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THE HISTORY OF THE PAPACY IN THE XIXth CENTURY
V
FEBRONIANISM
AND JOSEPHINISM
In 1741, after the death of Charles VI, when the
German electors met to choose a new emperor, the papal nuncio, Doria, like
former nuncios on similar occasions, did his best to induce the ecclesiastical electors
to cancel the fourteenth article in the stipulations of election, obliging the
emperor to oppose certain Roman encroachments, and to acknowledge the rights of
Protestantism in accordance with the terms of the Peace of Westphalia, and with
various Acts of the Diet. Instead of giving in upon this point, the electors
expressed the wish that Rome would satisfy those complaints which for many
centuries had found vent in the so-called gravamina nationis Germaniae.
A privy councilor of the Elector of Trier, named Von Spangenberg, who was a
convert and the son of a Pfarrer at Harzen, was commissioned, together with an official of
Trier, Johann von Hontheim, to enquire what was the real state of the case with
regard to these gravamina,
which had played a particularly prominent part at the time of the Reformation,
and how far the constitution of the German Catholic Church was in accordance
with existing laws. As the Elector of Trier would have the first voice in the
matter when it came publicly forward, it was needful for the commissaries of
Trier to consider the matter very thoroughly.
The task which was thus given to Hontheim had
important consequences in his after life.
Spangenberg once made the remark in a large company that it was much to be
wished that some learned priest should come forward, who could place in; its
proper light the difference between the spiritual power of the Pope and the
arrogance of the Roman Court, and who would draw the line between the
ecclesiastical and the temporal power. No one was more suited to solve this
problem than Hontheim; both his studies and his position made him the proper
person.
Johann Nicolaus von
Hontheim was born at Trier in 1701. After receiving his first instruction there
from the Jesuits; he went to Louvain, where Zeger Bernhard van Espen had for nearly half a century
lectured on canon law in a manner which betrayed the strong influence of
Grotius’ Law of Nature, and of Gallicanism. When Hontheim was a student at Louvain, Van Espen was an old man of nearly eighty, and no longer
lectured. But canon law was taught after his manner, and the aged master often
put in an appearance at the students' debates, to impress upon them those
truths which were the outcome of his long years of study in Church history and
jurisprudence. While at Louvain, it dawned upon young Hontheim that there was a
difference between Catholicism and Popery; and at the same time his eyes were
opened to the sins of Jesuitism. He became a Gallican,
but not, like Van Espen himself and many of his disciples,
a Jansenist as well.
His studies took him likewise to the Protestant
University of Leyden; and on his return home Hontheim was made professor at the University of
Trier, and afterwards commissary of the “Official” at Coblenz, superintendent
of the seminary for priests in that town, and canon of the Collegiate Church of
St Florian. This brought him into close
communication with the Elector Franz Georg, Count of Schonbom,
who usually lived at Ehrenbreitstein. Franz Georg
was not contented like his predecessors for the last hundred and forty years,
to leave church matters to a suffragan, while himself attending only to politics.
He had duly received consecration and zealously fulfilled his episcopal duties. At the beginning he employed Hontheim
only in matters of State, such as the imperial elections in 1741 and 1745. But
when his suffragan died in 1748, Hontheim became
also his ecclesiastical coadjutor, as titular Bishop of Myriophyti in partibus infidelium. Under the next elector, Johann Philipp von Walderdorff (1756-1768), who took more interest in
the chase than in the concerns of the Church, nearly the whole conduct of
ecclesiastical affairs was put into Hontheim’s hands, and he had occasion to
make his views felt in many directions. He endeavored to break the power of the
Jesuits at the University of Trier and in the scholastic sphere in general. He
thought of substituting Benedictines for the Jesuits in the theological
faculty, a plan, however, which was not carried out until after the Jesuits were
expelled from France. He took care that canon law was taught on Gallican principles. His historical interest showed itself
in the production of several important works throwing light on the history of
Trier. They betray a zeal for collecting and sifting original documents, which
was not common in those days, as well as a great love for Germany, and for his
native Trier.
JUSTINUS FEBRONIUS
But the most remarkable of Hontheim’s works is a
goodly quarto volume: De statu eclesiae et legitima potestate Romani Pontificis,
which was published in September 1763, by the bookseller Esslinger at Frankfurt. In this the author endeavors to answer the question which had
been put to him at the imperial election twenty-two years before, and which he
had never lost sight of since. On the title page the publisher concealed
himself and the place of printing under the misleading statement: Bullioni apud Guillelmum Eccardi; the
author called himself Justinus Febronius. It was a chance
name, taken from Justine, his younger brother’s daughter, who, on entering the
convent of Juvigny near Clermont, had just then
exchanged her baptismal name for that of Febronia.
