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              BOOK
                I
                
               RETROSPECTIVE VIEW OF THE HISTORY OF THE POPES FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE EXILE AT AVIGNON TOTHE ENDF OF THE GREAT SCHISM, 1305-1417.  |  |      CHAPTER
          III
          
         The
          Synods of Pisa and Constance,
          
         1409-1417
          (1418)
          
         
           
          
              
         The election of
          Gregory XII was due in great measure to the belief that he was earnestly bent
          on the restoration of unity to the Church, and, in the earlier days of his
          Pontificate, he certainly seemed full of enthusiasm for this great cause. He
          assured those around him that, notwithstanding his age, he was ready, for the
          sake of unity, to meet Benedict, even if he had to take the journey on foot
          with a staff in his hand, or to cross the sea in an open boat. In his
          Encyclical, as well as in other Briefs, he expressed himself in a manner which
          seemed to leave no doubt that the Schism would soon be at an end. He wrote to
          the Anti-Pope to the effect that the strife for their respective rights ought
          to cease, and that they should imitate the woman mentioned in Old Testament
          history who preferred to give up her real claim to the child rather than
          consent to have it divided. Accordingly, when in his answer to this epistle
          Benedict XIII offered to abdicate on the same conditions as Gregory, the
          restoration of unity to the Church appeared to be certain. But the appearance
          was deceptive. The embassy which France sent to both Popes to inquire more
          closely into their intentions, soon made it plain that Gregory XII, who was
          greatly under the influence of his relations, was as little in earnest in his
          expressions as was Benedict. The rejoicing of Gerson was premature. The meeting-place
          of the Popes was a subject of much dispute, and various proposals were made,
          but the meeting never took place, although Gregory XII and Benedict XIII came,
          within a few miles of each other.
          
         Contemporary
          writers and modern historians are agreed in laying on Gregory XII's nephews and
          the Archbishop Giovanni Dominici of Ragusa the chief
          blame for his conduct in not resigning. The hatred with which they consequently
          were regarded by the promoters of union is manifested in a satire preserved by
          Dietrich von Nieheim. It purposes to be a letter from
          Satan to Giovanni of Ragusa, and is full of ironical allusions to personal
          peculiarities, to various occurrences, and some revolting practices and
          manners. It is interesting also as an example of that medley of ecclesiastical,
          scriptural, and heathen ideas which was so popular at this period. This letter
          must have been written in March, 1408. It concludes by exhorting Giovanni Dominici to continue his opposition to Gregory's
          resignation, and tells him what he is to expect in another world. Satan, he is
          informed, has had the hottest place made ready for him in the lowest depths of
          eternal Chaos, between Arius and Mahomet, where other supporters of the Schism
          are most anxiously awaiting him. "Farewell, and be as happy as was our
          dear son Simon Magus", are the last words of this curious document.
  
         Gregory's
          altered attitude in regard to the question of union naturally awakened the
          greatest uneasiness among his Cardinals, and a party adverse to him was formed
          in the Sacred College. In order to counterbalance their influence, Gregory,
          forgetful of the promise he had made in the Conclave, decided to create new
          Cardinals. There were stormy discussions at Lucca, but they did not deter the
          Pope from actually nominating four Cardinals. Seven of those belonging to his
          Court then withdrew to Pisa, and issued two proclamations, by which the breach
          with Gregory was rendered final. In the first an appeal was made from an
          ill-informed to a better-informed Pope, to Jesus Christ, to a General Council
          and to a future Pope. The second called on the Princes of Christendom to give
          their support to the movement in favour of union.
          
         The relations of
          Benedict XIII with France also underwent a considerable change at this time.
          The conviction that this Pope, who before his election had professed the
          greatest zeal for union, had no real desire for the termination of the Schism
          was gaining ground, and on the 12th January, 1408, the King informed him that
          France would make a declaration of neutrality, if unity were not restored by
          the Feast of the Ascension. Benedict replied by a simple reference to the
          ecclesiastical penalties incurred by disobedience to the Pope. In the end of
          May, France solemnly disowned the authority of Benedict, an example which was
          soon followed by Navarre, and also by Wenceslaus and Sigismund, the Kings of
          Bohemia and Hungary. A great national Synod was then held in France, and the
          principles, in accordance with which the affairs of the Church were to be
          administered during the period of neutrality, were determined. It was also
          decided that the benefices of those who should still acknowledge Benedict were
          to be forfeited.
          
         These violent
          measures broke the power of Benedict, whose Cardinals came to an understanding
          with those who had deserted Gregory XII. As if the Holy See had really been
          vacant, they at once began to assume the position of lawful rulers of the
          Church, and formally sent out proclamations convening a Council at Pisa on the
          Feast of the Annunciation of our Lady, March 25, 1409. Both Popes now
          endeavoured, by summoning Councils of their own, to counteract the rebellion of
          the Cardinals, but the Council of the latter, although its convocation was,
          according to the canonical decisions of the time, absolutely illegal, took
          place and became extremely important.
          
