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JOHN HUS (1371-1415)
An outstanding feature of Czech history in the second half of the fourteenth
century was the powerful movement for Church reform which arose in Bohemia in
the reign of Charles IV and rapidly expanded while gaining in intensity.
Various causes contributed to this. There was the important political and
cultural position of the Czechs in the Europe of that day when the King of
Bohemia was at the same time Holy Roman Emperor, and the capital of
Bohemia—Prague—was the seat not only of his court but also of the first
university established in Central Europe, an institution attended by many
foreigners of various nationalities; there was the material and intellectual
wealth of the country, which at that time was an important centre of political
and cultural activity in Central Europe; there were the almost limitless wealth
and power of the Church of Rome, two factors which resulted in extravagance and
immorality among the priesthood; there was the undue interference, so
unfortunate in its consequences, of the Papal See in the internal affairs of
the Church in Bohemia—the appointment of prebendaries, the levying of all kinds
of dues—and the general relaxation of morals which all this encouraged; and,
finally, the zealous and extraordinarily effective activity of a few chosen
spirits against the moral degeneration of the day. The Emperor Charles and his
chief adviser, Ernest, the first Archbishop of Prague, had already not only
themselves taken action against various evils in the Church and among the
priests, but had also protected and supported two famous preachers, the
Austrian Conrad Waldhauser of the Augustinian Order (ob. 1369) and the Moravian
priest, John Milic of Kromefiz (ob. 1374), in their denunciations of depravity
among the burghers of Prague and the priests of the Church. The movement for
moral reformation inspired by the activities of these two men continued to
develop even after their death. At the close of the fourteenth century two
outstanding Czech thinkers and moralists, the knight Thomas of Stitny (ob. c.
1401) and the learned Matthias of Janov (ob. 1394), who had studied at the
University of Paris, worked in the spirit of Milic. The people of Prague at
this period demonstrated their fidelity to the memory of Milic by their
unswerving regard for the preachers who came forward on behalf of true morals.
The popularity of these preachers led, in 1391, to the foundation of the
Bethlehem Chapel at Prague, the ministers of which were charged by the founders
with the duty of preaching twice on every Sunday and holy day in the Czech
tongue. It was undoubtedly the intention of the founders that the sermons
should be preached in the spirit of Milfc’s reforming aims, and although the
first preachers at the Bethlehem Chapel were already noted for their
denunciation of vice and disorder, this place of divine worship did not become
the actual inheritor of Milic’s aims and the executor, as it were, of his
testament, until it was placed in charge of a man who raised the Bohemian
reformation movement, till then of only local significance, to a place in
world history. That man was John Hus.
John Hus was born about the year 1370. His birthplace was
probably the village of Husinec near Prachatice in southern Bohemia, although
some serious investigators consider that he was born at the village of the same
name near Prague. It is certain that he was called John of Husinec after the
name of his birthplace, a designation subsequently abbreviated into Hus, which
became so usual that he himself used it, and it entered with him into the pages
of history. Somewhere about the year 1390 Hus came as a poor student to the University
of Prague. The aim of his university studies was doubtless at the outset to
enable him to become a priest, a profession to which, as he later reproaches
himself, he was, like many others of his contemporaries, attracted mainly by
the prospects of a good living. Nor did Hus’ mode of life differ from that of
other students of that day. He got a livelihood by serving in the churches, nor
did he shun the gay or even exuberant entertainments of his fellow students,
but throughout all he preserved the uprightness of his religious feelings. In
1393 he secured the degree of Bachelor of Arts, and in 1396 became Master of
Arts. Devoting himself then to theological studies he obtained the degree of
Bachelor of Theology, but he never became Master or Doctor of Theology. As a
Master of Arts he lectured at the university, examined candidates for the
Bachelor’s degree, and was a member of various university commissions. The
prestige which he enjoyed at the university is evidenced by the fact that in
the autumn of 1401 he was elected Dean of the Faculty of Arts.
Previous to that, in 1400 or 1401, Hus had been ordained
priest. This event, it would seem, marked a great turning-point in his life. Up
to this time, Hus, though certainly at all times far removed from any debauchery
or immorality, had none the less, like other “masters”, found pleasure in
secular entertainment and pursuits. He liked fine dress, he did not despise a
good table, and he was a passionate player of chess. On becoming a priest he
turned away from all such secular vanities and devoted himself with fervent
sincerity to the work of his spiritual calling. He took up preaching with
especial zeal, and speedily won great popularity among the people of Prague. It
was apparently his qualities as a preacher that resulted in 1402 in his
appointment to the pulpit of Bethlehem Chapel. In his preaching at Bethlehem
Chapel Hus followed in the footsteps of men who, as we have seen, endeavoured
in the second half of the fourteenth century, either by their sermons or by
their writings, to raise the morals of the day by inveighing against the
degeneration they saw around them, and who are generally known as the
precursors of Hus. Although it cannot be shewn that Hus personally knew any of
these his precursors—two of them, Waldhauser and Milic, he could not, of
course, possibly have known—or that he made use of their writings, there is
nevertheless not the slightest doubt that in his activities at the Bethlehem
Chapel he is closely connected with them and is their true successor. Like
Waldhauser and Milic he succeeded by his preaching in dominating the hearts of
his hearers, whom he led to true religion and virtuous lives, and whose
affection and devotion he won for himself. Lacking the fierce pungency of
Waldhauser and the mystical flights of Milic, Hus influenced his audiences more
by the simplicity, clarity, and ingenuousness of his sermons and especially by
his vivid sense for the needs, the interests, and the feelings of the common
people, whose favourite and truly spiritual leader he was. In his endeavours to
bring about an improvement in morals and a better, sincerer religious sense,
Hus did not confine himself merely to preaching, but with profound
comprehension of the simple minds of the people made use of other means as
well. He devoted special attention to congregational singing in the churches.
Not only did he exhort his hearers to sing the old Czech hymns, of which up to
that time there were but few, but he himself composed several new hymns.
Whereas, however, up to then, popular hymns had been sung only outside the
actual divine service—during processions or after sermons—Hus introduced at the
Bethlehem Chapel the singing of hymns by the congregation as part of the
service itself. The congregation were not to be mere onlookers during the
services, but were to take active part in them with their hymnsinging. Thus
was given the impulse to the splendid development of Czech hymnology which
followed.
