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CHAPTER
XVI.
The
Religious Divisions in Germany.
The grave political complications with which
the first six years of the Pontificate of Clement VII. were filled reacted with
decisive influence on the spread of the Lutheran heresy throughout Germany.
Immediately after his election Clement
received disquieting reports on the subject; the adherents of the new belief
were steadily increasing in numbers, and, the decentralization of the Empire
having made great strides, it was practically impossible to put the Edict of
Worms into execution. Consequently, in his first consistory, held on the 2nd of
December 1523, Clement spoke of the dangers menacing Christendom, quite as much
from the side of the Lutherans as from that of the Turks. In accordance with
his own proposal, a commission of Cardinals, which soon included the names of
Egidio Canisio and Numai,
was appointed to deal with both aspects of the question. The immediate result
of their deliberations was, that the commission, on the 14th of December,
recommended the despatch of two Nuncios, one to Germany and a second to
Switzerland.
Clement, in his anxiety concerning the
advance of Lutheranism, also invited men thoroughly acquainted with German
affairs, such as Eck and Aleander, to furnish him
with reports as to what should be done with regard to the heretical movement
While Eck laid before him what was substantially a summary of his conversations
with Adrian VI, Aleander composed a special
memorandum on the means to be employed to suppress heresy in Germany. In this
he requested the Pope to remove the abuses in the Curia, and to punish unworthy
priests with the extreme penalty of deprivation; he further advised him not
merely to summon the Emperor and the other temporal princes to take steps
against the heretics, but also to exhort, under pain of censure, the negligent
German bishops to the performance of their duties. The concordats should be
strictly observed, and diocesan and provincial synods held under the presidency
only of men of approved loyalty to the Holy See. The Inquisition Aleander wished to see transferred, not to princes or
monks, who were objects of popular hatred, but to the bishops. He deprecated
the total abolition of indulgences, but urged that they should be issued
sparingly and with caution. The Nuncios in Germany should narrowly watch the
monks, the men of learning, and the printers, since with these classes they
would have to reckon before all others if they wished to provide an effectual antidote
to the diffusion of poisonous doctrine. He then made very detailed proposals
for dealing with the above-named classes of persons in order to foster the good
in them and counteract the evil. In cases of contumacious heresy, Aleander counselled, with a reference to the procedure of a
Gregory VII and an Innocent III, the application of the severest penalties: the
interdict and an embargo on trade for the cities of the Empire, withdrawal of
privileges from the University of Wittenberg, and the proclamation of the Ban
of the Empire and deposition against the Elector of Saxony. Since all the
good-will of Leo X and Adrian VI had proved fruitless, lenient measures were no
longer of any avail; they only helped to spread the evil, until it had at
length reached Rome itself. For the sins of Christendom God had permitted this
affliction to fall upon the Church; therefore the only real and lasting succour
must be sought in the revival of her ancient virtues.
The report of an anonymous writer is occupied
with a thorough examination of the complaints of the German nation presented to
the Diet of Nuremberg in the year 1523. The author, evidently a member of the
Curia, seeks to throw the responsibility, for the most part, on the German
Bishops. With a strange hallucination, he will admit no guilt on the part of
the Roman Curia, and only recommends an improvement of the existing system in a
few points. The report comes to a point in the proposal to send a Nuncio of
unimpeachable character and eminent learning, with the powers of a Legate a latere, to the German Empire, there to use his
authority with moderation and firmness towards the patrons of the erroneous
teaching.
Clement VII followed the advice given in this
document, but it was not easy to find the personage fully qualified for the
German legation. The Pope’s choice fell at last on Cardinal Campeggio, who had
proved himself to be an experienced diplomatist and to have a knowledge of
German affairs; a staunch Churchman, he was yet profoundly convinced of the
necessity of thorough reforms. At the same time, at the end of December 1523,
Clement VII. determined to send his chamberlain, Girolamo Rorario,
as a Nuncio to Germany, to be Campeggio’s forerunner and to prepare the way.
For the instruction of the Legate, Aleander prepared a memorandum on the measures to be
adopted in dealing with Luther. He here lays great stress on the necessity of
the Legate and those with him being conspicuous for their good reputation and
observance of all the laws and customs of the Church. The Legate himself must
use his faculties with moderation and circumspection; all benefices are to be
conferred only on good and learned men of German birth; in his demeanour he
must show the utmost modesty, friendliness, seriousness, and dignity, and, above
all, discretion; he is not to be drawn into disputations concerning truths of
the Faith ; he must be thoroughly acquainted with the points of controversy,
and draw his proofs from the Scriptures and the Fathers rather than from the
scholastic system, then in great odium in Germany; and especially he must avoid
sophistries and paradoxes. Aleander examines in close
detail the grievances of the German nation, declaring them to be only in part
justifiable; for these redress should be promised; but he complains of the
superfluous trouble caused to the Holy See by the manufacture of gravamina. For
the refutation of unfounded complaints he gives full and thorough
recommendations. He does the same with regard to dealings with the bishops and
the mendicant Orders. On no account whatever is the Legate to show his
instructions to anyone, so that he may not undergo experiences similar to those
of Chieregati at Nuremberg. He is neither to promise
nor refuse a Council; if he calls attention to the difficulties standing in the
way of one, let him point out, in that connection, that, in the meantime, the
laws against heresy must be put in force. Aleander tries to refute in detail the objections made to the collection of annates, and
then concludes by once more imparting counsels to the Nuncio concerning his
behaviour: he is not to be arrogant or violent, neither is he to show timidity,
but to maintain a steady courage and, above all, a wise discretion. Especially
must he and his personal following avoid all cause of scandal or offence, adapt
themselves as much as possible to the customs of Germany, and with unbiassed
minds recognize the existing good in that nation.
