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THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES
BOOK 1
- ORIGIN AND ORGANIZATION OF THE INQUISITION
CHAPTER V.
2
PERSECUTION COMMENCES UNDER CONSTANTINE
The triumph of intolerance was inevitable when
Christianity became the religion of the State, yet the slowness of its progress
shows the difficulty of overcoming the incongruity between persecution and the
gospel. Hardly had orthodoxy been defined by the Council of Nicaea when Constantine
brought the power of the State to bear to enforce uniformity. All heretic and
schismatic priests were deprived of the privileges and immunities bestowed on
the clergy and were subjected to the burdens of the State; their meeting-places
were confiscated for the benefit of the Church, and their assemblies, whether
public or private, were prohibited.
It is a curious commentary on theological perversity
to learn the watchful energy with which these provisions were enforced to the
suppression of heresy while yet the pagan temples and ceremonies remained
undisturbed. Yet while the churchmen might feel it to be a duty thus to
obstruct the development and dissemination of teachings which they regarded as
destructive to religion, they still shrank from pushing intolerance to
extremity and enforcing uniformity with blood, although the Emperor Julian
declared that he had found no wild beasts so cruel to men as most of the Christians
were to each other. Constantine, it is true, commanded the surrender of all
copies of the writings of Arius under penalty of death, but it does not appear
that any executions actually took place in consequence; and at last, tired of
the endless strife, he ordered Athanasius to admit all Christians to the churches
without distinction. No effort of the sovereign, however, could soothe the
bitterness of doctrinal strife, which grew fiercer and fiercer. In 370 Valens
is said to have put to death eighty orthodox ecclesiastics who had complained
to him of the violence of the Arians, but this was not a judicial execution,
but in pursuance of a secret order to the Prefect Modestus, who decoyed them on
board of a vessel and caused it to be burned at sea.
It was in 385 that the first instance was given of
judicial capital punishment for heresy, and the horror which it excited shows
that it was regarded everywhere as a hideous innovation. The Gnostic and
Manichaean speculations of Priscillian were looked upon with the peculiar
detestation which that group of heresies ever called forth; but when he was
tried by the tyrant Maximus, at Treves, with the use of torture, and was put to
death with six of his disciples, while others were banished to a barbarous
island beyond Britain, there was a most righteous burst of indignation. Of the
two prosecuting bishops, Ithacius and Idacius, one was expelled from the
episcopate and the other resigned. The saintly Martin of Tours, who had done
all in his power to prevent the atrocity, refused to join in communion with
them, or with any who communed with them. If he finally yielded, in order to
save the lives of some men for whom he had come to Maximus to beg mercy, and
also to prevent the tyrant from persecuting the Priscillianists of Spain
(where, like the subsequent Cathari, they were detected by their pallor), yet, in
spite of the consoling visit of an angel, he was overcome with grief at what he
had done, and he found that he had lost for some time the power to expel devils
and heal the sick.
If the Church thus still shrank from blood, it had by
this time reached the point of using all other means without scruple to enforce
conformity. Early in the fifth century we find Chrysostom teaching that heresy
must be suppressed, heretics silenced and prevented from ensnaring others, and
their conventicles broken up, but that the death-penalty is unlawful. About the
same time St. Augustin entreats the Prefect of Africa not to put any Donatists
to death because, if he does so, no ecclesiastic can make complaint of them,
for they will prefer to suffer death themselves rather than be the cause of it
to others. Yet Augustin approved of the imperial laws which banished and fined
them and deprived them of their churches and of testamentary power, and he
consoled them by telling them that God did not wish them to perish in
antagonism to Catholic unity. To constrain any one from evil to good, he
argued, was not oppression, but charity; and when the unlucky schismatics urged
that no one ought to be coerced in his faith, he freely admitted it as a
general principle, but added that sin and infidelity must be punished.
Step by step the inevitable progress was made, and men
easily found specious arguments to justify the indulgence of their passions.
The fiery Jerome, when his wrath was excited by Vigilantius forbidding the
adoration of relics, expressed his wonder that the bishop of the hardy heretic
had not destroyed him in the flesh for the benefit of his soul, and argued that
piety and zeal for God could not be cruelty; rigor, in fact, he argues in
another place, is the most genuine mercy, since temporal punishment may avert
eternal perdition. It was only sixty-two years after the slaughter of
Priscillian and his followers had excited so much horror, that Leo I, when the
heresy seemed to be reviving, in 447, not only justified the act, but declared
that if the followers of heresy so damnable were allowed to live there would be
an end of human and divine law. The final step had been taken, and the Church
was definitely pledged to the suppression of heresy at whatever cost. It is
impossible not to attribute to ecclesiastical influence the successive edicts
by which, from the time of Theodosius the Great, persistence in heresy was
punished with death.
DUTY OF THE RULER TO SUPRESS HERESY
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