The book was printed with the greatest secrecy at Frankfurt. The proofs were
read by Dumaix, Dean of the Collegiate Church of St
Leonard, that “very clear-sighted” Roman Catholic priest, belonging to the
circle of Mme. de la Roche, who gave Goethe such “full and beautiful”
information about the external and internal condition of the ancient Church.
In the reading-room of the town library at Trier there
is a portrait of Hontheim in his episcopal house-dress. If it is like him, his features bore a resemblance to those of
Herder and Goethe, and something of the large-mindedness and extensive survey
of those two men appears in his book. It is written by a learned theologian in
rather ornate Latin, and an observant reader soon discovers that the author's
views have been enlarged, not only by means of historical study, but by taking
part in practical politics. Its author is a statesman, not a schoolman. The
book contains the Gallican system transplanted to
German soil. It champions the importance of the episcopate and the rights of
the State as against the Papacy; and it ends with an appeal to reject utterly
those claims which are based on nothing but the forged Isidorian Decretals, and to return to the constitution of the
Church as it was during the first four centuries of the Christian era. In a
certain sense there is not much that is new in the book; the ideas are those of
Bossuet, Natalis Alexander, Fleury, and the other
great Gallicans. But Febronius speaks with such
clearness and authority, that the reader feels to what an extent Gallicanism has leavened his theology and his conception
of Christianity. In the beginning of the book he addresses himself to the pope,
the princes, the bishops, and doctors of divinity and of ecclesiastical law;
and throughout these appeals it is clear that his theoretical discussions have
a practical aim. He hopes to succeed in bringing the actual state of things
into agreement with his ideas.
The popes are called upon to define the proper limits
of their own powers. But Febronius has no belief that this summons will be
heeded; therefore the princes must come forward to defend the rights of their
respective national churches. In France, Gallicanism supported the rights of the French king; to Van Espen it meant maintaining the rights of his sovereign, the Emperor; to Febronius it
became the assertion of the rights of each territorial prince. At the Council
of Trent it had not been decided whether the bishops received their authority
directly from God or from the Pope. Febronius held the former view; and he
believed that the Roman Church would regain its old power of attracting, if
this view were universally enforced by help of the princes. His book bore on
the title page the words: ad reuniendos dissidentes in religione Christianos compositus, showing what he hoped would be the result,
when the cause of the bishops had vanquished that of the Curia. The bishops, he
says, ought never to forget that they are the successors of the Apostles, and
they ought to demand the restitution of their rights. Doctors of divinity and
of canon law should get rid of the false doctrines of the Pope's jurisdiction
and infallibility. The episcopal system must take
the place of the papal, and the autocracy of the papal decrees must be
shattered. At the beginning, the Church was by no means a monarchy; the Apostles
were equal; St Peter was only the first among equals. The bishops have their
rights directly from Christ, but the Pope has only received the primacy in commission
from the Church. It is false doctrine to say that the Pope represents the
Church, for the Church is represented by the General Council. Bishops have the
right of self-government as heirs of the authority given to the Apostles to
rule the Church. This former state of things must be brought back; the question
is how? Priests and people must be instructed in the origin and justification
of the Pope's claims. Councils must be called together, a General Council if
possible, at all events National Councils, and the Catholic princes must meet
and set bounds once for all to the power of the Papacy.
FEBRONIUS ON THE POPE
The nuncios at Cologne and Vienna at once sent
Febronius’ book to Rome, and in February 1764 it was placed on the Index. But
Clement XIII wished the affair to be kept as quiet as possible; it was not in
the interests of Rome at that moment to provoke a public discussion on such a
delicate point. A few weeks, however, after the book was condemned, he called
upon the German electors and bishops in several letters to suppress it, and his
request was acceded to even at Trier. In spite of this, the substance of the
book appeared in a German form in 1764; a new and enlarged edition in 1765; in
1766 the book was translated into Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese; and in the
following years new editions kept appearing. Although the Elector of Trier's
prohibition of the book was couched in somewhat gentler language than the
Pope's, Hontheim thought it right to ask to be released from his various
offices, alleging his age and indifferent health. But the Elector refused to
grant his request, and he continued to execute his offices. For safety's sake
he published in one or two local papers a declaration that he was not Justinus
Febronius. Although no one believed this declaration, Prince Clemens Wenzel,
Bishop of Freisingen, Regensburg, and Augsburg, who
succeeded the Elector Johann Philipp in 1768, made him Privy Counsellor and “Conferenzrath”,
chief of the clerical Consistory, and Minister, so that the most important part
of the ecclesiastical management was put into his hands, and especially the dealings
with Rome. The Pope made Cardinal Albani represent
to the Elector the impropriety of entrusting such a high ecclesiastical office
to a man of Hontheim’s views. Hontheim himself answered on behalf of the
Elector, that he had publicly denied that he was the author of the book; that
Trier was by no means governed on Febronian principles; and that, on the contrary, they showed all due loyalty and
sincerity towards the Roman see.