Campeggio, whose appointment as Legate a latere for the whole of Germany, Bohemia, Hungary,
Poland, and the three northern kingdoms was ratified in a consistory held on
the 8th of January 1524, was primarily and before all other considerations to
represent the Catholic interests in the forthcoming Diet at Nuremberg, but also
to urge on the support of Hungary against the Turks. In order to make fitting
preparation for Campeggio’s mission, and in support of it, Clement VII.
undertook a series of steps the success of which had at first to be waited for.
For this reason the Legate did not leave Rome until the 1st of February, and
then travelled slowly; on the 26th of February he was at Trent, on the 3rd of
March at Innsbruck, on the 9th at Augsburg, and on the 14th he reached
Nuremberg. In the course of this journey he had already an opportunity of
realizing the critical and increasing alteration in popular feeling, due to the
unscrupulous agitation conducted against Catholic institutions from the pulpit
and the printing press, at the instigation of the Lutheran leaders. In Augsburg
he was made the object of popular derision. At Nuremberg the ecclesiastical
ceremonies of his reception were omitted, while the preacher Osiander was allowed to discourse on the Roman Antichrist.
In the presence of these hostile dispositions
towards the Holy See, which were almost general throughout the Empire, and were
specially dominant in Nuremberg, Campeggio thought it wise to proceed with
great caution. His first speech in the Diet, on the 17th of March, was
therefore conciliatory in tone; nevertheless he spoke quite distinctly of the task
assigned to him, for he called for the execution of the Edict of Worms. To the
question of the Princes concerning the joint complaints of the German nation
presented at the Diet of the previous year, Campeggio explained that the Pope
had no official knowledge of the document, which had been transmitted to Rome
only in a private manner; he, Campeggio, had seen a copy, but did not believe
that a document of such “exceeding impropriety” could have been agreed to by
the Estates. If he had no present instructions concerning this particular
missive, yet he had full powers to treat with the Estates on the question of
the national grievances; in his opinion, it was to be recommended that the
Germans, like the Spaniards, should send envoys to Rome; he did not doubt that
the Pope would meet the just demands of their nation. Thereupon the old
complaints, with some fresh ones added, were presented.
Although Campeggio, supported by learned
Italians and Germans, such as Cochlaus and Nausea,
was zealously active in the Diet, the negotiations over the new doctrines
entered upon a new phase which was, to him, highly unacceptable. The Estates
did not, indeed, deny their obligation to carry out the Edict of Worms, but at
the same time they demanded a National Council empowered to deal, not merely
with the complaints against the Curia and the complaints of the laity against
the clergy, but with the controversies on religious doctrine. This proposal,
full of danger to the Catholic cause, if not directly put forward by Bavaria, was
at any rate supported by that Catholic country.
The Cardinal-Legate, who represented the view
that the reformation of the Church would be better carried out in any other way
than by a General Council, must have been still more averse to an independent
authoritative National Council. In consequence of his opposition, concessions
were so far made that, in the resolutions presented at the recess of the Diet,
only a provisional settlement of controversial questions was assigned to the
National Council, the final ruling being reserved for the General Council; also
the expression “National Council” was dropped, and “General assembly of the
German nation”—to meet at Spires in November—substituted for it. To this also
the Legate objected, but without result. The Lutheran towns and nobles
protested, on their side, against the renewal of the Edict of Worms in the
final decree, although to please the Estates the execution of the Edict was
qualified by the significant phrase “as far as is possible.” Campeggio disclosed
his attitude towards the decree of the Diet by promising to use his influence
with the Pope in favour of a General Council, and declaring himself ready to
enter into negotiations over the German grievances and the reform of the
clergy; to the assembly at Spires he refused to give his approval. His
standpoint seems to have been, so far, the correct one; for, if the Edict of
Worms held good, a fresh investigation of the doctrines therein repudiated was
an absurdity.