         The increasing
          desire for the restoration of unity will not alone suffice to explain this
          astonishing fact. The Synod of Pisa (1409), according to Catholic principle,
          was, from the outset, an act of open revolt against the Pope. That such an
          essentially revolutionary assembly should decree itself competent to
          re-establish order, and was able to command so much consideration, was only
          rendered possible by the eclipse of the Catholic doctrine regarding the primacy
          of St. Peter and the monarchical constitution of the Church, occasioned by the
          Schism. The utter confusion in theological ideas and the dangerous nature of
          the anti-papal tendency, partly due to the teaching of Occam and Marsiglio,
          which prevailed in the principal countries of Christendom at this time, can
          only be fairly estimated by a comparison of the theories set forth with the
          doctrine of the Church.
          
         It was the will
          of Christ that the whole Church should have a single, visible head, so that, by
          the mutual connection of all the members among themselves, and by the
          subjection of all these members under one head, the most perfect unity should
          subsist. Therefore, a short time before His Ascension, our Saviour, according
          to His promise (St. Matt, xvi., 17-19), appointed the Apostle Peter, after his
          threefold profession of love, to be His Vicar on earth, the foundation and
          centre of the Church, the shepherd of "the lambs and the sheep", that
          is to say, of the whole company of the redeemed on earth, as related by St.
          John (xxi., 15 et seq.)
  
         The primacy
          conferred on St. Peter, according to the teaching of the Church, is not merely
          a primacy of precedence and honour, but one of supreme jurisdiction, of
          complete spiritual power and authority. Inasmuch as Christ committed this power
          immediately and directly to St. Peter, he holds it for the Church, but not from
          her; he is not her representative and delegate, but her divinely-appointed
          head.
          
         Neither the
          Primacy nor the Church is a transitory institution. St. Peter was Bishop of
          Rome, there he died a martyr's death under Nero. It is an article of the
          Catholic Faith, that all his prerogatives and powers are by Divine appointment
          transmitted to his lawful successors in the See of Rome. This plenitude of
          power was from the first contained in the Papacy, but was, of course,
          manifested only in such measure as the needs of the Church and the
          circumstances of the time required. "Like every living thing, like the
          Church herself", says a modern ecclesiastical historian, the unique and
          incomparable institution of the Papacy has its historical development. But this
          takes place according to that law which underlies the very life of the Church
          herself, the law of evolution, of growth from within. The Papacy must share all
          the destinies of the Church, and take part in each phase of her progress".
  
         The bishops of
          Rome, as direct successors of the Prince of the Apostles, according to Catholic
          teaching possess by Divine appointment the plenitude of episcopal power over
          the Universal Church. Supreme, full, and lawful spiritual authority over all
          the faithful is theirs. In virtue of this supreme authority, all her members,
          including Bishops, are subjects of the Pope; subject, whether we view them as
          isolated individuals, or as assembled in Council. Far from subjecting the Pope
          to a Council, the early Church held it as a principle that the supreme
          authority could be judged by no one. A General Council cannot exist without the
          Pope or in opposition to him, for, as head of the Church, he is the necessary
          and essential head of the General Council, whose decrees receive their
          ecumenical validity solely from his confirmation. As supreme legislator, the
          Pope can, in matters of discipline, revise and change the decrees of a General
          Council, as well as those of his predecessors. Former ecclesiastical
          legislation forms a precedent for his action, in so far as he, being the
          superior, is by his own example to show respect to the law. The power of the
          Primacy also contains, comprehended within itself, the supreme judicial power.
          Appeal may accordingly be made to him in all ecclesiastical matters; there is
          no appeal from his judgment to another tribunal; the plenitude of power over
          the Universal Church, conferred on the Joly See, is limited by nothing but
          Divine and natural law.
          
         The Schism,
          attacking as it did the very centre of unity, brought discussion as to the
          position of the Pope in the Church into the foreground. In a period of such
          agitation, the discussion inevitably assumed a revolutionary character most
          dangerous to the Church. A multitude of theories, more or less openly opposed
          to her teaching, were brought forward, intensifying the confusion by their
          abandonment of the solid legal foundations. Many men, who were otherwise
          strongly attached to the Church, were carried away by these anti-papal
          tendencies.
          
         Things had come
          to such a point that besides the new theory of the superiority of the Council
          over the Pope, views were asserted and maintained which completely denied the
          unity of the Church and the divine institution of the Primacy. It was said that
          it mattered little how many Popes there were, that there might be two or three
          or ten or twelve; or that each country might have its own independent Pope.
          Again, it was suggested that it might be the will of God that the Papacy should
          be for a time, or even permanently, divided, as the Kingdom of David had been,
          and after the example of human governments which are subject to change.
          Certainty regarding the will of God was deemed unattainable, but it was thought
          possible that the efforts to restore unity might really be in opposition to it.
          