But Rome was not reassured. Both north and south of
the Alps a number of answers to Febronius were composed. Ballerini at Verona, Sangallo at Venice, Corsi at Florence, Zaccaria at Modena, and Mamachi at Rome were some of the most notable Italian opponents of Febronianism;
and in Southern Italy the Bishop of Sant' Agata sharpened his pen to fight this new foe. Hontheim
replied to some of these criticisms, which swelled the later editions of his
book to such an extent that in 1777 he thought it necessary to publish an
abridged edition. But in spite of all these attacks, Clemens Wenzel upheld his
aged servant, until an ex-Jesuit, named Beck, to whom had been given the task
of teaching theology and ecclesiastical law to the Elector, who was quite
ignorant of these sciences, gained such power over his noble pupil that he “did
with him what he would”. By means of a long succession of intrigues, in which
the papal nuncio and others played a part, Hontheim's position as the trusted
adviser of the Elector was completely undermined; and at last, in 1778, they
extorted from the old man of seventy-seven a moderately worded recantation. At
Rome people exulted loudly in this victory over Gallicanism,
to which so shortly before the Jesuit order had been sacrificed. At Trier it
was expected and assumed that Hontheim's recantation would remain a secret; but
that was not to be the case. Already on Christmas Eve 1778, Pius VI gathered
the cardinals around him in their festal robes in St Peter's, to communicate to
them the recantation of the Coadjutor Bishop of Trier, and the whole Roman
Catholic world was afterwards informed of this event which was so gratifying to
Rome.
HONTHEIM'S RECANTATION
In ultramontane circles the triumph of Rome found an
echo, but elsewhere this victory over a feeble old man was not thought of much
consequence. A. C. Hwiid, a Dane, who afterwards
became Provost of the Regents College in Copenhagen, was staying at Vienna soon
after the news of Hontheim’s retractation had arrived, and he says that many
people there “abused Febronius and said he was in his second childhood”. But this
explanation of his retractation is hardly justifiable; Hontheim knew well what
he was doing when he showed this outward obedience to Rome. He wrote: “I have
in a certain way recalled my book Justinus Febronius, just as a much more
learned prelate, Fénelon, did, in order to avoid scenes and unpleasantnesses. But my retractation does not harm, and
never will harm, the world and the Christian religion; and as little does it
benefit and will it benefit the Roman Court. The world has read, tried, and
accepted the assertions in my book, and my retractation will no more make
thoughtful minds deny or reject those assertions than will the refutations
written by so many of the Pope's theologasters,
monks, and flatterers”. The same keynote sounds through a Latin commentary on
his retractation, which Hontheim published in 1781, and which shows us that in
all essentials his standpoint remained the same.
Febronianism had made many conquests. Even before the
appearance of Hontheim’s famous book, the ultramontane system and the doctrine
of the Pope’s infallibility had begun to be put in the background in the Roman
Catholic schools and class books of Germany. The Jesuits were in reality
overthrown in Germany before the order was abolished. When Clement XIV had
succeeded Clement XIII in 1769, Emmerich Joseph of Breitenbach, Elector of Mainz (1763-1774), whose Ministers
were not only Gallicans but Voltairians,
proposed that commissioners from the three Rhenish electors should meet at Coblenz and consult on the question of demanding “the
correction of various abuses”, and especially with regard to the best way of
securing “the restoration of the original episcopal power”. These deliberations, which lasted from September till December, led to
the drawing up of the thirty Latin “Articles of Coblenz”, of which nearly all
are aimed at the arrogance of Rome and the extortions of the Roman chancery.