It was not only among the common people, however, that Hus
won many faithful friends and admirers; he found them also among the leading
burghers of Prague, in the ranks of the nobles, among the courtiers of King
Wenceslas (Vaclav); and Queen Sophia herself was so attracted by him that she
made him her chaplain and perhaps even her confessor. Although Hus, like his
predecessors, sharply castigated the moral shortcomings of the clergy in
particular, he had many friends among the priesthood, and he was also greatly
esteemed by his ecclesiastical superiors. The Archbishop of Prague, Zbynek, who
had been appointed to the see as a young man of no great learning but upright
and well-intentioned, himself showed Hus favour and confidence, and more than
once appointed him preacher at the synods of the Prague clergy.
Like every endeavour towards reform, all this practical
effort on the part of Hus directed towards an improvement of morals was a
manifestation of dissatisfaction with the conditions then existing, and his
protests against the undisciplined clergy and against all manner of evils in
the Church involuntarily placed him in opposition to the Church. The fate of
Hus’ precursors also shewed plainly enough how efforts towards a betterment of
morals, coupled with a severe criticism of actual conditions, could lead to
views in conflict with the general doctrines of the Church and cause the
zealous protesters to be suspected of heresy—a suspicion welcomed and
encouraged by those who were directly affected by the attack on immorality. It
is possible, too, that Hus, endeavouring to bring about a reform in
ecclesiastical and religious practice, arrived, through his own studies of
ancient Church writings, at doubts concerning certain articles of Church
doctrine, that he found a divergence between the teaching of Christ and that of
the oldest Fathers of the Church on the one hand and doctrines which the Church
of his day asked its adherents to believe on the other, that he was
dissatisfied with the manner in which the scholasticism of his day settled the
fundamental questions of the Christian faith. Finally, Hus was perhaps
acquainted with some of the ideas to be found in the writings of his Czech
precursors, ideas which not infrequently diverged from those commonly held by
the Church. We have no proofs of this, however. On the other hand, the records
that have come down to us concerning Hus’ beginnings show that it was by a
different path that he was led to the views over which he came into conflict
with the Church.
From the accusations brought by his opponents against Hus in
the course of the years 1409 to 1414 it appears that the first signs of
heretical views were observed in him in the very first year of his priesthood,
some time in the year 1401. At the time he is said to have contended in a
private conversation at one of the Prague rectories that the elements in the
Eucharist even after consecration contained the substance of bread, and that a
priest in mortal sin could not validly consecrate the elements. Even if we do
not altogether believe this assertion, since it comes from witnesses hostile to
Hus, we may assume from it with tolerable certainty that Hus, soon after his
ordination as priest, took part in conversation on certain points of religion
in the course of which the views were also broached for which he was afterwards
condemned at Constance, that already those views were not unknown to him, and
that if he did not actually adhere to them, he did not at any rate reject them
with due decision. As those views are obviously a reflex of the recent teaching
of the English theologian, John Wyclif, it is clear that Hus was already
influenced by that teaching which subsequently assumed such fateful
significance for him, that he was already acquainted with it and had turned it
over in his mind.
The comparatively brisk intercourse between Bohemia and
England at the time when Anne, the sister of the Bohemian King Wenceslas, was
Queen of England, and when many young Czechs studied at English universities,
caused a knowledge of the teachings of Wyclif as well as copies of his writings
soon to penetrate to Bohemia. Wyclif s philosophical works were brought to
Bohemia soon after the year 1380, that is, while their author was still alive
(Wyclif died in 1384), and attained no small popularity among the Czech masters
at the University of Prague, who, mainly through Hus’ chief teacher, the
learned Stanislav of Znojmo, preferred Wyclif’s philosophic realism to the
nominalistic tendencies in vogue among the other nationalities represented at
Prague University. Hus himself made in 1398 copies of several of Wyclif’s
philosophical treatises, probably in order to use them as the basis of his own
university lectures, and his annotations to these copies give evidence of the
powerful impression made on him by Wyclif’s works. Somewhat later than
Wyclif’s philosophical views, but still before the close of the fourteenth
century, the English reformer’s theological views began to penetrate into
Bohemia. Old Thomas of Stitny obviously has in mind Wyclif’s teaching on
consubstantiation when, in his last work written about the year 1400, he
confesses that in his seventieth year he was shaken in his belief in the
elements by several masters, so that he did not know whether the substance of
bread remains in the elements after consecration, or not. And practically at
the same time, as we have already seen, we hear of Hus taking part in
conversations in which theological views obviously emanating from Wyclif were
discussed. Wyclif’s theological teaching, then, was not unknown in Bohemia
before the young Master, Jerome of Prague, Hus’ subsequent companion in his
struggles as well as in his death, somewhere about the year 1401 or 1402
brought over from England, where he had been studying, the two main theological
works of Wyclif, the Dialogus and Trialogus.
A knowledge of Wyclif’s teachings subsequently spread with
rapidity among the masters of Prague University. As early as the beginning of
the year 1403, the chapter of the cathedral at Prague—then the supreme
ecclesiastical authority in the country, since the archiepiscopal see was
vacant—deemed it well to submit the 45 articles of Wyclif to the university
for an opinion upon them. To the 24 articles condemned in 1382 by the Synod of
London there were added 21 others collected from Wyclif’s writings by one of
the German masters of Prague University. In response to the chapter’s request,
the rector of the university convened a meeting of the whole university for 28
May 1403 to deliberate upon Wyclif’s articles. Thus came about in Bohemia the
first public controversy concerning Wyclif, a skirmish which revealed the
attitude of Prague University to his teaching. That attitude was not a
unanimous one. The Czech masters championed the articles of Wyclif, though not
all with the same determination. Among the defenders of the articles was Hus,
but two other Czech masters, Stanislav of Znojmo, mentioned above as Hus’
teacher, and Hus’ friend, Stephen of Palec, were much more decisive in their
championship. On a vote being taken, the view of the Czech masters was
rejected; the majority of the university, composed apparently of graduates of
other nationalities, declared that no one should, either in public or in
private, adhere to or defend any of the 45 articles submitted.
