| J. H. Merle D'Aubigne |
| "For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." 1 Timothy 2:5 |
"We cannot exalt the priests of the Church or the works of
the faithful without lowering Christ in his twofold quality of Mediator and
Redeemer." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"The encroachments of power form a great part of history;
as the resistance of those whose liberties are invaded forms the other portion."
History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"If Rome is the queen of cities, why should not her pastor
be the king of bishops? Why should not the Roman church be the mother of
Christendom? Why should not all nations be her children, and her authority their
sovereign law? It was easy for the ambitious heart of man to reason thus.
Ambitious Rome did so... There was originally no dependence implied in the honor
thus paid. They treated the Roman pastor as if they were on a level with him.
f14 But usurped power increased like an avalanche. Admonitions, at first simply
fraternal, soon became absolute commands in the mouth of the pontiff. A foremost
place among equals appeared to him a throne." History Of The Reformation Of The
Sixteenth Century
"The living Church retiring gradually within the lonely
sanctuary of a few solitary hearts, an external Church was substituted in its
place, and all its forms were declared to be of divine appointment. Salvation no
longer flowing from the Word, which was henceforward put out of sight, the
priests affirmed that it was conveyed by means of the forms they had themselves
invented, and that no one could attain it except by these channels. No one, said
they, can by his own faith attain to everlasting life. Christ communicated to
the apostles, and these to the bishops, the unction of the Holy Spirit; and this
Spirit is to be procured only in that order of succession! Originally, whoever
possessed the spirit of Jesus Christ was a member of the Church; now the terms
were inverted, and it was maintained that he only who was a member of the Church
could receive the Spirit." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"The doctrine of the Church and the necessity of its
visible unity, which had begun to gain ground in the third century, favored the
pretensions of Rome... As these ideas became established, the distinction
between the people and the clergy was more strongly marked. The salvation of
souls no longer depended entirely on faith in Christ, but also, and in a more
especial manner, on union with the Church. The representatives and heads of the
Church were made partakers of the trust that should be placed in Christ alone,
and became the real mediators of their flocks. The idea of a universal Christian
priesthood was gradually lost sight of; the servants of the Church of Christ
were compared to the priests of the old covenant; and those who separated from
the bishop were placed in the same rank with Korah, Dathan, and Abiram! From a
peculiar priesthood, such as was then formed in the Church, to a sovereign
priesthood, such as Rome claims, the transition was easy." History Of The
Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"Although we find no traces in the Gospel of Peter’s
superiority over the other apostles; although the very idea of a primacy is
opposed to the fraternal relations which united the brethren, and even to the
spirit of the Gospel dispensation, which on the contrary requires all the
children of the Father to minister one to another, acknowledging only one
teacher and one master; although Christ had strongly rebuked his disciples,
whenever ambitious desires of preeminence were conceived in their carnal hearts
the primacy of St. Peter was invented and supported by texts wrongly
interpreted, and men next acknowledged in this apostle and in his self-styled
successors at Rome, the visible representatives of visible unity — the heads of
the universal Church." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"Already had issued from the forests of the North the most
effectual promoters of the papal power. The barbarians who had invaded and
settled in the West, after being satiated with blood and plunder, lowered their
reeking swords before the intellectual power that met them face to face.
Recently converted to Christianity, ignorant of the spiritual character of the
Church, and feeling the want of a certain external pomp in religion, they
prostrated themselves, half savage and half heathen as they were, at the feet of
the high-priest of Rome. With their aid the West was in his power. At first the
Vandals, then the Ostrogoths, somewhat later the Burgundians and Alans, next the
Visigoths, and lastly the Lombards and Anglo-Saxons, came and bent the knee to
the Roman pontiff. It was the sturdy shoulders of those children of the
idolatrous north that succeeded in placing on the supreme throne of Christendom
a pastor of the banks of the Tiber." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth
Century
"In the eighth century we see the Roman bishops resisting
on the one hand the Greek emperors, their lawful sovereigns, and endeavoring to
expel them from Italy, while with the other they court the mayors of the palace
in France, begging from this new power, just beginning to rise in the West, a
share in the wreck of the empire. Rome founded her usurped authority between the
East, which she repelled, and the West, which she summoned to her aid. She
raised her throne between two revolts... Thus did France establish the temporal
power of the popes." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"Charlemagne appeared; the first time he ascends the stairs
to the basilic of St. Peter, devoutly kissing each step. A second time he
presents himself, lord of all the nations that formed the empire of the West,
and of Rome itself. Leo III thought fit to bestow the imperial title on him who
already possessed the power; and on Christmas day, in the year 800, he placed
the diadem of the Roman emperors on the brow of the son of Pepin. f22 From this
time the pope belongs to the empire of the Franks: his connection with the East
is ended." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"In the ninth century disunion everywhere weakened the
civil authority. Rome saw that this was the moment to exalt herself... Then
appeared the False Decretals of Isidore. In this collection of the pretended
decrees of the popes, the most ancient bishops, who were contemporary with
Tacitus and Quintilian, were made to speak the barbarous Latin of the ninth
century... Popes quoted the Bible in the Latin translation of Jerome, who had
lived one, two or three centuries after them; and Victor, bishop of Rome, in the
year 192, wrote to Theophilus, who was archbishop of Alexandria in 385. The
impostor who had fabricated this collection endeavored to prove that all bishops
derived their authority from the bishop of Rome, who held his own immediately
from Christ. He not only recorded all the successive conquests of the pontiffs,
but even carried them back to the earliest times. The popes were not ashamed to
avail themselves of this contemptible imposture... This impudent invention was
for ages the arsenal of Rome." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth
Century
"The Papacy celebrated its admission to the table of kings
by shameful orgies. She became intoxicated: her senses were lost in the midst of
drunken revellings." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"From this time Hildebrand was the soul of the Papacy,
until he became pope himself. He had governed the Church under the name of
several pontiffs, before he reigned in person as Gregory VII. One grand idea had
taken possession of this great genius. He desired to establish a visible
theocracy, of which the pope, as vicar of Jesus Christ, should be the head...