There is much which points to the belief that the Articles were composed by
Hontheim's pen; at all events they contain Febronian ideas. The Articles of Coblenz were sent to the Emperor Joseph II with a
petition that the freedom of the German Church might be so established, “that
the chief churches of this nation should enjoy not less freedom than the
churches of other nations”. After some delay the Emperor Joseph II replied that
some of the electors' grievances could be redressed at once by any archbishop
or bishop, with the knowledge of the Emperor; others must be brought before the
Diet; and others again must stand over for the present. At first the electors
wished to press their case, but when they were privately informed from Vienna,
that the right moment was not thought to have arrived for taking this matter
up, they let it drop. So the Articles of Coblenz were only of importance as the
precursors of the “Points” of Ems.
After the fall of the Jesuits, Febronianism rushed to the front everywhere in Germany. The German Benedictines,
Cistercians, Franciscans, and Augustinians, and especially the numerous
professors in Germany, who after the disappearance of the Jesuits were not
members of any order, fearlessly acknowledged the doctrine of the Council of
Constance, that a General Council of the Church was superior to the Pope, and
professed the Gallican principles of ecclesiastical
law. At the same time it became possible to study history with more freedom and
under better conditions. It was now no longer necessary to represent Henry IV,
Henry V, Frederick Barbarossa, and Lewis of Bavaria, as wicked adventurers and
half heretics, because they would not bow to the demands of the mediaeval
Papacy. People saw that right was not always on the side of the Papacy, and now
they dared to say so. The historical sense which was awaking deprived the
ultramontane system of one support after another.
JOSEPH II
Even crowned heads fell more and more under the power
of the Gallicanism and Febronianism which was in the air; and Europe witnessed a faint echo of the great struggle
of the Middle Ages between
the Ghibellines and the Guelphs.
The Romish Church had long been at war with the
spirit of the age; now it came into collision with the modern State, which
assumed more and more the right of interfering in every department of life. At
Vienna there was a circle of administrative officers and of professors, who not
only maintained the superiority of the Councils to the Papacy, but also the
power of the State in church matters and the civil duties owed by the
priesthood to the State. Their doctrine of the “omnipotent” State, and of the
union of all rights and duties in the head of the State, made an early
impression upon Joseph II. After visiting his brother-in-law, Louis XVI, in
1777, and getting a closer view of French affairs, he became an opponent of
religious intolerance. He returned to Austria with the conviction that the
decay to be everywhere noticed in those southern provinces of France, which are
so richly endowed by Nature, was due to the persecution of the Huguenots, and
that a prince should not deprive his country of the advantages to be gained
from excellent Protestant agriculturists and other good Protestant subjects.
When he heard that Protestantism was to be suppressed in Moravia, he made
representations to his mother in the name of religious freedom, but Maria
Theresa did not understand her son's “indifference and tolerance”, which, to
her mind, would only lead back to the days of club law, and would bring about
the ruin of Austria.
The young Emperor, on the other hand, was convinced
that religious liberty was the condition of the future greatness of Austria,
and when Maria Theresa's death in 1780 gave him a free hand, he soon showed
that he was a believer in tolerance, and also in the doctrine of the
omnipotence of the State. As Professor Sonnenfels,
one of the Liberal lecturers at the University of Vienna, said in 1782, the
very first year of his reign was “more fruitful in remarkable laws, than the
whole lives of other princes”. And the enlightened despotism of Joseph II found
a few adherents among the church dignitaries of the realm, even when it
ventured upon ecclesiastical territory. Count Francis Hrzan-Haras,
who, in 1780, was made a cardinal, and Austrian Minister to the Papal Court;
the Archbishop of Salzburg, Primate of the Austrian Empire; the Bishops of Laibach and Koniggratz,
willingly lent a hand to the carrying out of his church reforms, and defended
them against the attacks which came from the rest of the episcopate led by the
Cardinal-Archbishop of Vienna, Count Migazzi, and
the Primate of Hungary, Count Batthyany, Archbishop
of Gran.
