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"We are relaxing our resistance against the dreaded foe just
in proportion as he grows more formidable. It has become the fashion
to condemn controversy and to affect the widest charity for this and
all other foes of Christ and of souls."
The Attractions of Popery

R.L. Dabney

This text was scanned from The Trinity Review,
published by The Trinity Foundation, P.O. Box 1666, Hobbs, New Mexico
88240 (issues 120-122). The original article is from Discussions
of Robert Lewis Dabney Volume 3, reprinted by The Banner of Truth
Trust, Edinburgh.
r. John H. Rice, with
the intuition of a great mind, warned Presbyterians against a renewed
prevalence of popery in our Protestant land. This was when it was so
insignificant among us as to be almost unnoticed.
Many were surprised at his
prophecy, and not a few mocked; but time has fulfilled it. Our
leaders from 1830 to 1860 understood well the causes of this danger.
They were diligent to inform and prepare the minds of their people
against it. Hence General Assemblies and Synods appointed annual
sermons upon popery, and our teachers did their best to arouse the
minds of the people.
Now, all this has mainly passed
away, and we are relaxing our resistance against the dreaded foe just
in proportion as he grows more formidable. It has become the fashion
to condemn controversy and to affect the widest charity for this and
all other foes of Christ and of souls. High Presbyterian authority
even is quoted as saying, that henceforth our concern with Romanism
should be chiefly irenical! The figures presented by the census of
1890 are construed in opposite ways. This gives the papists more than
fourteen millions of adherents in the United States, where ninety
years ago there were but a few thousands. Such Protestant journals as
think it their interest to play sycophants to public opinion try to
persuade us that these figures are very consoling; because, if Rome
had kept all the natural increase of her immigrations the numbers
would have been larger. But Rome points to them with insolent triumph
as prognostics of an assured victory over Protestantism on this
continent. Which will prove correct?
For Presbyterians of all others
to discount the perpetual danger from Romanism is thoroughly
thoughtless and rash. We believe that the Christianity left by the
apostles to the primitive church was essentially what we now call
Presbyterian and Protestant. Prelacy and popery speedily began to
work in the bosom of that community and steadily wrought its
corruption and almost its total extirpation. Why should not the same
cause tend to work the same result again? Are we truer or wiser
Presbyterians than those trained by the apostles? Have the enemies of
truth become less skillful and dangerous by gaining the experience of
centuries? The popish system of ritual and doctrine was a gradual
growth, which, modifying true Christianity, first perverted and then
extinguished it. its destructive power has resulted from this: that
it has not been the invention of any one cunning and hostile mind,
but a gradual growth, modified by hundreds or thousands of its
cultivators, who were the most acute, learned, selfish, and anti-
Christian spirits of their generations, perpetually retouched and
adapted to every weakness and every attribute of depraved human
nature, until it became the most skillful and pernicious system of
error which the world has ever known. As it has adjusted itself to
every superstition, every sense of guilt, every foible and craving of
the depraved human heart, so it has travestied with consummate skill
every active principle of the Gospel. It is doubtless the ne plus
ultra of religious delusion, the final and highest result of
perverted human faculty guided by the sagacity of the great
enemy.
This system has nearly conquered
Christendom once. He who does not see that it is capable of
conquering it again is blind to the simplest laws of thought. One may
ask, Does it not retain sundry of the cardinal doctrines of the
Gospel, monotheism, the trinity, the hypostatic union, Christs
sacrifice, the sacraments, the resurrection, the judgment,
immortality? Yes; in form it retains them, and this because of its
supreme cunning. It retains them while so wresting and enervating as
to rob them mainly of their sanctifying power, because it designs to
spread its snares for all sorts of minds of every grade of opinion.
The grand architect was too cunning to make it, like his earlier
essays, mere atheism, or mere fetishism, or mere polytheism, or mere
pagan idolatry; for in these forms the trap only ensnared the coarser
and more ignorant natures. He has now perfected it and baited it for
all types of humanity, the most refined as well as the most
imbruted.
I. Romanism now enjoys in our
country certain important advantages, which I may style legitimate,
in this sense, that our decadent, half-corrupted Protestantism
bestows these advantages upon our enemy, so that Rome, in employing
them, only uses what we ourselves give her. In other words, there are
plain points upon which Rome claims a favorable comparison as against
Protestantism; and her claim is correct, in that the latter is
blindly and criminally betraying her own interests and duties.
(1) A hundred years ago French
atheism gave the world the Jacobin theory of political rights. The
Bible had been teaching mankind for three thousand years the great
doctrine of mens moral equality before the universal Father, the
great basis of all free, just, and truly republican forms of civil
society. Atheism now travestied this true doctrine by her mortal
heresy of the absolute equality of men, asserting that every human
being is naturally and inalienably entitled to every right, power,
and prerogative in civil society which is allowed to any man or any
class. The Bible taught a liberty which consists in each mans
unhindered privilege of having and doing just those things, and no
others, to which he is rationally and morally entitled. Jacobinism
taught the liberty of licenseevery man's natural right to indulge his
own absolute will; and it set up this fiendish caricature as the
object of sacred worship for mankind.
