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| THE GALLICAN CHURCH.A HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF FRANCE FROM THE CONCORDAT OF BOLOGNA, A.D. 1516, TO THE REVOLUTION, A.D. 1789. |  | 
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 CHAPTER II.STRENGTH OF PROTESTANTISM IN FRANCE
           During this interval, the disciples of Calvin, encouraged by
            the success of their coreligionists in Germany, and by the vacillating
            conduct of the authorities at home, propagated their opinions to a prodigious
            extent in France. It was in the year 1555, as we learn from Theodore Beza, that
            the first place of public Protestant worship was opened at Paris. The example
            was contagious, and conventicles were speedily established at Orleans, Rouen,
            Blois, Tours, Bourges, Agen, and other towns.
            Consistories were next organized; synods were held; and ere long the schism
            from the Church began to assume the appearance of a settled institution. How
            to deal with a movement whose aggressions became daily more audacious and more
            formidable was, for Catholics, the all-absorbing problem of the day.
             The numerical strength of French Protestantism, in the
            middle of the sixteenth century, has been variously estimated; some writers
            carrying it as high as the tenth, or even the eighth, part of the entire
            population, others depressing it as low as the seventeenth. Taking the mean
            between these extremes, the sectaries probably mustered about one million and a
            half.
                 From the first their cause had been supported by
            personages of exalted rank and station ; but by degrees it acquired zealous partizans in all grades of society. It was warmly
            patronized by the savans—by those who had
            borne the most active part in the recent “renaissance” of art, science, and
            classical learning. It had made many notable converts among the magistracy and
            “ gens de la robe and it was encouraged generally by men of education,
            capacity, and enlarged views, who, without endorsing all the extravagances of
            Luther and Calvin, sincerely advocated a practical regeneration of the Church,
            and desired to see that great work conducted by the Church herself. The most
            powerful promoters of the Reformation in France—morally and intellectually
            speaking—were to be found in this latter class; and had their counsels
            prevailed in the actual direction of the course of affairs, it may be safely
            affirmed that the history of the second half of the sixteenth century would
            have worn a very different complexion.
             But the predominant influences were, unfortunately, of
            a more questionable kind. The agitation for reform in the Church was
            complicated, from its commencement, with political interests, ambitious
            intrigues, private enmities, and selfish passions. The leaders on both sides
            professed to be actuated by the highest and most sacred principles; nor need we
            doubt that religion was honestly felt to be the most important issue at stake.
            But religious concerns were so speciously mixed up with considerations of a
            worldly nature, that the lower motive was continually mistaken for the higher;
            and thus, in the case both of Catholics and Protestants, the cause nominally
            advocated was in reality endangered and betrayed.
                 The Huguenots (as the French reformers now began to be
            called) had up to this time been simply a sect of dissenters from the national
            Church; but ere long they were driven, by the force of circumstances, into the
            position of a seditious faction in the State. The heads of the party were two
            malcontent princes of the blood-royal, burning with indignation against a rival
            family of scarcely less illustrious lineage, which had adroitly possessed
            itself of the chief direction of affairs. It was perfectly natural that the
            King of Navarre and his brother the prince of Conde should aspire to the enjoyment
            of that political consequence which seemed to befit their near relationship to
            the throne. It was no less natural that they should endeavour to transfer to
            themselves that authority which they deemed to have been unfairly usurped by
            the House of Guise. But to suppose that the governing spring of their conduct
            was religion, would be an egregious misconception of the truth. It cost them
            nothing, on the score of conscience, to profess the Calvinist creed; while it
            so happened that that profession opened a most promising prospect for the
            advancement of their worldly fortunes ; and it was the pursuit of this latter object which at length misled them into armed insurrection and treason.
             The Admiral de Coligny and his brother Francois D’Andelot were, it is true, men of a higher stamp;
            Protestants by strong conviction; conscientiously devoted to the cause of what
            they considered to be essential truth. But they were also deeply imbued with
            the spirit of political partisanship; they thirsted for ascendency and power;
            they were swayed by personal jealousies and deadly animosities. And in
            consequence, they were not unfrequently blind to the real character of acts and
            counsels, which, but for the mischievous sophistry of party spirit, they would
            probably have been the first to condemn.
                 The conduct of those who held the reins of government
            betrayed similar weaknesses, and was manifestly prompted by secondary and
            unworthy motives. Ambition, haughtiness, rapacity, cruelty, were the besetting
            sins of the House of Lorraine. These princes claimed descent by direct
            succession from Charlemagne; and not only esteemed themselves the equals in
            blood of the reigning family in France, but even maintained pretensions, more
            or less plausible, to the reversion of their inheritance.
                 The two elder sons of the first Duke of Guise—Francis,
            the second duke, and Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine—were distinguished no less
            by their talents and personal attainments than by their lofty birth. The duke
            was an able military commander, and had gained universal popularity by his
            gallant defence of Metz against the emperor, his recapture of Calais from the
            English, and other brilliant exploits. His brother, the Cardinal, possessed a
            character abounding with splendid qualities, which, however, were darkly shaded
            by strange inconsistencies, if not by scandalous vices. He was a dexterous,
            though not a profound, politician; an erudite scholar, an accomplished
            theologian, a practised orator, and gifted with singularly attractive manners. On
            the other hand, he was inordinately vain; intensely selfish; an adept in the
            arts of dissimulation, which he used without scruple; and generally believed to
            be irregular in his private morals. Born in 1524, Charles of Lorraine was
            preferred at the age of fifteen to the Archbishopric of Reims;—a somewhat gross
            specimen of the abuse of Church patronage by the Crown since the Concordat. On
            the accession of Henry II. he was made a member of the Council of State, and
            was soon afterwards elevated to the Conclave by Pope Paul III. In addition to
            the see of Reims, the Cardinal held in commendam that
            of Metz, besides several rich abbeys. His ecclesiastical revenue was reckoned
            at 300,000 livres (equal to about three times that amount according to the
            present value of money). His private fortune, moreover, was considerable.
             The influence of this great dignitary was paramount
            with the clergy, who looked up to him with boundless confidence as the all-powerful
            protector of their interests. The ecclesiastical administration, and indeed the
            whole internal government of France, was in his hands.
                 The Cardinal had accustome himself—like other famous statesmen before and since his time,—to identify the
            public welfare with his own tenure of the reins of power; and if he hated and
            persecuted the Huguenots, it was not so much because they were heretics, as
            because they were his political adversaries. Not that Charles of Lorraine was
            at all deficient in zeal for Catholicism; but with him the supremacy of the
            Guises was the first object, the supremacy of Catholicism was the second. The
            popular pamphleteers of the day represented him to the multitude as a special
            instrument raised up by Providence for the defence and preservation of the
            Faith; hence his severities against the Huguenots passed with the world for
            proofs of ardent devotedness to the cause of religion, whereas they resulted
            mainly from a reckless determination to trample down and annihilate the party
            which opposed his monopoly of power.
                 Henry II, at the instigation of the Cardinal, now
            embarked in a systematic course of fierce persecution. An attempt was made, in
            1555, to enforce the execution of all ecclesiastical sentences against heretics
            without permitting any appeal to the civil magistrate. This was firmly resisted
            by the heads of the parliament of Paris, who maintained, in a remonstrance to the
            king, that it belonged to the temporal courts to adjudicate finally in all
            causes without exception; though they acknowledged the right of the spiritual
            authorities to define what constituted the crime of heresy. The secular judges
            had hitherto been relentless in condemning the Calvinists; and it is a
            remarkable proof of their altered tone of feeling with regard to the great
            controversy of the day, that on this occasion they deprecated rigorous
            measures, and even proceeded to lecture the sovereign and his ministers for
            their intolerance. “We take the liberty to remark,” said they, “that, inasmuch
            as the infliction of these penalties has hitherto been ineffectual to correct
            error, it would be more reasonable to imitate the example of the Primitive
            Church, which, instead of employing fire and sword for the defence of
            religion, relied for that purpose on purity of doctrine and the saintly lives
            of its chief pastors. Let the bishops be more sedulous in personally superintending
            the flock committed to them; let them faithfully preach the word of God, or at
            least take care that this duty is conscientiously discharged by others; let
            them never promote to the priesthood any but men whom they know to be able and
            willing to fulfil their ministry without resorting to the services of
            substitutes. Such measures would have a happy effect, we doubt not, in
            arresting the progress of heresy; but if these are neglected, the most
            peremptory laws and edicts will assuredly fail to supply their place.” This
            spirited appeal was successful, and the execution of the edict was suspended.
                 The Cardinal, thus foiled, next applied himself to the
            task of resuscitating in France the terrible tribunal of the Inquisition. The
            machinery of the “Holy Office” was still extant, and scarcely differed from the
            original form in which it had been cast by Innocent III and the Dominicans;
            but, practically, it was obsolete and powerless. The object of the Cardinal was
            to revive it in accordance with the extreme type which it had assumed in Spain
            under the fostering hands of Philip II, the success of whose crusade against
            heresy was mainly due to its agency. A bull was procured from Paul IV, in 1557,
            nominating the Cardinals of Lorraine, Bourbon, and Chatillon, grand Inquisitors
            in France, and empowering them to hold courts in every diocese, from whose
            decision there was to be no appeal; the secular arm was simply to carry their
            sentences into effect. A “ bed of justice ” was held to enforce the registration
            of this stern decree of the Pope; but the Parliament, in the very act of
            acquiescence, took care to strip it of its most tyrannical provision. They
            stipulated that, in the case of laymen, the constitutional resource of an “appel comme d’abus”
            from the Inquisitorial tribunals should continue to be available.
