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Heresy
I.
Connotation and Definition
II. Distinctions
III. Degrees of heresy
IV. Gravity of the sin of heresy
V. Origin, spread, and persistence of heresy
VI. Christ, the Apostles, and the Fathers on
heresy
VII. Vindication of their teaching
VIII. Church legislation on heresy: ancient,
medieval, present-day legislation
IX. Its principles
X. Ecclesiastical jurisdiction over heretics
XI. Reception of converts
XII. Role of heresy in history
XIII. Intolerance and cruelty
I.
CONNOTATION AND DEFINITION
The term
heresy connotes, etymologically, both a choice and the thing chosen,
the meaning being, however, narrowed to the selection of religious
or political doctrines, adhesion to parties in Church or State.
Josephus
applies the name (airesis) to the three religious sects
prevalent in Judea since the Machabean period: the Sadducees, the
Pharisees, the
Essenes (Bel. Jud., II, viii, 1; Ant., XIII, v, 9). St. Paul is
described to the Roman governor Felix as the leader of the heresy (aireseos)
of the Nazarenes (Acts, xxiv, 5); the Jews in Rome say to the same
Apostle: "Concerning this sect [airesoeos], we know that it
is everywhere contradicted" (Acts, xxviii, 22).
St. Justin
(Dial., xviii, 108) uses airesis in the same sense. St. Peter
(II, ii, 1) applies the term to
Christian
sects: "There shall be among you lying teachers who shall bring in
sects of perdition [aireseis apoleias]". In later Greek,
philosophers' schools, as well as religious sects, are "heresies".
St. Thomas
(II-II:11:1) defines heresy: "a species of infidelity in men who,
having professed the faith of Christ, corrupt its dogmas". "The
right Christian
faith consists in giving one's voluntary assent to Christ in all
that truly belongs to His teaching. There are,therefore,two ways of
deviating from
Christianity: the one by refusing to believe in Christ Himself,
which is the way of infidelity, common to Pagans and Jews; the other
by restricting belief to certain points of
Christ's
doctrine selected and fashioned at pleasure, which is the way of
heretics. The subject-matter of both faith and heresy is, therefore,
the deposit of the faith, that is, the sum total of truths revealed
in Scripture and Tradition as proposed to our belief by the Church.
The believer accepts the whole deposit as proposed by the Church;
the heretic accepts only such parts of it as commend themselves to
his own approval. The heretical tenets may be ignorance of the true
creed, erroneous judgment, imperfect apprehension and comprehension
of dogmas: in none of these does the will play an appreciable part,
wherefore one of the necessary conditions of sinfulness--free
choice--is wanting and such heresy is merely objective, or
material. On the other hand the will may freely incline the
intellect to adhere to tenets declared false by the Divine teaching
authority of the Church. The impelling motives are many:
intellectual pride or exaggerated reliance on one's own insight; the
illusions of religious zeal; the allurements of political or
ecclesiastical power; the ties of material interests and personal
status; and perhaps others more dishonourable. Heresy thus willed is
imputable to the subject and carries with it a varying degree of
guilt; it is called formal, because to the material error it
adds the informative element of "freely willed".
Pertinacity,
that is, obstinate adhesion to a particular tenet is required to
make heresy formal. For as long as one remains willing to
submit to the Church's decision he remains a
Catholic
Christian
at heart and his wrong beliefs are only transient errors and
fleeting opinions. Considering that the human intellect can assent
only to truth, real or apparent, studied pertinacity, as distinct
from wanton opposition, supposes a firm subjective conviction which
may be sufficient to inform the conscience and create "good faith".
Such firm convictions result either from circumstances over which
the heretic has no control or from intellectual delinquencies in
themselves more or less voluntary and imputable. A man born and
nurtured in heretical surroundings may live and die without ever
having a doubt as to the truth of his creed. On the other hand a
born Catholic may allow himself to drift into whirls of
anti-Catholic thought from which no doctrinal authority can rescue
him, and where his mind becomes incrusted with convictions, or
considerations sufficiently powerful to overlay his Catholic
conscience. It is not for man, but for Him who searcheth the reins
and heart, to sit in judgment on the guilt which attaches to an
heretical conscience.
II.
DISTINCTIONS
Heresy
differs from
apostasy. The apostate a fide abandons wholly the faith
of Christ either by embracing Judaism,
Islamism,
Paganism, or simply by falling into naturalism and complete neglect
of religion; the heretic always retains faith in Christ. Heresy also
differs from schism. Schismatics, says St. Thomas, in the strict
sense, are they who of their own will and intention separate
themselves from the unity of the Church. The unity of the Church
consists in the connection of its members with each other and of all
the members with the head. Now this head is Christ whose
representative in the Church is the supreme pontiff. And therefore
the name of schismatics is given to those who will not submit to the
supreme pontiff nor communicate with the members of the Church
subject to him. Since the definition of
Papal
Infallibility, schism usually implies the heresy of denying this
dogma. Heresy is opposed to faith; schism to charity; so that,
although all heretics are schismatics because loss of faith involves
separation from the Church, not all schismatics are necessarily
heretics, since a man may, from anger, pride, ambition, or the like,
sever himself from the communion of the Church and yet believe all
the Church proposes for our belief (II-II, Q. xxix, a. 1). Such a
one, however, would be more properly called rebellious than
heretical.