During his stay in Nuremberg, Campeggio was
kept closely informed of the serious defects of the German Church by men who
had the Catholic cause deeply at heart; he had also convinced himself of the
pressing necessity for that reform of the German clergy demanded by so many of
the princes, if Lutheranism was to be successfully encountered. On the receipt
of his report at Rome, Clement VII, on the 14th of April 1524, gave him full
authority to hold a convention in Germany for the reform of the national
clergy. This Assembly, in which the Archduke Ferdinand, the Bavarian Dukes,
many bishops of South Germany, and the most important literary champions of
German Catholicism (Cochlaus, Eck, Johann Faber, and
Nausea) took part, opened in June at Ratisbon. A scheme of clergy reform
prepared by Campeggio and already produced at Nuremberg was here discussed,
accepted, and published for the whole of Germany in a legatine decree with full
apostolic authority on the 7th of July. The ordinances formed a first and
important step towards a reformation of the Church from within; in carrying
them out she would be freed from many defects, and many grievances would be
removed. At the same time Campeggio succeeded at Ratisbon in combining for the
first time the forces of at least the South German Catholics (the Archduke
Ferdinand, the Bavarian Dukes, and twelve bishops) by an act of union. The
above-named pledged themselves to uphold the Edict of Worms, and to resist all
religious innovations.
At Rome the proceedings at Nuremberg had been
followed attentively. The fatal delusion that only Saxony was on the side of
Luther had soon to give way in the face of facts. In the beginning of May,
Clement and the Cardinals consulted as to the measures to be taken to meet the
resolutions of the Diet, and Cardinals Monte and Numai drew up special reports. It was determined not to refuse the demand for a
General Council absolutely; attention, of course, was to be drawn to the
hindrances in the way arising from the warlike complications in Europe, but at
the same time the prospect of negotiations was to be held out. With regard to
the grievances, redress was promised by the suspension of the regulations of
the Lateran Council, and the appointment of a commission of Cardinals to
investigate further. If on these two important questions an understanding was
come to with the German opposition, the execution of the Edict of Worms was all
the more strongly insisted on, and the National Council at Spires was not the
less strongly opposed. Not merely the Emperor, but even foreign sovereigns, such
as the kings of England, France, and Portugal, were asked to protest, and a
series of briefs, couched in this sense, was despatched in May. At the same
time also the Nuncios were ordered to take action; especially full instructions
were sent to the Papal representatives at the Emperor’s court.
This action of Clement had as its result that
Charles V. repeatedly and in sharp and peremptory terms prohibited the National
Council of Spires, and ordered the observance of the Edict of Worms and the
avoidance of all religious innovation. If Charles directed his envoys at Rome
to acquaint the Pope with these measures, he made it plain at the same time
that he considered that it would be of advantage to summon a General Council;
he recommended Trent, a place which was practically a German town, although
within Italian territory; but the Pope would be at liberty to transfer the
Council to Italy at some later date.
The union of Ratisbon and the reforms
undertaken there, the Emperor’s strict insistence on the observance of the
Edict of Worms, and the obstruction of the National Council at Spires were
undoubtedly remarkable successes. Campeggio, who remained in Vienna until the
8th of December, actively engaged from thence in his campaign against the
Lutherans in Germany and in his reconciliation of the Bohemian Utraquists, might well be proud of them ; he believed that
half of his principal task had been achieved. But the great social revolution
so soon to break out in Germany brought all his fair hopes again to an end.
Clement VII was thoroughly informed by the
reports of Girolamo Rorario, Nuncio to Ferdinand I.,
and through various private persons, of the bloodshed which was turning Germany
into a second Bohemia. Campeggio also, who remained in Ofen till well on in June, sent him numerous communications. The Pope was greatly
alarmed, and informed Ferdinand on the 29th of May of the despatch of a subsidy
to the amount of 20,000 ducats; the Emperor, who, unfortunately, was still
lingering in Spain, he exhorted to more strenuous action in order to avert yet
greater dangers. The disorders in Germany and the enmity between France and
Spain were adduced by the Pope as reasons which prohibited him from convening a
Council.
Notwithstanding the detailed reports received
in Rome, as in foreign countries generally, of the peasants’ insurrection,
there was no correct conception of the real state of affairs. The accounts that
came in were fatally misleading, and men were under the delusion that
Lutheranism had, to all intents and purposes, been suppressed simultaneously
with the sanguinary extinction of the social revolution, in which both friends
and foes of the new teaching had co-operated. The only person who did not share
in this delusion, Campeggio, was recalled because, in the opinion of many, his
mission had not been sufficiently successful, and also, as is most probable,
because his sympathies were too Imperialist.
The functions of the Nunciature were now
concentrated in the person of Rorario, the Nuncio to
Ferdinand. And yet, in face of the difficult and complicated situation, not merely
was the presence of a permanent Cardinal-Legate necessary, but also the
despatch of a fresh Nuncio in the interests of accurate information. How
defective information was as to the real state of affairs in Germany is best
shown from the fact that, when Clement VII on the 23rd of August 1525 wrote
numerous letters of congratulation to the German princes on their victory over
the Lutherans, one of those thus addressed was the Landgrave Philip of Hesse.