Soon after Joseph II became sole ruler, he granted to
his dominions the freedom of the Press, by means of a law which only forbade
the issue of such writings as treated in an altogether offensive manner of
religion or morals, the State or the rulers of the country. After the issue of
this law a number of libelous pamphlets appeared, in which both the Emperor and
religion were sharply attacked. Joseph II defended religion, but as for his own
person, he let these “Büchel” writers attack it as
much as they liked. Maria Theresa had ordered, in 1767, that papal Bulls should
not be published in Austria without the Placet of
the government. Joseph II extended this order so as to apply to the decisions
and decrees of all foreign religious authorities, and he commanded that the
Bulls In cena Domini and Unigenitus should be
removed from the service-books. For the future the religious orders were not to
be allowed to confer directly with their generals in Rome; all transactions
were to go through the Austrian envoy at the Papal Court. In order to draw away
young Austrians from the foreign influences in the Collegium Germanicum in Rome, a college for
Austrians intended for the priesthood was founded at Pavia, and to promote the
formation of an Austrian Catholic national Church the Emperor supported the
bishops in every way against the Curia.
Formerly, the Austrian bishops were compelled to obtain powers from the Pope,
for five years at a time, to give dispensations in certain matrimonial cases;
now, the bishops in the dominions of Joseph II were commanded to give
dispensations in those cases without the Pope's permission, “because it was
obviously of great importance to the State that the bishops should make use of
the power which God had given them”. To bind the prelates still closer to the
State, Joseph determined that the bishops, before their oath to the Pope,
should take an oath to the Emperor, in which they promised “all their lives to
be faithful and obedient to the Emperor, and to the best of their power to
promote the good of the State and the service of the Emperor; not to take part
in meetings, projects, or consultations, which might be injurious to the State,
but, on the contrary, when such things came to their knowledge, to inform the
Emperor without delay”.
HIS EDICT OF TOLERATION
A still greater sensation was caused by Joseph II's
Edict of Toleration, published on 13th October 1781. Under Maria Theresa the
Protestants had existed on sufferance, and the Jews had been quite without
rights or protection. The Protestants now received permission, wherever there
were a hundred families of them, to build meeting-houses, though these were not
allowed to have towers or bells nor an entrance from the street, which might
give them the pretension of being churches. By means of an imperial
dispensation, Protestants might after this even be permitted to take public
appointments and academical degrees, to enjoy full
citizenship and the rights of property. A brighter day dawned also for the
Jews. The old regulation that all children of mixed marriages must be brought
up in the faith of the Roman Church was restricted. If the father were a Roman
Catholic, all the children were still to be brought up in the Roman Catholic
religion; but if the father were a Protestant, the sons were to follow his
religion, and the daughters that of the mother. It was moreover forbidden to
force non-Catholics to take part in processions or other forms of service of
the “dominant religion”. After these
tolerant laws were made the number of Protestants increased remarkably. In 1782 there had only been 73,722 Protestants with 28 meeting-houses in German
Austria; five years later there were 156,865 with 154 places of worship.
The year after the issue of the Toleration Edict,
Joseph II laid his hand on the numerous Austrian monasteries. In this
department also some changes had been made during his mother's reign, but they
were by no means of a radical nature, and were carried out with the Pope's
approval. Joseph II acted on his own account and went to work in a much more
thorough fashion. In his eyes the monasteries were the abodes of idlers and
strongholds of hierarchical tendencies; and when, in November 1781, some
questionable conduct in the Carthusian monastery of Mauerbach in Lower Austria had attracted general attention
to the monastic institutions, Joseph, in a letter to the Chancellor of his
Court, set forth his plan for abolishing those monasteries which were serving
no useful purpose by education, by sick-nursing, or by study. On 12th January
1782 a rescript was issued which must be considered
as the real law for dissolving monastic institutions; in consequence of which
one house after another was closed. In 1770 there had been 2,163 monastic
establishments for monks and nuns in Austria and Hungary; in 1786 no fewer than
783 of these had been dissolved in virtue of the rescript of 1782 and subsequent imperial decrees. This reduction of the convents by
Joseph, which was imitated in the beginning of the following century in Baden,
Bavaria, and Württemberg, saved Austria from a revolution like the French
Revolution, and one which might easily have been far more destructive; it was
also a measure of great importance in political economy. Before Joseph II's
reforms three-eighths of all landed property was in the hands of the Church,
and the wealth of the convents was enormous. Although in many places a good
deal of this wealth was put away before the government commissioners crossed
the convent threshold, what remained caused general astonishment. It was not
expected that such riches would be found. The large quantity of dead capital
which was now suddenly brought into circulation had a great economic effect;
the same was the case with the many men and women who by means of the convent
law were restored to the family and to the commonwealth.
