was transferred from Vaugirard to the Bastille; and it was given out that
          revelations had been made by Father Lacombe, then a prisoner at Vincennes, the
          effect of which was to cast a dark shade upon the nature of their past
          relations. Lacombe, whose intellect had never been robust, was at this time in
          a state of pitiable fatuity; and it was preposterous in the extreme to attach
          any serious import to allegations obtained under such circumstances. Nevertheless
          it is unhappily certain that an attempt was made by the Abbé Bossuet and others
          at Rome, under colour of these extorted confessions, to insinuate that the
          connection between Fenelon and Madame Guyon had not been altogether innocent.
          Fenelon’s first impulse was to treat the calumny with silent contempt; but, on
          the appearance of Bossuet’s ‘ Relation sur le Quietisme,’ which contained
          mysterious allusions pointing in the same direction, his friends, especially
          Cardinal de Bouillon and the Abbé de Chanterac, represented to him that an
          equally public refutation of the falsehood was indispensable; and it was now
          that he wrote his celebrated Apology, the ‘Réponse a la Relation.’ If Bossuet’s
          attack had raised a ferment in the popular mind, the archbishop’s defence
          produced a still more extraordinary sensation. The reaction of feeling was
          electrical. The public voice proclaimed that his justification on the score of
          morals was complete and triumphant; and, moreover, a strong presumption arose
          in favour of the orthodoxy of his opinions; since it was argued that his
          enemies would never have resorted to the disgraceful expedient of personal
          slander, had they not felt that the charge of heretical doctrine was likely to
          prove untenable. “We have already given away mere than forty copies of the ‘ Réponse,’
          ” writes the Abbé de Chanterac, “and numbers of people are still demanding it
          with incredible eagerness. The uproar is terrible ; all Rome resounds with it.
          What comforts me the most is to witness the joy both of private friends and of
          the public at the entire recognition of your innocence. One of the most learned
          bishops here said to me, and has said pretty strongly to others, that nothing
          more could be desired for your justification, and that you have crushed M. de
          Meaux to powder.” “Never did
            an apology meet with such general approbation. It is not only its simple
            unaffected elegance that is admired, but, still more, its force, its
            gentleness, its persuasive air of truthfulness, which convinces, and which
            effaces altogether the disagreeable impressions produced by the Relation of M.
            de Meaux. The Archbishop’s innocence seems to fill the public with universal
            joy. The Abbé Bossuet is so amazed by it, that he urgently solicited an
            audience of the Pope, and besought him with extreme earnestness to defer giving
            judgment in the affair until his uncle should be able to answer the ‘ Reply ’
            of M. de Cambrai. His party no longer speak with the same pride and confidence
            which they displayed after the ‘Relation.’ Their present cue is to say that the
            history of the facts has nothing to do with the points of doctrine; yet it is
            clear enough that their great object was to confound the two together, while,
            on the contrary, it is M. de Cambrai’s interest to keep them separate.” “A
            prelate of this court, famous for his learning, and high in the esteem and
            confidence of several cardinals, to whom I presented a copy of your ‘ Réponse,’
            told me that it has wrought a great change in the minds of many; that the last
            time he saw me, he feared that the affair would end unfavourably, because he
            had heard certain cardinals express their apprehension that your book would be
            treated as an apology for Madame Guyon; but that, at present, all is going in
            the right direction.”
             Fenelon and his friends were inspirited by this
          apparent change of fortune; and upon the strength of it an effort was made to
          settle the case by a compromise. A series of twelve dogmatic statements, or
          canons, was drawn up, and submitted to the Pope by Cardinal Ferrari; they were
          shaped affirmatively, and set forth the orthodox tradition on the points at
          issue, without denouncing any anathemas, or censuring any theological work by
          name. If the judgment could have taken such a form, the ‘Explication des maximes’
          would have remained in reality uncensured, while at the same time the doctrine
          of the Church would have been clearly established in opposition to Quietism.