         This last
          opinion, which may be considered as a consequence of Occam's teaching, was
          strongly controverted by Heinrich von Langenstein in
          his "Proposition of Peace for the Union and Reformation of the Church by a
          General Council", written in 1381. He looks on the Schism as a thing
          permitted by God, who, in His wisdom, which constantly brings good out of evil,
          had not prevented this great misfortune, but would have it bring about the
          right and necessary reform of the Church. For the accomplishment of this great
          work he considers that a General Council must be held.
  
         The new and
          extravagant system which Langenstein put forth in
          this Peace Proposal in order to furnish a theoretical justification for the
          Convocation of a General Council, is important from its bearing on future
          events. It is briefly as follows: No special weight is to be attached to our
          Lord's institution of the Papacy. The Church would have had a right to appoint
          a Pope if He had not done so. If the Cardinals should have chosen a Pope who
          does not suit the Church, she had the right to revise the work of her agents,
          and even to deprive them of her commission. For the power to elect the Pope
          rests originally in the Episcopate, and reverts to it if the Cardinals cannot,
          or will not elect; or if they abuse their right of election. The criterion, by
          which all acts of Church and State are to be judged, is whether they do, or do
          not promote the general good. A prince who, instead of preserving the State,
          would ruin and betray it, is to be resisted as an enemy; the same course should
          be pursued in the Church. Necessity breaks the law; indeed, even renders its
          breach a duty. In the present instance of the Schism, however, Langenstein goes on to say, it is by no means necessary to
          resort to this expedient. Laws are given that human actions may be ordered and
          measured thereby, but as these actions are innumerable, they cannot be
          completely comprehended by any law, and therefore, if we would not run counter
          to the will of the lawgiver, we must look to the spirit rather than to the
          letter. In the interpretation of every law we must be mindful of the
          Aristotelian principle of equity. To apply these general notions to the present
          case, it is not of the essence of a General Council that it should be summoned
          by the Pope; in extraordinary cases this may be done by temporal princes. The
          authority of the Council stands higher than that of the Pope and the Sacred
          College, for of the Church alone is it said that the gates of hell should not
          prevail against her.
  
         These theories,
          by which Langenstein broke with the whole existing
          system, soon became widely diffused. Henceforward this most dangerous doctrine
          of the natural right of necessity was the instrument used in all efforts to put
          an end to the Schism. Not very long after the appearance of the "Peace
          Proposal", we find Langenstein's view maintained
          by another German theologian, Conrad von Gelnhausen. His argument is chiefly directed
          against those "who are never weary of repeating that, even if all the
          Prelates of the Church came all together without the authority of the Pope they
          would form no Council, but merely a Conventicle". The Papacy, according to
          this writer, is an official position whose authority is derived from the
          unanimous will of the faithful. Infallibility resides in the whole Church. The
          individual Pope is fallible, whence it evidently follows that a Council may be
          lawfully assembled without his authority.
  
         Langenstein's principles had the
          greatest influence on the mind of Jean Gerson. This is shown in the remarkable
          New Year's Sermon which he preached at Tarascon, in
          1404, before Pope Benedict XIII. The constitution of the Church, like every
          ecclesiastical law, has, he maintained, peace for its object. If a law no
          longer fulfils this purpose it is ipso facto repealed. Every means of
          putting an end to the Schism would be lawful, and the best means would be a
          General Council.
  
         It is easy to
          understand that Benedict XIII was greatly offended by this discourse. An
          opposition to its principles also arose among the French theologians and was
          expressed in the Assembly held in Paris in 1406, where Guillaume Filastre, the future Cardinal, absolutely denied the right
          of a General Council to judge or condemn the Pope. Pierre d'Ailly lamented the manner in which certain members of the University of Paris spoke
          of the Pope, and declared it unlawful to renounce allegiance to Benedict,
          inasmuch obedience is not to be refused even to a Pope suspected of heresy. It
          cannot, in fact, be denied that the theory which permitted such a course, made
          revolution permanent, for the Pope would be subject not merely to the judgment
          of the Church, but to the subjective estimate of the individual.
  
         In the meantime
          objections to the new theories of Church government were little heeded; faith
          in the Divine right of the Primacy had been shaken to its foundations; the
          distress of the Church became more and more intolerable, and the general
          confusion greater. The attempt to decide between the claims of the different
          Popes was abandoned, and, as the proposals of abdication and of compromise had
          proved impracticable, the idea of an appeal to force gained ground; the great
          object was to find some way of getting rid of the Schism. Dignitaries of the
          Church, as, for example, Pierre Leroy, the Abbot of Mont St. Michel, openly
          proclaimed it lawful to disobey a Pope who misused his power. The Parisian
          Professor Plaoul declared both Popes to be obstinate
          schismatics, and consequently heretics, adding that all their adherents were to
          be looked upon as promoters of heresy and schism. The extreme urgency of the
          case, in his opinion, justified the King in summoning a Council, and even made
          it his duty to do so, and to use all possible means for the removal of the
          Schism; for, as Plaoul further explained, the
          obligation of peace, being based on divine and natural law, takes precedence of
          all constitutions, and annuls all contrary obligations, even oaths. If the Pope
          hinders peace it becomes necessary to separate from him.
  