The verdict of the university failed to check the study of
Wyclif’s writings or the spread of his doctrines among the masters of the Czech
University. In particular, Master Stanislav of Znojmo never ceased to defend
Wyclif’s articles. Not long after the university meeting he wrote a treatise on
the elements in which he entirely accepted Wyclif’s teaching that the substance
of bread remained in the elements even after consecration. On an accusation
being made against him by one of the German masters at the university, he was
summoned to Rome together with Stephen of Palec who had zealously championed
him against his German opponent. In the autumn of 1408 the two Czech masters
set out for Rome, but at Bologna they were arrested by order of Cardinal
Baldassare Cossa, who subsequently became Pope under the name of John XXIII,
and Stanislav of Znojmo was ordered by the College of Cardinals, which regarded
itself as the supreme ecclesiastical tribunal in place of the dethroned Pope,
Gregory XII, to declare that he recanted everything in his writings which could
be regarded as in conflict with Holy Scripture and the judgment of the Church,
and submitted himself to the judgment of the Apostolic See and of the
appropriate ecclesiastical authorities.
Previous to this, in May 1408, a meeting of the Czechs
at the University of Prague, convened, doubtless, at the instance of King
Wenceslas and Archbishop Zbynek, had deliberated upon the teaching of Wyclif.
The 45 articles of Wyclif were again submitted to this gathering, which was
attended by a large number of masters, graduates, and students. The object of
the meeting was apparently to constrain those Czech masters who, in the year
1403 at the great university assembly, had made a stand for Wyclif or had
subsequently taken his part, to declare their dissent from his teaching. In
this, at least to outward view, the meeting was successful. On the one hand it
was unanimously resolved that mere bachelors of arts should not be allowed to
read the main theological writings of Wyclif, Dialogue, Trialogus,
and De Corpore Christi, and on the other hand that no Czech member of
the university should assent to or defend those of Wyclifs articles which were
“heretical, misleading, or causes of offence”. This description was apparently
added to meet the views of those Czech masters who were unwilling to subscribe
to the statement that all Wyclif’s articles were misleading or heretical. Among
these undoubtedly was Hus who, according to his own admission, did not agree
with an absolute condemnation of Wyclif's articles, being convinced that several
of them, properly interpreted, were correct. It is certain that at the meeting
of the Czechs he supported the two resolutions above mentioned.
From the conduct of Hus at the meeting of the Czechs at
Prague University, it may be assumed that at that time he had not as yet
inclined to Wyclif’s teachings so far as to be able to declare himself directly
and openly for them. He certainly did not accede to Wyclif’s view concerning
the elements, which had been the main point of contention up till then in Bohemia,
nor to Wyclif’s other articles of faith. He was, however, greatly attracted by
the fervour of the English reformer in his attack upon the various evils in the
Church, and by his determined efforts to bring about a better state of affairs.
Hus’ own efforts to uplift the morality of the people and the priesthood took
on, thereby, a sharper tone, increased decision and definiteness. He directed
those efforts directly against certain features of Church administration
mercilessly attacked by Wyclif, and particularly against the evils of simony,
prevalent among the priesthood of the day. This brought upon him the wrath of
those priests who were able to apply his emphatic accusations to themselves.
Influenced by them, Archbishop Zbynek also began to turn away from Hus. Thus it
came about that at the synod of the diocese of Prague held in June 1408, at
which Hus was no longer the preacher, a resolution was passed directed against
his activities, prohibiting in particular any deriding of the priesthood in the
course of sermons preached to the public. At the same time it was directed that
anyone possessing a copy of any book by Wyclif must hand it in by a certain
date to the archbishop’s officials for examination. Although it was to be
suspected that the archbishop had the intention of destroying all these books,
Hus and almost all the other masters handed over to the archbishop within the
given time all the works of Wyclif they possessed. Only five students refused
to surrender Wyclif’s works and appealed to the Pope. The prohibition to
criticise the faults of the priests in public was not, however, observed by
Hus. Not only did he attack them in a special work but he also opposed them by
action, preaching unceasingly to the masses in condemnation of unworthy priests.
He did not even abandon the condemned views of Wyclif: on the contrary, after
the enforced repression of Stanislav of Znojmo’s enthusiasm for Wyclif, Hus
began more and more to be recognised as the leader of those who championed his
teaching.
The tension which all this produced between Hus and the
Archbishop of Prague was made more acute by developments in the general
condition of the Church. After many fruitless attempts to rid the Church of the
schism which had lasted since the year 1378, the cardinals on both sides
finally, in the year 1408, decided to convoke a General Council at Pisa which
should make a determined effort to unite the divided Church and to remove what
were universally felt to be evils in ecclesiastical administration. To bring this
about more easily, the cardinals urged the Christian rulers to observe, until
the Council should have arrived at its decision, strict neutrality towards the
two Popes, acknowledging neither the one nor the other. King Wenceslas readily
acceded to the wishes of the cardinals, but Archbishop Zbynek, at the head of
his clergy, was unwilling to abandon allegiance to the Roman Pope, Gregory
XII, who up till then had been acknowledged in Bohemia. Desirous of breaking
down the opposition of the archbishop, the king called upon the University of
Prague for an expression of its opinion on the question of neutrality. He
manifestly expected that, influenced by the leading Czech masters who had
joyfully greeted the attempt of the cardinals to give unity and reform to the
Church, the whole university would declare in favour of neutrality. In this,
however, he was disappointed. At the meeting of the university only the Czech
masters signified their agreement with the king's standpoint, while the
masters of the other three “nations” at the university opposed him. Although
the majority was thus against neutrality, the rector did not venture to
announce to the king an unwelcome result; so the university meeting dispersed
without a definite resolution being passed. The Czech masters, however, did not
abandon their standpoint, and Hus in particular was active in support of
neutrality, winning over influential personages as well as preaching to the
people and clergy in its favour. This roused Archbishop Zbynek, the faithful supporter
of the Roman Pope Gregory, to such an extent that he issued public letters in
both Latin and Czech, forbidding all the masters of Prague University and Hus
in particular, whom he specially named therein as a disobedient son of the
Church, to exercise any of the priestly functions in the diocese of Prague,
thus prohibiting them from preaching the Word of God.