             This second defeat only served to impel the king and
            his advisers to still more odious extremities. By this time the “new learning”
            had made several proselytes on the judicial bench, and the consequence was that
            the proceedings of the different courts of Parliament were frequently at
            variance. The Grande Chambre, in which the judges were strict Catholics,
            condemned the Huguenots without mercy; the “Tournelle”
            was more lenient, admitted extenuating circumstances, and rarely or never
            inflicted the punishment of death. At one of the periodical meetings of the
            Chambers, called “Mercuriales,” the whole question of
            the treatment of offences against religion was discussed at length; when it
            appeared that the majority of the magistrates were in favour of a mild
            interpretation of the existing laws. Upon this the Cardinal of Lorraine urged
            the king to interpose with a high hand in support of his own edicts;
            representing that such a step was especially necessary at that moment, in order
            to vindicate his zeal for the Church in the eyes of the King of Spain, with
            whom he had just concluded the treaty of Chateau-Cambresis.
            Swayed by these counsels, Henry, on the 10th of June, 1559, proceeded in person
            to the parliament, where a memorable scene ensued. The magistrates having been
            invited to declare their sentiments, Anne Dubourg, one of the clerical
            councillors, a man of distinguished family and character, made an indiscreet
            and irritating speech, in the course of which he alluded, by no means
            obscurely, to the scandal of the King’s immoral life. Another councillor, Louis Dufaur, followed in the same strain, and declaimed
            forcibly against the abuses which disgraced the Church. The advice of the
            majority was that the king should employ all his influence to procure forthwith
            a free Ecumenical Council; and that, meanwhile, penal proceedings against
            heretics should be suspended, and liberty of conscience proclaimed throughout
            the realm.
             Henry, in a transport of rage, caused Dubourg and Dufaur to be arrested on the spot. Three of their colleagues
            were seized at their own houses the same day; three more saved themselves by
            flight. A special Commission, presided over by the Bishop of Paris, was
            appointed to try the prisoners for heresy; and Anne Dubourg, the most
            conspicuous of their number, was selected as the victim. The king, wild with
            passion, protested that he would, with his own eyes, see him burnt at the stake
            before a week was past.
                 Henry was not permitted to fulfil this savage threat.
            His own life was cut short by an accidental injury at a tournament, and he
            expired on the 10th of July, 1559.
                 Under his youthful successor, Francis II, the power of
            the Guises rose to its highest pitch. The Queen-Consort, Mary Stuart, was their
            niece, daughter of their sister Mary of Lorraine. Her empire over her feeble
            husband was unbounded; and she, in her turn, was completely under the dominion
            of her uncles.
                 The religious agitation now increased alarmingly. One
            of the presidents of the Parliament, belonging to the party opposed to Dubourg,
            was assassinated in the street at noon day; and the Huguenots, though without
            direct proof, were credited with the crime. This outrage sealed the fate of
            Dubourg. His trial was hastened; he was capitally condemned, and, after vainly
            appealing from the sentence, was executed on the Place de Grève.
                 Upon the death of Dubourg there followed almost immediately
            an explosion of the various elements of strife which had long threatened the
            peace of society in France. The treasonable enterprise called the conspiracy
            of Amboise (March 1560), though undertaken in the name of religion, was a
            general combination of all parties who, for whatever reason, were hostile to
            the government of the Guises. Its principal cause, however, was undoubtedly
            religious partisanship. The Huguenot leaders, with a view to remove any
            scruples of conscience which might perplex their followers, obtained opinions
            from certain lawyers and divines of their persuasion, to the effect that when a
            sovereign, too young to govern in person, is held in bondage by usurping ministers,
            it is lawful to deliver him from their yoke by force of arms, provided the step
            be sanctioned by the princes of the blood or the Estates of the realm. On the
            strength of this assurance, measures were concerted for taking possession of
            the Chateau of Blois, where the court was sojourning, and seizing the persons
            of the Duke of Guise and the Cardinal of Lorraine, who were either to be put to
            death, imprisoned, or banished from France. The young king was then to be
            placed under the tutelage of the Bourbons, who were to succeed to the
            management of affairs. The States-General were to be summoned forthwith;
            effective reforms, civil and ecclesiastical, were to be inaugurated, and
            complete toleration, independence, and equality were to be secured to the “new
            religion.”
                 The plot was betrayed at the last moment to the
            Guises, and was defeated with ease in the very act of execution. A ruthless
            butchery of the unfortunate prisoners followed; and the insurrectionary spirit
            was quelled for the moment by the severity of these acts of vengeance.
                 From the conspiracy of Amboise may be dated the commencement
            of the miserable “Wars of Religion.” And the reader will do well to take
            special note of the fact that the cause of the Reformation was thus necessarily
            identified in the eyes of the Government, and of the great mass of the nation,
            with that of political disaffection and sedition.
                 This character—impressed upon it by the misguided
            counsels and fanatical excesses of its friends—it never afterwards lost;
            indeed, the subsequent course of events developed it more distinctly. Those
            who study dispassionately the records of the time can scarcely avoid the
            conclusion that it was the turbulent and offensive attitude maintained by the
            Huguenots towards the civil power, even more than any prejudice arising from
            religion, that brought about their decisive overthrow as a party, and the
            ultimate triumph of the ancient faith.
                 Upon the death of Francis II (Dec. 5, 1560) a
            remarkable change took place in the posture of affairs. The supreme authority
            passed from the hands of the Guises into those of the Queen-Mother, Catherine
            de Medicis,—a personage who had hitherto been of no
            importance in the state, and whose real character was unknown. The Guises,
            though not altogether deprived of power, were reduced to a secondary position.
            The Bourbon princes,—who had only just escaped condign punishment as traitors
            by the opportune demise of the crown,—were now admitted to the council-board,
            and invested with high dignities. The Constable Montmorency and his nephew the
            Admiral de Coligny reappeared at Court, and were received with distinguished
            honour. Catherine’s policy (well worthy of her fellow-countryman Machiavelli,
            whose writings probably suggested it) was to balance the great rival houses
            against each other, allowing neither to preponderate, and thus to secure the
            real sovereignty to herself and her immediate confidants.
             There existed in France, from the earliest days of the
            Reforming movement, a party disposed to moderate counsels; averse to
            persecution, anxious for practical improvements on a broad and safe basis,
            attached generally to the ancient Church, but at the same time strongly opposed
            to the pretensions of Papal absolutism. This was known by the name of the “Tiers-parti.”
            It was the same which developed afterwards into the famous faction of the “Politiques,”
            and played so decisive a part in the struggles of the “League.” On the accession
            of Charles IX, the Tiers-parti found itself suddenly in the ascendant. At its
            head was one of the most enlightened and disinterested men of the time, Michel
            de L’Hôpital, who, by the favour of the Queen-Mother, and without opposition
            from the Guises, had just been created Chancellor of France. On assuming that
            high office, De L’Hôpital avowed himself a friend to toleration, and willing to
            make reasonable concessions to the professors of the “new religion.” As a first
            step he procured a meeting of Notables at Fontainebleau, where it was resolved
            to convoke without delay the States-General of the realm, and also a National
            Council, in which the Huguenots were to be fairly represented.
                 The States met at Orleans on the 13tli of December.
            The Chancellor, in his opening speech, dwelt earnestly and eloquently on the
            duty of mutual forbearance, patience, and charity; recommended that invidious
            party names, such as Lutheran, Huguenot, Papist, be for ever abolished;
            inveighed with grave severity against those who sought to propagate religious
            opinion by sedition and physical force; hinted that the restoration of
            discipline among the clergy would be found one of the most effective weapons
            against heresy; pointed out that theological controversies could only be
            decided by a Council; and pledged himself that no exertion should be spared
            on the part of the Government to procure the application of that remedy to
            existing evils.
                 The fruit of the deliberations which ensued was the
            celebrated “Ordonnance of Orleans.” Many of its provisions were identical with
            those which had been demanded by the minority of the Parliamentary magistrates
            at the “Mercuriale” two years before;—a proof of the
            rapid growth of the tolerant school of opinion represented by L’Hôpital. It
            proclaimed an amnesty for the past, the chief conspirators of Amboise being
            alone excepted. Prisoners for religious offences were restored to liberty, and
            those who had been banished on like grounds were authorized to return to
            France, provided they would conduct themselves like good Catholics in future.
            If they declined this condition, they might sell their property and take up
            their residence abroad. A subsequent edict enacted that heresy should not be
            punishable henceforth with any severer penalty than banishment; and six months
            later (January, 1562) all penalties against Huguenots were provisionally
            suspended, until the promulgation of the final sentence of a General Council.
             The States of Orleans legislated likewise in the right
            direction on the all-important subject of ecclesiastical elections. It was
            decreed that, on the vacancy of an episcopal see, the bishops of the province
            and the chapter of the Cathedral, in conjunction with twelve deputies of the
            nobility and twelve of the commonalty of the diocese, should present the names
            of three well-qualified candidates to the King, of whom he should select one
            for the appointment. That such a statute should not only have passed the three
            Chambers, but should also have been accepted by the Crown, is a fact well
            worthy of note, since it amounted to nothing less than an abolition of the
            Concordat. But the concession was merely nominal. The new regulation was
            tacitly set aside, and the sovereign continued to bestow episcopal sees at his
            pleasure as heretofore.
                 The Chancellor was earnestly bent upon carrying a
            further instalment of his scheme of conciliation,—namely, the assembling of a
            National Council. What he desired under this name was a conference between the
            leading divines of the two communions, for the amicable discussion of the
            points in controversy;—a step which, he trusted, might lead to some temporary
            arrangement by way of compromise, and thus pave the way for eventual reunion.
            There can be no doubt that he regarded it also in another point of view—as an
            instrument which might be useful in detaching the French clergy more and more
            from the Court of Rome, and accustoming them to see critical questions
            affecting domestic interests determined independently of foreign intervention.
                 The news of these strange projects in France excited
            serious disquietude at Rome. The reigning Pope, Pius IV, no sooner discovered
            that Catherine and her advisers were in earnest in preparing to hold a Gallican
            Council, than he resolved to traverse it by recalling into action the dormant
            synod of Trent—a step which, indeed, he seems to have meditated from the
            beginning of his Pontificate. That the Protestants, who were every day
            increasing in numbers and power, would recognize such an assembly, and submit
            to its decrees, was no longer within the bounds of probability; but it might be
            possible to avert, by this expedient, the scandal to be apprehended from a
            meeting in which the most venerable dogmas of the Catholic faith were to be
            rudely questioned by irreverent schismatics, intruded for that purpose into a
            position of equality with the most dignified prelates of the Church. “If every
            prince,” cried the indignant Pontiff, addressing the French ambassador, “were
            to take upon himself to hold Councils in his own dominions, the Church would
            soon become a scene of universal confusion.” He also complained bitterly that
            the French government had not consulted him previously as to the projected
            synod, requesting his permission to hold it, instead of convoking it first and
            acquainting him with their intentions afterwards.