         Theories of this
          revolutionary description were not confined to France. In Italy, the Republic
          of Florence, which, especially since the election of Gregory XII, had been most
          zealous in its endeavours to promote the “holy cause of peace”, decided, in
          1408, that, under existing circumstances, neutrality or indifference in regard
          to both Popes was the best expedient. In Prague, a German Dominican Friar,
          Johann von Falkenberg, called Pope Gregory a heretic. He ascribed to the
          Cardinals the right of deposing their Lord, without admitting that the Pope
          might deprive them of their dignities. In like manner the celebrated Canonist, Zabarella, who afterwards became a Cardinal, sought to
          raise the Sacred College to the position of a standing governing committee in
          the Church, and thereby to secure for it the lion's share in the contemplated
          changes. The treatise in which he put forward this idea is most important, as
          it gives us for the first time the Council theory in its fullness. Zabarella ascribes the plenitude of power to the Church,
          and consequently to the General Council as her representative. The Pope, in his
          view, is only the highest servant of the Church, to whom the executive power is
          entrusted. Should he err, the Church must set him right; should he fall into
          heresy, or be an obstinate schismatic, or commit a notorious crime, the Council
          may depose him. The Church, or the General Council, cannot sit permanently, and
          therefore the Pope commonly wields the supreme power. He can, however, issue no
          decree binding on the whole Church without the consent of the Cardinals, and,
          if he should differ from them, the Council must decide the matter. It is to be
          summoned by the Pope, or, in the event of a schism, or of his refusal to summon
          it, notwithstanding urgent necessity, by the College of Cardinals. If this body
          is unable or unwilling to act, the duty devolves on the Emperor. The scope of
          the General Council was also widely extended. Learned Canonists, like Abbot Pierre
          Leroy, of Mont St. Michel, taught that the Pope can never alter its decisions,
          and is bound to acknowledge them, even if they should concern the faith or the
          general welfare of the Church.
  
         Revolutionary
          views of this kind predominated in the Council of seditious Cardinals assembled
          at Pisa, but they were not allowed to pass uncontroverted. Among their most
          zealous opponents was the noble King Rupert. He saw that the path in which the
          Cardinals were engaged, could never lead to unity, but rather to a "threefold
          division, and to still greater discord and humiliation for the Church and
          Christendom". To avert this fresh disaster, he sent a special embassy to
          Pisa to state his serious objections to the proceedings of the Cardinals. The
          Ambassadors argued that obedience might not be renounced for the sake of
          obtaining union, inasmuch as it is not lawful to do evil that good may come;
          that the Cardinals could not themselves depart from unity in order to unite
          others; that it belonged to the Pope alone to summon a General Council; that
          Pope Gregory had been acknowledged and presented to Christendom by the
          Cardinals as duly elected, but that if his election had been unlawful, their
          own position must be doubtful. They further contested the legality of a union of
          the two colleges, inasmuch as the Cardinals of one party could alone be
          recognized as lawful.
  
         These and other
          considerations were, however, unheeded by the Assembly at Pisa. Delusive hopes
          of union held the better sort captive, and blinded them to the intrigues of
          Baldassare Cossa, who was leading the Council according to his own interests,
          and turned a deaf ear to all representations regarding the injustice of these
          proceedings towards both Popes. Since many Universities and learned men
          expressed their agreement with the new theories, the Synod of Pisa disregarded
          all canonical scruples, and boldly assumed authority over the two Popes of whom
          one must necessarily have been the lawful head of the Church. In vain did Carlo
          Malatesta, the loyal adherent of Gregory XII, endeavour, even at the last
          moment, to bring about an understanding between him and the Synod. In vain did
          this Prince, who was distinguished for his Humanistic culture, and was the
          noblest of his race, represent to the Cardinals, that their new way might
          indeed speedily lead to an end, but that the end would be a threefold division
          instead of unity. The Synod of Pisa having in its first session declared itself
          to be canonically summoned and ecumenical, representing the whole Catholic
          Churchy then proceeded to the trial and deposition of Benedict XIII and Gregory
          XII. No one seriously believed the assertion by which the Council supported its
          action. It was declared to be a matter of public notoriety that Benedict XIII
          and Gregory XII were not merely promoters of the Schism, but actually heretics
          in the fullest sense of the word, because by their conduct they had attacked
          and overturned the article of faith regarding the One, Holy, Catholic and
          Apostolic Church. Having thus invented a basis of operations, the Synod of Pisa
          proceeded with feverish haste to the most extreme measures, from which they
          might reasonably have been deterred by their knowledge that Gregory and
          Benedict had each an important body of followers, and that the forcible
          repression of both parties could not be deemed possible. Without further
          negotiations with the two Popes, neither of whom had appeared at Pisa, their
          deposition was decreed, and a new election ordered. The elevation on the 26th
          June, 1409, of the aged Cardinal Archbishop of Milan, Petros Filargis, a Greek, who took the name of Alexander V, was
          the result.
  