          Innocent, who was sincerely anxious to save the reputation of Fenelon, approved
          the project; and at one moment its success seemed probable. But the Abbé Bossuet
          was vigilant, well informed, and resolute. No sooner did he hear of the scheme,
          than he despatched an extraordinary courier to Paris, and signified to the king
          that, unless he was prepared to see the Archbishop of Cambrai triumphantly
          acquitted, he must instantly make an exhibition of authority and determination
          such as the Vatican could neither misunderstand nor evade. Louis had already
          remonstrated with the Pope on the vexatious impediments which delayed his
          judgment; he now exchanged complaints for menaces. “His Majesty learns with
          surprise and grief that after all his solicitations, and after the repeated
          promises of his Holiness to cut up by the root the mischief which the
          Archbishop of Cambrai’s book has wrought throughout the kingdom, when all seemed
          terminated, and the book was declared by the congregation of Cardinals and by
          the Pope himself to abound with errors, its friends have proposed a new
          expedient, the tendency of which is to render all the previous deliberations
          fruitless, and to renew the whole dispute … His Majesty cannot believe that,
          under a Pontificate like the present, such a lamentably weak policy can be
          entertained; and it is clear that it would not be possible for his Majesty to
          receive or sanction in his dominions anything except that which he has
          demanded, and which has been promised him, namely, a direct and precise
          judgment upon a book which has thrown his kingdom into flames, and a doctrine
          which causes division. Any other form of decision would be useless for the
          settlement of an affair of such importance, which has kept all Christendom so
          long in a state of suspense. The promoters of this new plan have manifestly no
          great concern for the honour of the Holy See, whose authority might by their rashness
          be plunged in an abyss of difficulties merely for the sake of protecting a book
          already pronounced to be deserving of censure. It would be too distressing to
          his Majesty to witness the birth of another schism among his subjects, at the
          very moment when he is making every available effort to extinguish that of
          Calvin. And if he should perceive that an affair which seemed almost at an end
          is being protracted through motives of indulgence which he is at a loss to
          comprehend, he will know what course he ought to adopt, and will take measures
          accordingly; cherishing at the same time the hope that his Holiness will be
          unwilling to reduce him to such painful extremities.”
           As it happened, however, this indecent attempt to
          intimidate the aged Pontiff was unnecessary. He had taken his determination
          before the royal missive reached his hands; and that determination was in
          accordance with the dictates of Louis, and adverse to Fenelon. The project of
          the canons was discussed in the congregation of cardinals, but, with the
          exception of Cardinal de Bouillon, no one raised a voice in its support. Even
          Cardinal Ferrari, with whom the idea originated, and Cardinal Albani, who had warmly
          supported it, ultimately abandoned it as hopeless. The only remaining
          alternative was to pronounce a direct sentence of condemnation on Fenelon’s
          work, according to the draft-decree which had been already agreed upon.
               On the 12th of March, 1699, Innocent XII at length
          gave judgment in this memorable cause. It was expressed in the form, not of a
          bull, but of a brief, condemning the ‘ Explication des maximes des saints ’ in
          general, and, in particular, twenty-three propositions extracted from it; these
          were characterised as “rash, scandalous, ill-sounding, offensive to pious ears,
          pernicious in practice, and respectively erroneous.” The faithful were
          forbidden, under pain of excommunication, to print, read, possess, or make use
          of the said book, “inasmuch as they might thereby be misled insensibly into
          errors already condemned by the Catholic Church.” The principal passages
          condemned are those to which we have so often referred as comprising the
          leading features of Fenelon’s system; namely, the disinterested love of God
          exclusively for His own sake, and the notion of the absolute sacrifice of
          salvation by a righteous soul under circumstances of extreme spiritual trial.
          It was remarked, however, that some of the statements which had been most
          severely criticised in France were altogether untouched by the Papal censure.
               The enemies of Fenelon felt, indeed, even in this
          moment of exultation, that something was wanting to the completeness of their
          triumph. The twenty-three propositions were pronounced erroneous, but they were
          not branded as heretical, nor even as “approaching to heresy.” Strenuous
          exertions had been made to secure the insertion of those epithets, but in vain;
          a majority of the Cardinals decided on the more lenient course. The censure,
          again, was promulgated in a brief or letter, instead of the more imposing form
          of a bull; and certain clauses were omitted, which the Popes usually employed
          for the purpose of adding weight to their official utterances. On the other
          hand, phrases had been added which were notoriously opposed to the principles
          of Gallicanism ; for it was presumed that Louis and his advisers, in their joy
          at the attainment of their main object, would not be overscrupulous as to
          points of minor interest, which, under other circumstances, they might have
          been inclined to dispute.
               The courier despatched by Cardinal de Bouillon with
          the announcement of the Papal judgment reached Versailles on the 22nd of March.