Now, democratic Protestantism in
these United States has become so ignorant, so superficial and
wilful, that it confounds the true republicanism with this deadly
heresy of Jacobinism. It has ceased to know a difference. Hence, when
the atheistic doctrine begins to bear its natural fruits of license,
insubordination, communism, and anarchy, this bastard democratic
Protestantism does not know how to rebuke them. It has recognized the
parents; how can it consistently condemn the children? Now, then,
Rome proposes herself as the stable advocate of obedience, order, and
permanent authority throughout the ages. She shows her practical
power to govern men, as she says, through their consciences (truth
would say, through their superstitions). Do we wonder that good
citizens, beginning to stand aghast at these elements of confusion
and ruin, the spawn of Jacobinism, which a Jacobinized Protestantism
cannot control, should look around for some moral and religious
system capable of supporting a firm social order? Need we be
surprised that when Rome steps forward, saying, I have been through
the centuries the upholder of order, rational men should be inclined
to give her their hand? This high advantage a misguided
Protestantism is now giving to its great adversary.
(2) The Reformation was an
assertion of liberty of thought. It asserted for all mankind, and
secured for the Protestant nations, each mans right to think and
decide for himself upon his religious creed and his duty toward his
God, in the fear of God and the truth, unhindered by human power,
political or ecclesiastical. Here, again, a part of our
Protestantism perverted the precious truth until the manna bred
worms, and stank.
Rationalistic and skeptical
Protestantism now claims, instead of that righteous liberty, license
to dogmatize at the bidding of every caprice, every impulse of
vanity, every false philosophy, without any responsibility to either
truth or moral obligation. The result has been a diversity and
confusion of pretended creeds and theologies among nominal
Protestants, which perplexes and frightens sincere, but timid, minds.
Everything seems to them afloat upon this turbulent sea of licentious
debate. They are fatigued and alarmed; they see no end of
uncertainties. They look around anxiously for some safe and fixed
foundation of credence. Rome comes forward and says to them, You see,
then, that this Protestant liberty of thought is fatal license; the
Protestants rational religion turns out to be but poisonous
rationalism, infidelity wearing the mask of faith. Holy Mother
Church offers you the foundation of her infallibility, guaranteed by
the indwelling of the Holy Ghost. She shows you that faith must
ground itself in implicit submission, and not in human inquiry. She
pledges herself for the safety of your soul if you simply submit;
come, then, trust and be at rest. Many are the weary souls who accept
her invitations; and these not only the weak and cowardly, but
sometimes the brilliant and gifted, like a Cardinal Newman. For this
result a perverted Protestantism is responsible. If all nominal
Protestants were as honest in their exercise of mental liberty as the
fear of God and the loyalty to truth should make them; if they were
as humble and honest in construing and obeying Gods word in his
Bible, as papists profess to be in submitting to the authority of the
Holy Mother Church, honest inquirers would never be embarrassed, and
would never be fooled into supposing that the words of a pope could
furnish a more comfortable foundation for faith than the Word of
God.
II. I now proceed to explain
certain evil principles of human nature which are concurring
powerfully in this country to give currency to popery. These may be
called its illicit advantages. I mention:
(1) The constant tendency of
American demagogues to pay court to popery and to purchase votes for
themselves from it, at the cost of the peoples safety, rights, and
money.
Nearly two generations ago (the
men of this day seem to have forgotten the infamy) William H. Seward,
of New York, began this dangerous and dishonest game. He wished to be
Governor of New York. He came to an understanding with Archbishop
Hughes, then the head of the popish hierarchy in that state, to give
him the Irish vote in return for certain sectarian advantages in the
disbursement of the state revenues. Neither Rome nor the demagogues
have since forgotten their lesson, nor will they ever forget it. It
would be as unreasonable to expect it as to expect that hawks will
forget the poultry yard.
It is the nature of the demagogue
to trade off anything for votes; they are the breath in the nostrils
of his ambition. The popish hierarchy differs essentially from the
ministry of any other religion, in having votes to trade. The
traditional claim of Rome is that she has the right to control both
spheres, the ecclesiastical and the political, the political for the
sake of the ecclesiastical. The votes of her masses are more or less
manageable, as the votes of Protestants are not, because Romes is a
system of authority as opposed to free thought. Rome instructs the
conscience of every one of her members that it is his religious duty
to subordinate all other duties and interests to hers. And this is a
spiritual duty enforceable by the most awful spiritual sanctions. How
can a thinking man afford to disobey the hierarchy which holds his
eternal destiny in its secret fist; so that even if they gave him in
form the essential sacraments, such as the mass, absolution, and
extreme unction, they are able clandestinely to make them worthless
to him, by withholding the sacramental intention? Hence it is that
the majority of American papists can be voted in blocs; and it is
virtually the hierarchy which votes them. The goods are ready bound
up in parcels for traffic with demagogues.
We are well aware that numerous
papists will indignantly deny this, declaring that there is a
Romanist vote in this country which is just as independent of their
priesthood and as free as any other. Of course there is. The
hierarchy is a very experienced and dexterous driver. It does not
whip in the restive colts, but humors them awhile until she gets them
well harnessed and broken. But the team as a whole must yet travel
her road, because they have to believe it infallible. We assure these
independent Romanist voters that they are not good Catholics; they
must unlearn this heresy of independent thought before they are meet
for the Romanist paradise.