         Instead of two
          Popes there were now three, for the sentence of the Synod of Pisa had in no way
          affected the allegiance of the States which recognized Gregory XII or Benedict
          XIII. The Assembly which was to have restored unity had only increased the
          confusion. Such was the deplorable result of the removal of the established
          basis of unity. As Pierre d'Ailly had sadly foreseen,
          the Council of Cardinals added another and a far more dangerous evil to those
          which already existed; it created a second Schism, and showed itself absolutely
          incapable of accomplishing the much longed for reform of ecclesiastical
          affairs. Reform and union alike came to nothing at Pisa.
  
         Alexander V died
          on the 3rd May, 1410. The Cardinals immediately elected as his successor
          Baldassare Cossa, who assumed the name of John XXIII (1410-1415). Of all the
          miserable consequences of the disastrous Synod of Pisa, this election was the
          worst. John XXIII was not, indeed, the moral monster his enemies afterwards
          endeavoured to represent him, but he was utterly worldly-minded and completely
          engrossed by the temporal interests, an astute politician and courtier, not
          scrupulously conscientious, and more of a soldier than a Churchman. No help for
          the distracted Church was to be hoped for from him. All eyes, therefore, turned
          to the powerful and right-minded Sigismund, the King of the Romans, who was
          necessarily most deeply interested in the termination of the Schism, inasmuch
          as his Coronation as Emperor in Rome could not take place until Western
          Christendom was again united under one spiritual head. He did not disappoint
          the hopes which were fixed upon him, for the termination of the Schism and the
          restoration of unity to the Church in the West were in great measure his work.
          
         The mischief
          wrought by the Synod of Pisa could not, however, check the ever-increasing
          belief that peace could only be restored by a General Council. Its very
          fruitlessness drove the more ardent to extreme measures for the deliverance of
          the Church from the three-headed Papacy. A scandal so terrible made men long
          for union at any price. The belief that the Emperor, or the King of the Romans
          was bound, as Protector of the Church, to summon a General Council, came more
          and more prominently forward. It was forcibly expressed by Dietrich von Nieheim, the author of a work "On the ways of uniting
          and reforming the Church by means of a General Council" (1410), long
          falsely attributed to Gerson. Dietrich here distinguishes two Churches; the
          particular and private Apostolic Church, and the Universal Church which, as the
          Society of all the faithful, has received immediately from God the power of the
          keys. Her representative, the General Council, is therefore above the Pope, who
          is bound to obey her; she may limit his power, annul his rights, and depose
          him. If the existence of the Church is in danger, she is, according to
          Dietrich, dispensed from the moral law. The end of unity sanctifies all means:
          graft, deception, violence, bribery, imprisonment, and death. For all law is
          for the sake of the whole body, and the individual must give way to the general
          good. Dietrich founds his chief hopes on a powerful Roman Emperor or King.
  "Until there is", he says, "a just, mighty, universal Roman
          Emperor or King, the Schism will not only continue, but will, we must fear,
          constantly grow worse". And as, in his opinion, the removal of the Schism
          and the holding of a General Council cannot be expected without the King of the
          Romans, he is bound, under pain of grievous sin, to bring about its meeting.
  
         Sigismund
          understood how to turn to account the temper of the time, which found
          expression in the remarkable work of Dietrich von Nieheim.
          He also knew how to overcome the great obstacles which stood in the way of the
          Council. Fortune favoured him in a remarkable manner. The conquest of Rome by
          King Ladislaus (June, 1413) had compelled John XXIII
          to escape to Florence, where so dangerous a visitor had not been very cordially
          welcomed. As the Pope was in urgent need of protection and aid against his
          enemy, he gave his Cardinal-Legates, Challant and Zabarella, ample powers to come to an understanding with
          the King of the Romans, who was then at Como, as to the time and place of the
          Council. After lengthened resistance on their part, Sigismund succeeded in
          obtaining their consent to the selection of Constance, a German city, as the
          place of its assembly. This point settled, he hastened to complete the matter,
          and on the 30th October, 1413, informed all Christendom that, in agreement with
          Pope John, a General Council would be opened at Constance on the 1st November
          in the following year, and solemnly invited all Prelates, Princes, Lords, and
          Doctors of Christendom to attend. John XXIII, who was completely powerless, had
          no choice but to submit to Sigismund's will; on the 9th December he signed the
          Bull which convened a General Council at Constance, and promised himself to be
          present. As soon as this, decisive step had been taken by the Pisan Pope,
          Sigismund wrote to Gregory XII and Benedict XIII, inviting them to come to the
          Council, and also to the Kings of France and Aragon, calling upon them to do
          everything in their power to ensure the accomplishment of the important object
          it had in view.
  