          Bossuet received the news on the same day; and when he next appeared at Court,
          the king arranged with him, in a private interview, the measures which it would
          be necessary to take with a view to the official reception of this important
          act by the Gallican Church. “It was then, doubtless,” says the Abbé Ledien, “that
          he suggested the idea, not only of the letters patent, but of the provincial
          assemblies, in order to render the acceptance more solemn, and to augment the
          lustre of the king’s triumph. After this, he said to us in private, ‘All will
          go well; what is requisite will be done; letters patent will be given; the
          Parliament will make no difficulty.’ The common talk in Paris, however, was of
          a different tone. ‘It is only a brief; that is nothing. The king will never
          grant letters patent. The Parliament cannot possibly accept the expression “motu
          proprio.” When I mentioned these rumours to the bishop, he merely repeated that
          all would turn out well .... The condemnation of a book against which he had
          been so continually writing for a long time past was universally regarded as
          the fruit of his exertions. The more he sought to divest himself of this distinction,
          the more eagerly was it assigned to him by the public. A perfect concourse of
          people of all conditions came to congratulate him. The royal family were the
          first to give the example, both in person and by letter; he received visits
          from all the bishops who were at Paris; and letters arrived from those who were
          absent, and from persons of consideration throughout the kingdom, during the
          space of two months, to wish him joy on the occasion. It was the theme of
          common conversation, not only in the towns but among country people, that “M.
          de Meaux had gained his cause at Rome against M. de Cambrai.”
               The conduct of tire defeated party, meanwhile, was
          such as to entitle it to a meed of praise at least equal in degree, however
          widely differing in character. Few facts in the Church’s annals are more
          familiar to the general reader than the exemplary submission of Fenelon to the
          supreme authority of Rome, notwithstanding the crushing humiliation now
          inflicted on him. The duty of such submission was one of the primary axioms of
          his religious creed. “Roma locuta est; causa finita est.” Considering the high
          personal esteem in which he was held by the reigning Pontiff—considering the
          powerful support which he enjoyed among the Jesuits, the Cardinals, the
          official staff of the Inquisition—considering, again, the extremely intricate
          and bewildering nature, of the questions which formed the subject of
          dispute—there is no doubt that the Archbishop, had he been so minded, might
          have eluded the censure, and prolonged the struggle indefinitely. He had a
          position as strong, to say the least, as that of the Jansenists, who, by means
          of their fine-drawn distinction between doctrine and fact, had set Pope after
          Pope at defiance, and were still, after half a century of controversy,
          uncondemned in their own estimation, though they were heretics in the eyes of
          all the rest of the Catholic world. But Fenelon disdained such sophistical artifices.
          It is well known how, on receiving notice of the Papal brief, he ascended the
          pulpit of his cathedral, where, instead of preaching, as he had intended, on
          the subject of the day—the Annunciation—he proceeded to enforce the duty of
          obedience to ecclesiastical authority; and how he drew up forthwith a mandement
          to his flock announcing his sincere acceptance of the sentence, at whatever
          cost of personal mortification,
               “We adhere to this brief, most dear brethren (such are
          his words), both with respect to the text of the book and with respect to the
          twenty-three propositions, simply, absolutely, and without a shadow of reserve.
          Accordingly, we condemn both the book and the propositions, precisely in the
          same form and with the same expressions, simply, absolutely, and without
          restriction. Moreover, we forbid the faithful of this diocese, under the same
          penalty, to read or retain this book. We shall find comfort, dearest brethren,
          under our present humiliation, provided that the ministry of the word, which we
          have received of the Lord for your sanctification, be not weakened thereby, and
          that, notwithstanding the abasement of the pastor, the flock may grow in grace
          before God. With our whole heart, then, we exhort you to sincere submission and
          unreserved docility, lest by any means the simple duty of obedience to the Holy
          See should be insensibly impaired ; of which obedience we desire, with the
          assistance of God’s grace, to set you an example to the last moment of our
          life. God forbid that our name should ever be mentioned, except it be to call
          to mind that a pastor felt it incumbent on him to be more submissive than the
          least sheep of his flock, and that he set no bounds to his compliance.” The
          Archbishop wrote to the Pope to signify, in similar terms of profound humility,
          his submission to the censure; and received a reply from his Holiness,
          expressing in gratifying language his satisfaction with his conduct. In the
          original draft of this letter Innocent had spoken still more decidedly in
          praise of Fenelon, whose character he had long admired ; but the Abbe Bossuet,
          who had displayed throughout the affair a spirit of hateful malignity,
          succeeded, by dint of clamour and intrigue, in procuring the suppression of
          these eulogistic clauses. Even the victor of Meaux could not refrain from
          indulging in unfair and captious criticisms on the mandement of his fallen
          adversary.