DISSOLUTION OF CONVENTS
All Joseph II’s church reforms sprang from his
conviction that the State had the right to abolish pernicious ecclesiastical
institutions, to stop abuses, and to arrange on its own account all matters of
service which were not immediately connected with the faith. In defense of
these reforms the Bishop of Laibach issued a
pastoral letter (1783) in which he maintained that all bishops had equal power,
and that the first among them, although he was the successor of St Peter, had
no rights of jurisdiction over the others; to him was only given the task of
preventing schisms and maintaining unity, and also of watching over the purity
of the Catholic Faith. The monastic orders were human institutions which had
degenerated in the course of time; the Church could well do without them, and
the closing of convents would in no wise injure religion.
Of course the ecclesiastical reforms in Austria were
variously judged of both at home and abroad. Frederick II mockingly called
Joseph II “my brother the sacristan”; the followers of the esprit philosophique considered the
doings in Austria to be only pernicious half measures; but many faithful
Catholics looked upon Joseph II's reforms as the beginning of the end. At Rome
the news from Vienna caused the greatest horror, and Pius VI thought that he
ought to try his powers as il persuasore to make the Emperor change
his course. Immediately after the death of Maria Theresa there was a coolness between Pius VI and
Joseph II, because the Pope had omitted to hold the solemn service, which was
customary on the death of Catholic sovereigns, maintaining that it ought only
to be held for a man. When the Austrian envoy communicated this to his master,
adding that Pius VI would not allow those prelates who were dependants of the
Imperial Court to wear mourning, Joseph answered: “It is a matter of complete
indifference to me whether the Bishop of Rome is polite or rude”. But in
reality it was not indifferent to him. And Pius VI resolved by visiting Austria
to get an opportunity of atoning for his rudeness.
When Pius VI informed the cardinals that he was going
to Vienna, the news caused great consternation, and several of them tried to
keep him back. Cardinal Bernis even wrote a letter
in which he told Pius VI that people already began to laugh at his apostolic
ardor, “and ridicule is the most formidable weapon against the Church and her
servants”. But it was of no use, Pius was bent upon going. At Vienna the Pope's
intimation of his intended journey gave great surprise. Prince Kaunitz would have preferred that the Emperor should
decline the visit. This the Emperor would not do, but in the letter which he
sent to thank the Pope he expressed a positive assurance that it would be
utterly impossible to make him change his mind with regard to the ordinances
which he had introduced, partly for the better ordering of church matters, and
partly to make use of the sovereign power which was his by right. This reply to
Pius VI was at once published in the newspapers, and Joseph II had thereby committed himself to such an extent, that there could
be no question of yielding on any essential point.
PIUS VI AT VIENNA
On 27th February 1782 Pius VI left Rome and reached
Vienna on 22nd March. Throughout the journey the Roman-Catholic people greeted
him with great joy; the Emperor Joseph II came to meet him in a friendly
manner, and himself conducted him into Vienna. Magnificently furnished apartments
in a wing of the Hofburg were assigned to him; but
only a single entrance led to them, and that was strictly guarded. The Austrian
bishops received imperial orders to keep away from the capital, but the country
people streamed in from all sides to receive the Pope's blessing. It was
necessary to use ships and barges on the Danube to house those who could not
find shelter on land, and at one time it was even feared that provisions would
run short. Every day the Pope had to bless as many as seven different sets of
people from the open gallery of the palace, and the Austrian magnates were
daily admitted to kiss the Fisherman's Ring on his finger. On Easter Day Pius
VI said Mass in St Stephen's, and on the same day he appeared with the tiara
upon his head on the balcony of the Jesuit church to bless a crowd of about
fifty thousand people. Even the enemies of the Church were moved at the sight
of the people's devotion to the Pope; but Joseph II did not recall his
ecclesiastical laws, and Prince Kaunitz, who was
jealous of the Pope's popularity, showed the greatest disrespect during a visit
which Pius VI paid him, and a grievous disregard of the courtesies usually
offered to a Pope. The Prince did not go down the stairs to receive his eminent
guest, and Pius VI was “quite astonished” when the Catholic Minister pressed
his hand instead of kissing it. Their conversation turned upon art, not upon
politics, and it was clear to Pius VI that il persuasore had made no impression at
all upon the old diplomatist. Nor had anything been gained by the negotiations
with Joseph II. The Pope had to submit to the Edict of Toleration and the conventual law remaining in force, and it was impossible
to come to an agreement about the royal Placet, the episcopal oath, and the power of the bishops in
matrimonial cases. Pius really attained nothing by this journey, but the
setting of a fateful example to his successor. In order to do Pius VI a favor,
Joseph II gave the title of Prince of the Empire to his nephew Count Onesti; but the Pope begged the Emperor to keep back the
diploma for a time “because he feared satire”.