Gregory VII was not directed by the spirit of the Lord. That spirit of truth,
humility, and long-suffering was unknown to him. He sacrificed the truth
whenever he judged it necessary to his policy." History Of The Reformation Of
The Sixteenth Century
"The successors of Gregory, like soldiers arriving after a
victory, threw themselves as conquerors on the enslaved Churches. Spain rescued
from Islamism, Prussia reclaimed from idolatry, fell into the arms of the
crowned priest. The Crusades, which were undertaken at his instigation, extended
and confirmed his authority. The pious pilgrims, who in imagination had seen
saints and angels leading their armed bands, -- who, entering humble and
barefoot within the walls of Jerusalem, burnt the Jews in their synagogue, and
watered with the blood of thousands of Saracens the places where they came to
trace the sacred footsteps of the Prince of Peace, -- carried into the East the
name of the pope, who had been forgotten there since he had exchanged the
supremacy of the Greeks for that of the Franks." History Of The Reformation Of
The Sixteenth Century
"The Germans laid at the feet of a bishop those tributes
which their ancestors had refused to the most powerful generals. Their princes,
on succeeding to the imperial dignity, imagined they received a crown from the
popes, but it was a yoke that was placed upon their necks. The kingdoms of
Christendom, already subject to the spiritual authority of Rome, now became her
serfs and tributaries. Thus everything was changed in the Church. It was at
first a community of brethren, and now an absolute monarchy was established in
its bosom. All Christians were priests of the living God, with humble pastors as
their guides. But a haughty head is upraised in the midst of these pastors; a
mysterious voice utters words full of pride; an iron hand compels all men, great
and small, rich and poor, bond and free, to wear the badge of its power. The
holy and primitive equality of souls before God is lost sight of." History Of
The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"God who prepares his work through ages, accomplishes it by
the weakest instruments, when His time is come. To effect great results by the
smallest means — such is the law of God." History Of The Reformation Of The
Sixteenth Century
"God selected the reformers of the Church from the same
class whence he had taken the apostles. He chose them from among that lower
rank, which, although not the lowest, does not reach the level of the middle
classes. Everything was thus intended to manifest to the world that the work was
not of man but of God." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"Another great error contributed still further to unsettle
the doctrine of grace: this was Pelagianism. Pelagius asserted that human nature
is not fallen -- that there is no hereditary corruption, and that man, having
received the power to do good, has only to will in order to perform. If good
works consist only in external acts, Pelagius is right. But if we look to the
motives whence these outward acts proceed, we find everywhere in man’s nature
selfishness, forgetfulness of God, pollution, and impotency." History Of The
Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"Salvation considered as coming from man, is the creative
principle of every error and abuse." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth
Century
"Faith, says the theologian in order to express his ideas,
is the subjective appropriation of the objective work of Christ. If faith be not
an appropriation of salvation, it is nothing; all the Christian economy is
thrown into confusion, the fountains of the new life are sealed, and
Christianity is overturned from its foundations." History Of The Reformation Of
The Sixteenth Century
"While Pelagianism corrupted the Christian doctrine, it
strengthened the hierarchy. The hand that lowered grace, exalted the Church: for
grace is God, the Church is man." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth
Century
"The more we feel the truth that all men are guilty before
God, the more also shall we cling to Christ as the only source of Grace. How
could we then place the Church in the same rank with Christ, since it is but an
assembly of all those who are found in the same wretched state by nature?"
History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"It was especially by the system of penance, which flowed
immediately from Pelagianism, that Christianity was perverted... Great
importance was soon attached to external marks of repentance -- to tears,
fasting, and mortification of the flesh; and the inward regeneration of the
heart, which alone constitutes a real conversion, was forgotten." History Of The
Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"The pope by a bull annexed Purgatory to his domain."
History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"Rome is human nature exalted in some of its worst
propensities. We say this that we may speak the truth; we say it also, that we
may be just." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"To set up a mediatorial caste between God and man -- to
obtain by works, by penance, and by money the salvation which is the free gift
of God -- such is Popery. To open to all, through Jesus Christ, without any
human mediator, without that power which calls itself the Church, free access to
the great boon of eternal life which God offers to man — such is Christianity
and the Reformation." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"Popery interposes the Church between God and man.
Primitive Christianity and the Reformation bring God and man face to face."
History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century
"Eminent servants of Jesus Christ, who were true
Protestants as regards the essential doctrines of Christianity, diffused a
cheering light during the dark ages; and in the humblest convent, in the
remotest parish, might be found poor monks and poor priests to alleviate great
sufferings." History Of The Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century