The question of neutrality which caused this public and
severe action by the archbishop against Hus also provoked a notable change at
the university. Early in 1409 King Wenceslas summoned the leading masters of
the four “nations” at the university to meet him at Kutuá Hora, where he was
then residing, and whither an embassy had come from the French king to discuss
the repudiation of obedience to both Popes. King Wenceslas desired to obtain a
final verdict from the university in favour of neutrality. Among the Czech
masters was John Hus with his young friend, Jerome of Prague. The king was soon
able to convince himself of the divergent attitude to neutrality adopted by the
Czech masters on the one hand and those of foreign nationality on the other. It
was plain that the university would decide according to the king’s wishes for
neutrality if the decision should lie with the Czech masters. Thus arose the
idea of altering the statutes of the university in favour of the Czech masters.
The king was not at first inclined to agree to this change, since he was
offended with several of the Czech masters, especially Hus and Jerome, for
continuing to champion Wyclif. When, however, the representatives of the three
foreign “nations” at the university persisted in their opposition to a
declaration of neutrality, the king resolved to take a decisive step. By the
decree of Kutuá Hora, promulgated on 18 January 1409, he gave the Czechs at the
university three votes in all university matters, and the other three “nations”
had to be content with one. The university, which up to now had been dominated
by the three foreign “nations,” thus passed into the control of the Czechs.
This was not only a great national victory for the Czechs,
who thus secured the power in the university that had been founded in their
capital, but it was also a great triumph for the Hus party, whose position in
the university was considerably enhanced by it, for the decisive factor now was
the voice of the Czechs, most of whom belonged to the Has party. An obvious
outcome of this success was the election of Hus himself as rector of the
university in the autumn of 1409. In the dispute with Archbishop Zbynek, which
became more and more aggravated, the Hus party also derived advantage from the
fact that the archbishop had completely fallen out with the king on the
question of neutrality. Immediately after the issue of the decree of Kutuá Hora
the king strictly forbade his subjects, and particularly the clergy, to render
obedience to Pope Gregory XII. This prohibition was, indeed, obeyed by Hus and
his friends, but not by the archbishop, the prelates, and the bulk of the
clergy. Thus the Czech clergy were split into two camps—one under the
leadership of Hus and protected by the king, the other following the archbishop
in allegiance to Pope Gregory XII, and defying the king’s injunctions to
observe neutrality. The dissension between the two parties broke out publicly
in Lent 1409. The archbishop, instigated doubtless by the university debates in
January of that year, in the course of which Jerome of Prague had recommended a
study of the works of Wyclif, launched a sentence of excommunication against
Hus and several of his friends, and anathematised on that occasion not only the
religious teachings of Hus but also his philosophic realism. When those
excommunicated did not cease exercising their functions as priests, and in
particular continued to preach, the archbishop placed Prague and its
neighbourhood under interdict. Hus and his supporters, of course, took no heed
of this interdict, and the king himself sternly brought to account all persons
who complied with the archbishop’s interdict and thus manifested their
disregard of Wenceslas’ injunctions in the matter of neutrality. It was not
until after the General Council of Pisa, in June 1409, had deposed the two
existing Popes and elected a new pontiff who took the name of Alexander V, that
Archbishop Zbynek, some three months later, abandoned the deposed Gregory XII,
and, together with all the clergy of his diocese, gave in his allegiance to the
conciliar Pope.
Now that the cause of the dispute between king and archbishop
had disappeared, the position of the archbishop improved so greatly that he was
able to take more decisive and effective steps than hitherto against Hus. Urged
on by accusations brought by Hus’ enemies among the Prague priesthood, he began
to make difficulties for him in his preaching and other activities at the
Bethlehem Chapel. He secured in 1409 from the Pope a prohibition of all
preaching outside cathedral, collegiate, parish, and monastic churches, to none
of which categories, of course, the Bethlehem Chapel belonged, and further an order
to demand the surrender of all books of Wyclif in order that they might be
“removed from the sight of the faithful.” Making use of this authorisation, the
archbishop decided at the June synod in 1410 that all Wyclif’s books
surrendered to him should be burnt; he prohibited, on pain of severe penalties,
the teaching and defence of the errors of Wyclif, and forbade all preaching in
Prague outside churches of the four categories allowed in the Pope’s bull;
therefore the prohibition applied in particular to the Bethlehem Chapel.
Having no intention of submitting to this prohibition, to
comply with which would have meant the end of his efforts at reform, Hus,
together with several other members of the University of Prague, appealed to
the Pope, at that time the notorious John XXIII. The archbishop, however,
despite the protest of the university and the wishes of the king himself,
caused all Wyclif’s works that had been surrendered to his officials to be
burnt on 16 July 1410 in the courtyard of the archiepiscopal palace in a
bonfire which he lighted with his own hand. During this ceremony the Te Deum
was sung and bells tolled as if for the dead. Immediately afterwards he
launched the ban of excommunication against Hus and all those who had joined
him in appealing to the Pope. In the struggle that now broke out with new force
between the archbishop and the Hus party, the archbishop had, it is true, the
full support of the Holy See, but against him not only the people of Prague but
also King Wenceslas himself stood by Hus. The king even had the estates of the
archbishop and the prelates confiscated to provide compensation for those whose
books had been burnt. When the archbishop therefore again placed Prague under
interdict, the king began to persecute the clergy who, in obedience to the
archbishop’s orders, ceased to celebrate the Church services. Wenceslas’
energetic action finally compelled the archbishop to recede, and through the
king’s intervention a truce was brought about between the two parties in the summer
of 1411.
Soon afterwards, perhaps at the suggestion of the king, Hus
sent a petition to Pope John XXIII denying the charges made against him and
asking to be relieved of the duty of appearing in person before the Papal
Court, since his conflict with the archbishop had been completely settled. In
this letter, which shows of itself that at that time he had not ceased to
recognise the Pope as the supreme head of the Church, nor had denied in
principle his supreme power of decision in questions of religion, Hus also
solemnly declares his attitude to several of the fundamental articles of
Wyclif’s doctrine. Never, he says, had he taught that the substance of bread
remained in the elements after consecration, nor that a priest in a state of
mortal sin could not consecrate; never had he called upon secular lords to take
the property of the priests, to refuse to pay tithes, or to punish them with
the secular sword; nor, again, had he rejected indulgences or in any way
promulgated errors or heresy. Nor was it his fault, as was asserted by his
opponents, that the German masters at the university had departed from Prague.