               Although, in consequence of the readiness shown by
          Fenelon to bow to the decision of the Holy See, all doubt was removed as to the
          practical reception of the brief in France, it was deemed necessary, before it
          was published officially, to observe certain formalities illustrating the great
          principles of “Gallican liberty” which had been re-affirmed with so much
          emphasis in 1682. According to these maxims, a judicial sentence of the Pope in
          a matter of faith cannot be published in France until it has been solemnly
          accepted in due canonical form by the archbishops and bishops of the realm.
          Every member of the episcopate is, by virtue of his office, a judge of
          theological doctrine co-ordinately with the Pope; and the judgments of the Holy
          Father are not irreversible or infallible unless confirmed by the collective
          assent of the Church. It was arranged, therefore, that the king should address
          a circular letter to the metropolitans, desiring them to summon a meeting of
          their comprovincial bishops to deliberate on the acceptance of the brief. By
          this expedient it was held that the bishops would individually exercise their
          functions as colleagues and assessors of the Pope ; and their acquiescence in
          the judgment would be no mere act of enforced registration, but the expression
          of their own independent conviction.
               “The Provincial Assemblies,” says D’Aguesseau, “were
          held successively in each province with perfect unanimity, both as to the
          condemnation of the Archbishop of Cambrai’s book, and as to the preservation of
          the right of bishops to judge of doctrine, and other features of the liberties
          of the Gallican Church. A laudable emulation was excited among the different
          provinces; each aspired to the honour of having maintained most vigorously the
          power inherent in the episcopal character, of judging either before the Pope,
          or with the Pope, or after the Pope, and the right of bishops to receive the
          Papal constitutions only after examination, and in judicial form. The most
          remarkable circumstance in this solemn attestation of its doctrine by the
          Gallican Church was that it occurred at a time when we had no difference
          whatever with the Court of Pome, and when the king was living in perfect
          intelligence with the Pope, from whom he feared nothing and had nothing to
          fear. So that it was truth alone, and not the necessity arising from any
          external conjuncture, which gave occasion to a declaration of the sentiments of
          the clergy thus authoritative and unanimous.
               The Assembly of the province of Paris, which was
          designed to serve in some measure as a model for the rest, was held in the
          chapel of the Archbishop’s palace on the 13th of May, 1699. There were present
          Archbishop de Noailles, the Bishops of Chartres, Meaux, and Blois, and the
          vicar-general of Orleans, representing Cardinal de Coislin, bishop of that see.
          Bossuet had feared that some opposition or dissension might arise in the course
          of the proceedings ; but on the contrary, perfect harmony prevailed, and the procès-verbal was adopted without amendment or division. In this document it was carefully
          laid down that the acceptance of Apostolic constitutions is to be made by the
          authorities of the Church after deliberation; the bishops uniting themselves in
          spirit with his Holiness in the condemnation of error. Such acceptance, again,
          must include an express declaration that it is not to prejudice the right of
          bishops to judge in the first instance in causes of doctrine, when they may
          think it necessary for the good of the Church. The Assembly adverted to the
          defects of form in the Pope’s brief, to the omission of the customary clauses
          “Nulli ergo” and “Si quis autem,” and to the insertion of the anti-Gallicau
          phrase  motu proprio”;—all which
          irregularities they excused upon various specious considerations. But they
          added another article, which was a most unjust and unbecoming aggravation of
          Fenelon’s punishment. Under the plea of deterring his partisans from imitating
          his example, “like the followers of Gilbert de la Porrée, of whom St. Bernard
          says that they preferred having that prelate for their master in his error than
          in his retractation,” they resolved that the king should be requested to revoke
          the permission granted for printing the condemned book, and to suppress all
          publications that had been made in defence of it. This was grossly
          inconsistent; for whereas they professed to be acting in strict accordance with
          the judgment of the Pope, they well knew that the archbishop’s apologies for
          his work had been repeatedly declared at Rome to be exempt from censure, and
          that no mention was to be found of them in the brief which was the occasion of
          their meeting. The resolution passed, however, unanimously; and the maxim “vae
          victis” was applied without remorse. The majority of the provinces copied
          almost verbatim the proceedings of that of Paris; but six out of the seventeen
          (Toulouse, Narbonne, Sens, Vienne, Auch, and Arles) forbore to insist on the
          suppression of the apologetic writings.