                 The resumption of the Tridentine Council placed the
            promoters of the Gallican scheme on the horns of an anxious dilemma. If they
            persisted in their plan, they set themselves in open opposition to the Holy
            See, and to the first principles of Catholicism; if they abandoned it, they
            relinquished a measure which they believed to be of the deepest national
            importance, in favour of one from which they expected little or no practical
            advantage.
                 A middle course was finally adopted. It was agreed
            that the National Council should not be celebrated under that obnoxious name; but
            the bishops and clergy were invited to confer with certain chosen members of
            the Calvinist body, in order to ventilate freely, and if possible to adjust,
            disputed questions; without trenching, however, on the character and functions
            of a synod representing the universal Church. The Cardinal of Lorraine declared
            in favour of the project in this modified shape; partly, it is said, from
            motives of vanity, that he might have an opportunity of exhibiting his powers
            in demolishing the heretics, and partly because he hoped that by skilful management, the inconsistencies and
              divisions between the different sects of Protestants, especially between the
              Lutherans of Germany and the Calvinists of France, might be so strongly
              brought out in the course of the debates, as to shake the credit of the whole
              system of the Reformation in the public mind. In the prospect, moreover, of an
              appeal to arms, which manifestly was not far distant, it was an important point
              to separate the Huguenots from their brethren of the Augsburg Confession, and
              thus deprive them of any advantage which they might have gained by coalition.
              With this object the Guises entered into secret negotiations with the
              Protestant Duke of Wurttemberg; and the Cardinal is even said to have offered
              to sign the Lutheran profession of faith, and to obtain its recognition in
              France, provided the Duke and other princes of the Empire would agree to
              support their pretensions and policy.
               The “Colloquy of Poissy” was
            appointed for the 19th of August, 1561. Just before it assembled, Catherine de Medicis addressed a remarkable letter to the Pope, in which
            she explained her motives, enlarged on the many notorious abuses which
            infested the Church, and pointed out the concessions which, in her judgment,
            ought to be made to the Reformers, for the purpose of re-establishing, if it
            might be, unity and peace. She stated that the numbers and importance of the
            separatists were now so great, that it was hopeless to think of coercing them
            by rigorous legislation or by force of arms. The party was strong among the
            nobility and magistracy; it was constantly on the increase, and was formidable
            throughout the kingdom. Nevertheless it was consoling to reflect that the Huguenots
            were not Anabaptists, or free-thinkers, or propagators of monstrous and
            pestilent opinions. They held the Apostles’ Creed, and adhered to the first six
            General Councils. This being so, it was felt by many Catholics that They ought
            not to be violently expelled from the pale of the Church; that their difference
            of sentiment on certain topics might be tolerated without danger; and that such
            a course might even tend to facilitate a reconciliation between the Latin and the
            Oriental communions. The Queen went on to specify the measures which she
            considered desirable towards regaining the seceders, and confirming those who
            still remained in the fold. She recommended frequent interviews between those
            of the two parties who were most eminent for their learning and their love of
            peace; diligence on the part of the clergy in exhortations to charity,
            brotherly-kindness, and concord; careful abstinence from injurious language and
            disputatious habits. She suggested, further, that the use of images, since it
            was forbidden in Scripture, might be advantageously abolished; that the
            ceremony of exorcism in baptism, and other like superstitions, might be
            omitted; that the Holy Eucharist ought to be given to the laity under both
            kinds; that prayers and psalms should be recited in public in the vulgar
            tongue; and that the Feast of Corpus Christi (then recently instituted) should cease
            to be observed, inasmuch as it had caused widespread offence.
             Such language, from such a quarter, at such a moment,
            alarmed and irritated the Holy Father. It sounded as if the French Court had
            resolved to take the concerns of religion into its own hands, without either
            seeking directions from the See of S. Peter, or consulting the supreme
            legislature of Christendom. A special legate, Hippolito d’Este, Cardinal of Ferrara, was despatched in all
            haste to France, with instructions to frustrate the conference, if possible.
            But he arrived too late.
             After much preliminary negotiation, the Colloquy was
            opened on the 9th of September, in the presence of the young king, the
            Queen-Mother, the princes of the blood, the great officers of the Crown, and a
            brilliant audience. Cardinal de Tournon, Archbishop
            of Lyons, presided; five other Cardinals attended, together with forty
            prelates, a numerous phalanx of doctors of the Sorbonne, and many deputies from
            the chapters and conventual bodies. The Reformers were represented by twelve of
            their most eminent ministers, headed by Theodore Beza, the favourite disciple
            and confidential friend of Calvin. Peter Martyr, who was reckoned the ablest
            theologian of the party, was likewise present.
             The Chancellor de L’Hôpital commenced the proceedings
            in a speech which by no means pleased the Catholics, since he drew a parallel
            between the advantages of a National and an Ecumenical Council, to the
            disparagement of the latter. The fathers summoned to Trent, he said, being for
            the most part strangers to France, could not be intimately acquainted with the
            evils which required redress; and, moreover, would be obliged to defer to the
            personal will and pleasure of the Pope; whereas an assembly of French divines
            was directly interested by ties of natural relationship, by local experience,
            and by patriotic motives, in healing the wounds under which the country
            groaned. There was no reason, he observed, why there should be any opposition
            or collision between the one Council and the other; instances were on record of
            two Councils being in session at the same time; and it had even happened that
            mistakes committed by a General Council had been rectified by one of more
            modest pretensions. Cardinal de Tournon demanded that
            a copy of this discourse should be furnished to him in writing; but an excuse
            was made for non-compliance. It is supposed that he designed to call the
            Chancellor to account for it at some future opportunity.
             Theodore Beza was then invited to speak. He entered
            into an elaborate exposition of the doctrinal system of the Reformers, as set
            forth in the “Institutions” of Calvin. His tone was calm, conciliating, and
            impressive. In treating of the Eucharist, he employed language which at first
            seemed almost tantamount to the Catholic terminology on that vital point. But
            on further explanation it appeared that the Presence which he recognized was
            subjective only; depending, not on the supernatural virtue of the Sacrament,
            but on the power of faith; to be sought, not in any change of the substance of
            the elements, but in the heart of the devout communicant. Beza repudiated both
            Transubstantiation and Consubstantiation. “The glorified Body of Christ,” he
            contended, “is in heaven, and cannot be elsewhere.” He allowed that by the
            Sacrament wo are really made partakers of Christ; “but with respect to actual
            locality,” continued Beza, forgetting for a moment his discretion, “Christ is
            as far distant from the consecrated bread and wine as the highest heaven is
            remote from earth.”
                 At this unfortunate sally the Catholics could not
            restrain their indignation. “He blasphemes!” they exclaimed. Cardinal de Tournon rose hastily, and, in a voice trembling with
            emotion, begged that Beza might not be allowed to proceed further, for fear of
            poisoning the tender mind of the young monarch. He obtained leave, however,
            though with difficulty, to bring his speech to a conclusion; and, after a few
            more words of angry remonstrance from the Cardinal, the assembly separated in a
            state of agitation.
             At the second meeting, several days afterwards, the
            Cardinal of Lorraine replied to Beza in a discourse well worthy of his high
            reputation both as an orator and a controversialist. He confined himself to two
            points—the authority of the Church and the Real Presence in the Eucharist. From
            the unvarying testimony of tradition to the Catholic dogmas, he proved the
            infallibility of the “Ecclesia docens” in her decisions
            founded upon it. All doctrinal controversy, he argued, turns upon the right
            interpretation of Holy Scripture. How then is the sense of Scripture to be
            ascertained, unless there be an authoritative tribunal to which appeal may be
            made continually; a living voice to adjudicate between truth and error as each
            successive emergency arises? What could ever be sufficient to justify
            Christians in rejecting the guidance of such an infallible teacher? And then,
            dexterously resorting to the “argumentum ad hominem,” he reminded the
            Huguenots that they had been baptized into the communion of the Roman Church,
            had professed its creed, and obeyed its authority, until certain proceedings
            on the part of its rulers in recent times had chanced to give them offence.
               With respect to the Eucharist, the Cardinal exposed
            the contradiction into which Beza had fallen, by asserting that we are really
            partakers of the Body and Blood of Christ in that Sacrament, while he
            maintained at the same time that Christ, being locally in heaven, cannot be in
            any other place. It was far more philosophical and more reasonable, he
            contended, to believe with Catholics, that the Body of Christ, which is no
            longer a natural but a spiritual and immortal body, subject to conditions of
            existence of which we know absolutely nothing, may be present in many places at
            one and the same time. The doctrine of the Real Presence, as held in the Church
            of Rome, he proceeded to establish by proofs drawn with great ability from Holy
            Scripture and the principal Fathers.
                 The sitting was now adjourned. Those which followed
            were not held in the presence of the King and Court, but were comparatively
            private. Theodore Beza attempted to justify the position of the separatists
            from the Church, by distinguishing between the succession of persons and the
            succession of true doctrine, and arguing that the former is of no avail except
            in conjunction with the latter. Being thereupon asked who had ordained him to
            the ministry, he replied that there is an extraordinary vocation to that
            office, in addition to the ordinary; just as there is a Church of the
            predestined and elect, besides that outward communion which consists of all Christians
            indiscriminately. Both general and particular Councils, he affirmed, have
            repeatedly fallen into error; for an assembly of bishops is not less fallible
            than any other body of men. Yet God will always preserve in His Church a
            certain number of faithful witnesses, either greater or smaller, who will hand
            down the knowledge of saving truth.