After the unfortunate visit to Kaunitz,
Pius VI determined to go home, and a few days later (22nd April) he left
Vienna. Joseph II was quite glad at his going. He was tired of seeing all the
passages and stairs thronged with people who wanted his guest to bless rosaries
and pictures, and he was shocked at the “ridiculous enthusiasm” of the women.
He accompanied Pius VI to Mariabrunn, and, before
parting, they prayed together in the convent church. But the next day, imperial
emissaries came to Mariabrunn to dissolve the
convent. That was Kaunitz’s revenge for his master's
weakness.
After the Pope’s visit Joseph II continued in the path
of reforms, but “quite gently”. A high ecclesiastical commission was appointed
with Freiherr von Kressel as president. In the provinces local ecclesiastical commissions were formed,
which, without reference to the Pope, took upon themselves to interfere in church affairs, and new conventual laws did away with more and more of the abodes
of monks and nuns. Violent briefs came from Rome; and when Joseph II by his own
authority appointed an Archbishop of Milan, a brief was sent which nearly
caused a rupture. At Christmas, in 1783, Joseph II suddenly appeared in Rome;
it seems to have been his intention to break with the Pope altogether. He is
said to have confided ten Cardinal Bernis and the
Spanish envoy, D’Azara, that without making any
doctrinal alterations, he intended to render the Austrian Catholic Church
independent of Rome, and that thirty-six of his bishops would make common cause
with him. But D’Azara represented to him, that so
great a change would take time; and he made Joseph II afraid that Prussia would
take advantage of the dissatisfaction which a breach with Rome would create.
Joseph therefore gave up his project and from 1784 onwards he showed greater
moderation and more consideration for the old order of things in the Church.
Later on, in January 1790, when Belgium was lost, both he and Kaunitz begged Pius VI to use his influence to make the
Belgian bishops and priests cease their opposition to Austria. Joseph II was
then dying, and from his deathbed he summoned with feverish anxiety his brother
Leopold, Grand Duke of Tuscany, that he might take a share of the burden of
government. But before Leopold reached Vienna, Joseph II was dead.
SCIPIONE DE’ RICCI
Leopold II, who succeeded his brother on the imperial
throne, approved of the church policy of Joseph. He considered that his imperial brother
deserved well of religion for enlightening Europe and removing that
superstition and those abuses, “which many deplored without having the courage
to attack them directly or at the root”. Before he became Emperor he had
endeavored to the best of his power to pave the way for Jansenism and Gallicanism in his Grand Duchy.
Italian Jansenism had gained a stronghold in the
theological faculty which the Austrian government had instituted at the
University of Pavia, and the Jansenist theologians and teachers of
ecclesiastical law acquired still greater influence, when Joseph II used the
Milanese property of the Roman Collegium Germanicum to
found a Collegium Germanicum et Hungaricum at Pavia. Giuseppe Zola and Pietro Tamburini, the most important teachers in the new faculty,
gave general offence because of their Jansenism, which did not so much take the
form of a revival of St Augustine's doctrine of Grace, as that of bitter
opposition to Jesuit morals and a strong tendency to church reform in the Gallican spirit. They were reproached with making a
Council superior to the Pope, of denying the Pope's infallibility in matters of
faith, and of maintaining that a bishop had a right to make alterations in the
breviary; in short, of being the disciples not only of Cornelius Jansen, but of
Van Espen and Febronius as well.
While Pavia thus became a nest of Jansenists and
Galileans, “Bigotism” had found a safe retreat in
Tuscany, which Cosimo III’s devotion to Rome had made
an Eldorado for priests and monks. In 1766 the town of Florence, with 78,635
inhabitants, had no fewer than 1,377 priests, 917 monks, and 2,134 nuns,
distributed between nearly sixty convents. The “angelic” life had also a dark
side in Florence; hideous vices prevailed behind the convent walls, and
ignorance and superstition displayed itself in the priesthood. It was therefore
a very difficult and rather hopeless task that the Grand Duke Leopold set
himself, when he made up his mind to introduce reforms like those of Joseph in
the Tuscan Church.
His greatest support in this work of reform was Scipione de’ Ricci, Bishop of Pistoia and Prato, who was an enlightened,
virtuous, and zealous prelate, but at the same time violent, impatient, and
reckless. On his father's side Ricci belonged to one of the oldest and most
distinguished families of Tuscany, and his mother was a Ricasoli.