The Pope, and the Cardinals appointed to sit as a commission on Lutheran
affairs had evidently not the slightest notion that since the end of 1523
Philip had been a patron of the new teaching. The affairs of Bohemia also had
been grossly misrepresented in Rome. The sanguine hopes fostered by Campeggio
of the return of the Utraquists to the Church and of
the defeat of Lutheranism were soon shown to be entirely futile.
What random and, in some instances,
nonsensical reports obtained credence in the Curia, is illustrated by the
circumstance that in the consistory of the 6th of September 1525 it was stated
that Catholic worship had been restored at Wittenberg and that Luther had
narrowly escaped capture. It was excusable that the sentiments of the Grand Master
of the Teutonic Order should long have deceived the Roman court; for this
prince had allayed with consummate ability the early awakened distrust of
Clement VII. The first certain intelligence of the apostasy of Albert of
Brandenburg was brought to Rome in letters from German bishops in the latter
half of March 1525. Of the alliance of the Grand Master with King Sigismund of
Poland so little was known that the Pope intended to present the latter with
the consecrated sword on the 27th of March. It was not known until the
beginning of May that Albert had broken his oath to the Church, the Order, and
the Empire, that he had constituted himself secular lord of the territory of
the Order, and had received the latter as a fief from the Polish king. The
consternation of the Pope and his advisers was very great on the subsequent
receipt of a letter from King Sigismund, in which he tried to justify his
behaviour and made protestation of his Catholic zeal. Clement comforted himself
with the assurance that the king, whose intentions were so good, would, if he
could once more gain the ascendancy over Prussia, make amends for his faults
and again help on the ancient faith to victory. In a Brief of the 20th of July
1525 he urgently appealed to Sigismund to this effect. On the 31st of January
1526 the Pope approached Charles with the entreaty that he would not give his
sanction to Albert’s alteration of the constitution of the Order. A commission
of Cardinals examined the whole case thoroughly, whereon Clement, on the 21st of
January 1527, empowered the loyal remnant of the Teutonic knights to elect a
new Grand Master.
Although the Bishop of Trent and the Nuncio Rorario himself had asked in August 1525 for the despatch
of a special representative of the Holy See to Germany, this had not been done.
Consequently the final decrees of the Diets of Augsburg and Spires (9th of
January and 27th of August 1526) were framed in a sense unfavourable to
Catholic interests. The resolution of the Diet of Spires, that in the matter of
the Edict of Worms each Estate, pending the summons of a General Council,
should act in such a way as they could answer for before God and the Emperor,
did not certainly afford a legal basis for the self-development of the
Protestant system of State Churches, but it was used as a starting-point for
their formation. A change was in process of accomplishment, the vast scope of
which was hardly understood in Rome, where purely political concerns were more
and more absorbing men’s attention. Luther conceded to the princely and civic
authorities a power over their territories far greater than that hitherto
possessed by the Pope. Not merely the constitution and government, but the
worship and doctrine of the Church were surrendered to the princes and civic
magistrates as State bishops; the latter forthwith determined what their
subjects had to believe as their “Evangelium.” From
this absolute episcopate of the rulers of the State was reached, as a logical
conclusion, the application of the axiom which flouts all freedom of
conscience: “Cujus regio illius religio”.
The development of the Lutheran State Church
system and the forcible suppression of the Catholic Church, first in Hesse and
the Saxon Electorate, and then in many of the territories belonging to the
princes and cities of Germany, were singularly favoured by the unhappy strife
between Emperor and Pope; while they were alternately checkmating one another,
the half-political, half-religious opposition unfriendly to them was securing a
firm footing in Germany. The Protestants rejoiced to see the heads of
Christendom at warlike variance with each other, and made full use of this
circumstance to spread their doctrines and apply coercive measures against
Catholics. The conflict between Emperor and Pope weakened also the resistance
of the Catholics, and checked the progress of the reform of the Church from
within begun by the latter in 1524, and thus the fruits of Campeggio’s labours
were, for the most part, again wasted. In consequence of the same struggle, the
activity of the Catholic scholars in defence of the ancient faith, so zealously
encouraged by the Cardinal, and the significant action of Erasmus in taking
part openly against Luther, failed to have the anticipated effect. Political
troubles made such claims on the attention of the Curia that the affairs of
Germany gradually passed out of sight. It was a sign of the times that the
Papal briefs dealing with Germany became fewer and fewer; for a considerable
length of time the relations between Germany and the Roman Curia were
practically broken off.
At last, in 1529, the regular representation
of the Holy See in Germany was resumed by the mission of Gian Tommaso Pico della Mirandola, a layman, to the
Diet of Spires. This nobleman announced on the 13th of April that the Pope was
prepared to give hearty support to Germany against the Turks, to make efforts
for the restoration of peace, and, finally, to summon a Council for the ensuing
summer. But this declaration made no impression on the Estates. To what an
extraordinary extent things had altered to the disadvantage of Catholics was
shown in the deliberations on the recess of the Diet. Although the latter
confirmed to the Protestant States the retention of the new forms of doctrine
and Church order within their own boundaries, and only asked for toleration
towards the Catholics among them, a protest was raised on the 19th of April by
the Elector of Saxony, the Margrave George of Brandenburg-Kulmbach,
the Landgrave Philip of Hesse, the Dukes Ernest and Francis of Lüneberg, and Prince Wolfgang of Anhalt. On the 25th of
April the protesting party appealed from all existing and future grievances to
the Emperor and the forthcoming free council. This set the seal on the
religious severance of the German nation.