III.
DEGREES OF HERESY
Both matter
and form of heresy admit of degrees which find expression in the
following technical formula of theology and canon law. Pertinacious
adhesion to a doctrine contradictory to a point of faith clearly
defined by the Church is heresy pure and simple, heresy in the first
degree. But if the doctrine in question has not been expressly
"defined" or is not clearly proposed as an article of faith in the
ordinary, authorized teaching of the Church, an opinion opposed to
it is styled sententia haeresi proxima, that is, an opinion
approaching heresy. Next, a doctrinal proposition, without directly
contradicting a received dogma, may yet involve logical consequences
at variance with revealed truth. Such a proposition is not
heretical, it is a propositio theologice erronea, that is,
erroneous in theology. Further, the opposition to an article of
faith may not be strictly demonstrable, but only reach a certain
degree of probability. In that case the doctrine is termed
sententia de haeresi suspecta, haeresim sapiens; that is, an
opinion suspected, or savouring, of heresy (see CENSURES,
THEOLOGICAL).
IV.
GRAVITY OF THE SIN OF HERESY
Heresy is a
sin because
of its nature it is destructive of the virtue of
Christian
faith. Its malice is to be measured therefore by the excellence of
the good gift of which it deprives the soul. Now faith is the most
precious possession of man, the root of his supernatural life, the
pledge of his eternal salvation. Privation of faith is therefore the
greatest evil, and deliberate rejection of faith is the greatest
sin. St. Thomas (II-II, Q. x, a. 3) arrives at the same conclusion
thus: "All sin is an aversion from
God. A sin,
therefore, is the greater the more it separates man from
God. But
infidelity does this more than any other sin, for the infidel
(unbeliever) is without the true knowledge of
God: his
false knowledge does not bring him help, for what he opines is not
God:
manifestly, then, the sin of unbelief ( infidelitas ) is the
greatest sin in the whole range of perversity." And he adds:
"Although the Gentiles err in more things than the Jews, and
although the Jews are farther removed from true faith than heretics,
yet the unbelief of the Jews is a more grievous sin than that of the
Gentiles, because they corrupt the Gospel itself after having
adopted and professed the same. . . . It is a more serious sin not
to perform what one has promised than not to perform what one has
not promised." It cannot be pleaded in attenuation of the guilt of
heresy that heretics do not deny the faith which to them appears
necessary to salvation, but only such articles as they consider not
to belong to the original deposit. In answer it suffices to remark
that two of the most evident truths of the depositum fidei
are the unity of the Church and the institution of a teaching
authority to maintain that unity. That unity exists in the Catholic
Church, and is preserved by the function of her teaching body: these
are two facts which anyone can verify for himself. In the
constitution of the Church there is no room for private judgment
sorting essentials from non-essentials: any such selection disturbs
the unity, and challenges the Divine authority, of the Church; it
strikes at the very source of faith. The guilt of heresy is measured
not so much by its subject-matter as by its formal principle, which
is the same in all heresies: revolt against a Divinely constituted
authority.
V. ORIGIN,
SPREAD, AND PERSISTENCE OF HERESY
(a) Origin
of Heresy
The origin,
the spread, and the persistence of heresy are due to different
causes and influenced by many external circumstances. The undoing of
faith infused and fostered by
God Himself
is possible on account of the human element in it, namely man's free
will. The will determines the act of faith freely because its moral
dispositions move it to obey
God, whilst
the non-cogency of the motives of credibility allows it to withhold
its consent and leaves room for doubt and even denial. The
non-cogency of the motives of credibility may arise from three
causes: the obscurity of the Divine testimony ( inevidentia
attestantis ); the obscurity of the contents of Revelation; the
opposition between the obligations imposed on us by faith and the
evil inclinations of our corrupt nature. To find out how a man's
free will is led to withdraw from the faith once professed, the best
way is observation of historical cases.
Pius X,
scrutinizing the causes of
Modernism,
says: "The proximate cause is, without any doubt, an error of the
mind. The remoter causes are two: curiosity and pride. Curiosity,
unless wisely held in bounds, is of itself sufficient to account for
all errors. . . . But far more effective in obscuring the mind and
leading it into error is pride, which has, as it were, its home in
Modernist
doctrines. Through pride the
Modernists
overestimate themselves. . . . We are not like other men . . . they
reject all submission to authority . . . they pose as reformers. If
from moral causes we pass to the intellectual, the first and most
powerful is ignorance . . . . They extol modern philosophy . . . .
completely ignoring the philosophy of the Schools and thus depriving
themselves of the means of clearing away the confusion of their
ideas and of meeting sophisms. Their system, replete with so many
errors, had its origin in the wedding of false philosophy with
faith" (Encycl. "Pascendi", 8 September, 1907).
So far the
pope. If now we turn to the
Modernist
leaders for an account of their defections, we find none attributing
it to pride or arrogance, but they are almost unanimous in allowing
that curiosity--the desire to know how the old faith stands in
relation to the new science--has been the motive power behind them.