         When John XXIII,
          in his extremity, made up his mind to consent to the convocation of the Council
          at Constance, he hoped by this act to establish a certain right to direct it,
          with the assistance of his numerous Italian prelates, more or less in accordance
          with his own views. Any such hopes, however, proved utterly fallacious, and, if
          we may believe the Chronicler Ulrich von Richental,
          who tells us that at the sight of the Lake of Constance John exclaimed
  "This is how foxes are caught!" even before he set foot in the city,
          where the Council was to be held, he had become fully aware of the danger which
          threatened him. There was, indeed, ample ground for his apprehensions; a
          feeling most unfavourable to him had become general, and the complete failure
          of the Council of Pisa had at the same time driven the leaders of the party of
          union to the adoption of revolutionary opinions. The important treatise of
          Dietrich von Nieheim "On the ways of uniting and
          reforming the Church by means of a General Council", which we have
          mentioned, had already given expression to the prevailing sentiment. The author
          attacks the worldly-minded Popes and their Courts in the most ruthless manner.
          Their sins are painted in the darkest colours, while he hardly alludes to those
          of the rest of the clergy. If his work does not contain the full and perfect
          truth, it nevertheless bears important testimony to the predominant tone of
          mind at the period. Few contemporary writings as clearly show how low the first
          dignity of Christendom had fallen in the eyes of the friends of reform, and how
          its bearers had come to be despised. The hostility of the party adverse to John
          XXIII soon manifested itself at Constance in the most unmistakable manner. It
          gained new strength from the arrival of Sigismund, and its first great result
          was the new mode of voting by nations, carried through in opposition to the
          Italians by the Germans, English, and French. Events unfolded themselves with
          marvellous rapidity after the arrival of the King of the Romans, and John's
          prospects became more and more gloomy. An anonymous memorial, addressed to the
          Fathers of the Council and containing most serious charges against the Pisan
          Pope, produced great effects. His bearing from the beginning of the Council had
          been irresolute, and now he lost heart altogether. In dread of judicial
          proceedings, he solemnly promised to give peace to the Church by an absolute
          surrender of the papal power, if Gregory XII and Benedict XIII would likewise
          abdicate. But this step was not taken freely or in good faith. Meanwhile the
          language of the party of reform became more and more decided. John, who was
          kept well informed of all that passed by hisspies, at
          last came to the conclusion that nothing but bold and sudden action could save
          him, and on March 19th,1415, with the connivance of Duke Frederick of Austria,
          he fled “on a little horse” to Schaffhausen, disguised as a messenger.
  
         The deed was one
          of desperation, and occasioned the greatest confusion and alarm amongst those
          assembled at Constance. The Italians and Austrians left the city and gathered
          round their Princes; merchants, fearing a riot, packed up their wares, and the Burghermaster called the citizens to arms.
  
         During this
          stormy episode, the party which looked on a definite limitation of Papal rights
          as the only means of suppressing the Schism and reforming the Church
          discipline, gained the upper hand. The General Council was to effect this
          limitation, and accordingly it was held that the Pope must be subject to its
          jurisdiction; many, indeed, would have rendered this subjection permanent. With
          characteristic precipitation it was decided in the third, fourth, and fifth
          Sessions that a General Council could not be dissolved nor prorogued by the
          Pope without its own consent; that the present Council continued in full force
          after the flight of the Pope; that everyone, even the Pope, must obey the
          Council in matters concerning the faith and the extirpation of the Schism, and
          that it had authority over the Pope as well as over all Christians.
          
         By these decrees
          a power which had not been instituted by Christ was constituted supreme over
          the Church, and this was done in order to provide the Assembly of Constance
          with a theoretical basis on which to act independently of the Pope. But,
          although defended by d'Ailly and Gerson, they never
          received the force of law. They proceeded from a headless Assembly, which could
          not be an Ecumenical Council since it was not acknowledged by any Pope, while
          one of the three must certainly have been the lawful head of the Church.
          Moreover, the method of procedure, by a majority of votes, had no precedent in
          the ancient Councils, and these decrees were carried against the Cardinals by a
          majority composed in large part of unauthorized persons. It was evident, then,
          that they could only be regarded as an act of violence, an expedient to put an
          end to the existing confusion. It was possible, indeed, to interpret the words,
          asserting the supremacy of the Council over the Pope, in a sense which limited
          their application to the Schism of the day, and they were thus understood by
          many, both at the time and afterwards. But, in the intention of their authors,
          their signification was general and dogmatic, and amounted to the introduction
          of a new system, subversive of the old Catholic doctrine. No dogmatic
          importance, however, can possibly be attached to them. The Assembly of
          Constance was no General, or representative, Council of the Church, and they
          never received Papal confirmation. The great mistake of those assembled at Constance
          was to take that which may have seemed a matter of necessity under
          extraordinary circumstances, as a general rule for all times, and to consider
          it possible that a General Council could be held without the Pope, and in
          opposition to him, an idea as extravagant as would be the supposition that a
          body without a head could be a living organism. The necessary consequence of
          this attempt to carry out reforms by means of the Episcopate alone was, as a
          modern Canonist well observes, that in the next century many denied the
          authority of both Pope and Bishops.
  