Men of secular ambition have
always sought to use the hierarchy to influence others for their
political advantage; the example is as old as history. Just as soon
as prelacy was developed in the patristic church, Roman emperors
began to purchase its influence to sustain their thrones. Throughout
the Middle Ages, German kaisers and French, Spanish, and English
kings habitually traded with Rome, paying her dignities and
endowments for her ghostly support to their ambitions. Even in this
century we have seen the two Napoleons playing the same gamepurchasing
for their imperialism the support of a priesthood in whose
religion they did not believe. If any suppose that because America is
nominally democratic the same thing will not happen here, they are
thoroughly silly. Some Yankee ingenuity will be invoked to modify the
forms of the traffic, so as to suit American names; that is all.
Intelligent students of church
history know that one main agency for converting primitive
Christianity first into prelacy and then into popery was unlimited
church endowments. As soon as Constantine established Christianity as
the religion of the State, ecclesiastical persons and bodies began to
assume the virtual (and before long the formal) rights of
corporations. They could receive bequests and gifts of property, and
hold them by a tenure as firm as that of the fee-simple. These
spiritual corporations were deathless. Thus the property they
acquired was all held by the tenure of mortmain. When a
corporation is thus empowered to absorb continually, and never to
disgorge, there is no limit to its possible wealth.
The laws of the empire in the
Middle Ages imposed no limitations upon bequests; thus, most
naturally, monasteries, cathedrals, chapters, and archbishoprics
became inordinately rich. At the Reformation they had grasped one-third
of the property of Europe. But Scripture saith, Where the
carcass is, thither the eagles are gathered together. Wealth is
power, and ambitious men crave it. Thus this endowed hierarchy came
to be filled by the men of the greediest ambition in Europe, instead
of by humble, self-denying pastors; and thus it was that this
tremendous money power, arming itself first with a spiritual
despotism of the popish theology over consciences, and then allying
itself with political power, wielded the whole to enforce the
absolute domination of that religion which gave them their wealth. No
wonder human liberty, free thought, and the Bible were together
trampled out of Europe.
When the Reformation came, the
men who could think saw that this tenure in mortmain had been
the fatal thing. Knox, the wisest of them, saw clearly that if a
religious reformation was to succeed in Scotland the ecclesiastical
corporations must be destroyed. They were destroyed, their whole
property alienated to the secular nobles or to the State (the remnant
which Knox secured for religious education); and therefore it was
that Scotland remained Presbyterian. When our American commonwealths
were founded, statesmen and divines understood this great principle
of jurisprudence, that no corporate tenure in mortmain, either
spiritual or secular, is compatible with the liberty of the people
and the continuance of constitutional government.
But it would appear that our
legislators now know nothing about that great principle, or care
nothing about it. Church institutions, Protestant and Romanist, are
virtually perpetual corporations. Whatever the pious choose to give
them is held in mortmain, and they grow continually richer and
richer; they do not even pay taxes, and there seems no limit upon
their acquisitions.
And last comes the Supreme Court
of the United States, and under the pretext of construing the law,
legislates a new law in the famous Walnut-Street Church case, as
though they desired to ensure both the corruption of religion and the
destruction of free government by a second gigantic incubus of
endowed ecclesiasticism. The new law is virtually this: That in case
any free citizen deems that the gifts of himself or his ancestors are
usurped for some use alien to the designed trust, it shall be the
usurper who shall decide the issue. This is, of course,
essentially popish, yet a great Protestant denomination has been seen
hastening to enroll it in its digest of spiritual laws. The working
of this tendency of overgrown ecclesiastical wealth will certainly be
two-fold: First, to Romanize partially or wholly the Protestant
churches thus enriched; and, secondly, to incline, enable, and equip
the religion thus Romanized for its alliance with political ambition
and for the subjugation of the people and the government. When church
bodies began, under Constantine, to acquire endowments, these bodies
were Episcopal, at most, or even still Presbyterian. The increase of
endowment helped to make them popish. Then popery and feudalism
stamped out the Bible and enslaved Europe. If time permitted, I could
trace out the lines of causation into perfect clearness. Will men
ever learn that like causes must produce like effects?
(2) The democratic theory of
human society may be the most rational and equitable; but human
nature is not equitable; it is fallen and perverted. Lust of
applause, pride, vain-glory, and love of power are as natural to it
as hunger to the body. Next to Adam, the most representative man upon
earth was Diotrephes, who loves to have the preeminence. Every man is
an aristocrat in his heart. Now, prelacy and popery are aristocratic
religions. Consequently, as long as human nature is natural, they
will present more or less of attraction to human minds. Quite a
number of Methodist, Presbyterian, or Independent ministers have gone
over to prelacy or popery, and thus become bishops. Was there ever
one of them, however conscientious his new faith, and however devout
his temper, who did not find some elation and pleasure in his
spiritual dignity? Is there a democrat in democratic America who
would not be flattered in his heart by being addressed as my lord?
Distinction and power are gratifying to all men. Prelacy and popery
offer this sweet morsel to aspirants by promising to make some of
them lords of their brethren. This is enough to entice all of them,
as the crown entices all the racers on the race-course. It is true
that while many run, one obtains the crown; but all may flatter
themselves with the hope of winning.