                 Claude d’Espence and Claude
            de Saintes, two of the most eminent controversial scholars of the time, refuted
            without difficulty these paradoxes of the Calvinist divine, which, it must be
            remembered, were not then so trite and hackneyed as they appear to readers of
            the nineteenth century.
                 The Cardinal of Lorraine, recurring to the crucial
            subject of the Eucharist, now enquired whether Beza and his colleagues were
            willing to subscribe the article of the Confession of Augsburg relating to
            that doctrine? Beza, in reply to this insidious question (the purpose of which
            he penetrated), demanded whether the Cardinal and the other prelates were
            themselves prepared to adopt it? If they had authority to make the proposition
            in the name of the Catholics as a body, he hailed it as a happy omen, since in
            that case the tenet of Transubstantiation would necessarily be expunged from
            the Roman creed; but if they would not accept the Lutheran article themselves,
            with what consistency could they tender it as a test of orthodoxy to others?
            This keen rejoinder disconcerted and provoked the Cardinal; and the rest of the
            debate seems to have been little better than a scene of indecorous altercation.
                 Lainez, the famous General of the Jesuits, who had come to
            France in company with the Cardinal-legate of Ferrara, assailed the Huguenots
            with vituperative epithets, and even rebuked the Queen-Mother to her face for
            suffering the Conference to take place. Beza retorted in a style of raillery
            still more exasperating.
                 Though it was clear, after this, that the affair could
            not terminate successfully, it was resolved to make a final effort of
            approximation, and for this purpose, a select committee of ten persons was
            named from the most moderate members of each party. After some days of negotiation,
            these divines drew up a formulary upon the doctrine of the Eucharist, in the
            terms of which it was hoped that all sincere friends of peace in the rival
            communions might be induced to concur. Its language, of course, was to some
            extent ambiguous, in order that each party might be at liberty to construe it
            in accordance with their own prepossessions. The following was the draft agreed
            upon :—
                 “We confess that Jesus Christ, in His Holy Supper,
            presents, gives, and exhibits to us the true substance of His Body and Blood by
            the operation of the Holy Spirit; and that we receive and eat sacramentally,
            spiritually, and by faith, that very Body which died for us, that we may be
            bone of His bone and flesh of His flesh. And inasmuch as faith, resting on the
            word of God, makes present things which are promised, so that thereby we
            receive actually the true and natural Body and Blood of our Lord by the power
            of the Holy Ghost, in that sense we acknowledge the real presence of Christ in
            the Holy Supper.”
                 With the help of this evasive phraseology an
            understanding might possibly have been effected, provided both sides could have
            agreed to accept the statement in a general sense, as an article of peace,
            intentionally excluding technicalities, and not to be too narrowly criticised.
            But its authors must have been conscious that, if submitted by Catholic divines
            to the rigorous test of scientific definition, its failure was inevitable.
                 The result showed that the whole enterprise was simply
            hopeless. The doctors of the Sorbonne, being appealed to, rejected the
            formulary as “captions, insufficient, and heretical.” Upon this the prelates
            put forth a counter statement, asserting the Real Presence by
            transubstantiation of the elements, according to the authorized tradition of
            the Church. This they forwarded to the queen, with a request that Beza and his
            associates might be ordered to signify their acceptance of it without further
            demur, under pain of being proscribed as heretics and banished from the
            kingdom.
                 This peremptory demand was equivalent to a rupture of
            the negotiation; and the Conference of Poissy thus
            terminated without satisfactory result.
             It was a woeful disappointment to De L’Hôpital and his
            friends. They now saw the utter futility of attempting to accommodate matters
            by means of a National Council; nor was the augury at all more promising with
            regard to the action of the General Council about to reassemble at Trent, in
            which lay the sole remaining chance of a peaceful solution. The irreconcilable
            discrepancies between the two great Protestant denominations had been exposed
            with damaging ability; and the disputants, instead of settling the conditions
            of reunion, separated with feelings of increased estrangement.
                 Other circumstances concurred to augment the
            mortification of those who had been most sanguine in promoting the late negotiations.
            The King of Navarre, yielding to the fascinating rhetoric of the Cardinal of
            Lorraine, and to the political bribes of Philip of Spain, abandoned the
            Huguenots and returned to the bosom of the Church of Home. It was at this
            juncture, too, that the Jesuits first obtained a legal footing in France. Their
            General, Lainez, procured an arret from the
            Parliament, referring the question of their admission to the prelates assembled
            at Poissy. That body decided in their favour, though
            with certain qualifications; whereupon the courts of law registered their
            letters of reception, and they were put into possession of a college at Paris
            which had been bequeathed to them by Guillaume Duprat,
            Bishop of Clermont; an institution which soon acquired celebrity under the name
            of the College de Clermont.
             The state of things now grew rapidly worse in France,
            The Queen-Mother, under the guidance of De L’Hôpital, persevered for some time
            longer in her efforts to soothe and conciliate the sectaries; and the edict of
            Saint Germain, published in January, 1562, was a further step than any which
            had yet been taken towards establishing complete liberty of conscience, But it
            was instantly met by a vehement ultra-Catholic reaction. The “Tiers-parti” lost
            the control of affairs, which was seized by a menacing coalition headed by the
            Constable Montmorency, the Duke of Guise, and Marshal de St. Andre. Their
            alliance became known by the ill-omened title of the “Triumvirate.” Within
            three months afterwards, the long-suppressed violence of parties burst forth in
            the accidental rencontre called the “Massacre of Vassy,”
            and the flames of civil strife were forthwith kindled throughout the land.
             Upon the close of the proceedings at Poissy, the Gallican prelates received the king’s commands
            to prepare to set out for Trent. The Council had been opened there pro forma,
            several months previously, but had been unable to commence operations, on
            account of its manifest inadequacy, in point of numbers and importance, to
            represent the Catholic world. The attendance of bishops gradually increased,
            and the first session under
              Pius IV (counted as the seventeenth) was held
                on the 18th of January, 1562.
                   There were those in France who still cherished a vague
            hope that the collective wisdom of the Fathers of the Church might devise the
            means of a safe reformation, and that a happy reunion might thus succeed to
            the calamities of schism. But such visions were altogether baseless. No mere
            concessions on matters of ceremonial and outward discipline, such as the grant
            of Communion in both kinds to the laity, or the celebration of Divine service
            in the vulgar tongue, would have sufficed at this moment to win back the
            wanderers to the fold, even had the Council been willing to consent to them.
            Every day’s experience proved more plainly that the gulf which separated the
            two systems was too broad and deep to be thus easily bridged over; and that the
            innovations of Protestantism amounted in sober truth, as well as in popular
            parlance, to a “new religion.”
                 It was felt, by the deepest thinkers on both sides,
            that the controversy had passed beyond the region of calm discussion and
            amicable adjustment. All that remained to be done at Trent, as things then
            stood, was to declare the mind of the Church, definitely and positively, upon
            the points at issue, and so to provide a standard of belief to which Catholics
            might appeal thenceforward as a final and supreme authority.
                 The Court of France, nevertheless, professed to be
            full of hope for the future if the Tridentine fathers could be induced to give
            way on certain minor questions of ecclesiastical polity and ritual order; and
            these, accordingly, were embodied in the instructions given to the ambassadors
            of Charles IX—Saint Gelais de Lansac,
            Arnaud Du Ferrier, and Dufaur de Pibrac—all
            magistrates of high position, and strongly attached to the party headed by De L’Hôpital.
             They were charged to demand, in the first place, that
            the Council should be explicitly declared to be a new assembly, and not a mere
            continuation of the old. Special stress was laid upon this distinction, for the
            sake of avoiding offence to the Protestants; who, having denied, the
            legitimacy of the earlier proceedings under Popes Paul and Julius, could hardly
            be expected to submit to the same tribunal which they had formerly rejected.
            The reader will remember, moreover, that Henry II had entered a protest, in
            his own name and that of the Gallican Church against all synodal acts at Trent
            posterior to the XIIth session, in September, 1551.
            As a second point, they were to urge that the deliberations of the Council must
            be free; and that no reservation should be made, as was the case on former
            occasions, of “the good pleasure of the Pope and his legates.” The decisions at
            which the fathers might arrive were not to be submitted to the judgment of the
            Pope; on the contrary, it was to be clearly understood that his Holiness had no
            power to alter or dispense with them in the very least particular, and that he
            himself was bound to obey them. Further, inasmuch as the existing troubles had
            arisen from the flagrant abuses prevalent among the clergy, and from the
            general decay of discipline, the ambassadors were to recommend the Council to
            apply itself forthwith to the thorough reformation of the Church, as well in
            its head as in its members, conformably with the well-known decrees of the
            Council of Constance. With a view to such reformation, the Pope should be
            requested not to interfere, directly or indirectly, in the appointment of
            bishops, abbots, or parochial clergy; the disposal of benefices should be left
            to the ordinary collators. The Pope ought plainly to renounce for the future
            the prerogative of dispensing with the decrees of Councils. Annates, and all
            other taxes payable by ecclesiastics to the Court of Rome, should be abolished;
            and official documents issuing from the Roman chancery ought to be furnished
            without charge. Archbishops and bishops ought to be bound to residence within
            their dioceses, without exemption. None should be advanced to the episcopate
            unless duly qualified as to age and other canonical requirements. Newly-appointed
            prelates should be admitted and consecrated according to the rules laid down by
            the Councils. Lastly, the royal envoys were enjoined to keep vigilant watch
            over the privileges and liberties of the Gallican Church; and in the event of
            any attack being made upon them, they were to protest against it forthwith, and
            send information to the king.
             It was on the 26th of May, 1562, that the
            representatives of his most Christian Majesty made their first public
            appearance at Trent. Pibrac addressed the Council on
            this occasion in a speech of considerable ingenuity, though of questionable
            taste. He enlarged on the manifold snares and artifices by which the great
            Tempter would seek to blind the understanding and corrupt the hearts of those
            then assembled in consultation on the affairs of the Church. Self-interest,
            servility, sloth, worldly-mindedness, duplicity—such, according to this
            unceremonious monitor, were the special dangers which beset them. He warned
            them not to mar the good work before them by yielding to these weaknesses.