In the last instance, they appeal to the sacred voice of their
individual conscience which forbids them outwardly to profess what
inwardly they honestly hold to be untrue. Loisy, to whose case the
Decree "Lamentabili" applies, tells his readers that he was brought
to his present position "by his studies chiefly devoted to the
history of the Bible, of
Christian
origins and of comparative religion". Tyrrell says in self-defence:
"It is the irresistible facts concerning the origin and composition
of the Old and New Testaments; concerning the origin of the
Christian
Church, of its hierarchy, its institutions, its dogmas;
concerning the gradual development of the papacy; concerning the
history of religion in general--that create a difficulty against
which the synthesis of scholastic theology must be and is already
shattered to pieces." "I am able to put my finger on the exact point
or moment in my experience from which my 'immanentism' took its
rise. In his 'Rules for the discernment of Spirits' . . . Ignatius
of Loyola says . . . etc." It is psychologically interesting to note
the turning-point or rather the breaking-point of faith in the
autobiographies of seceders from the Church. A study of the personal
narratives in "Roads to Rome" and "Roads from Rome" leaves one with
the impression that the heart of man is a sanctuary impenetrable to
all but to God
and, in a certain measure, to its owner. It is, therefore, advisable
to leave individuals to themselves and to study the spread of
heresy, or the origin of heretical societies.
(b) Spread
of Heresy
The growth of
heresy, like the growth of plants, depends on surrounding
influences, even more than on its vital force. Philosophies,
religious ideals and aspirations, social and economic conditions,
are brought into contact with revealed truth, and from the impact
result both new affirmations and new negations of the traditional
doctrine. The first requisite for success is a forceful man, not
necessarily of great intellect and learning, but of strong will and
daring action. Such were the men who in all ages have given their
names to new sects. The second requisite is accommodation of the new
doctrine to the contemporary mentality, to social and political
conditions. The last, but by no means the least, is the support of
secular rulers. A strong man in touch with his time, and supported
by material force, may deform the existing religion and build up a
new heretical sect.
Modernism
fails to combine into a body separate from the Church because it
lacks an acknowledged leader, because it appeals to only a small
minority of contemporary minds, namely, to a small number who are
dissatisfied with the Church as she now is, and because no secular
power lends it support. For the same reason, and proportionately, a
thousand small sects have failed, whose names still encumber the
pages of church history, but whose tenets interest only a few
students, and whose adherents are nowhere. Such were, in the
Apostolic Age, the
Judeo-Christians, Judeo-Gnostics, Nicolaites, Docetae,
Cerinthians,
Ebionites,
Nazarenes, followed, in the next two centuries, by a variety of
Syrian and Alexandrian
Gnostics,
by Ophites, Marcionites, Encratites, Montanists, Manichaeans, and
others. All the early Eastern sects fed on the fanciful speculations
so dear to the Eastern mind, but, lacking the support of temporal
power, they disappeared under the
anathemas
of the guardians of the depositum fidei.
Arianism is
the first heresy that gained a strong footing in the Church and
seriously endangered its very nature and existence. Arius appeared
on the scene when theologians were endeavouring to harmonize the
apparently contradictory doctrines of the unity of
God and the
Divinity of Christ. Instead of unravelling the knot, he simply cut
it by bluntly asserting that Christ was not
God like
the Father, but a creature made in time. The simplicity of the
solution, the ostentatious zeal of Arius for the defence of the
"one God",
his mode of life, his learning and dialectic ability won many to his
side. "In particular he was supported by the famous
Eusebius of
Nicomedia who had great influence on the Emperor Constantine. He
had friends among the other bishops of Asia and even among the
bishops, priests, and nuns of the Alexandrian province. He gained
the favour of Constantia, the emperor's sister, and he disseminated
his doctrine among the people by means of his notorious book which
he called thaleia or 'Entertainment' and by songs adapted for
sailors, millers, and travellers." (Addis and Arnold, "A Catholic
Dictionary", 7th ed., 1905, 54.) The Council of Nicaea
anathematized
the heresiarch, but its
anathemas,
like all the efforts of the Catholic bishops, were nullified by
interference of the civil power. Constantine and his sister
protected Arius and the
Arians, and
the next emperor, Constantius, assured the triumph of the heresy:
the Catholics were reduced to silence by dire persecution. At once
an internecine conflict began within the
Arian pale,
for heresy, lacking the internal cohesive element of authority, can
only be held together by coercion either from friend or foe. Sects
sprang up rapidly: they are known as Eunomians, Anomoeans,
Exucontians,
Semi-Arians, Acacians. The Emperor Valens (364-378) lent his
powerful support to the
Arians, and
the peace of the Church was only secured when the orthodox Emperor
Theodosius reversed the policy of his predecessors and sided with
Rome. Within the boundaries of the Roman empire the faith of Nicaea,
enforced again by the General Council of Constantinople (381),
prevailed, but
Arianism held its own for over two hundred years longer wherever
the Arian
Goths held sway: in Thrace, Italy, Africa, Spain, Gaul. The
conversion of King Recared of Spain, who began to reign in 586,
marked the end of
Arianism in
his dominions, and the triumph of the Catholic Franks sealed the
doom of
Arianism everywhere.
Pelagianism,
not being backed by political power, was without much difficulty
removed from the Church.