Especially does the pretension of
sacramental grace offer the most splendid bait to human ambition
which can be conceived of on this Earth. To be the vicar of the
Almighty in dispensing eternal life and heavenly crowns at will is a
more magnificent power than the prerogative of any emperor on Earth.
Let a man once be persuaded that he really grasps this power by
getting a place in the apostolic succession, and the more sincere he
is, the more splendid the prerogative will appear to him; for the
more clearly his faith appreciates the thing that he proposes to do
in the sacraments, the more illustrious that thing must appear. The
greatest boon ever inherited by an emperor was finite. The greatest
boon of redemption is infinite; to be able to dispense it at will to
one sinner is a much grander thing than to conquer the world and
establish a universal secular empire. The humblest hedge-priest would
be a far grander man than that emperor if he could really work the
miracle and confer the grace of redemption which Rome says he does
every time he consecrates a mass.
How shall we estimate, then, the
greatness of that pope or prelate who can manufacture such miracle
workers at will? The greatest being on Earth should hardly think
himself worthy to loose his sandals from his feet. The Turkish
ambassador to Paris was certainly right when, upon accompanying the
King of France to high mass in Notre Dame, and seeing the king,
courtiers, and multitude all prostrate themselves when the priest
elevated the host, he wondered that the king should allow anybody but
himself to perform that magnificent function. He is reported to have
said: Sire, if I were king, and believed in your religion, nobody
should do that in France except me. It is a vastly greater thing than
anything else that you do in your royal function s.
As long as man is man, therefore,
popery will possess this unhallowed advantage of enticing, and even
entrancing, the ambition of the keenest aspirants. The stronger their
faith in their doctrine, the more will they sanctify to themselves
this dreadful ambition. In this respect, as in so many others, the
tendency of the whole current of human nature is to make papists. It
is converting grace only which can check that current and turn men
sincerely back toward Protestantism. I am well aware that the
functions of the Protestant minister may be so wrested as to present
an appeal to unhallowed ambition. But popery professes to confer upon
her clergy every didactic and presbyterial function which
Protestantism has to bestow; while the former offers, in addition,
this splendid bait of prelatic power and sacramental miracle-working . . . .
(4) In sundry respects I perceive
a sort of hallucination prevailing in peoples minds concerning old
historical errors and abuses, which I see to have been the regular
results of human nature. Men will not understand history; they
flatter themselves that, because the modes of civilization are much
changed and advanced, therefore the essential laws of mans nature are
going to cease acting; which is just as unreasonable as to expect
that sinful human beings must entirely cease to be untruthful,
sensual, dishonest, and selfish, because they have gotten to wear
fine clothes.
Of certain evils and abuses of
ancient history men persuade themselves that they are no longer
possible among us, because we have become civilized and nominally
Christian. One of these evils is idolatry with its two branches,
polytheism and image-worship. Oh! they say, mankind has outgrown all
that; other evils may invade our Christian civilization, but that is
too gross to come back again. They are blind at once to the teachings
of historical facts and to common sense. They know that at one time
idolatry nearly filled the ancient world. Well, what was the previous
religious state of mankind upon which it supervened? Virtually a
Christian state, that is to say, a worship of the one true God, under
the light of revelation, with our same Gospel taught by promises and
sacrifices. And it is very stupid to suppose that the social state
upon which the early idolatry supervened was savage or barbaric. We
rather conclude that the. people who built Noahs ark, the tower of
Babel, and the pyramid of Cheops, and who enjoyed the light of Gods
recent revelations to Adam, to Enoch, to Noah, were civilized. Men
made a strange confusion here: They fancy that idolatry could be
prevalent because mankind were not civilized. The historical fact is
just the opposite: Mankind became uncivilized because idolatry first
prevailed. In truth, the principles tending to idolatry are deeply
laid in mans fallen nature. Like a compressed spring, they are ever
ready to act again, and will surely begin to act, whenever the
opposing power of vital godliness is withdrawn.
First, the sensuous has become
too prominent in man; reason, conscience, and faith, too feeble.
Every sinful mans experience witnesses this all day long, every day
of his life. Why else is it that the objects of sense perception,
which are comparatively trivial, dominate his attention, his
sensibilities, and his desires so much more than the objects of
faith, which he himself knows to be so much more important? Did not
this sensuous tendency seek to invade mans religious ideas and
feelings, it would be strange indeed. Hence, man untaught and
unchecked by the heavenly light always shows a craving for sensuous
objects of worship. He is not likely, in our day, to satisfy this
craving by setting up a brazen image of Dagon, the fish-god; or of
Zeus, or the Roman Jupiter; or of the Aztecs Itzlahuitl. But still he
craves a visible, material object of worship. Rome meets him at a
comfortable half-way station with her relics, crucifixes, and images
of the saints. She adroitly smoothes the downhill road for him by
connecting all these with the worship of the true God.