           The most trying scene in the whole drama was that
          enacted in the province of Cambrai; where it fell to the lot of Fenelon to
          preside, as metropolitan, over an assembly called together for the purpose of
          finally sealing the condemnation of his own work. One of his suffragans,
          Valbelle, Bishop of St. Omer, had the effrontery to attack the touching
          mandement of his superior, and to insinuate that his professed humility was but
          that of outward respect, and not of the heart and conscience. It lacked, he
          said, some expression of penitence; and, were it not for the known integrity of
          the Archbishop, the door might thus be left open for a relapse into the very
          error which had been verbally abjured. Fenelon bore the implied insult without
          a sign of resentment. He calmly pointed out that the terms of his mandement
          expressed a far deeper acquiescence than one of mere external respect; that he
          had promised his flock to set them an example of docility and obedience of
          equal duration with his life; and that he could hardly be suspected of making
          use of such language with an intent to deceive and trifle with the Church. He
          was incapable of taking any steps, directly or indirectly, for the sake of
          eluding the sentence contained in the Pope’s brief. He could not indeed
          acknowledge, against his conscience, that he had ever really hell the erroneous
          tenets imputed to him; he had hoped that his work had been so carefully shaped,
          and balanced by such correctives, as to give no countenance to error; but he
          gladly renounced his own judgment to conform implicitly to that of the Holy
          Father. The bishops congratulated him on these edifying sentiments; but
          nevertheless they made him drink the cup of humiliation to the very dregs. He
          was compelled to decide, as president, in favour of the suppression of all his
          writings in support of the ‘ Explication des maximes, which was demanded by the
          plurality of voices; recording at the same time, in the procès-verbal, his own dissent from that measure.
           When the Pope’s constitution had thus been accepted by
          the Provincial Assemblies, the king sent letters-patent to the Parliament,
          requiring the magistrates to register and publish it, that it might be executed
          according to due form and tenor. This final step took place on the 14th of
          August, 1699, after an eloquent “requisitoire” from the Avocat-General
          D’Aguesseau, which is styled by the President Hainaut “an immortal monument of
          the solidity of the maxims of the Church of France, for ever honourable to the
          memory of that great magistrate.” Bossuet, in like manner, commended it as “ a
          work worthy of the zeal of a bishop or a theologian, rather than of a
          magistrate ; the officers of the Parliament not being accustomed to manifest so
          much favour to the Church.” D’Aguesseau showed indeed considerable skill on
          this occasion in distinguishing, while at the same time he reconciled and
          harmonized, the rights of the Church and of the Crown, of the Pope and of the
          Episcopate. “This glorious work,” he says, “the success of which interested in
          an equal degree religion and the State, the Priesthood and the Empire, is the
          precious fruit of their perfect intelligence. Never did the two supreme Powers
          which God has established for the government of mankind concur so zealously,
          and I may say so felicitously, to the attainment of their commou end, namely,
          the glory of Him who delivers His oracles by the mouth of the Church, and who
          causes them to be executed by the authority of sovereigns.” In a fe pregnant
          sentences he depicts the source and nature of the controversy. “ Dark shades,
          all the more dangerous in that they borrowed the appearance and lustre of the
          most brilliant light, had begun to cover the face of the Church. Minds the most
          elevated, souls the most heavenly, deceived by the false glitter of a dazzling
          spirituality, were the most ardent in pursuing the shadow of an imaginary
          perfection; and if God had not abridged the days of illusion and aberration,
          even the elect (if it were possible, and if I may be permitted to adopt the
          language of Scripture), would have been in danger of being seduced. The truth
          made itself heard through the voice of the Pope and of the Bishops; they
          invoked the light, and light arose out of the depths of darkness. Only a word
          was necessary to dissipate the clouds of error; and the remedy was so prompt
          and so effectual, that it has effaced even the remembrance of the malady which
          threatened us.” He then pays a just tribute of admiration to the magnanimous
          behaviour of Fenelon;—that pastor from whom the Church might have expected
          opposition, “if his heart had been the accomplice of his intellect,” but who
          had “hastened to pronounce against himself a painful yet salutary censure, and
          had reassured the Church, scared as it was by the novelty of his doctrine, by
          solemnly announcing submission without reserve, obedience without limits, acquiescence
          without restriction.” He next recounts the constitutional measures which had
          been taken for the acceptance of the brief: insisting specially on the judicial
          power of bishops in doctrinal causes, whether separately or in conjunction with
          the Pope. “Nothing,” he says, “can shake this incontestable maxim, which was
          born with the Church, and will last as long as the Church;—that each See, being
          the depository of the faith and tradition of its fathers, has the right to give
          its testimony to the same, whether separately or in the corporate assembly of
          bishops; and these individual rays make up that vast body of light which,
          henceforth till the consummation of all things, will evermore cause error to
          tremble and truth to triumph. Let us, by a wise moderation, identify the
          interests of the Pope with those of the bishops ; let us receive his judgment
          with profound veneration, yet without detracting aught from the authority of
          the other pastors. Let the Pope be always the most exalted, yet not the sole,
          judge of our faith ; let the bishops always have their seats after him, but
          nevertheless with him, for the exercise of that power which Christ conferred on
          them in common, to teach all nations, and to be everywhere and in all ages the
          light of the world. For these reasons,” he concludes, “ we demand that this
          brief be registered, with one simple but useful protest, which we find in the
          subscriptions of an ancient Spanish Council:—Salva priscorum canonum
          auctoritate.”