Eutychianism,
Nestorianism,
and other Christological heresies which followed one upon another as
the link, of a chain, flourished only so long and so far as the
temporal power of Byzantine and Persian rulers gave them
countenance. Internal dissension, stagnation, and decay became their
fate when left to themselves.
Passing over
the great
schism that rent East from West, and the many smaller heresies
which sprang up in the
Middle Ages
without leaving a deep impression on the Church, we arrive at the
modern sects which date from
Luther and
go by the collective name of
Protestantism.
The three elements of success possessed by
Arianism
reappear in
Lutheranism and cause these two great religious upheavals to
move on almost parallel lines.
Luther was
eminently a man of his people: the rough-hewn, but, withal sterling,
qualities of the Saxon peasant lived forth under his religious habit
and doctor's gown; his winning voice, his piety, his learning raised
him above his fellows yet did not estrange him from the people: his
conviviality, the crudities in his conversation and preaching, his
many human weaknesses only increased his popularity. When the
Dominican John Tetzel began to preach in Germany the
indulgences
proclaimed by
Pope Leo X for those who contributed to the completion of St.
Peter's Basilica in Rome, opposition arose on the part of the people
and of both civil and ecclesiastical authorities.
Luther set
the match to the fuel of widespread discontent. He at once gained a
number of adherents powerful both in Church and State; the Bishop of
Würzburg recommended him to the protection of the Elector Frederick
of Saxony. In all probability
Luther
started on his crusade with the laudable intention of reforming
undoubted abuses. But his unexpected success, his impetuous temper,
perhaps some ambition, soon carried him beyond all bounds set by the
Church. By 1521, that is within four years from his attack on abuse
of indulgences,
he had propagated a new doctrine; the Bible was the only source of
faith; human nature was wholly corrupted by original sin, man was
not free, God
was responsible for all human actions good and bad; faith alone
saved; the
Christian priesthood was not confined to the hierarchy but
included all the faithful. The masses of the people were not slow in
drawing from these doctrines the practical conclusion that sin was
sin no longer, was, in fact, equal to a good work.
With his
appeal to the lower instincts of human nature went an equally strong
appeal to the spirit of nationality and greed. He endeavored to set
the German emperor against the Roman pope and generally the Teuton
against the Latin; he invited the secular princes to confiscate the
property of the Church. His voice was heard only too well. For the
next 130 years the history of the German people is a record of
religious strife, moral degradation, artistic retrogression,
industrial breakdown; of civil wars, pillage, devastation, and
general ruin. The Peace of 1648 established the principle: Cujus
regio illius et religio; the lord of the land shall be also lord
of religion. And accordingly territorial limits became religious
limits within which the inhabitant had to profess and practise the
faith imposed on him by the ruler. It is worthy of remark that the
geographical frontier fixed by the politicians of 1648 is still the
dividing line between Catholicism and
Protestantism
in Germany. The English Reformation, more than any other, was the
work of crafty politicians. The soil had been prepared for it by the
Lollards or Wycliffites, who at the beginning of the sixteenth
century were still numerous in the towns. No English
Luther
arose, but the unholy work was thoroughly done by kings and
parliaments, by means of a series of penal laws unequalled in
severity.
(c)
Persistence of Heresy
We have seen
how heresy originates and how it spreads; we must now answer the
question why it persists, or why so many persevere in heresy. Once
heresy is in possession, it tightens its grip by the thousand subtle
and often unconscious influences which mould a man's life. A child
is born in heretical surroundings: before it is able to think for
itself its mind has been filled and fashioned by home, school, and
church teachings, the authority of which it never doubted. When, at
a riper age, doubts arise, the truth of Catholicism is seldom
apprehended as it is. Innate prejudices, educational bias,
historical distortions stand in the way and frequently make approach
impossible. The state of conscience technically termed bona fides,
good faith, is thus produced. It implies inculpable belief in error,
a mistake morally unavoidable and therefore always excusable,
sometimes even laudable. In the absence of good faith worldly
interests often bar the way from heresy to truth. When a government,
for instance, reserves its favours and functions for adherents of
the state religion, the army of civil servants becomes a more
powerful body of missionaries than the ordained ministers. Prussia,
France, and Russia are cases in point.
VI.
CHRIST, THE APOSTLES, AND THE FATHERS ON HERESY
Heresy, in
the sense of falling away from the Faith, became possible only after
the Faith had been
promulgated
by Christ. Its advent is clearly foretold, Matt., xxiv, 11, 23-26: "
. . . many false prophets shall rise. and shall seduce many. . . .
Then if any man shall say to you: Lo here is Christ, or there, do
not believe him. For there shall rise false Christs and false
prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders, insomuch as to
deceive (if possible) even the elect. Behold I have told it to you,
beforehand. If therefore they shall say to you: Behold he is in the
desert, go ye not out: Behold he is in the closets, believe
it not. "Christ also indicated the marks by which to know the false
prophets: "Who is not with me is against me" (Luke, xi, 23); "and if
he will not hear the Church let him be to thee as the heathen and
the publican" (Matt., xviii, 17); "he that believeth not shall be
condemned" (Mark, xvi, 16). The Apostles acted upon their Master's
directions. All the weight of their own Divine faith and mission is
brought to bear upon innovators. "If any one", says St. Paul,
"preach to you a gospel, besides that you have received, let him be
anathema"
(Gal., i, 9). To St. John the heretic is a seducer, an
antichrist,
a man who dissolves Christ (I John, iv, 3; II John, 7); "receive him
not into the house nor say to him,
God speed
you" (II John, 10). St. Peter, true to his office and to his
impetuous nature, assails them as with a two-edged sword: " . . .
lying teachers who shall bring in sects of perdition, and deny the
Lord who bought them: bringing upon themselves swift destruction . .