            Reform was indispensable; and that reform, he gave them to understand, must
            commence with themselves. Other Councils, he went on to remark, had been held
            both in Italy and Germany, which, unhappily, had proved useless to the Church;
            and perhaps for this reason among others, that they had not enjoyed the
            necessary freedom of action. To prevent this in the present instance, the
            fathers should remember that they were individually responsible as judges of
            all the questions which might be brought before them; that they were bound to
            give their opinion according to the dictates of conscience, without listening
            to prejudice or passion; and that they must not invoke the inspiration of
            the Holy Ghost from any other quarter than Heaven. This last hint was a
            sufficiently plain allusion to the pressure which was said to be exercised upon
            the Council by the Pope. The same insinuation was afterwards repeated in
            coarser language by De Lansac, who, in a letter to
            his colleague at Rome, begged that no ground might be given for a rumour which
            he had heard, that the Holy Spirit was despatched from Rome to Trent in the
            courier’s portmanteau. After some further admonitions in the same tone of
            covert raillery, Pibrac concluded by urging the
            legates to declare officially that the present was no mere continuation of the
            Council begun under Paul III, and carried on by Julius III in the midst of
            tumult and disorder—but an entirely new assembly, convoked freely, legitimately,
            and according to ancient usage, with the consent of the princes of Christendom; an assembly which would doubtless be attended by deputies from the Reformed
            States of Germany, qualified by their learning and talent to represent the
            views and interests of those who were striving for the purification of the
            Church.
             The Spaniards, and others who had been engaged in the
            earlier proceedings of the Council, were much offended by this harangue. The
            legates replied to it with dignity and moderation; assuring the ambassadors
            that the Council was by no means disposed to submit to dictation, in whatever
            shape it might be attempted; that it was fully resolved to be guided by no
            principles save those of honour and duty, as the result would prove in due time.
            They had no authority, they said, to make any alteration in the “indiction” of the Council; their office was to preside in
            it, according to the terms of the Pope’s bull, confirmed by the assent of the
            fathers. After this the question about the “continuation” of the Council was
            dropped. Indeed it had been mooted without reason, inasmuch as the bull of indiction was so worded as to admit the view for which the
            French contended, though without positively excluding the contrary
            construction,
             The Gallican episcopate, meanwhile, was still absent
            from Trent, or slenderly represented there by the Bishop of Paris, Eustache du Bellai, and two or three of his colleagues. The religious
            commotions which distracted France were alleged as the cause of their
            non-arrival; but, considering that the Council had been convened for the very
            purpose of appeasing these commotions, and that the condition of France was
            the principal subject of solicitude and alarm in the ecclesiastical world,
            there was no great force in this excuse. The real reasons which withheld the
            French from proceeding to Trent appear to have been these:—first, they shrank
            from the measures of practical reform affecting their own order, which were
            known to be in contemplation, and of the necessity of which they were fully
            conscious; and next, they found it difficult to decide what line of action to
            adopt amid the mazy intrigues and conflicting interests which abounded in the
            Council. They were far from being agreed among themselves as to some of the
            most important questions in debate, particularly as to the policy of making concessions
            to the Huguenots. Even the sentiments of the Cardinal of Lorraine were on many
            points ambiguous, and the greatest uncertainty prevailed as to the part which
            he might actually play in the deliberations of the assembly.
             It were idle to indulge in speculation as to the
            amount of influence for good which the French prelates might have exercised,
            had they shown more zeal in repairing to the seat of the Council, strong in
            numerical force, and unanimous as to the objects which they desired to gain. It
            is well to mention, however, that in all probability they might at least have
            succeeded in carrying a decree for the restoration of the Eucharistic Cup to
            the laity. In the course of the discussions on that subject it was abundantly
            proved that such a change of discipline would be acceptable to large numbers
            of Catholics, besides being urgently demanded on behalf of the Protestants; and
            there is reason to believe that the Pope himself was not personally opposed to
            it. But, in the absence of those who might have turned the scale decisively in
            favour of concession, the Council pronounced that communion “sub utraque” is not of Divine obligation; and left it to the
            Pope to judge of the particular cases and circumstances in which it might be
            expedient to authorize it. The French ambassadors, however, entered a special
            plea for the preservation of one of the ancient privileges of the kings of
            France, who were accustomed, from time immemorial, to communicate in both
            kinds on the day of their coronation.
             The French prelates, headed by the Cardinal of
            Lorraine, at length reached Trent on the 13th of November, 1562. They were
            fifteen in number, and were accompanied by three abbots and eighteen divines of
            the Sorbonne. Other prelates arrived from France soon afterwards; and with
            these reinforcements there were two hundred and eighteen bishops assembled in
            Council. The Gallicans, however, were still a mere fraction as compared with
            the Italians, the greater part of whom were pensioners of the Pope, and, as
            such, his submissive creatures.
                 The movements of the Cardinal of Lorraine were
            jealously watched by the Court of Rome, since he was reported to entertain
            ideas and projects inimical to the Papal interests. He had been heard to boast
            that he would place himself at the head, not only of the French, but also of
            the Spanish and German prelates in the Council. It was apprehended that, if he
            should thus assume the position of a party leader, he might be tempted to
            foment the discussion of unpalatable questions. He might think proper to
            ventilate the doctrine which was known to be so popular among his countrymen as
            to the supreme authority of General Councils; he might insist on sweeping
            measures of administrative reform, and the extirpation of lucrative abuses; he
            might agitate vexatiously for changes in the disciplinary system of the Church,
            for the sake of humouring the Calvinists. Every effort was, in consequence,
            made at Rome to counteract his influence. The Cardinal-legate of Ferrara was
            secretly instructed to dissuade him from attending the Council; while the
            legates at Trent were ordered to hasten matters so as to bring it to a close,
            if possible, before the dreaded visitor could make his appearance on the scene.
            As soon as his arrival was announced, the Pope sent a confidential emissary to
            Trent, ostensibly to compliment him by a mark of special favour, but in reality
            to act as a spy on his proceedings.
                 It turned out, however, that there was no reason for
            such excessive mistrust. The Cardinal, undoubtedly, was a stanch Gallican on
            the point of the superiority of a General Council over the Pope. He was
            charged, moreover, by his government, to urge upon the fathers of Trent
            certain indispensable articles of reformation, in the necessity of which he
            himself concurred. In principle, therefore, and as the leading representative
            of the Church of France, he could not do otherwise than uphold the national
            maxims; but it will appear in the sequel that, under the pressure of
            circumstances, he was practically a time server, and governed by the dictates
            of his own ambition. He forbore, when once convinced of the expediency of that
            course, to demand the dogmatic assertion of truths which might be detrimental
            to the Pope’s prerogative; and on several critical occasions he lent effective
            aid, both by his vote and influence, to the Ultramontane section of the Council.
                 At the moment of his arrival the assembly was in a
            state of violent excitement on a question which could not well be avoided,
            though its discussion was by no means likely to turn to the advantage of the
            Church—namely the institution and jurisdiction of the episcopate. That the
            Christian hierarchy is of Divine origin was, of course, indisputable among
            Catholics; nevertheless the subject was not without its controversial difficulties.
            One party (the Ultramontane) held that the powers of diocesan bishops are
            derived mediately from the Sovereign Pontiff, who assigns to each a portion of
            that universal pastoral responsibility which is centralized in his person.
            Others maintained, on the contrary, that all bishops are by their office equal;
            that their authority is immediately “of Divine right and that their character
            is complete without any form of institution by the Pope. This latter
            doctrine—based on the strongest evidence of primitive antiquity—was manfully
            enunciated, in the Congregation of the 1st of December, by Avosmediano Bishop of Cadiz; and the plain-spoken freedom of this prelate led to a scene of
            unprecedented agitation in the Council. The Ultramontanes shouted “Anathema! heresy! away with him!” and it was with no small difficulty
            that the legates restored order. The Cardinal of Lorraine then rose, and
            animadverted with severity on this indecent outburst. He declared that the
            opinion of the Spanish prelate was anything hut heretical; and added that, if
            it had been one of the Drench bishops who had met with such insolent treatment,
            he (the Cardinal) would have felt it his duty to protest against the acts of
            the Council, and to return forthwith to France.
             Addressing himself to the main question, he proceeded
            to discourse for two hours in a style which, though it excited universal
            admiration, savoured strongly of a politic compromise between conviction and
            expediency. Rejecting alike the extravagant Ultramontanist theory propounded by the Jesuit Lainez, and the view
            which attributes to the Pope no more than a precedency of rank among his equals
            in office, the astute Frenchman steered a middle course, which conducted him
            to a safe, if not a strictly logical, conclusion. He acknowledged that the
            Episcopal Commission proceeds immediately from Christ; but argued that its
            practical exercise must depend on the direction of the prince of bishops, the
            successor of Peter. Those were no times, he observed, for venturing upon any
            step which might tend to abridge the authority of the Sovereign Pontiff. That
            authority was a principle absolutely necessary to the preservation of the
            unity of the Church ; and for his part, nothing should ever induce him to
            consent to any decision which might appear to derogate from it. He, therefore,
            exhorted the fathers to omit the phrase “de jure divino”
            from the canon under discussion (the 7th canon on the Sacrament of Order), and
            to content themselves with stating in general terms that the Episcopate was
            instituted in the Church by Jesus Christ himself.
             The rest of the French prelates, however, were not
            deterred by the influence of their superior from delivering their sentiments
            conscientiously and freely. Some few felt it necessary to endorse the views of
            the great Cardinal; but the majority declared that the powers of the episcopate
            are inherently Divine, and independent of the Sovereign Pontiff. The superiority
            of the Pope over bishops, they maintained, is not a superiority of Order, but
            of rank or degree. The Pope, equally with all other prelates, is subject to the
            legislative control of the Church; he is equally bound by the canons. Those who
            most distinguished themselves by thus defending the ancient doctrine of the
            Church of France were Claude d’Angennes, Bishop of Le
            Mans, Eustache du Bellai, Bishop of Paris, and Francois
            de Beaucaire, Bishop of Metz, who in former days had
            been tutor to the Cardinal of Lorraine.