Again, man's conscious weakness
impels him almost irresistibly in his serious hours to seek some
being of supernatural attributes to lean upon. His heart cries out,
Lead me to the Rock that is higher than I. But when pure monotheism
proposes to him the supreme, eternal Godinfinite not only in his
power to help, but in his omniscience, justice, and holinessthe
sinful heart recoils. This object is too high, too holy, too dreadful
for it. Sinful man craves a god, but, like his first father, shuns
the infinite God; hence the powerful tendency to invent intermediate
gods, whom he may persuade himself to be sufficiently gracious and
powerful to be trusted, and yet not so infinite, immutable, and holy
as inevitably to condemn sin. Here is the impulse which prompted all
pagan nations to invent polytheism. This they did by filling the
space between man and the supreme being with intermediate gods. Such,
among the Greeks, were Bacchus, Hercules, Castor and Pollux, Theseus,
Aesculapius, etc.
It is a great mistake to suppose
that thoughtful pagans did not recognize the unity and eternity of a
supreme god, Father of gods and of men. But sometimes they represent
him as so exalted and sublimated as to be at once above the reach of
human prayers and above all concernment in human affairs. Others
thought of him as too awful to be directly approached, accessible
only through the mediation of his own next progeny, the secondary
gods. Here we have precisely the impulse for which Rome provides in
her saint worship Mary is the highest of the intermediate gods, next
to the Trinity, the intercessor for Christs intercession. The
apostles and saints are the secondary gods of this Christian
pantheon. How strangely has Gods predestination led Rome in the
development of her history to the unwitting admission of this
indictment! Pagan Rome had her marble temple, the gift of Agrippa to
the Commonwealth, the Pantheon, or sanctuary of all the gods. This
very building stands now, rededicated by the popes as the temple of
Christ and all the saints. So fateful has been the force of this
analogy between the old polytheism and the new.
The attempt is made, indeed, to
hide the likeness by the sophistical distinction between latria and
dulia; but its worthlessness appears from this, that even dulia
cannot be offered to redeemed creatures without ascribing to them, by
an unavoidable implication, the attributes peculiar to God. In one
word, fallen men of all ages have betrayed a powerful tendency to
image-worship and polytheism. Rome provides for that tendency in a
way the most adroit possible, for an age nominally Christian but
practically unbelieving. To that tendency the religion of the Bible
sternly refuses to concede anything, requiring not its gratification,
but its extirpation.
This cunning policy of Rome had
sweeping success in the early church. The same principle won almost
universal success in the ancient world. It will succeed again here.
Many will exclaim that this prognostic is wholly erroneous; that the
great, bad tendency of our age and country is to agnosticism as
against ill religions. I aim not mistaken. This drift will be as
temporary as it is partial. M. Guizot says in his Meditations:
One never need go far back in history to find atheism advancing half
way t6 meet superstition. A wiser analyst of human nature says: Even
as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them
over to a reprobate mind. Professing themselves to be wise, they
became fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an
image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and four-footed
beasts, and creeping things. This is the exact pathology of
superstition.
When the culture of the Augustan
age taught the Romans to despise the religious faith of their
fathers, there was an interval of agnosticism. But next, the most
refined of the agnostics were seen studying the mysteries of Isis,
and practicing the foulest rites of the paganism of the: conquered
provinces. Atheism is too freezing a blank for human souls to inhabit
permanently. It outrages too many of the hearts affections and of the
reasons first principles. A people who have cast away their God, when
they discover this, turn to false gods. For all such wandering
spirits Rome stands with open doors; there, finally, they will see
their most convenient refuge of superstition in a catalogue of
Christian saints transformed into a polytheism. Thus the cravings of
superstition are satisfied, while the crime is veiled from the
conscience by this pretence of scriptural origin.
(5) I proceed to unfold an
attraction of Romanism far more seductive. This is its proposal to
satisfy mans guilty heart by a ritual instead of a spiritual
salvation. As all know who understand the popish theology, the
proposed vehicle of this redemption by forms is the sacraments.
Romanists are taught that the New Testament sacraments differ from
those of the Old Testament in this: that they not only symbolize and
seal, but effectuate grace ex opere operato in the souls
of the recipients. Rome teaches her children that her sacraments are
actual charismatic power of direct supernatural efficiency wrought
upon recipients by virtue of a portion of the Holy Spirits
omnipotence conferred upon the priest in ordination from the
apostolic succession.
The Bible teaches that in the
case of all adults a gracious state must preexist in order for any
beneficial participation in the sacrament, and that the only
influence of the sacraments is to cherish and advance that pre-existing
spiritual life by their didactic effect, as energized by
Gods Spirit, through prayer, faith, watchfulness, and obedience, in
precisely the same generic mode in which the Holy Spirit energizes
the written and preached word. Hence, if watchfulness, prayer,
obedience, and a life of faith are neglected, our sacraments become
no sacraments. If thou be a breaker of the law, then circumcision is
made uncircumcision. But Rome teaches that her sacraments, duly
administered by a priest having apostolic succession, implant
spiritual life in souls hitherto dead in sin, and that they
maintain and foster this life by a direct power not dependent on the
recipients diligent exercise of Gospel principles. Provided the
recipient be not in mortal sin unabsolved, the sacrament does its
spiritual work upon the sinful soul, whether it receives it in the
exercise of saving grace or not.
Now let no Protestant mind
exclaim: Surely this is too gross to be popular; surely people will
have too much sense to think that they can get to Heaven by this
species of consecrated jugglery! History shows that this scheme of
redemption is almost universally acceptable and warmly popular with
sinful mankind. Apprehend aright the ideas of paganism, ancient and
modem: We perceive that this popish conception of sacraments is
virtually the same with the pagans conception of their heathen rites.