. These are fountains without water, and clouds tossed with
whirlwinds, to whom the mist of darkness is reserved" (II Pet., ii,
1, 17). St. Jude speaks in a similar strain throughout his whole
epistle. St. Paul admonishes the disturbers of the unity of faith at
Corinth that "the weapons of our warfare . . . are mighty to
God unto
the pulling down of fortifications, destroying counsels, and every
height that exalteth itself against the knowledge of
God . . .
and having in readiness to revenge all disobedience" (II Cor., x, 4,
5, 6).
What Paul did
at Corinth he enjoins to be done by every bishop in his own church.
Thus Timothy is instructed to "war in them a good warfare, having
faith and a good conscience, which some rejecting have made
shipwreck concerning the faith. Of whom is Hymeneus and Alexander,
whom I have delivered up to
Satan, that
they may learn not to blaspheme" (I Tim., i, 18-20). He exhorts the
ancients of the Church at Ephesus to "take heed to yourselves, and
to the whole flock, wherein the Holy Ghost hath placed you bishops,
to rule the
Church of God, . . . I know that, after my departure, ravening
wolves will enter in among you, not sparing the flock . . .
Therefore watch, . . ." (Acts, xx. 28, 29, :31). "Beware of dogs",
he writes to the Philippians (iii, 2), the dogs being the same false
teachers as the "ravening wolves". The Fathers show no more leniency
to perverters of the faith. A
Protestant
writer thus sketches their teaching (Schaff-Herzog, s. v. Heresy): "Polycarp
regarded Marcion as the first-born of the
Devil.
Ignatius sees in heretics poisonous plants, or animals in human
form. Justin
and Tertullian
condemn their errors as inspirations of the Evil One; Theophilus
compares them to barren and rocky islands on which ships are
wrecked; and Origen says, that as pirates place lights on cliffs to
allure and destroy vessels in quest of refuge, so the Prince of this
world lights the fires of false knowledge in order to destroy men.
[Jerome calls the congregations of the heretics synagogues of
Satan (Ep.
123), and says their communion is to be avoided like that of vipers
and scorpions (Ep. 130).]" These primitive views on heresy have been
faithfully transmitted and acted on by the Church in subsequent
ages. There is no break in the tradition from St. Peter to
Pius X.
VII.
VINDICATION OF THEIR TEACHING
The first law
of life, be it the life of plant or animal, of man or of a society
of men, is self-preservation. Neglect of self-preservation leads to
ruin and destruction. But the life of a religious society, the
tissue that binds its members into one body and animates them with
one soul, is the symbol of faith, the creed or confession adhered to
as a condition sine qua non of membership. To undo the creed
is to undo the Church. The integrity of the rule of faith is more
essential to the cohesion of a religious society than the strict
practice of its moral precepts. For faith supplies the means of
mending moral delinquencies as one of its ordinary functions,
whereas the loss of faith, cutting at the root of spiritual life, is
usually fatal to the soul. In fact the long list of heresiarchs
contains the name of only one who came to resipiscence: Berengarius.
The jealousy with which the Church guards and defends her deposit of
faith is therefore identical with the instinctive duty of
self-preservation and the desire to live. This instinct is by no
means peculiar to the Catholic Church; being natural it is
universal. All sects, denominations, confessions, schools of
thought, and associations of any kind have a more or less
comprehensive set of tenets on the acceptance of which membership
depends. In the Catholic Church this natural law has received the
sanction of Divine
promulgation,
as appears from the teaching of Christ and the Apostles quoted
above. Freedom of thought extending to the essential beliefs of a
Church is in itself a contradiction; for, by accepting membership,
the members accept the essential beliefs and renounce their freedom
of thought so far as these are concerned.
But what
authority is to lay down the law as to what is or is not essential?
It is certainly not the authority of individuals. By entering a
society, whichever it be, the individual gives up part of his
individuality to be merged into the community. And that part is
precisely his private judgment on the essentials: if he resumes his
liberty he ipso facto separates himself from his church. The
decision, therefore, rests with the constitutional authority of the
society--in the Church with the hierarchy acting as teacher and
guardian of the faith. Nor can it be said that this principle unduly
curtails the play of human reason. That it does curtail its play is
a fact, but a fact grounded in natural and Divine law, as shown
above. That it does not curtail reason unduly is evidenced by this
other fact: that the deposit of faith (1) is itself an inexhaustible
object of intellectual effort of the noblest kind, lifting human
reason above its natural sphere, enlarging and deepening its
outlook, soliciting its finest faculties; (2) that, side by side
with the deposit, but logically connected with it, there is a
multitude of doubtful points of which discussion is free within the
wide bounds of charity--"in necessariis unitas, in dubiis libertas,
in omnibus charitas." The substitution of private judgment for the
teaching magisterium has been the dissolvent of all sects who
have adopted it. Only those sects exhibit a certain consistency in
which private judgment is a dead letter and the teaching is carried
on according to confessions and catechisms by a trained clergy.