Although Hus thus expressly disavows the main articles of
Wyclif’s teachings of which he had been accused, it would nevertheless seem
that even then he was already more affected by Wyclif’s heresies than he
admitted or perhaps was himself aware. Certainly his forbearance towards those
who obviously championed Wyclif’s teaching, his ostentatious talk in favour of
Wyclif and continued use of his works, not only put a welcome weapon into the
hands of his personal enemies but also confirmed in their opposition to him
those who were against him because they were honestly afraid of Wyclif’s
heresies. Thus neither the truce secured through the king between the
archbishop’s party and the party of Hus in 1411, nor the petition sent by Hus
to the Pope following the truce, nor even the death of Archbishop Zbynek in
September of the same year, brought to an end the struggles between Hus and the
power of the Church. Whereas, however, up to now Archbishop Zbynek of Prague
had represented this power, his place was henceforth taken by the Holy See
itself.
Though Hus, throughout the whole period of his conflict with
the archbishop, had never ceased to acknowledge the supreme power of the Pope,
and continued to manifest his readiness to submit to papal commands, it is
nevertheless possible at this very time to observe in him and his friends a
serious change in their views of the Papacy. The lamentable state of the Papacy
of that day, especially after the election of John XXIII had added to the two
existing Popes a third of very doubtful character, and still more a deeper
penetration into the teachings of Wyclif, undermined the faith of Hus and his
friends in the Pope. This was publicly manifested in the spring of 1412 when,
in accordance with a bull of John XXIII, there was proclaimed at Prague a
crusade against his opponent, King Ladislas of Naples, and ample indulgences
were granted to all who should personally join in the crusade or contribute
funds towards it. Those who proclaimed these benefits went about their mission
in such a way that their action was hardly distinguishable from an actual sale
of indulgences. It is not to be wondered at that this caused great indignation,
especially as in Bohemia voices had already been raised in opposition to
indulgences altogether. This traffic in indulgences moved Hus to open revolt
against the commands of the Pope. He preached and wrote against indulgences,
and at a public disputation at the university on 7 June, supported by his
friends, particularly by the eloquent Jerome of Prague, he produced reasons,
mainly taken from Wyclif’s writings, why it was improper for the faithful to
approve of the papal bull proclaiming a crusade against the King of Naples or
to give money for the spilling of Christian blood. On this occasion Hus adopted
the revolutionary principle that the faithful are not bound to obey papal
commands so far as they are in conflict with the law of Christ.
The opposition to indulgences had in the meantime so much
increased among the masses that various disturbances occurred, in the course of
which the vendors of indulgences, as well as the preachers who recommended them
to the people, were abused and held up to ridicule. Even the strict orders
given by the king and the city councillors, to the effect that none should
speak against the preachers or the papal bulls, failed to check this. One
Sunday, 10 July 1412, three youths, probably workmen, were arrested for this
offence in three of the principal churches of Prague and haled to the Old Town
Hall. In vain Hus begged the councillors not to punish the prisoners, since he
himself was the cause of the opposition to the indulgences. The very next day
they had the three youths beheaded. The people, however, favouring Hus’ aims,
refused to be intimidated. A great procession of masters, bachelors, and
students of the university, and other persons, singing hymns, accompanied the
bodies of the three young men to the Bethlehem Chapel, and there buried them as
martyrs.
While the excitement among the people inspired by Hus’
campaign against indulgences had increased in menacing fashion, the faculty of
theology at the university led by Stanislav of Znojmo and Stephen of Palec, who
had become the most determined opponents of the views and aims for which they
had themselves formerly fought with such fervour, and who had completely
separated from Hus, rose up against the reformer. Doctors of theology condemned
in a new pronouncement not only the 45 articles of Wyclif but six further heretical
articles—a judgment directed against Hus and his friends, and particularly
against their denial of indulgences. This action had the result that in the
king’s name there was issued, on 16 July, a strict prohibition of all these
articles, and all persons disobeying the prohibition were threatened with the
king’s displeasure and banishment from the realm. Rome, too, issued an
excommunication at this time against Hus and all who should have any relations
with him, and another bull ordered that Hus should be arrested and punished
under the Canon Law and that the Bethlehem Chapel should be razed to the
ground. When, in accordance with a bull of excommunication, service was
suspended in the autumn of 1412 in all churches throughout Prague, and the
priests were forbidden to baptise the children and to bury the dead, Hus, in
order to remove the cause of the interdict, left Prague for the country some
time in October 1412. He remained there until the summer of 1414, staying in
various places in the south-west of Bohemia and visiting Prague only for short
periods. During his sojourn in the country he devoted himself indefatigably to
preaching and to writing works in Latin and in Czech. Of his Czech works of
that period the most important are his great Exposition of Belief, the Ten
Commandments and the Lord’s Prayer, the sharply polemical On Simony,
and his excellent Postilla, or exposition of the lections from Scripture
on Sundays. Of his Latin works the outstanding one is De Ecclesia. In
composing these works Hus found a model and a fruitful source of ideas in the
writings of Wyclif, to whose views he was gradually succumbing more and more,
though he did not accept them without considerable changes more in keeping with
the general views then held in the Church.
King Wenceslas had, in the meantime, made several attempts to
bring about a reconciliation between Hus’ party and his opponents, but an
extraordinary synod of the clergy held with this purpose at the command of the
king early in 1413 only demonstrated the fact that there was an unbridgeable
gulf between the views of the two parties. When a new attempt by the king to
settle the differences between them by means of the findings of a special
commission failed because of the unyielding attitude of Hus’ opponents, who
declined to recognise him and his supporters as true Christians, the king
banished their leaders from the country, expelled them from the university, and
deprived them of their ecclesiastical dignities and emoluments. Among them were
Stanislav of Znojmo, who soon afterwards died, and Stephen of Palec, whom Hus
met again a little later at the Council of Constance. Whereas, in Bohemia, Hus’
party had at the beginning of 1413 scored a great success through the
intervention of the king, the opposing party’s views now again secured
recognition at Rome. Pope John XXIII issued a new bull condemning all the works
of Wyclif, ordering them to be burnt, strictly forbidding them to be read,
elucidated, used, or even their author’s name to be mentioned.