They claim to be just this species of saving ritual, working their
benefit upon souls precisely by this opus operatum agency.
What a commentary have we here upon this tendency of human nature to
a ritual salvation. The evangelists and apostles reintroduced to the
world the pure conception of a spiritual salvation wrought by the
energy of divine truth, and not of church rites; received by an
intelligent faith in the saved mans soul, and not by manual
ceremonial; and made effectual by the enlightening operation of the
Holy Ghost upon heart and mind in rational accordance with truth, not
by a priestly incantation working a physical miracle. The gospels and
epistles defined and separated the two conceptions as plainly as
words could do it. But no sooner were the apostles gone than the
pagan conception of salvation by ritual, instead of by rational
faith, began to creep back into the patristic church. In a few
hundred years the wrong conception had triumphed completely over the
correct one in nearly the whole of Christendom, and thenceforward
sacramental grace has reigned supreme over the whole Roman and Greek
communions, in spite of modern letters and culture. How startling
this commentary upon that tendency of human nature! Surely there are
deep-seated principles in man to account for it.
These are not far to seek. First,
men are sensuous beings, and hence they naturally crave something
concrete, material, and spectacular in their religion. Dominated as
they are by a perpetual current of sensations, and having their
animality exaggerated by their sinful nature, they are sluggish to
think spiritual truths, to look by faith upon invisible objects; they
crave to walk by sight rather than by faith. The material things in
mammon, the sensual pleasures which they see with their eyes and
handle with their fingers, although they perfectly know they perish
with the using, obscure their view of all the infinite, eternal
realities, notwithstanding their professed belief of them. Need we
wonder that with such creatures the visible and manual ritual should
prevail over the spiritual didactic? Does one exclaim, But this is so
unreasonablethis notion that a ritual ceremonial can change the
state and destiny of a rational and moral spirit! I reply, Yes, but
not one whit more irrational than the preference which the whole
natural world gives to the things which are seen and temporal, as it
perfectly knows, over the things which are unseen and eternal; an
insanity of which the educated and refined are found just as capable
as the ignorant and brutish. But the other principle of human nature
is still more keen and pronounced in its preference for a ritual
salvation. This is its deep-seated, omnipotent preference for self-will
and sin over spiritual holiness of life. The natural man has,
indeed, his natural conscience and remorse, his fearful looking for
of judgment, his natural fear of misery, which is but modified
selfishness. These make everlasting punishment very terrible to his
apprehension.
But enmity to God, to his
spiritual service, to the supremacy of his holy will, is as native to
him as his selfish fear is. Next to perdition, there is no conception
in the universe so repulsive to the sinful heart of man as that of
genuine repentance and its fruits. The true Gospel comes to him and
says: Here is, indeed, a blessed, glorious redemption, as free as
air, as secure as the throne of God, but instrumentally it is
conditional on the faith of the heart; which faith works by love,
purifies the heart, and can only exist as it coexists with genuine
repentance, which repentance turns honestly, unreservedly, here and
now, without shuffling or procrastination, from sin unto God, with
full purpose of and endeavor after new obedience; wh ich is, in fact,
a complete surrender of the sinful will to Gods holy will, and a
hearty enlistment in an arduous work of watchfulness, self-denial,
and self-discipline, for the sake of inward holiness, to be kept up
as long as life lasts. Soul, embrace this task and this splendid
salvation shall be yours; and the gracious Saviour, who purchases it
for you, shall sustain, comfort, and enable you in this arduous
enlistment, so that even in the midst of the warfare you shall find
rest, and at the end Heaven; but without this faith and this
repentance no sacraments or rights will do a particle of good toward
your salvation.
Now, this carnal soul has no
faith; it is utterly mistrustful and skeptical as to the possibility
of this peace of the heart in the spiritual warfare, this sustaining
power of the invisible hand, of which it has had no experience. This
complete subjugation of self-will to God, this life of self-denial
and vital godliness, appears to this soul utterly repulsive, yea,
terrible. This guilty soul dreads Hell; it abhors such a life only
less than Hell. When told by Protestantism that it must thus turn or
die, this carnal soul finds itself in an abhorrent dilemma; either
term of the alternative is abominable to it.
But now comes the theory of
sacramental grace and says to it with oily tongue: Oh! Protestantism
exaggerates the dilemma! Your case is not near so bad! The sacraments
of the church transfer you from the state of condemnation to that of
reconciliation by their own direct but mysterious efficiency; they
work real grace, though you do not bring to them this deep,
thoroughgoing self-sacrifice and self-consecration. No matter how
much you sin, or how often, repeated masses will make expiation for
the guilt of all those sins ex opere operato. Thus, with her other
sacraments of penance and extreme unction, Holy Mother Church will
repair all your shortcomings and put you back into a salvable state,
no matter how sinfully you live.
Need we wonder that this false
doctrine is as sweet to that guilty soul as a reprieve to the felon
at the foot of the gallows? He can draw his breath again; he can say
to himself: Ah, then the abhorred dilemma does not urge me here and
now; I can postpone this hated reformation; I can still tamper with
cherished sins without embracing perdition. This is a pleasant
doctrine; it suits so perfectly the sinful, selfish soul which does
not wish to part with its sins, and also does not wish to lie down in
everlasting burnings.