             The war of opinion on this much-vexed question—a
            question which involved, in its manifold ramifications, all the principles at
            issue between the constitutional and the absolutist parties in the Church—raged
            fiercely in the Council for many months, and at one time threatened to
            terminate in its. The Cardinal of Lorraine preserved throughout the position
            of a mediator. Theologically, he agreed with his Gallican brethren; but he
            deprecated any conciliar definition of tenets known to be offensive to the Holy
            See; and lamented, moreover, that theoretical disputes of this kind should be
            allowed to obstruct the all-important work of internal reform to which the
            assembly was pledged. Three times did the Cardinal, at the invitation of the
            legates, remodel the controverted canon; they were still dissatisfied, and at
            length determined to refer the difficulty to the Pope. This led to further negotiations
            and further embarrassment. His Holiness proposed various amendments in the
            draft submitted to him, and subjoined to it an additional canon, in which the
            Pope was declared to have the power of “ feeding, ruling, and governing the
            Universal Church.”
               It seems probable that, had a direct vote been taken,
            the Ultramontanes would have been in a majority. But
            the legates, knowing the strength of the opposition, wisely resolved to avoid
            the unseemly spectacle of a division upon a matter of such grave import; and in
            the end it was arranged that all mention of Pontifical supremacy should be
            omitted from the canon, and that the hierarchy of the Church, in its threefold
            order of bishops, priests, and deacons, should be defined to have its origin  ex ordinatione Divina. That the Court of Rome on the one hand, and the bishops of France
            on the other, were brought to acquiesce in this mode of winding up the dispute,
            was due chiefly to the judicious counsels, earnest entreaties, and masterly
            tactics, of the Cardinal of Lorraine.
             The result was in reality a triumph for the Gallican
            tradition, which, in the absence of any authoritative decision of the Church to
            the contrary, remains a permissible and legitimate opinion, however strongly
            the tide of feeling among Catholics of a certain school may have run counter to
            it in more recent times. So far as the Council of Trent is concerned, it is
            open to the faithful to regard the Episcopate as holding its functions
            immediately from God, without any secondary agency on the part of the Roman
            Pontiff; though there is nothing in the decree to make the Ultramontane theory
            untenable.
                 The Cardinal took a similar course upon the thorny
            question of clerical residence, which was also debated with much warmth and at
            tedious length. He maintained, in theory, that residence is a matter of Divine
            obligation; but he subjoined so many exceptions and modifications, that it was
            not easy to discover whether his real opinion was favourable or the reverse to
            the proposed decree on the subject. In this, as in other instances, the
            controversy turned, not so much on the doctrine, as on the consequences of the
            doctrine. If it were defined that residence is necessary by Divine command, it
            followed that the Pope had no authority to dispense with it; and one entire and
            most important branch of the Pontifical prerogative would thus be swept away.
            This sufficiently accounts for the earnestness with which the decree was
            advocated by the sincere friends of reformation, and for the pertinacity of the Ultramontanes in opposing it. The Cardinal of
            Lorraine desired to stand well with both parties;—to satisfy the demands of his
            temporal sovereign, but at the same time to avoid giving offence in the quarter
            from which he derived his ecclesiastical rank; and the natural result was, that
            his conduct was not heartily approved by either. The French bishops pronounced
            almost unanimously for the definition of residence as obligatory by the law of
            God. Eventually the difficulty was surmounted, like many others, by a
            compromise. Residence was strictly enjoined upon the clergy of all ranks,
            including cardinals—but without any express mention of the jus divinum; and the Pope was declared to be the proper
            judge of the causes which, under particular circumstances, might lawfully
            dispense with it.
             On the 2nd of January, 1563, the French envoys
            transmitted to the legates their “Articles of Reformation”—thirty-four in
            number—with a request that they might be immediately laid before the Council.
            In addition to the demands already specified, they contained others bearing on
            the residence of the clergy, the qualifications of candidates for orders, the
            efficient exercise of the jurisdiction of bishops, the regular celebration of
            provincial Councils;—in short, the series of measures recommended would have
            ensured a complete revival of Church discipline throughout France. But when
            the legates inquired of the Cardinal of Lorraine whether he himself approved of
            all these articles, he replied that there were some of them to which he
            strongly objected, and that he had reason to believe that this feeling was
            shared by many of his colleagues. Indeed, it was no secret that the prelates
            of France were at heart opposed to a reform which would have fallen chiefly
            upon abuses and corruptions notoriously practised by themselves.
                 The Pope, to whom the French requisitions were
            forthwith despatched by a special messenger, was at first much irritated, but
            was soon reassured by a private communication from the Cardinal of Lorraine,
            who intimated that his Government would be satisfied with much less in the way
            of concession than the whole of what was formally demanded; and that if his
            Holiness should think fit to grant the communion of the Cup to the laity, the
            marriage of priests, and the use of the vulgar tongue in Divine service, he
            would find no difficulty in bringing the Council to a close with honour to
            himself and contentment to all parties. Upon this a temporising reply was
            forwarded from Rome to France. The Pope expressed his approbation of many of
            the articles, but pointed out that others were opposed to the authority and
            interest of the Crown itself, inasmuch as they would curtail the royal
            prerogative of patronage, and tend to make the bishops too powerful and
            independent. Commending these objections to the king’s consideration, he
            requested him to transmit fresh instructions to his ambassadors at Trent. Time
            was thus gained, and unwelcome demands eluded; but when the French renewed
            their importunities, Pius flatly refused to permit the legates to propose their
            articles to the Council. He seems to have done this, not so much because he
            disapproved of the articles themselves, as from uneasiness as to the possible
            consequences of yielding to external pressure at such a momentous crisis in
            the fortunes of the Church. Even subordinate concessions, he argued, if made in
            the face of danger, and for the avowed purpose of satisfying heretics, would be
            fatal to the principle of Pontifical authority. When these first steps had been
            gained, new and more serious aggressions would inevitably follow in their
            train; and, while difficulties increased, the means of resistance would
            diminish in proportion. Moreover, there was not the smallest probability that
            the Italian members of the Council would ever consent to innovations of this
            kind in the existing system of administration. The Pope, therefore, now made it
            his chief object to terminate the Council with as little delay as possible; and
            the Cardinal of Lorraine, who had lately adopted views of the same kind from
            motives of personal interest, afforded important assistance to his Holiness in
            effecting this result.
                 The course of events in France, since the outbreak of
            the civil war, had been such as to encourage the Government to hope that the
            Huguenots would be subdued with little difficulty, and that, ere long, the
            royal authority might be completely re-established. The battle of Dreux, fought on the 9th of December, 1562, was favourable
            to the Catholic cause. Catherine was thus enabled to negotiate on advantageous
            terms with the Protestant leaders, and the “pacification of Amboise” was
            concluded in March, 1563. It bad a curious influence on the history of the
            Council of Trent. No sooner had the aspect of affairs brightened at home, than
            Catherine and her ministers began to look with much less interest on the
            proceedings of that distant assembly, from which they no longer expected any
            efficient support. They now attached less importance to the propositions of
            reform which at first had been so vigorously insisted on; and, finding that the
            fathers were not likely to accept a line of policy dictated by the necessities
            of France, they instructed the Cardinal of Lorraine to turn his attention henceforth
            to the means of satisfying the Pope, and to co-operate with the legates in
            expediting the business of the Council, so that it might be dismissed without
            delay.
             The Cardinal’s private feelings ran in the same
            direction. He had lately sustained a cruel loss in the death of his elder
            brother, the duke, who was assassinated by a fanatical Huguenot at the siege of
            Orleans. This was a heavy blow to the ascendency of his family in France. He
            saw that, if it was still to be maintained, the best way to promote it was to
            draw as closely as possible the bonds of sympathy between himself, the Pope,
            the King of Spain, and other powers, who were the bulwarks of Catholicism.
            Under such circumstances a cordial understanding was speedily arrived at
            between Pius IV and his Eminence of Lorraine. The latter proceeded to Rome on
            the invitation of the holy Father, and was received with unprecedented honour;
            he was lodged in the Vatican, and the Pope went publicly to visit him. In the
            confidential interviews which followed, Pius ascertained that the prelate, whom
            he had once imagined to be a dangerous opponent, might be easily converted
            into a firm and zealous ally. A treaty to that effect was soon negotiated; and
            although it is not likely that its details can have been so fully divulged as
            Father Paul would lead us to believe, there is no doubt that they were
            sufficiently gratifying to the ambition and self-love of the Cardinal. The Pope
            hastened to announce to the legates at Trent that his guest had gained his
            entire confidence. Henceforward they were to treat him as a colleague in
            authority, and to do nothing without his knowledge and approval.
                 To return to the Council. The legates, with whom lay
            the sole prerogative of initiating measures for consideration, at length
            brought forward a scheme of reform, embracing thirty-eight articles. Its most
            remarkable chapter related to what was called “ the reformation of secular
            princes”;—a topic of extreme delicacy, which had been frequently alluded to as requiring
            discussion, and which was proposed at this moment byway of attempting to counterbalance
            and neutralize the claims advanced by the representatives of France. This
            famous chapter consisted of various provisions for correcting and restraining
            the jurisdiction of the Crown in respect of the Church and its ministers. The
            preamble stated that the holy Synod had thought fit to renew certain ancient
            enactments in favour of ecclesiastical immunity, hoping that lay sovereigns
            would regard them with respect, and cause them to be punctually observed,
            considering the submission which they themselves owed to the Pope and to the
            Church. The chief stipulations were as follows:—That ecclesiastics should not
            be amenable to secular tribunals for any cause, or under any pretext
            whatsoever. That the Crown should cease to interfere with the due exercise of
            the jurisdiction of the Church in matters spiritual; whether in causes of
            matrimony, heresy, and patronage, or in the temporal government of churches,
            and the administration of Church property. That the practice of “appels comme d’abus”
            should be abolished; and that any one resorting to the civil courts in the
            cases specified should be excommunicated, and incur the forfeiture of their
            rights. That the temporal judge should not be authorized to inhibit the
            spiritual judge from passing sentence of excommunication without his
            permission, nor to order him to revoke or suspend any such sentence already pronounced.