In this struggle over the very foundations of ecclesiastical
theory and practice a decisive change of situation was produced by the convocation
of a General Council at Constance for 1 November 1414. It came about chiefly
through Sigismund, the Hungarian king, who, having been elected King of the
Romans in 1410, made himself the defender of the Roman Church. In addition to
the renewal of Church unity and the general reform of morals, the Council
called at Constance was to occupy itself with the question of faith, that is,
to express its opinion on several doctrines declared to be errors or heresy. It
was clear that Wyclif’s teachings and the dispute waged round the person of Hus
would come up for consideration. Moreover, King Sigismund, who, as heir
apparent to the throne of Bohemia, his brother King Wenceslas being childless,
was anxious to see Bohemia cleansed of the disgrace of heresy, conceived the
idea of prompting Hus, who had hitherto refused to present himself before the
Court at Rome, to attempt his justification before the Council of Constance. In
the spring of 1414 he had negotiations to this end opened with Hus, promising
him not only a safe-conduct to Constance and a public hearing in the presence
of the Council, but also a free and safe return to his country should he not
wish to submit to the judgment of the Council. Rejecting the warnings of his
friends, Hus decided to accept Sigismund’s invitation. He doubtless cherished
the idea that he would be successful in defending himself before the Council on
the charge of heresy, but he was also determined to meet death, if need be, for
his convictions. Some time in August 1414 Hus informed Sigismund that he was
ready to proceed to the Council under the king’s safe-conduct, and he also made
this intention public. After having prepared his defence and the speeches which
he designed to make before the Council, and after securing various evidence
concerning his activities in the past, including the fact that he had never
been proved guilty of heresy, Hus set out for Constance at the beginning of
October, accompanied by the three Czech nobles who had been appointed for this
task by King Wenceslas (Wenceslas, Knight of Dubá, John, Knight of Chlum, and
Henry of Chlum) and several other Czechs. Travelling through Nuremberg, Hus
arrived at Constance on 3 November 1414.
During the first few days of his sojourn at Constance Hus met
with no humiliation. Even the ban against him and the prohibition to celebrate
divine service in the place where he was staying were temporarily suspended,
since they would have had unfavourable consequences for Constance itself. Hus
was also allowed to attend churches and to say the services in his abode. But
this changed shortly owing to the action of his opponents. These were in
particular the representatives of the Czech clergy hostile to Hus, Bishop John
of Litomysl and Michael, nicknamed “de Causis,” procurator of the Prague
Chapter at the Papal Court, as well as Stephen of Palec, who had come to
Constance on his own account. These compatriots of Hus endeavoured to persuade
the Council, by means of public declarations and formal accusations in
writing, of Hus’ heresy and of the danger threatening all the clergy from his
activities. They brought it about that on 28 November Hus was summoned to the
Pope’s palace, subjected to a hearing by the cardinals, and then thrust into
prison. He was imprisoned first in the house of the precentor of Constance, but
at the end of a week was thrown into a dark and dirty cell in the Dominican
convent on the shores of the Lake of Constance. There he soon became so ill
that his life was despaired of. In vain King Sigismund endeavoured to get him
released, for the king had guaranteed his personal safety by giving him a
safe-conduct. Unwilling to permit any restriction of its right to pass judgment
upon a heretic, the Council brusquely refused to admit itself bound by
Sigismund’s safe-conduct, and the king, allowing himself to be intimidated by
the threat that the Council would break up if he persisted in his request, gave
way and admitted the complete liberty of the Council in the trial of a heretic.
As soon as Hus had somewhat recovered, he was obliged to
answer the accusations brought against him. He was, in particular, required to
express himself in writing on the 45 articles of Wyclif, and the 42 articles
extracted by Stephen Palec from Hus’ own work De Ecclesia. In his answer
Hus rejected several of Wyclif’s articles most decidedly, on others he expressed
himself evasively, and with some he expressed agreement. Some of the articles
selected by Palec he showed were not correctly extracted from his work, while
others he acknowledged and endeavoured to prove their truth. At the same time
he never ceased to demand a hearing before the whole Council. This he obtained
only at the repeated request of the Czech nobles, and not until the beginning
of June 1415.
Meanwhile, after the flight of Pope John XXIII from
Constance, Hus had been transferred from the Dominican convent to the fortress
of Gottlieben on the Rhine, in the tower of which he suffered imprisonment more
than two months (April and May 1415), in fetters and inadequately supplied with
food and drink, so that he was soon again afflicted with various maladies. A
few days after the transfer of Hus to Gottlieben, his friend Jerome of Prague
appeared in Constance. He caused letters to be nailed to the city gates, to the
doors of the churches, and to the houses of the cardinals, asking King
Sigismund and the Council to grant him a safe-conduct to enable him to appear
before the Council and give a public answer to anyone who might desire to
accuse him of any error or heresy. In a few days he received an answer in the
form of a communication summoning him before the Council. Meanwhile, however,
Jerome, urged by Hus’ friends, had left Constance to return to Bohemia. On the
way he was arrested, was brought back to Constance at the end of May, and flung
into a dark cell in the municipal tower near the church and cemetery of St
Paul.
By the cruel imprisonment of Hus and Jerome the Council gave
very clear expression of the disfavour with which it regarded the two Czechs.