Two months later came the conclusion, at
Barcelona, of the treaty of peace between Charles V and Clement VII, coupled,
in the February of the following year, with the meeting of the Emperor and the
Pope at Bologna. At this conference, Charles, who had never lost sight of the
conciliar question even during the recent troubles, obtained Clement’s consent to a General Council, to be held as soon
as this means of overcoming heresy and restoring the unity of the Church should
be proved to be necessary. It was the Emperor’s object to induce the
Protestants to submit temporarily to the authority of the Church, so that on
this basis some reasonable expectation might be founded that the Council would
terminate once for all the religious divisions of Germany. In the hope of
attaining this end with the co-operation of the States of the Empire, Charles
wrote from Bologna, on the 21st of January 1530, appointing a Diet to be held
at Augsburg on the 8th of April.
Charles left Bologna on the 22nd of March on
his journey to Germany. He was accompanied by Cardinal Lorenzo Campeggio, who
had been appointed Legate to Germany in the Consistory of the 16th of March
1530. At Innsbruck, where the Emperor arrived on the 3rd of May with the
intention, at first, of staying a few days in order to acquaint himself more
fully with the state of affairs in Germany, his halt lasted until the 6th of
June. Here Charles was awaited by his brother Ferdinand and the Cardinals of
Salzburg and Trent, while the Dukes of Bavaria and George of Saxony came later.
Charles found special gratification in the reconciliation to the Church of his
brother-in-law, Christian of Denmark, which took place in the capital of the
Tyrol. On the other hand, the reports brought in from the States of the Empire
as to the religious conditions there existing were disquieting. On the ground
of the information then received, Campeggio wrote on the 4th of May to Rome, to
the Pope’s private secretary, Jacopo Salviati, that Germany was, as he had
supposed, in great disorder. A principal difficulty concerning the Council
wished for by both parties was whether it should now be a General Council of
the Church or a council of the nation; the Dukes of Bavaria, prominent Catholic
princes, especially looked upon the council as the most effectual means of
salvation. There were weighty reasons for opposing a national council; as
regards a General Council, he would do his duty. On the 8th of May the Emperor
asked Campeggio to lay before him a written opinion on the most suitable means
to be resorted to for the removal of the religious contentions—a request which
was complied with on that or the following day.
Campeggio did not expect much from the
good-will of the Protestant princes; he was much more in favour of decisive
measures against the innovators. He advised, in the case of failure to restore
unity by measures of kindness, the use of force, especially by the execution of
the terms of the Edict of Worms. He also expressed himself in the same sense a
few days later in conversation with the Emperor and King Ferdinand. He was
particularly opposed to negotiations on the subject of the Council; the
Protestants, in demanding one, were not actuated by an honourable intention of
submitting to its decisions, but only of keeping the Emperor in check so that,
during his sojourn in Germany, he could take no serious measures against them.
Thereupon the Emperor himself explained to him that he had come to an agreement
with the Pope at Bologna that the Council should be held at a time of general
peace and quiet in Christendom; but he hoped that, despite the many
difficulties, all would yet go well, if the Kings of England and France did not
encourage the Protestants in their opposition. Campeggio also discussed the
circumstances with the other Catholic princes in Innsbruck, who were in favour
of a council being held; he was successful in convincing Duke George of Saxony
of the dangers therein involved.
On the 15th of June the Emperor entered
Augsburg, and on the 20th the Diet was opened. After the Mass of the Holy Ghost
the Papal Nuncio, Vincenzo Pimpinella, who had accompanied Campeggio, delivered
an oration on the war against the Turks, and the unity of belief which that
undertaking demanded. In the second session, on the 24th of June, Campeggio
made a speech on the removal of disunion, in which he avoided any expression
likely to offend the Protestants. On the 25th of June the Augsburg Confession,
as it came to be afterwards called, was read to the Diet. It began with a
demand on the part of the Protestants that a “general free Christian council”
should be held in the event of their failing to come to an agreement in the
present Diet. The document, which was signed by the protesting princes of the
Diet of Spires, and on behalf of the cities of Nuremberg and Reutlingen, attempted
to mitigate and disguise, as much as possible, the deeply rooted points of
controversy, in order to keep up the delusion that the innovators only formed a
party within the Church, which could easily be reconciled by means of a mutual
understanding. Immediately after the presentation of the Confession the Emperor
had written to Rome declaring that it afforded an excellent beginning for the
return of the Protestants to the Church. In Papal circles the arrival of the
Emperor in Germany and his accord with Campeggio on the religious question had
given great satisfaction. As early as the 3rd of June, Clement, in a letter
addressed to the Emperor, had expressed the hope that the latter, after the
expected fall of Florence, would devote himself without interruption to the
Turkish war and the cleansing of Germany from heresies. With reference to the
reconciliation of Christian of Denmark through Charles’s influence, the Pope
remarked that already, on his first appearance, his resplendent virtue had
begun to scatter the darkness. Christian’s example would have an incalculable
influence; he hoped in God that Charles would bring to a glorious conclusion an
undertaking so happily begun for the welfare of Christendom and the Apostolic
See.