            That no prince or lay magistrate should make promise of the presentation to any
            benefice within their territories, nor procure any such preferment either from
            bishops or conventual chapters; any such presentation to be ipso facto null and
            void. That they should not lay hands on the revenues of vacant benefices,
            either in virtue of patronage or under pretext of appointing stewards or
            substitutes with a view to prevent disputes. That ecclesiastics should not be
            subject to the payment of taxes, or other subsidies under the name of gifts or
            loans, except in countries where, by ancient usage, the clergy sit in the
            provincial legislature for the purpose of taxing the laity equally with their
            own order in case of war, or other urgent necessity. And lastly, that all
            ecclesiastical sentences, citations, and decrees, particularly those emanating
            from the Court of Rome, should be at once published and executed, without the
            formality of seeking consent or licence from the civil power.
             These were extravagant pretensions ; and it is
            probable that their supporters were not serious, or at all events not hopeful
            of success, in attempting to force them on the acceptance of the Council. The
            object of the move was to create a diversion; and to intimate to those whom it
            might concern, that reformation is a question which has two sides—the
            reformation of the clergy, however confessedly important, being only one of them.
            The proceeding was keenly resented by the Court of France; the young king
            denounced it to his ambassadors as an attempt to “pare the nails of sovereigns,
            while it lengthened those of the priests.” He ordered them to protest against
            it with the utmost vigour, and to retire from the Council if it were not withdrawn.
            Upon this, Du Ferrier put forth all his energies in a spirited effort of
            remonstrance. He recounted the exertions made by the kings of France for ages
            past to obtain a real reform of the Church and its ministers, and showed how
            that work had hitherto been systematically eluded. His master was amazed, he
            said, that the fathers should suggest measures which manifestly tended to
            subvert the ancient liberties of the Gallican Church, and to injure the
            authority of the Most Christian kings, who had made laws for the government of
            ecclesiastics within their own dominions, which laws had been approved by
            successive popes, and were in accordance with the decrees of Ecumenical
            Councils. No such mighty progress had as yet been made at Trent in the work of
            reforming the Church, that the Council should overstep its proper province, and
            undertake the correction of secular magistrates. He went on to criticize in
            detail the acts and regulations of the Council, contrasting them sarcastically
            with the legislation of primitive ages, the restoration of which, he contended,
            was the only true remedy for existing evils, persistently demanded both by
            Church and State in France. In fine, Du Ferrier exhorted the assembled fathers,
            if they desired to see a reform among princes, to begin by imitating in their
            own persons those great prelates of old, who, by their sanctity and
            self-devotion, had acquired such commanding influence over the temporal
            magnates of their day. The surest way to reproduce a line of sovereigns like
            Theodosius, Arcadius, Valentinian, and Gratian, would be to fill the high
            places of the Church with a line of bishops rivalling Ambrose and Augustine,
            Athanasius and Chrysostom.
                 This scene took place during the absence of the
            Cardinal of Lorraine on his visit to Rome. The Pope complained to him bitterly
            of the intemperate and offensive tone of the ambassador. The Cardinal did his
            best to excuse it, blamed the legates for introducing the subject so
            inopportunely, and pledged himself to repair the mischief, and restore a good
            understanding among all parties, as soon as he returned to Trent. From that
            moment, nevertheless, the feelings which prevailed between the French
            Government and the Council were those of settled mistrust and estrangement.
                 The ambassadors, after delivering their protest,
            quitted Trent and repaired to Venice. The French bishops were instructed to
            remain, and offer all possible opposition to the further progress of the
            measure which had given such provocation to their sovereign; but in case of any
            fresh invasion of the royal prerogative or the Gallican liberties, they too
            were to absent themselves at once, without waiting for explanation or entering
            into longer discussion. Many of them gladly seized this opportunity to abandon
            the Council and return to their dioceses. Others took flight in different
            directions; six had accompanied the Cardinal to Rome; no more than eight
            continued at Trent.
                 The decree relating to princes, when proposed for
            reconsideration, was resisted strenuously by all the ambassadors present; and
            the legates found it useless to urge it further. It was postponed, pro forma,
            to a future session; but in the end it was dropped altogether.
                 The Pope, on this occasion, made an indiscreet
            exhibition of his displeasure against the party which, as he conceived, had instigated
            the late opposition in the Council. Sometime previously (in order to mark his
            dissatisfaction at the terms of peace granted to the Huguenots) he had cited
            several French bishops suspected of favouring heresy to appear before the tribunal
            of the Inquisition at Rome; a proceeding grossly inconsistent with the
            Gallican usage, which provided that bishops should be tried in the first
            instance before the metropolitan and his comprovincials assembled in synod. On
            the 22nd of October, 1563, sentence of deposition or suspension was published
            against the following members of the French hierarchy, who were declared
            contumacious by reason of non-appearance: the Cardinal de Chatillon, Bishop of
            Beauvais; St. Romain, Archbishop of Aix; Montluc,
            Bishop of Valence; Caraccioli, Bishop of Troyes; Barbançon,
            Bishop of Pamiers; Guillart,
            Bishop of Chartres; St. Gelais, Bishop of Uzes; and D’Albret, Bishop of Lescar. And besides inflicting these penalties on
            ecclesiastics, Pius was rash enough to summon the Queen of Navarre to the bar
            of the holy Office, there to answer the charge of heresy, under pain of being
            deprived of her dominions. Jeanne d’Albret was indeed
            notoriously a Calvinist; she had prohibited the exercise of the Catholic
            religion in her principality of Bearn, and had violently expelled the priests
            from the churches, replacing them by ministers of her own persuasion. Yet a
            penal process of this nature against a crowned head, so nearly connected with
            the royal blood of France, was not likely to be tamely tolerated. Charles IX.
            interfered with considerable dignity and vigour. He gave the Pope to
            understand that he regarded the cause of the Queen of Navarre as his own; he
            begged his Holiness to remember that his spiritual powers were granted for the
            edification of souls, and not to subserve political ends; he intreated him to
            revoke the measures taken against the Queen, and threatened, in case they were
            persisted in, to resort to the means of redress which his ancestors had
            employed under similar circumstances. He protested, likewise, against the
            infraction of the Gallican liberties in the persons of the condemned prelates.
            The Pontiff, who was not prepared for such a resolute resistance, found it
            necessary to give way; and, after several conferences with the French
            ambassador at Rome, signified that no further steps would be taken, either in
            the matter of the Queen of Navarre, or as to the execution of the sentence
            passed upon the bishops.
             The Cardinal of Lorraine returned to Trent on the 9th
            of November; and acted thenceforward as the Pope’s plenipotentiary for
            carrying into effect his anxious desire to close the Council. When the decrees
            of reformation came to be finally examined, the Cardinal said that, although he
            could have wished that the restoration of discipline had been more extensive
            and complete, he assented to the acts of the Council, in the hope that the
            Sovereign Pontiff in his wisdom would supply whatever might be wanting, either
            by reviving the ancient laws of the Church, or by summoning future General
            Councils.
                 Little of importance occurred to disturb the harmony
            of the twenty-fourth and twenty-fifth sessions. The French ambassadors
            remained sullenly at Venice. The Cardinal repeatedly urged them to return,
            reminding them that the objectionable decrees had been greatly modified and
            virtually suppressed, and pointing out how injurious it might be to the
            character both of France and of the Council if the final transactions of such
            an assembly should be unsanctioned by the presence of any official delegate
            from the “eldest son of the Church.” They replied, however, that they were
            acting in obedience to the King’s express order; and that, independently of the
            odious chapter on the “reformation of princes,” the Council had made, and was
            about to publish, various other regulations repugnant to the rights of the
            French Crown and to the liberties of the Gallican Church; so that, on the
            whole, the interests of France might be better served by the absence of the
            royal commissioners, than by their presence.
                 All parties at Trent being now agreed as to the policy
            of an immediate termination of the Council, the remaining formalities were
            despatched with almost precipitate haste. The fathers dutifully petitioned the
            Pope to confirm their decrees; they passed a general declaration that all the
            acts of the Council, from its commencement under Paul III to its close, were to
            be understood “without prejudice to the authority of the Apostolic See”; and
            they assigned to the Pope the exclusive power of interpreting the decrees, and
            of providing for any difficulties that might arise with regard to their
            reception by the States of Christendom. The altered current of feeling in the
            Council, occasioned by the conversion of the Cardinal of Lorraine and the
            withdrawal of so many of the Gallican bishops, is signally apparent in these
            last enactments. Six months previously, the opposition to Ultramontanism was so
            powerful that a proposal to assert the supremacy of the Pope as the chief
            pastor and ruler of the Church had been negatived as impracticable. Now, the
            entire legislation of the Council was surrendered to the uncontrolled
            arbitration of the Holy See; and an implied sanction was thereby given to the
            dogma which the Church of other days had so emphatically rejected, that the
            Roman Pontiff is superior to General Councils.
                 The privileges thus liberally accorded were turned to
            the utmost advantage at Rome. In the bull of confirmation, dated January 26,
            1564, the Pope prohibited all persons ecclesiastical and civil, of whatever
            rank or dignity, from publishing any comments, glosses, annotations, or
            interpretations, concerning the acts and decrees of the Council, without his
            permission, under pain of excommunication ipso facto. If in any case
            interpretation might seem necessary, it was to be sought from the Apostolic
            See, “the mistress of all the faithful, whose authority had been so recently
            acknowledged by the Holy Synod itself.” “All such difficulties,” said Pius, “we
            reserve to be by us explained and decided, being prepared to provide for the
            necessities of all the provinces, in such manner as we shall judge most
            convenient; ordaining that whatever may be attempted to the contrary with
            respect to these matters, by any person or authority whatsoever, is null and
            void.” A congregation of eight cardinals was afterwards appointed for the
            purpose of enforcing the due observance of the Tridentine decrees.