         The firmness and
          prudence of Sigismund had been the chief means of frustrating the attempt made
          by John XXIII to disperse the Assembly at Constance, and the fate of this Pope
          was soon decided. He had already been arrested and confined in Radolfzell, and, after a trial, was, on the 29th May,
          solemnly and formally deposed; utterly broken in spirit he submitted without
          remonstrance to the sentence of the Synod.
  
         The deposition
          John XXIII nullified the work of the Synod of Pisa, and brought things back to
          the position they had occupied, before it had decreed the deposition of Gregory
          XII and Benedict XIII. The election of a new Pope ought logically, therefore,
          to have taken place, but such a measure would not have advanced matters a step,
          and accordingly the Synod was in an untenable position when Gregory XII solved
          his difficulties by his magnanimous resolution to abdicate. The way in which
          this was done is of the highest significance, and must by no means be viewed as
          a concession in non-essentials to the assembled Bishops. Gregory XII the one
          legitimate Pope, sent his plenipotentiary, Malatesta, to Constance, where the
          prelates of his obedience had already arrived, and now summoned the Bishops to
          a Council. His Cardinal-Legate, who had made his entry into the city as such,
          read Gregory's Bull of Convention to the assembled Bishops, who solemnly
          acknowledged it. Malatesta then informed this Synod, which Gregory XII had
          constituted, of his abdication (4th July, 1415). His summons had given the
          Synod a legal basis; the Bishops of the third obedience gradually joined it,
          while Benedict XIII, with but three Cardinals, fled to the fortress of Peñiscola, thus proclaiming himself a schismatic before the
          whole Church. The Holy See was, therefore, now acknowledged and declared to be
          vacant, and it became possible to proceed to the election of a successor to
          Gregory XII.
  
         "If even we
          admit the proposition", observes the Canonist from whom we have taken the
          above account, "that Gregory XII's fresh convocation and authorization of
          the Council were a mere matter of form, this form was the price to which he
          attached his abdication; and it meant nothing less than that the Assembly
          should formally acknowledge him the lawful Pope, and accordingly confess that
          its own authority dated only from that moment, and that all its previous acts
          —in particular those of the fourth and fifth Sessions— were devoid of all
          ecumenical character. The recognition of Gregory XII's legitimacy necessarily
          included a similar recognition of Innocent VII, Boniface IX, and Urban VI, and
          the rejection of Clement VII and Benedict XIII.
  
         In gratitude for
          the concession which he had made, the Council conferred upon Gregory XII the
          Cardinal Bishopric of Porto, with the permanent Legation of the March of
          Ancona, and rank second only to that of the Pope; he did not, however, long
          enjoy these dignities, as he died on the 18th October, 1417. His last words
          were "I have not understood the world, and the world has not understood
          me".
  
         From the
          resignation of Gregory XII till the election of Martin V the Apostolic See was
          vacant, and the Church was ruled by the Council to which the Cardinals
          belonged. The Council, during this period, undertook the administration and temporal
          government of the States of the Church, a remarkable fact, which clearly proves
          them to be the property of the whole Church.
          
         After the
          burning of John Huss (July 6th, 1415) matters regarding the third point of the
          great programme of the Council —the reform of the Church in her head and
          members— principally occupied its attention. The great majority of the Assembly
          were of one mind as to the need of reform. "The whole world, the clergy,
          all Christian people, know that a reform of the Church militant is both
          necessary and expedient”, exclaims a theologian of the day. "Heaven and
          the elements demand it; it is called for by the Sacrifice of the Precious Blood
          mounting up to heaven. The very stones will soon be constrained to join in the
          cry". But while this necessity was generally recognized, the members of
          the Council were neither clear nor unanimous in their views as to the scope and
          nature of the reform. Various measures were proposed, especially for the
          amendment of the Papal Court, but few of them were practicable. When the
          details came to be considered the countless difficulties which ultimately
          rendered the labours of the Council in this matter so ineffectual became more
          and more apparent.
  