This sanguine hope was stimulated by false
reports of the decline of Lutheranism, as well as by the Catholic attitude of
the Emperor, who was acting hand in hand with the Cardinal-Legate, and by the
moderate terms of the Augsburg Confession. How great the optimism of the Roman
Curia had become is shown by a report of the Venetian envoy on the 10th of
July; it was hoped that the Emperor’s appearance on the scene would soon make
short work of Lutheranism. Another noteworthy symptom of Roman opinion is
apparent in a letter of Charles’s former confessor, Garcia de Loaysa, who relates that in a Consistory held on the 6th of
July the Emperor was hailed by almost all the Cardinals as an angel sent from
heaven for the salvation of Christendom. In this Consistory a despatch from
Campeggio, dated the 26th of June, was read, containing the triumphant
announcement that the Protestant princes had agreed to the Emperor’s
prohibition of Protestant preaching in Augsburg. Campeggio, who saw in this a
first and hopeful step towards the attainment of his object, reported further
that the Emperor, in matters of religion, and in a scheme for confuting the
Augsburg Confession, was acting on his, the Legate’s, advice. “I cannot write
more today,” he added, “but this I can say: things are in a good way.” With
regard to the Protestant demands, Campeggio in the same letter reports that
they concern, apart from the Council, three points : communion under both
kinds, the marriage of the clergy, and the reformation of the Canon of the Mass
and many ecclesiastical ceremonies.
The concession of these demands was the
subject of close deliberation in the Consistory of the 6th of July; the
decision arrived at was a refusal. The demands were incompatible with faith and
discipline, and in contradiction to the principles of the Church; they must
therefore be rejected. It was decided further, however, to thank the Emperor
for his zealous endeavours to bring back the adherents of error to the truth.
In order to accomplish this there was a willingness to make concessions, but
none so prejudicial as those just dealt with could be considered.
All other decisions would depend on the
course of the negotiations at Augsburg, where the Cardinal-Legate was
indefatigable in his exertions, not only with the Catholic members of the Diet
and the theologians engaged on a rejoinder to the Confession, but with the
Emperor.
Campeggio, to whom Charles had given a Latin
copy of the Confession, wrote for him on the 28th of June an opinion in Italian
and Latin on the treatment of the religious question. In this he opposed the
Council in terms similar to those employed in his letter from Innsbruck of the
20th of May. On the receipt of this memorial from the Legate Charles summoned
his council, who handed him a written opinion on the 30th of June or
thereabouts. In this the Emperor was strongly advised to ask the signatories to
the Confession if, in the first place, they would accept his adjudication on
the religious questions. If they declined to do so, and if it appeared that a
betterment could only be reached by means of a General Council, then the
proposals for the latter would be made at the suitable time, but on condition
that in the interval all innovations contrary to the belief and institutions of
the Catholic Church should be put on one side and the Edict of Worms observed
to the letter. Besides this, it seemed absolutely necessary, in order to gain
the Lutherans more easily, that by means of the Papal and Legatine authority a
stop should be put as soon as possible to the abuses in the Church and in the
lives of the clergy. No public disputation was to be allowed; but the Legate
might choose men of learning to examine the articles of the Confession. Not
until the Protestants showed themselves unwilling to submit either to the
authority of the Emperor or to that of the Council, and remained stubbornly
contumacious, should forcible measures against them be considered, subject to
the express opinion of the Legate.
Campeggio, with whom the Emperor had a long
conversation as to this view of his advisers, gave a general assent, but
declared himself decidedly against a Council, while the Emperor explained that
he still held to the standpoint agreed upon at Bologna between himself and the
Pope; namely, that a Council would be good and useful if Christendom were at
peace, but not under present circumstances, and that the convening of such a
synod might be effective for good, provided that there was a recurrence to the
former state of things.
On the 4th of July, Campeggio handed to
Charles V his written reply to the Imperial suggestions. In this he proceeded
to show in detail that a Council would be of no avail to restore religious
order, even if, at first sight, the contrary appeared to be the case. As the
Lutherans had openly discarded previous Councils and their decisions, it was
not probable that they had any serious intention of submitting themselves to a
future synod. They persisted in their demand for one only in order to gain time
in the meanwhile to push forward without hindrance their monstrous schemes,
since they knew well that it would be a very long time before the Council itself
could assemble. But the Emperor, if such were his pleasure, might consult the
Pope further on the matter. Campeggio was in full agreement with the Emperor
and the Catholic princes in their intention to insist on the observance of the
Edict of Worms. As regards the removal of abuses, he recommended that men of
approved virtue and pure life should be sent to Rome to report on these matters
to the Pope; there was no doubt that the latter would prescribe remedies where
proof of actual abuses was forthcoming, and he, as Legate, would not be wanting
in his co-operation when cases were presented to him which, on due examination,
were shown to be genuine abuses. To bring the religious division of Germany to
an end, Campeggio held that the right and necessary way was to act with
requisite firmness.