This deep-seated love of sin and
self has also another result: The soul is conscious that, if it must
do many things which it does not like in order to avoid perdition, it
is much pleasanter to do a number of ceremonial things than to do any
portion of spiritual heartwork.
After I stood my graduate
examination in philosophy at the University of Virginia, my
professor, the venerable George Tucker, showed me a cheating
apparatus which had been prepared by a member of the class. He had
unluckily dropped it upon the sidewalk, and it had found its way to
the professors hands. It was a narrow blank-book, made to be hidden
in the coat-sleeve. It contained, in exceedingly small penmanship,
the whole course, in the form of questions from the professors
recitations with their answers copied from the text-book. It was
really a work of much labor.
I said, The strange thing to me
is that this sorry fellow has expended upon this fraud much more hard
labor than would have enabled him to prepare himself for passing
honestly and honorably.
Mr. Tucker replied, Ah, my dear
sir, you forget that a dunce finds it easier to do any amount of mere
manual drudgery than the least bit of true thinking.
Here we have an exact
illustration. It is less irksome to the carnal mind to do twelve
dozen paternosters by the beads than to do a few moments of real
heart-work. Thoughtless people sometimes say that the rule of Romish
piety is more exacting than that of the Protestant. This is the
explanation, that Rome is more exacting as to form and ritual; Bible
religion is more exacting as to spiritual piety and vital godliness.
To the carnal mind the latter are almost insufferably irksome and
laborious; the form and ritual, easy and tolerable. And when remorse,
fear, and self-righteousness are gratified by the assurance that
these observances really promote the souls salvation, the task is
made light. Here Rome will always present an element of popularity as
long as mankind are sensuous and carnal.
(6) To a shallow view, it might
appear that the popish doctrine of purgatory should be quite a
repulsive element of unpopularity with sinners; that doctrine is,
that notwithstanding all the benefit of the churchs sacraments and
the believers efforts, no Christian soul goes direct to Heaven when
the body dies, except those of the martyrs, and a few eminent saints,
who are, as it were, miracles of sanctification in this life. All the
clergy, and even the popes, must go through purgatory in spite of the
apostolic succession and the infallibility.
There the remains of carnality in
all must be burned away, and the deficiencies of their penitential
work in this life made good, by enduring penal fires and torments for
a shorter or longer time. Then the Christian souls, finally purged
from depravity and the reaum paenae, enter into their final
rest with Christ. But the alms, prayers, and masses of survivors
avail much to help these Christian souls in purgatory and shorten
their sufferings. It might be supposed that the Protestant doctrine
should be much more attractive and popular, viz.: that there is no
purgatory or intermediate state for the spirits of dead men, but that
the souls of believers, being at their death made perfect in
holiness, do immediately enter into glory. This ought to be the more
attractive doctrine, and to Bible believers it is such, but there is
a feature about it which makes it intensely unpopular and repellent
to carnal men, and gives a powerful advantage with them to the popish
scheme. That feature is the sharpness and strictness of the
alternative which the Bible doctrine presses upon sinners: turn or
die.
The Bible offers the most blessed
and glorious redemption conceivable by man, gracious and free, and
bestowing a consummate blessedness the moment the body dies. But it
is on these terms that the Gospel must be embraced by a penitent
faith, working an honest and thorough revolution in the life. If the
sinner refuses this until this life ends, he seals his fate; and that
fate is final, unchangeable, and dreadful. Now, it is no consolation
to the carnal heart that the Gospel assures him he need not run any
risk of that horrible fate; that he has only to turn and live; that
very turning is the thing which he abhors, if it is to be done in
spirit and in truth. He intensely desires to retain his sin and self-will.
He craves earnestly to put off the evil day of this sacrifice
without incurring the irreparable penalty.
Now, Rome comes to him and tells
him that this Protestant doctrine is unnecessarily harsh; that a
sinner may continue in the indulgence of his sins until this life
ends, and yet not seal himself up thereby to a hopeless Hell; that if
he is in communion with the Holy Mother Church through her
sacraments, he may indulge himself in this darling procrastination
without ruining himself forever. Thus the hateful necessity of
present repentance is postponed awhile; sweet, precious privilege to
the sinner! True, he must expect to pay due penance for that self-indulgence
in purgatory, but he need not perish for it. The Mother
Church advises him not to make so bad a bargain and pay so dear for
his whistle. But she assures him that, if he does, it need not ruin
him, for she will pull him through after a little by her merits and
sacraments. How consoling this is to the heart at once in love with
sin and remorseful for its guilt!