VIII.
CHURCH LEGISLATION ON HERESY
Heresy, being
a deadly poison generated within the organism of the Church, must be
ejected if she is to live and perform her task of continuing
Christ's
work of salvation. Her Founder, who foretold the disease, also
provided the remedy: He endowed her teaching with
infallibility
(see CHURCH). The office of teaching belongs to the hierarchy, the
ecclesia docens, which, under certain conditions, judges
without appeal in matters of faith and morals (see COUNCILS).
Infallible
decisions can also be given by the pope teaching ex cathedra
(see
INFALLIBILITY). Each pastor in his parish, each bishop in his
diocese, is in duty bound to keep the faith of his flock untainted;
to the supreme pastor of all the Churches is given the office of
feeding the whole
Christian flock.
The power, then, of expelling heresy is an essential factor in the
constitution of the Church. Like other powers and rights, the power
of rejecting heresy adapts itself in practice to circumstances of
time and place, and, especially, of social and political conditions.
At the beginning it worked without special organization. The ancient
discipline charged the bishops with the duty of searching out the
heresies in their diocese and checking the progress of error by any
means at their command. When erroneous doctrines gathered volume and
threatened disruption of the Church, the bishops assembled in
councils, provincial, metropolitan, national, or ecumenical. There
the combined weight of their authority was brought to bear upon the
false doctrines. The first council was a meeting of the Apostles at
Jerusalem in order to put an end to the judaizing tendencies among
the first
Christians. It is the type of all succeeding councils: bishops
in union with the head of the Church, and guided by the Holy Ghost,
sit as judges in matters of faith and morals. The spirit which
animates the dealings of the Church with heresy and heretics is one
of extreme severity. St. Paul writes to Titus: "A man that is a
heretic, after the first and second admonition, avoid: knowing that
he, that is such a one, is subverted, and sinneth, being condemned
by his own judgment" (Tit., iii, 10-11). This early piece of
legislation reproduces the still earlier teaching of Christ: "And if
he will not hear the church, let him be to thee as the heathen and
the publican" (Matt., xviii, 17); it also inspires all subsequent
anti-heretical legislation. The sentence on the obstinate heretic is
invariably
excommunication. He is separated from the company of the
faithful, delivered up "to
Satan for
the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the
day of our Lord
Jesus Christ" (I Cor., v, 5).
When
Constantine had taken upon himself the office of lay bishop,
episcopus externus, and put the secular arm at the service of
the Church, the laws against heretics became more and more rigorous.
Under the purely ecclesiastical discipline no temporal punishment
could be inflicted on the obstinate heretic, except the damage which
might arise to his personal dignity through being deprived of all
intercourse with his former brethren. But under the
Christian
emperors rigorous measures were enforced against the goods and
persons of heretics. From the time of Constantine to Theodosius and
Valentinian III (313-424) various penal laws were enacted by the
Christian
emperors against heretics as being guilty of crime against the
State. "In both the Theodosian and Justinian codes they were styled
infamous persons; all intercourse was forbidden to be held with
them; they were deprived of all offices of profit and dignity in the
civil administration, while all burdensome offices, both of the camp
and of the curia, were imposed upon them; they were disqualified
from disposing of their own estates by will, or of accepting estates
bequeathed to them by others; they were denied the right of giving
or receiving donations, of contracting, buying, and selling;
pecuniary fines were imposed upon them; they were often proscribed
and banished, and in many cases scourged before being sent into
exile. In some particularly aggravated cases sentence of death was
pronounced upon heretics, though seldom executed in the time of the
Christian
emperors of Rome. Theodosius is said to be the first who pronounced
heresy a capital crime; this law was passed in 382 against the
Encratites, the Saccophori, the Hydroparastatae, and the Manichaeans.
Heretical teachers were forbidden to propagate their doctrines
publicly or privately; to hold public disputations; to ordain
bishops, presbyters, or any other clergy; to hold religious
meetings; to build conventicles or to avail themselves of money
bequeathed to them for that purpose. Slaves were allowed to inform
against their heretical masters and to purchase their freedom by
coming over to the Church. The children of heretical parents were
denied their patrimony and inheritance unless they returned to the
Catholic Church. The books of heretics were ordered to be burned." (
Vide "Codex Theodosianus", lib. XVI, tit. 5, "De Haereticis".)
This
legislation remained in force and with even greater severity in the
kingdom formed by the victorious barbarian invaders on the ruins of
the Roman Empire in the West. The burning of heretics was first
decreed in the eleventh century. The Synod of Verona (1184) imposed
on bishops the duty to search out the heretics in their dioceses and
to hand them over to the secular power. Other synods, and the Fourth
Lateran Council (1215) under
Pope Innocent
III, repeated and enforced this decree, especially the Synod of
Toulouse (1229), which established inquisitors in every parish (one
priest and two laymen). Everyone was bound to denounce heretics, the
names of the witnesses were kept secret; after 1243, when
Innocent IV
sanctioned the laws of Emperor Frederick II and of Louis IX against
heretics, torture was applied in trials; the guilty persons were
delivered up to the civil authorities and actually burnt at the
stake. Paul III
(1542) established, and
Sixtus V
organized, the Roman Congregation of the Inquisition, or Holy
Office, a regular court of justice for dealing with heresy and
heretics (see ROMAN CONGREGATIONS). The Congregation of the Index,
instituted by
St. Pius V, has for its province the care of faith and morals in
literature; it proceeds against printed matter very much as the Holy
Office proceeds against persons (see INDEX OF PROHIBITED BOOKS). The
present pope [1909],
Pius X, has
decreed the establishment in every diocese of a board of censors and
of a vigilance committee whose functions are to find out and report
on writings and persons tainted with the heresy of
Modernism (Encycl.