           Nothing is more remarkable in the history of this
          affair than the fact that it was terminated by a single decision of that august
          tribunal, to which Catholics in all ages have been accustomed to appeal for
          justice in the last resort. D’Aguesseau observes that, in a case of such
          magnitude, the circumstance is probably without a parallel. After the events
          which we have just related, the vexed question of Quietism sank rapidly into
          oblivion. The Archbishop of Cambrai amply redeemed the pledges he had given both
          before and since bis condemnation. He avoided all allusion to the controversy;
          he never complained of the sentence; he never regretted that lie bad bound
          himself to absolute and life-long submission. His friends, for the most part,
          pursued a similar course; and the consequence was that, although the
          traditional theory of Mysticism survived in individual minds, and exercised an
          influence which no external opposition could overthrow, it led to no display of
          sectarianism, and never again became openly menacing to the peace of the
          Church.
               There are other considerations, however, which suggest
          a doubt whether the judgment which was thus passively accepted may not have
          been prejudicial, rather than favourable, to the true principles of
          Catholicism. Fenelon leaned towards Ultramontane opinions. Hence his sympathy
          with the Jesuits; hence his friendship with Cardinal de Bouillon; hence the
          extreme reluctance of the Pope to pronounce his condemnation. Such tendencies
          predisposed him, when his orthodoxy was attached to recur immediately to Rome;
          a step highly gratifying to that Court, and one from which it failed not to
          extract solid advantage. That a Gallman prelate of such eminence should
          voluntarily seek the decision of a foreign tribunal, ignoring the constitutional
          rights of his colleagues in the episcopate, and contradicting the maxims which
          his predecessors had upheld with so much ardour in all ages, was a matter of no
          small congratulation to the Curia and its supporters. It was, pro tanto, a
          relinquishment of the doctrine that the bishops, assembled in Provincial or
          National Synod, are the primary judges of ecclesiastical causes arising within
          their jurisdiction; it was a direct encouragement to the absolutist pretensions
          of the Roman Pontiffs, from which the Church had already suffered so severely.
          This error on Fenelon’s part compromised, as we have seen, Bossuet and those
          who acted with him, since his appeal to Rome seemed to necessitate a similar
          movement on their side; and the frequent applications of Louis to Innocent
          placed the Crown in the same incongruous predicament. When all was over—when
          the oracle had spoken, and the Pope had arrogated to himself personally, “ motu
          proprio,” the supreme arbitration of the affair—then the Gallican Church
          bethought itself of the authority of its own episcopal assemblies; but it is
          obvious that it was then too late; the proper moment for the exercise of that
          authority was past. The forms of deliberation, references to historical
          precedent, protests against usurpation, saving clauses, scrupulous
          reservations—all were important in their measure, and it was right to employ
          them ; but it cannot be denied that they were illusory with regard to the
          adjudication of the case in hand; the bishops had allowed the real functions of
          their office to be forestalled and sacrificed. Every successive instance of
          such weakness damaged the cause of Gallicanism ; and hence we must not be
          surprised to find that the aggressions upon it became bolder and more
          offensive, and that, although there was not wanting a firm front of resistance,
          that resistance was made with diminished resources, and with less and less
          prospect of ultimate victory.
               
 
 
           
 |