                 The Council terminated its labours on the 4th of
            December, 1563; on which occasion the customary acclamations were pronounced
            by the Cardinal of Lorraine, according to a form composed by himself. Two
            hundred and fifty-five prelates subscribed the decrees; but of this number only
            seven were representatives of the Gallican Church.
                 No sooner had the Cardinal of Lorraine returned to
            France, than he was attacked in various quarters for having sanctioned, in the
            later sessions at Trent, decisions incompatible with the laws of the land, the
            dignity of the sovereign, and the liberties of the Gallican Church. He defended
            himself by referring to a formal protest which he had delivered in the
            twenty-fourth session, expressing his assent to the acts of the Council with a
            distinct reservation of all rights and privileges, ecclesiastical and civil,
            appertaining both to Church and State in France. Besides which, as he observed
            with much justice, it was absurd to expect that, with no more than six of his
            countrymen to back him, he could withstand with effect an assembly of upwards
            of two hundred bishops.
                 The Nuncio Santa Croce now applied to the Government
            to promulgate an official announcement of the reception of the Council, according
            to the forms of the constitution. Upon this the King called a meeting of the
            heads of the Parliament and other great functionaries, to consider what course
            should be taken. There was a sharp altercation on this occasion between the
            Cardinal of Lorraine and the Chancellor de L’Hôpital, who still held the post
            of chief adviser of the Crown. The Chancellor strongly advocated the expediency
            of postponing for the present any public recognition of the Council; remarking
            that, since many points of importance,—for instance, the usage of the Cup in
            the Eucharist,—had been referred to the decision of the Pope, it was desirable
            to wait, at least, until his Holiness should make known his judgment upon these
            particulars. The Cardinal replied angrily. He did not know, he said, what
            religion the Chancellor really belonged to; but it seemed as if he had none
            other than that of doing all the injury he could to himself and the house of
            Guise—a line of conduct grossly ungrateful to those who had been his earliest
            friends and benefactors. De L’Hôpital replied by declaring that he could never
            forget his many and deep obligations to his Eminence of Lorraine; but that he
            must beg to be excused from discharging them at the expense of the honour and
            interest of his sovereign. The Queen interposed to stop the dispute; and the
            Council adjourned without making any order as to the reception of the decrees
            of Trent.
                 The demand was repeated again and again with increased
            earnestness; and was evaded for some time upon similar pretexts. But at length
            it became necessary to speak distinctly; and the Parliament of Paris announced
            that the Council of Trent could not be publicly received without prejudicing
            the rights of the Crown and the liberties of the Gallican Church. The principal
            points specified on the first head were the following:—
                 1. The decree against duels; by which princes permitting
            such encounters to take place in their territories were excommunicated, and,
            moreover, were deprived of the lordship of the town, chateau, or other spot in
            which the duel may have been fought.
               2. The decree authorizing the Pope to appoint bishops
            in the room of those who might persist, after monition, in remaining absent
            from their dioceses;—an arrangement clearly contrary to the Concordat.
             3. The decree empowering ecclesiastical judges to
            impose pecuniary fines upon laymen, and to compel payment by imprisonment, if
            necessary, making use of their own officers for the purpose.
             4. That which placed all public hospitals under the
            visitation and control of the bishops.
             5. That by which the bishops were authorized to compel
            the inhabitants of any place to provide a sufficient stipend for the parish
            priest, and to make all necessary repairs in parish churches.
                 The articles objected to as infringing the Gallican
            liberties were those by which criminal causes affecting bishops were reserved
            to the sole cognizance of the Pope, in contravention of the ancient discipline,
            which made them amenable in the first instance to the Metropolitan and the
            Provincial Council; also, the right assigned to the Pope of evoking to Rome
            ecclesiastical causes which may be pending before the ordinary judges. The
            Parliament disapproved, moreover, the regulation allowing the Pope to grant
            pensions and “reserves des fruits,” chargeable on benefices; and that
            permitting the Mendicant Orders to hold corporate property.
                 The celebrated advocate Charles Dumoulin, being
            consulted for his opinion on the Trimebutine decrees, drew up and published a
            statement containing a long catalogue of reasons which made it impossible, in
            his judgment, that the Council should be received in France. These grounds of
            exception relate in some few instances to doctrine; but the author chiefly
            animadverts upon the canons of discipline, many of which he declares to be at
            variance with the ancient Councils,—derogatory to the rights of the king, the
            authority of his edicts and those of the courts of justice,—as well as contrary
            to the liberties and immunities of the National Church, Dumoulin was,
            unfortunately, a seceder from the Church; and his exposition of constitutional
            law was in some particulars tinctured too strongly by his known religious
            partialities. His enemies denounced him to the Parliament, on the ground that
            his publication had been made without the king’s permission, and that he had
            compromised the Government by pretending that it was put forth by order of the
            Council of State. Upon this he was severely interrogated by the magistrates as
            to the views expressed in his writings; which he could not deny to be
            substantially those of the Protestants. The Parliament, while strenuously
            Gallican, was rigid in its abhorrence of heresy; and in consequence, although
            Dumoulin’s conclusions agreed with their own as to the inadmissibility of the
            decrees above specified, they committed him without scruple to the
            Conciergerie. He was soon released by the King’s orders, no doubt through the
            interference of De L’Hôpital;—promising, as the conditions of his liberty, that
            he would publish nothing in future on political or theological questions, and
            that he would carefully avoid speculations on the authority of Councils and of
            the Apostolic See, which might occasion scandal to his Majesty’s subjects.
                 Special instances for the reception of the Council in
            France were made in the year 1565, by a joint embassy from the Pope, the King
            of Spain, and the Duke of Savoy. But Charles IX, under the direction of his
            mother and De L’Hôpital, returned an ambiguous response, from which it was
            gathered that, while he was anxious not to offend the great Catholic Powers, he
            had determined to adjourn indefinitely a measure which would have been treated
            by the Huguenots as almost equivalent to a declaration of war.
             The French bishops, however, obtained authority from
            the Government to give effect within their dioceses to those of the Tridentine
            canons which were not repugnant to the laws and constitutions of the realm. For
            this purpose the Cardinal of Lorraine convoked without delay a provincial synod
            at Reims, at which a series of decrees were passed in exact conformity with
            those of Trent, and the clergy were ordered to provide themselves with copies
            of the acts of the Council in French and Latin, and to regulate their teaching
            and conduct by that standard. At the provincial Council of Cambrai, held in the
            following year, the decrees were accepted as the authoritative law of the
            Church, and the Confession of Faith prescribed in the Pope’s bull of November,
            1564 (commonly called the Creed of Pope Pius IV), was signed by all the
            prelates and deputies of the clergy present. Similar measures were taken
            subsequently by the Metropolitans of Rouen, Tours, Bordeaux, Aix, Bourges, and
            Toulouse. But it must not be imagined that this ecclesiastical recognition of
            the Council gave to its enactments the character and force of statute law in
            France. The approbation of the Church (though even this was subject to certain
            limitations) made them canonically binding on the clergy; but they were not
            on that account placed on the same footing with those laws which the executive
            authority undertook to enforce upon all classes of French subjects. In order to
            be embodied with the national legal code, it was requisite that the Council
            should be accepted by the sovereign, sanctioned by the Council of State, and
            registered by the Parliament—the constitutional guardian of the laws of the
            kingdom.
                 To obtain for the Tridentine decrees this universally
            coercive jurisdiction was an object which the Gallican Church pursued through
            many generations with indefatigable zeal; but invariably without success. The
            “remonstrances” of the Assemblies of the clergy, in 1567, 1577, 1579, 1582,
            1585, 1588, and 1596, and on other occasions, were met with the stereotyped
            reply, that it was judged inexpedient, for reasons of state which had been
            often cited, to proceed to any official publication of the Council. Nor has
            any such ratification of its authority by the civil power been granted in
            France from that day to the present. In regard to doctrine, the definitions of
            Trent constitute the law of the Church, as in all other branches of the Roman
            obedience; many of its decrees of discipline, moreover, have been carried into
            execution by the Gallican prelates, as salutary in themselves, and clearly in
            accordance with the spirit of the ancient canons; but neither its doctrine nor
            its discipline has ever been incorporated by the State with the body of national
            law.
                 It is not to be denied that such a policy was inconsistent
            with that high profession of Catholicism upon which the French monarchy had
            been wont to pride itself, as one of its essential characteristics, from the
            earliest records of its history. For, after all, the Council of Trent was
            either a legitimate assembly of the Western Church by representation, or it was
            not. If it was not, why did France recognize and deal with it as such? Why
            send ambassadors to attend its sessions? Why appeal to its judgment, and seek
            its support under the complicated political difficulties of the time? But if it
            was a legitimate Council, upon what principle was its authority questioned and
            its decisions disallowed? Philip of Spain was consistent in accepting the
            Council; the Lutherans and Huguenots and Anglicans were consistent, according
            to their light, in rejecting it; but where was the consistency of the “eldest
            son of the Church”?
                 That this anomalous behaviour on the part of the
            French Government admits of sufficient explanation, is abundantly evident from
            the facts which have been placed before the reader in the course of the
            foregoing narrative. But we cannot be surprised to find that that explanation
            was anything but satisfactory to the great majority of the Gallican clergy. In
            their eyes, the refusal to publish the Council of Trent was scarcely less
            odious than the suppression of the right of free election by the provisions of
            the Concordat. It seemed as if the Government were bent upon adding wantonly
            to their mortification. The Concordat, detested by the clergy as having
            deprived them of the most cherished privilege of their order, was rigidly enforced
            by the Crown to its very letter; while the Tridentine code, which the Church
            regarded as the charter of its restored liberties—the Palladium of its
            authority—was, for that reason and no other, jealously disavowed and
            discountenanced. This fresh grievance was keenly irritating to all Catholics
            who had not been corrupted by covetousness and the blandishments of court
            favour. It was a germ of strife, which proved calamitously fruitful during the
            subsequent convulsions of the “League.”
                 
 
 CHAPTER III.THE CATHOLIC LEAGUE OR HOLY UNION.
             
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