The Catholic princes, to whom Charles
presented the answer of the Legate on the 5th of July, approved, in their reply
of the 7th, and also in a second communication on the 13th, of the Emperor’s
proposal concerning the Council.
On the evening of the 13th of July, Campeggio
once more stated his objections, in the sense of his former declarations, to
Granvelle, who had been sent by the Emperor to inform him that he was on the
point of writing to the Pope on the subject of the Council. Thereupon, on the
14th, the Emperor sent to Clement a full account of the state of the
negotiations at Augsburg. As things then stood, the Protestants refused to
accept the Emperor as judge in religious questions; on the contrary, they held
out for the Council, and if their wishes were not granted in this respect they
would grow yet more obdurate; therefore the Emperor, in agreement with the
Catholic princes, was also of opinion that this should be promised them on the
condition that, in the meanwhile, they returned to the obedience of the Church.
Charles had also written shortly before to his Ambassador in Rome in similar
terms. On the 24th of July he again had a long conversation with Campeggio, in
which he gave his opinion on the seat of the Council, expressing his strong
preference for an Italian city, in opposition to the view of the princes, who
were desirous that it should be held in Germany. He mentioned Mantua in
particular, that city having already been spoken of in his discussions with the
Pope at Bologna.
On the 18th of July, immediately after the
receipt of the Emperor’s letter to the Ambassador, Clement called together the
twelve Cardinals specially commissioned to deal with German affairs to hear
their views on the question of the Council; no final decision was come to, as
the Cardinals held that the matter was one for the full Consistory to consider.
“Although many of the Cardinals,” wrote Loaysa, one
of the twelve, on the same day, in his report of the conference to the Emperor,
“object to the Council for factitious reasons, yet the most of us in this
congregation held it fitting that a Council should be promised, on the
condition that the Protestants in the meanwhile abandon their errors and live
as their forefathers lived before them. It would be much better, however, if
the Protestants would accept the Emperor as their arbitrator, since the
success of a Council is in itself doubtful, and even its meeting perhaps
impossible, owing to the difficulties that other Christian princes may in some
way raise, and to the dangers of the Turkish invasion.” Loaysa feared, however, that they would not accept the Emperor’s arbitration with a
good will, and that in the end no other means would remain but to have recourse
to force.
On the arrival of the Emperor’s letter of the
14th of July, Clement, at the end of the month, once more assembled the twelve
Cardinals and acquainted them with its contents. Both the Pope and the
Cardinals received it, as Loaysa wrote to the
Emperor, with great satisfaction. Loaysa had not,
indeed, been present at the meeting owing to illness, but he had a private
interview with Clement afterwards, to whom he spoke in support of the Emperor’s
opinion. Clement replied that Charles was right, the Council could not be
avoided; it was Loaysa’s opinion, however, that
Clement wished in his heart of hearts that it might not take place. He would
certainly agree to one, and even go the length of convoking it, but in the
meantime he would secretly use his influence with the Christian princes in
order to put hindrances in the way. He was led to this presumption by the
conduct of the French Cardinal, Gabriel de Gramont,
Bishop of Tarbes, who in the first meeting of the Cardinals had spoken strongly
in favour of a Council, while in the second conference he dwelt on all the
difficulties, especially on those which had arisen on the part of the King of
France; this inconsistency, Loaysa surmised, was due
to the influence of the Pope. In spite of this “evil” suspicion, as he himself
calls it, Loaysa was still in hopes that Clement, “on
perceiving the truthfulness and uprightness of your Majesty’s behaviour in this
matter, and how necessary a Council is for the quieting of his conscience and
the avoidance of lasting dishonour,” would eventually control events in
accordance with the Imperial wishes.
In two audiences held on the 28th and the
30th of July, Clement addressed Andrea da Burgo in terms favourable to the
Council, provided that the conditions fixed by Charles should be fulfilled,
namely, that until it assembled the Lutherans should desist from their
innovations; Rome he considered suitable as the seat of the Council; but, if
the Emperor objected, he would propose Mantua, Piacenza, or Bologna. In this
sense Clement sent a reply to the Emperor on the 31st of July.