The Council also proclaimed at that time with great clarity its opinion of
Wyclif’s works. On the proposal of a commission appointed to conduct the dispute
centring round Hus and to examine the works of Wyclif, it confirmed at the
beginning of May the condemnation of them launched two years previously by Pope
John XXIII, and in addition expressly rejected several articles selected from
among them. All this boded ill for the public hearing of Hus before the
Council, to which the reformer had looked forward with so much hope. The trial
was appointed to begin on 5 June. A short time previous to this Hus was brought
from Gottlieben to Constance and imprisoned in the Franciscan convent, in the
refectory of which the Council held its sessions. His public hearing before the
Council took place in three sessions, on 5, 7, and 8 June, and was marked by
many dramatic scenes. Here, too, Hus very decidedly rejected several of Wyclif’s
articles (notably his teaching concerning the presence of the substance of
bread in the elements after consecration), denying that he had ever taught it,
but he admitted his agreement with other articles. He confessed that he did not
approve of the condemnation of all the well- known 45 articles of Wyclif, since
he could not regard some of them as heresy or error; he agreed, too, that he
had spoken with approbation of Wyclif, that he had appealed from the archbishop
to the Pope against the burning of Wyclif’s books, and that, when his
emissaries had failed to find a hearing at the Papal Court, he had finally
appealed to Christ. The trial before the Council showed further that on the
whole Hus accepted the teaching of St Augustine and Wyclif which regarded the
Church as the company of all those predestined to be saved, and the majority of
the consequences deduced therefrom by Wyclif against the then Church of Rome
and its institutions, especially against the papal power. Refusing to recant the
articles which had been falsely concocted against him, Hus expressed his
readiness to recant those which he had really professed, could he be convinced
by evidence from Holy Scripture that they were untrue. The Council, of course,
insisted on Hus recanting all the articles completely and unreservedly. This he
could not be persuaded to do, either by the arguments of various members of the
Council or by the persuasion of his friends, although it was clear that, if he
did not recant completely and without reserve, he would be condemned to death
as a confirmed heretic.
Before the Council delivered final judgment in the case of
Hus, it occupied itself with a question closely connected therewith. This was
the question of communion in both kinds (bread and wine), which, either shortly
before or soon after Hus’ departure from Prague, had begun to find favour with
his followers there. The author of this innovation, which in the subsequent
development of the Czech religious movement became of such pre-eminent importance,
was not Hus himself but his friend and right-hand man, Jakoubek of Stribro
(Jacobellus de Misa), who, from a study of the writings of Matthias of Janov
with his reasons for frequent communion, came to the conviction that laymen had
the same right as priests to communicate in both kinds. In this conclusion he
found agreement and effective support in two German masters, Nicholas and Peter
of Dresden, who had spent some years at Prague taking a prominent part in the
Czech religious struggles of the day on the side of Plus. Although Hus
apparently agreed with Jakoubek’s view from the very outset, he requested his
friend, previous to his own departure for Constance, to postpone the contest
over this subject. Afterwards, however, when disputes upon it arose in his
absence among his own followers, threatening to produce a split in their ranks,
Hus gave his approval to communion in both kinds in a special work written
shortly after his arrival at Constance. The Council, however, at its general
meeting on 15 June forbade lay communion in both kinds, and ordered that the
communion by laymen in one kind, introduced in the Church for good reasons in
place of the original communion in both kinds, was to be maintained as an
unalterable practice.
A few days later the Council decided that Hus’ Latin and
Czech works ought to be destroyed on the ground that they contained doctrinal
errors. In the meantime negotiations proceeded with Hus himself touching the
manner of the recantation which he was to make in accordance with the wishes of
the Council, but these proved in vain. A commission was sent to him in jail and
he was required to give a final answer. On 1 July Hus again declared in writing
that he was unable to recant all the articles which had been brought forward against
him, since several of them were based upon false witness; that as to the
articles selected from his own writings he was willing to recant everything
contained in them that was not true, but that he could not recant all, since he
did not wish to abuse truth. And when on 5 July the Czech nobles, Wenceslas of
Dubá and John of Chlum, interviewed him for the last time at King Sigismund’s
request in order to persuade him to recant, he repeated with tears that he
could only do so if convinced by better and more powerful reasons taken from
Holy Writ.
Perceiving that Hus was not to be moved to make the
recantation demanded of him, the Council proceeded to pass judgment upon him.
This was delivered in solemn assembly of the Council held on 6 July in the
cathedral of Constance, King Sigismund himself presiding. First of all there
were condemned 260 heretical passages extracted from Wyclif’s works, then there
was read in Hus’ presence a document describing the whole case against him with
the accusations, which he was no longer permitted to answer, together with
thirty passages taken from his own works, and finally sentence was delivered
upon the works of Hus and upon his person. His writings were condemned to be
burnt, and he himself as a manifest heretic who taught false, demoralising,
and revolutionary doctrines, who had led many astray, had slandered the honour
and power of the Apostolic See and the Church, and obstinately persevered in
his errors, was condemned to be degraded from the priesthood and to be punished
by the secular powers. The sentence was at once carried out. Hus was unfrocked
in the usual ceremony and as a heretic handed over to the King of the Romans.
By order of King Sigismund he was at once led away from the town to the place
of execution and placed on the pyre that had been prepared. Hus, on being
appealed to for the last time to save himself, refused to recant, the fire was
lighted, and in a short time, chanting a hymn, he breathed his last.
Less than a year after the death of Hus a like fate overtook
his friend, Jerome of Prague. Jerome, it is true, soon after the burning of
Hus, was moved by the fear of death and a yearning for liberty to recant
publicly before the Council the errors of Wyclif and Hus, to acknowledge the
condemnation of Hus as just, and to submit himself in all things to the
judgment of the Council (September 1415). Since, however, he was still kept in
prison and subjected to a new examination, he demanded a public hearing before
the Council, and having obtained it (May 1416) he not only championed the
condemned doctrines of Wyclif and Hus, but declared that his greatest sin had
been denial of that good and holy man and his teachings. By this he sealed his
own fate. On 30 May 1416 he was condemned by the Council and handed over to
the secular arm to be burnt at the stake. On the spot where a year previously
Hus had perished, Jerome of Prague met death with courage, dignity, and pious
devotion.
The terrible death which Hus had suffered for his convictions
has given him the martyr’s halo, won him the universal respect of the whole
civilised world, and placed him in the ranks of the greatest and noblest
figures of history. But the significance of his death grows when one considers
for what it was he suffered. According to a view widely accepted, the real
cause of Hus’ death was his fight against the evils in the Church and the
immorality of the priests, which brought upon him the hostility of the clergy
at home and also influenced the mind of the Council against him. The
condemnation of Hus would thus become the work of petty, one might almost say
personal, revenge on the part of the priesthood smarting under his accusations.
This view is certainly not correct. It is doubtless true that many of Hus’
opponents were against him for some such mean reasons, but the actual causes of
the struggle between Hus and his main opponents, especially between him and the
Council, certainly lay elsewhere and much deeper.