The seductiveness of this theory
of redemption to the natural heart is proved by this grand fact, that
in principle and in its essence this scheme of purgatorial cleansing
has had a prominent place in every religion in the world that is of
human invention. The Bible, the one divine religion, is peculiar in
rejecting the whole concept. Those hoary religions, Brahmanism and
Buddhism, give their followers the virtual advantage of this
conception in the transmigration of the souls. The guilt of the
sinners human life may be expiated by the sorrows of the souls
existence in a series of animal or reptile bodies, and then through
another human existence, the penitent and purified soul may at last
reach Heaven. Classic paganism promised the same e scape for sinners,
as all familiar with Virgil know. His hero, Aeneas, when visiting the
under world, saw many sinners there preparing for their release into
the Elysian fields. Ergo exercentur paenis, et veterum malorum
supplicia expendunt. Mohammed extends the same hope to all
his sinful followers. For those who entirely reject Islam there is
nothing but Hell; but for all who profess There is no God but Allah,
and Mohammed is his prophet, there is a purgatory after death, and
its pains are shortened by his intercession. The Roman and Greek
Churches flatter the sinful world with the same human invention. So
strong is this craving of carnal men to postpone the issue of turning
to God or perishing, we now see its effect upon the most cultured
minds of this advanced nineteenth century in the New England doctrine
of a 'probation.' Rome has understood human nature
skilfully, and has adapted her bait for it with consummate cunning.
Her scheme is much more acute than that of the absolute universalist
of the school of Hosea Ballou, for this outrages mans moral
intuitions too grossly by rejecting all distinction between guilt and
righteousness. This bait for sin-loving men is too bald.
It must be added that the
doctrine of a purgatory and of an application of redemption after
death is intensely attractive to other principles of the human heart,
much more excusable; to some affections, indeed, which are amiable. I
allude to the solicitude and the affection of believers for the souls
of those whom they loved in this life, "died and made no
sign." The Bible doctrine is, indeed, a solemn, an awful one to
Christians bereaved by the impenitent deaths of children and
relatives. It is our duty to foresee this solemn result, and to
provide against it by doing everything which intercessory prayer,
holy example and loving instruction and entreaty can do to prevent
such a catastrophe in the case of all those near to our he arts. But
human self-indulgence is prone to be slack in employing this
safeguard against this sorrow. Let us picture to ourselves such a
bereaved Christian, sincere, yet partially self-condemned, and
doubtful or fearful or hopeless concerning the thorough conversion of
a child who has been cut down by death. Of all the elements of
bereavement none is so bitter, so immedicable, as the fear that he
whom he loved must suffer the wrath of God forever, and that now he
is beyond reach of his prayers and help. To such a one comes the
Romish priest with this species of discourse. See now how harsh and
cruel is this heretical Protestant dogma! Instead of offering
consolation to your Christian sorrow it embitters it as with a drop
of Hell fire. But Holy Mother Church is a mild and loving comforter;
she assures you that your loved one is not necessarily lost; he may
have to endure keen penances in purgatory for a time, but there is a
glorious hope to sustain him and you under them. Every minute of pain
is bringing the final Heaven nearer, and the most blessed part of our
teaching is that your love can still follow him and help him and
bless, as it was wont to do under those earthly chastisements of his
sins. It is your privilege still to pray for him, and your prayers
avail to lighten his sufferings and to shorten them. Your love can
still find that generous solace which was always so sweet to you
midst your former sorrows for his sins and his earthly sufferings the
solace of helping him and sharing his pains. Your aims also may avail
for him; masses can be multiplied by your means, which will make
merit to atone for his penitential guilt and hasten his blessed
release. Who can doubt that a loving heart will be powerfully seduced
by this promise, provided it can persuade itself of its certainty, or
even of its probable truth? Here is the stronghold of Romanism on
sincere, amiable, and affectionate souls.
Of course, the real question is,
whether any pastor or priest is authorized by God to hold out these
hopes to the bereaved. If they are unwarrantable, then this
presentation is an artifice of unspeakable cruelty and profanity.
Under the pretence of softening the pain of bereavement to Gods
children, it is adding to wicked deception the most mischievous
influences upon the living by contradicting those solemn incentives
to immediate repentance which God has set up in his Word, and by
tempting deluded souls with a false hope to neglect their real
opportunity. If the hope is not grounded in the Word of God, then its
cruelty is equal to its deceitfulness. But the suffering heart is
often weak, and it is easier to yield to the temptation of accepting
a deceitful consolation than to brace itself up to the plain but
stern duty of ascertaining Gods truth.
I have thus set in array the
influences which Rome is now wielding throughout our country for the
seduction of human souls. Some of these weapons Protestants put into
her hands by their own unfaithfulness and folly. God has a right to
blame Rome for using this species of weapon in favor of the wrong
cause, but these Protestants have not.
There is another class of weapons
which Rome finds in the blindness and sinfulness of human nature. Her
guilt may be justly summed up in this statement: That these are
precisely the errors and crimes of humanity which the church of
Christ should have labored to suppress and extirpate; whereas Rome
caters to them and fosters them in order to use them for her
aggrandizement. But none the less are these weapons potent. They are
exactly adapted to the nature of fallen man. As they always have been
successful, they will continue to succeed in this country. Our
republican civil constitutions will prove no adequate shield against
them. Our rationalistic culture, by weakening the authority of Gods
Word, is only opening the way for their ulterior victory. Our
scriptural ecclesiastical order will be no sufficient bulwark. The
primitive churches had that bulwark in its strongest Presbyterian
form, but popery steadily undermined it. What it did once it can do
again. There will be no effectual check upon another spread of this
error except the work of the Holy Ghost. True and powerful revivals
will save American Protestantism; nothing else will.
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