He first of all went thoroughly into the
reasons against a Council adduced by some of the Cardinals, but, trusting to
the good sense and insight of the Emperor, whose sojourn in Germany had made
him a better judge of the situation than those at a distance, he promised to
convene the Council when he deemed it necessary, and under the conditions of
which he had already written, namely, that the Protestants should renounce
their errors and return immediately to the obedience of their Holy Mother the
Church and the observance of her customs and doctrine, so long as it was not
otherwise appointed by the Council, to the decisions of which in all points and
unreservedly they were willingly to submit. Apart from these conditions, a
Council could only cause scandal and set a most evil example. It was therefore
absolutely necessary that the Emperor should insist on these conditions being
accepted, so that there might also be certainty of their actual fulfilment; for
otherwise, not the removal of error, but only pernicious and deadly effects,
were to be expected. The Pope then promised that, as soon as the Emperor
informed him of the acceptance and observance of these conditions by the
Protestants, he would summon a Council at such time as appeared to him
suitable; the Emperor might feel assured that the earliest possible date would
be appointed, and that certainly no postponement would be allowed. Regarding
the seat of the Council, since it was highly necessary that it should not be
held anywhere else than in Italy, Rome had the first claim to consideration—a
claim, moreover, favoured by the circumstance that, after all the misfortunes
the city had undergone, another lengthened withdrawal of the Curia would
involve total ruin. But if Rome were not acceptable, then the Pope proposed
Bologna, Piacenza, or Mantua. Concerning abuses, Clement remarked in
conclusion, he was waiting for the reply of the Legate, who would report
wherein a reformation was called for; on receipt of this reply he would take such
measures that everyone would acknowledge his intention to reform what was
amiss, and to meet where it was possible the wise and charitable exhortations
of the Emperor.
In the Curia the greatest difference of
opinion on the question of the Council prevailed. Clement VII, partly from
personal and partly from higher reasons, had such strong apprehensions that it
seemed to him even less dangerous to tolerate the prolongation of the existing
state of affairs in Germany than to summon a Council. That the Pope’s anxiety
was to a certain extent justified was admitted by the Imperial envoy Mai
himself. On this account many doubted whether the Council would be held; but
others looked upon this as certain. It was not surprising that such an
assembly, bound to take into consideration the question of reform, should be
displeasing to the many prelates of a worldly type. The latter took comfort in
the supposition that the Protestants were not in earnest in their demands for a
General Council. The envoy of the Duke of Mantua had special satisfaction in
knowing that his city was eligible as a meeting-place. “A reformation,” he said
in closing his report, “is certainly necessary in view of the great corruption.
God grant that it may not be brought about by the Turks instead of by the
Council.”
The Papal letter of the 31st of July reached
Augsburg on the 7th of August, where a few days before the refutation of the
Augsburg Confession had been publicly read. This important document was
presented by Campeggio to the Emperor on the 9th; but, in consequence no doubt
of Loaysa’s letter of the 31st of July already
mentioned, he found Charles biassed against the Pope
and distrustful of his good intentions. The Emperor himself no longer held to
his former tenacious insistence on the Protestant acceptance of the conditions,
but now asked that, waiving the latter entirely, the Council so necessary for
the general welfare of Christendom should, under any circumstances, be summoned
as soon as possible, without prejudice to the objections and representations
made by Campeggio in the sense of their former agreement. As regards the seat
of the Council Charles avoided any definite pronouncement on the choice of
Rome, as desired by Clement and recommended by the Legate, by calling attention
to the Pope’s own alternative suggestion of Bologna, Mantua, or Piacenza.
Charles, meanwhile, was still possessed by
the delusive hope that he might succeed in arriving at a temporary suspension
of the religious strife until such time as a general synod should assemble. On
the 7th of September he once more ordered the promise of the Council under the
specified conditions to be tendered to the protesting Estates, who thanked him
for his exertions and urged speedy action, but refused in round terms the
abandonment for the time being of the innovations. On the 23rd of September
Charles once more had a discussion with Campeggio on the Council; after his
experience, during this very month of September, of the obstinacy of the
Protestant princes, he again declared to the Legate that the Council, quite
irrespective of the Lutheran situation, was absolutely necessary, or otherwise,
within the space of ten years, there would be no obedience left in Germany. He
added, however, that, if Clement nevertheless thought otherwise, he, as an
obedient son, would submit; but in that case he hoped the Pope would inform him
openly and as soon as possible, as this would be better than that the Council
should be hindered by the King of France, when in the general opinion the blame
would still be laid upon the Pope.
In the draft of the decree of the Diet which
Charles laid before the protesting Estates on the 22nd and 23rd of September,
he once more charged the latter “to discuss and consider among themselves,
until the 15th of April of the forthcoming year, whether, as regards the
articles on which there was still disagreement, they would reunite themselves
with the Christian Church, the Pope, the Emperor’s Majesty, and the princes of
the Empire and other heads and members of Christendom at large, until such time
as the future Council should open its discussions.” The protesting princes
rejected this message finally; their spokesman, the Elector of Saxony, at once
left the Diet, from which the Landgrave of Hesse had already withdrawn on the
6th of August in precipitate haste. Duke Ernest of Lüneburg, Prince Wolfgang of
Anhalt, the Chancellor Bruck, and the Saxon theologians also left Augsburg.
They thus destroyed all further possibility of reconciliation.
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