It was above all a question of several grave differences in
belief. In this connexion Hus was mainly accused of championing and proclaiming
the heretical doctrine of Wyclif touching the presence of the substance of
bread in the elements after consecration (consubstantiatio). This accusation,
as we know, Hus very emphatically and with entire truth denied, yet from the
Council’s point of view he could not be entirely freed from guilt, in that he
had not opposed this doctrine with sufficient resolution when it spread among
his supporters. Another of Wyclif’s doctrines which was heretical in the eyes
of the Council Hus himself admitted that he accepted. This was the doctrine,
derived from St Augustine, that the Church is composed of all persons
predestined to salvation. Hus did not accept all the extreme consequences of
Wyclif’s doctrine; in particular he did not agree with the view that a priest
in a state of sin is unable to minister the sacrament, thus being as it were
deprived of his office; but he accepted fully the substantial part of Wyclif’s
doctrine. Although doctrine concerning the Church and the Papacy and other
questions connected therewith had not up to that time been laid down as a
definite article of faith, there was no doubt that what Hus, following Wyclif,
believed and taught regarding this was in absolute conflict with the entire
spirit of the universal Catholic standpoint, and could only be regarded as
heresy by those who upheld the Catholic conception.
Hus’ attitude also to the prevailing Church order could not
secure him any mercy from the Council. In his sharpest criticism and rejection
of that order Hus did not, it is true, go as far as Wyclif, who rejected
practically all the rules of the Church in so far as they were not based on
Scripture or were not practised by the primitive Church; but he none the less
fiercely attacked many customs and rules established by centuries of
development, without which the Church could not be imagined even by those who
recognised the need of altering the system of administration which had
developed in the course of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, who
acknowledged the need of breaking the excessive power of the Pope over the
individual branches of the Church, and of putting an end to the financial
exploitation of these branches by the Papacy. Great indignation was aroused,
for example, at the Council by Hus’ views against ecclesiastical tithes, and
his condemnation of the originators of the secular power of the Church. Hus, it
is true, did not reject as decidedly as had Wyclif the right of the Church and
priests to possess secular wealth, nor did he directly declare that secular
lords should have the right to deprive unworthy priests of their property, but
from various utterances of his own and from the fact that several of his
friends and adherents openly proclaimed such views, it may be assumed that
they were not altogether alien to him.
If some of the views actually proclaimed by Hus, or at least
attributed to him, aroused the Council against him, he was perhaps even more
damaged in its eyes by the fact that he declined to recant them even when they
had been condemned by the Council, and that he refused to submit simply to the
decision of the Council, but demanded that he should be shown the falsity of
these opinions by the evidence of Holy Scripture. By opposing the Council,
which just at that moment had been given supreme power of decision in all
ecclesiastical questions and the right to dictate to the faithful what they
were to believe, Hus assumed for himself and thus for every believer the right
to be his own judge in matters of faith. Although he himself placed limits to
the freedom of this right of judgment, desiring that Holy Writ should be
acknowledged as a law from which there must be no departure in anything soever,
his attitude, nevertheless, was in absolute conflict with that principle of
one sole supreme authority in matters of faith, upon which the Roman Church had
been erected.
If then the Council, from its own point of view, had grave
cause for condemning Hus, it cannot be doubted that exactly therein lies the
historical significance of the Czech reformer. From the opinions for which Hus
was condemned by the Council there was born a great movement rich in ideas and
imposing in its outward manifestations, a movement rightly called the Hussite
movement after Hus himself, and a movement which gives Czech and Bohemian
history its characteristic feature and a worldwide significance. The ideas
underlying the movement were, it is true, not entirely original, having for the
most part been taken over from Wyclif, but it was Hus and the movement which he
enkindled in Bohemia that first made them an important factor in the spiritual
evolution of mankind, such a factor as, without Hus and the Hussite movement,
they would certainly never have become. The very fact that, in championing
these ideas, Hus not only himself undertook an heroic struggle with the supreme
ecclesiastical powers on behalf of the liberty of the individual conscience,
but also that by his life and death he was able to impel his nation to a grand
and successful struggle for that right, contributed undoubtedly very
substantially to liberating the human mind from the heavy fetters laid upon it
by the authority of the medieval Church.
Over and above this Hus rendered special services to his own
nation. His activities as a Czech author have no small significance for the
history of the Czech language and literature. Through his Czech writings Hus
put into practice new principles of Czech composition, which meant a
considerable simplification and therefore an improvement of Czech orthography.
Also from the point of view of the language itself his writings introduced an
important innovation. They were not composed in the obsolete tongue, already
remote from the living language spoken by the masses, that heavy and hard style
that we meet with in the works of the best Czech authors previous to Hus, but
in a speech such as was actually spoken in his own environment at Prague, a
speech light and supple but at the same time pure and avoiding the use of unnecessary
foreign expressions. Thus Hus not only contributed substantially by his Czech
writings to the formation of a Czech literary tongue, but he also, through his
whole activity as an author, laid the foundations of the subsequent rich
development of Czech religious literature. Religious questions had been dealt
with in Bohemia before Hus in both Latin and Czech, but these older religious
writings of Czech origin, not excluding the Czech works of Thomas of Stitny or
the great Latin work of Matthias of Janov, never attained much circulation and
could thus have but small effect. It was only with Hus that there began the
systematic development of Czech religious literature (to a considerable extent
composed in Latin), which for a long time was the most significant element in
Czech literature generally and ranks among the most important intellectual
productions of the Czech nation as a whole.
But over and above Hus’ services to Czech orthography,
language, and literature, his importance for his nation appears still more in
his securing for it a place among those peoples who have contributed a share to
the general progress of humanity, in his uplifting in no mean measure the
national conscience and giving it a new content. The great struggle which Hus
himself, and the Czech nation in his spirit, carried on for the reform of the
Church and the triumph of the pure law of God was, in the case of the Czech
Hussites, from the very outset a fight in defence of national honour and
dignity against the reproach of heresy, and soon became in the eyes of the
nation the fulfilment of an exalted task for which the Czech nation had been
chosen by God. This pious conviction was for a long period a source of noble
self-consciousness for the Czechs, giving them an impregnable strength against
the hugely superior material forces of their enemies, and later representing a
source of consolation for them in their sufferings. To this very day Hus is a
great national hero alike for his services to Czech language and literature and
for all that he did to cause his name and that of his nation to be inscribed in
the annals of the world’s history.
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