         Contemporary
          writings clearly show the existence of a widespread dislike of the higher
          clergy, not only amongst the laity, but also amongst the inferior
          ecclesiastics. An immense number of absolutely revolutionary discourses
          preached at Constance by monks and clergy of the lower ranks, bear witness to
          this feeling. The Cardinals were detested by the majority of those who formed
          the Assembly at Constance, and they had repeatedly to complain of grievous
          slights put upon them. The treatment which they had to expect may be gathered
          from the singular fact that on the 17th April, 1415, a Prelate brought forward
          a proposal for their exclusion from all deliberations regarding Union and
          Reform. It was not indeed carried, but it showed the Cardinals the greatness of
          the danger which threatened them. They dexterously met it by an effort to get
          the matter into their own hands, and in the end of July moved that a Committee
          should be appointed to deliberate on the reform of the Church. The opposition
          aroused by this step was overcome by the eloquence of d'Ailly.
          The Cardinals' motion was passed, and the first Committee was appointed,
          between the 26th July and the 1st of August. It consisted of eight deputies
          from each nation, and three Cardinals. The conflict of various interests made
          it impossible to come to any agreement on the most important questions. In the
          autumn of 1416 negotiations came to a complete standstill. Some powerful
          impulse was wanted to keep up the interest in the Council, which flagged more
          and more, wearied out by the monotony of interminable discussions.
  
         In regard to the
          smallness of the results achieved by it, a Protestant writer has justly
          observed: "Few perhaps lacked goodwill, but all lacked courage to begin
          the conflict against the network of interests which covered all the ground. If
          the work were once seriously undertaken, it was hard to see where it might
          end".
  
         The resistance
          naturally offered by the Conservative element to any change in the constitution
          of the Church, exercised a great influence on the cause of reform. This
          struggle absorbed all energies, and divided the Council into two camps at a
          time when united action alone could have led to success. Another circumstance
          also came into play.
          
         The Constitution
          of the Church is an organic body, and a reform of one part must necessarily
          react on the whole. The chief aim of by far the greater number at Constance was
          the removal of special pressing abuses, and the protection of special concerns.
          Considerations of the general good were postponed to those regarding particular
          interests. No party would begin by reforming itself; each wished for reform in
          the first place at the cost of another. Unanimous action was out of the
          question in this conflict of parties.
          
         We must also
          give due weight to the influence of national and political interests. Church
          and State, in the views of that time, were by no means unconcerned with each
          other. Civil and ecclesiastical life were most closely bound together, and, as
          a necessary consequence, every effort to reform the Church awakened national
          and political opposition. The removal of abuses by reverting to a simple
          principle, was, under these circumstances, impossible; relations were so
          entangled that every change was like a Revolution. "Church Reform",
          to quote the words of a modern historian, "was the Tower of Babel; every imaginable
          language was spoken in the Assembly, and opinions were as numerous and as
          conflicting as the nationalities gathered together at Constance”
  
         The conflict of
          interests was intensified by the system of division into nations adopted in the
          Council, which opened the door to party spirit and national jealousy. This new
          organization of the Assembly, though framed with the sole purpose of
          counteracting the preponderance of the Italian prelates, was in great measure
          responsible for the failure of the work of reform. Even those, who looked with
          sympathy on the introduction of new modes of deliberation and voting,
          acknowledge this fact. "The reform which one nation desires, another
          rejects", wrote Peter von Pulka, the Envoy of the University of Vienna.
          Under these circumstances, it was impossible to foresee how long the Church
          Would remain without a head, if according to the wishes of Sigismund and the
          German nation, the election of a new Pope was to be deferred until the reform
          had been accomplished. Discussions of a most violent nature soon arose on this
          question. The struggle was at last concluded by a compromise, which the aged
          Bishop of Winchester, the uncle of the King of England, brought about.
          According to its terms, a Synodal Decree was to give assurance that, after the
          election, the reform of the Church should really be taken in hand; those
          Decrees of reform, to which all the different nations had already given their
          consent, were to be published before the election, and the mode of the election
          was to be determined by deputies.
  
         Accordingly, on
          the 9th of October, 1417, in the thirty-ninth General Session, five Decrees of
          reform, on which the nations had agreed, were published. The first concerned
          the holding of General Councils, which were henceforth to be of more frequent
          occurrence; the next was to be held in five years; the following one, ten years
          later; and after that, one every ten years. The second Decree enacted
          precautionary measures against the outbreak of a fresh Schism; the third
          required every newly-elected Pope, before the proclamation of his election, to
          lay before his electors a profession of his faith. The remaining Decrees
          limited the translation of Bishops and Prelates, and abolished the Papal rights
          of spolia and procuration. Regarding the election of a new Pope, it was
          agreed on the 28th of October that, for this time, thirty other Prelates and
          Doctors, six from each nation, should be associated with the Cardinals present
          at Constance. This decision, as well as the Decree for securing reform, was
          immediately published in the fortieth General Session, on the 30th October. The
          Decree was to the effect that, before the dissolution of the Council, the new
          Pope was, with its co-operation, or with that of deputies of the nations, to
          take measures for ecclesiastical reform, especially in reference to the Supreme
          head of the Church and the Roman Court.
  
         The Conclave
          began on the evening of the 8th November, 1417, in the Merchants' Hall at
          Constance, which is still visited by every traveller, and on St Martinis Day
          the Cardinal Deacon Oddone Colonna came forth as Pope
          Martin V.
  
          
              
         
           
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