"Pascendi", 8 Sept., 1907). The present-day legislation against
heresy has lost nothing of its ancient severity; but the penalties
on heretics are now only of the spiritual order; all the punishments
which require the intervention of the secular arm have fallen into
abeyance. Even in countries where the cleavage between the spiritual
and secular powers does not amount to hostility or complete
severance, the death penalty, confiscation of goods, imprisonment,
etc., are no longer inflicted on heretics. The spiritual penalties
are of two kinds: latae and ferendae sententiae. The
former are incurred by the mere fact of heresy, no judicial sentence
being required; the latter are inflicted after trial by an
ecclesiastical court, or by a bishop acting ex informata
conscientia, that is, on his own certain knowledge, and
dispensing with the usual procedure
The penalties
(see CENSURES, ECCLESIASTICAL) latae sententiae are: (1)
Excommunication
specially reserved to the Roman pontiff, which is incurred by all
apostates from the Catholic Faith, by each and all heretics, by
whatever name they are known and to whatever sect they belong, and
by all who believe in them ( credentes ), receive, favour, or
in any way defend them (Const. "Apostolicae Sedis", 1869). Heretic
here means formal heretic, but also includes the positive
doubter, that is, the man who posits his doubt as defensible by
reason, but not the negative doubter, who simply abstains
from formulating a judgment. The believers ( credentes ) in
heretics are they who, without examining particular doctrines, give
a general assent to the teachings of the sect; the favourers (
fautores ) are they who by commission or omission lend support
to heresy and thus help or allow it to spread; the receivers and
defenders are they who shelter heretics from the rigours of the law.
(2) "Excommunication
specially reserved to the Roman Pontiff incurred by each and all who
knowingly read, without authorization from the Apostolic See, books
of apostates and heretics in which heresy is defended; likewise
readers of books of any author prohibited by name in letters
Apostolic, and all who retain possession of, or print, or in any way
defend such books" (Apost. Sedis, 1869). The book here meant
is a volume of a certain size and unity; newspapers and manuscripts
are not books, but serial publications intended to form a book when
completed fall under this censure. To read knowingly ( scienter
) implies on the reader's part the knowledge that the book is the
work of a heretic, that it defends heresy, and that it is forbidden.
"Books . . . prohibited by name in letters Apostolic" are books
condemned by Bulls, Briefs, or Encyclicals emanating directly from
the pope; books prohibited by decrees of Roman Congregations,
although the prohibition is approved by the pope, are not included.
The "printers" of heretical books are the editor who gives the order
and the publisher who executes it, and perhaps the proof-reader, but
not the workman who performs the mechanical part of printing.
Additional
penalties to be decreed by judicial sentences: Apostates and
heretics are irregular, that is, debarred from receiving
clerical orders or exercising lawfully the duties and rights annexed
to them; they are infamous, that is, publicly noted as guilty
and dishonoured. This note of infamy clings to the children and
grandchildren of unrepented heretics. Heretical clerics and all who
receive, defend, or favour them are ipso facto deprived of
their benefices,
offices, and ecclesiastical jurisdiction. The pope himself, if
notoriously guilty of heresy, would cease to be pope because he
would cease to be a member of the Church. Baptism received without
necessity by an adult at the hands of a declared heretic renders the
recipient irregular. Heresy constitutes an impedient impediment to
marriage with a Catholic ( mixta religio ) from which the
pope dispenses or gives the bishops power to dispense (see
IMPEDIMENTS). Communicatio in sacris, i. e. active
participation in non-Catholic religious functions, is on the whole
unlawful, but it is not so intrinsically evil that, under given
circumstances, it may not be excused. Thus friends and relatives may
for good reasons accompany a funeral, be present at a marriage or a
baptism, without causing
scandal or
lending support, to the non-Catholic rites, provided no active part
be taken in them: their motive is friendship, or maybe courtesy, but
it nowise implies approval of the rites. Non-Catholics are admitted
to all Catholic services but not to the sacraments.
IX.
PRINCIPLES OF CHURCH LEGISLATION
The guiding
principles in the Church's treatment of heretics are the following:
Distinguishing between formal and material heretics, she applies to
the former the canon, "Most firmly hold and in no way doubt that
every heretic or schismatic is to have part with the
Devil and
his angels
in the flames of
eternal fire,
unless before the end of his life he be incorporated with, and
restored to the Catholic Church." No one is forced to enter the
Church, but having once entered it through baptism, he is bound to
keep the promises he freely made. To restrain and bring back her
rebellious sons the Church uses both her own spiritual power and the
secular power at her command. Towards material heretics her conduct
is ruled by the saying of St. Augustine: "Those are by no means to
be accounted heretics who do not defend their false and perverse
opinions with pertinacious zeal (animositas), especially when
their error is not the fruit of audacious presumption but has been
communicated to them by seduced and lapsed parents, and when they
are seeking the truth with cautious solicitude and ready to be
corrected" (P. L., XXXIII, ep. xliii, 160).
Pius IX, in
a letter to the bishops of Italy (10 Aug., 1863), restates this
Catholic doctrine: "It is known to Us and to You that they who are
in invincible ignorance concerning our religion but observe the
natural law . . . and are ready to obey
God and
lead an honest and righteous life, can, with the help of Divine
light and grace, attain to eternal life . . . for
God . . .
will not allow any one to be eternally punished who is not wilfully
guilty" (Denzinger, "Enchir.", n. 1529). X.
X.
ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION OVER HERETICS
The fact of
having received valid baptism places material heretics under the
jurisdiction of the Church, and if they are in good faith, they
belong to the soul of the Church. Their material severance, however,
precludes them from the use of ecclesiastical rights, except the
right of being judged according to ecclesiastical law if, by any
chance, they are brought before an ecclesiastical court. They are
not bound by ecclesiastical laws enacted for the spiritual
well-being of its members, e. g. by the Six Commandments of the
Church.
XI.
RECEPTION OF CONVERTS
Converts to
the Faith, before being received, should be well instructed in
Catholic doctrine. The right to reconcile heretics belongs to the
bishops, but is usually delegated to all priests having charge of
souls. In England a special licence is required for each
reconciliation, except in case of children under fourteen or of
dying persons, and this licence is only granted when the priest can
give a written assurance that the candidate is sufficiently
instructed and otherwise prepared, and that there is some reasonable
guarantee of his perseverance. The order of proceeding in a
reconciliation is: first, abjuration of heresy or profession of
faith; second, conditional baptism (this is given only when the
heretical baptism is doubtful); third, sacramental confession and
conditional absolution.
XII. ROLE
OF HERESY IN HISTORY
The role of
heresy in history is that of evil generally. Its roots are in
corrupted human nature. It has come over the Church as predicted by
her Divine Founder; it has rent asunder the bonds of charity in
families, provinces, states, and nations; the sword has been drawn
and pyres erected both for its defence and its repression; misery
and ruin have followed in its track. The prevalence of heresy,
however, does not disprove the Divinity of the Church, any more than
the existence of evil disproves the
existence of an
all-good God. Heresy, like other evils, is permitted as a test
of faith and a trial of strength in the Church militant; probably
also as a punishment for other sins. The disruption and
disintegration of heretical sects also furnishes a solid argument
for the necessity of a strong teaching authority. The endless
controversies with heretics have been indirectly the cause of most
important doctrinal developments and definitions formulated in
councils to the edification of the body of Christ. Thus the spurious
gospels of the
Gnostics prepared the way for the canon of Scripture;
Patripassian, Sabellian,
Arian, and
Macedonian heresies drew out a clearer concept of the
Trinity;
the Nestorian and
Eutychian
errors led to definite dogmas on the nature and Person of Christ.
And so down to
Modernism, which has called forth a solemn assertion of the
claims of the supernatural in history.
XIII.
INTOLERANCE AND CRUELTY
The Church's
legislation on heresy and heretics is often reproached with cruelty
and intolerance. Intolerant it is: in fact its raison d'être
is intolerance of doctrines subversive of the faith. But such
intolerance is essential to all that is, or moves, or lives, for
tolerance of destructive elements within the organism amounts to
suicide.
Heretical sects are subject to the same law: they live or die in the
measure they apply or neglect it. The charge of cruelty is also easy
to meet. All repressive measures cause suffering or inconvenience of
some sort: it is their nature. But they are not therefore cruel. The
father who chastises his guilty son is just and may be
tender-hearted. Cruelty only comes in where the punishment exceeds
the requirements of the case. Opponents say: Precisely; the rigours
of the Inquisition violated all humane feelings. We answer: they
offend the feelings of later ages in which there is less regard for
the purity of faith; but they did not antagonize the feelings of
their own time, when heresy was looked on as more malignant than
treason. In proof of which it suffices to remark that the
inquisitors only renounced on the guilt of the accused and then
handed him over to the secular power to be dealt with according to
the laws framed by emperors and kings.
Medieval
people found no fault with the system, in fact heretics had been
burned by the populace centuries before the Inquisition became a
regular institution. And whenever heretics gained the upper hand,
they were never slow in applying the same laws: so the Huguenots in
France, the Hussites in Bohemia, the
Calvinists
in Geneva, the Elizabethan statesmen and the Puritans in England.
Toleration came in only when faith went out; lenient measures were
resorted to only where the power to apply more severe measures was
wanting. The embers of the Kulturkampf in Germany still
smoulder; the separation and confiscation laws and the ostracism of
Catholics in France are the
scandal of
the day. Christ said: "Do not think that I came to send peace upon
earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword" (Matt., x, 34). The
history of heresy verifies this prediction and shows, moreover, that
the greater number of the victims of the sword is on the side of the
faithful adherents of the one Church founded by Christ (see
INQUISITION). |