He was born in 1741, and when he was fifteen years of age he came to Rome to
receive the benefit of instruction from the Jesuits; their last General,
Lorenzo Ricci, was a relative of his. As his Jesuit teachers told him that St
Francis Borgia had promised all Jesuits that they might be certain of eternal
salvation, he wished to enter the order; but both his mother and Lorenzo opposed
this wish. He was called home to Florence, and went afterwards to Pisa, where
he studied law and theology. His theological teachers there were Benedictines
from Monte Cassino, disciples of St Augustine, but
“consideration for certain papal decisions did not permit these learned monks
to say all that they thought”. In 1766 Scipione was
ordained priest, and soon after he became uditore at the nunciature at
Florence, and afterwards vicar-general to the Archbishop.
As such, Ricci experienced the fresh breeze that went
through the Church of Rome after the abolition of the Jesuit order. He plunged
into the study of the Epistles of St Paul and of the Gallican Canon Law; and the vicar-general of the Archbishop of Florence soon became
known as an ardent Jansenist and Febronian. The
Grand Duke, who wished to make use of him in carrying out his intended Church
reforms, proposed him for the archiepiscopal throne of Pisa, but as Rome made
objections, he appointed him in 1780 Bishop of Pistoia and Prato.
After the downfall of the Jesuits, the Dominicans had
come into power in that diocese, as everywhere else in Tuscany. But a bishop
like Ricci could not in the long run agree with the disciples of St Thomas.
Already, when he went to Rome to be consecrated, people were offended because
he did not approve of the adoration of the Sacred Heart of Jesus—la cardiolatria he calls it—which had found many zealous partisans among the Italian
Dominicans; and in his own diocese, when he tried with a firm hand to reform
some convents of Dominican nuns, the inhabitants of which were given to a
curious mixture of quietism and sensuality, a storm of ill-will arose against
him. Although Rome approved of his moral zeal, he was informed that he had
erred in making the scandals public. Moreover, when with Jansenistic rigor he opposed the dispensations from fasting which had become common, but
which in his eyes were unnecessary, he was told that he did not “believe in the
Pope”. “As if this new article of faith”, he writes with disgust in his Memoirs, “were the watchword of
Catholicism”.
RICCI'S
JANSENISM
The sentiments of the ex-Jesuits towards Ricci were
naturally not sweetened when he proposed to introduce catechizing in Lent from
a new Jansenistic catechism instead of the usual
Lenten sermons with their pompous rhetoric; or when he took upon himself to
remove several “apocryphal and unedifying” lessons from the breviary. Offence
was taken because, when visiting convents, he insisted on seeing their collections
of books, and gave vent to his anger when he saw them lodged in a wretched
place and full of cobwebs. Many looked upon such zeal for “enlightenment” as
suspicious. There were Italians who considered religious enlightenment harmful
to the common people; the only thing that was wanted was “a priest or a bishop
who could bless the people from a high tower”. The scandal grew when Ricci
openly approved of Leopold's Josephine reform, and of the reduction of the
number of convents, and even ventured to thank the Grand Duke, because “by
means of his high and absolute authority” he had abolished the tribunal of the
Inquisition in Tuscany, and so “delivered the State from the pernicious effects
of a foreign Court of Justice which had been sustained by arrogance, and had
thriven upon ignorance and selfishness”. The more trouble the Grand Duke took
to raise the episcopate and to make it independent of the Pope, the greater
grew the indignation both in Tuscany and at Rome. There were Tuscan priests,
who in their sermons violently attacked Joseph II and Leopold, and on the
church door at Prato were found requests for prayer on behalf of the heterodox
bishop. Soon violent attacks upon Ricci appeared in the Press.
But neither he nor his prince was scared by the opposition
they encountered. In the beginning of 1786 Leopold sent to the Tuscan bishops a
draft scheme of church reforms which was to be considered at diocesan synods;
and with a view to such consideration, Ricci gathered together nearly two
hundred and fifty of his priests and theologians, in the autumn, to a diocesan
synod at Pistoia. It was noticed at once that in his episcopal style and title he had omitted the usual addition, “by the grace of the Holy
See”. The proceedings of the synod caused the greatest consternation. It not
only approved of the proposed programme of reforms,
but it acknowledged the four Gallican propositions,
and it asserted that the Church had no right to introduce new dogmas, and that
its infallibility rested upon its fidelity to the Scriptures and to the
primitive tradition.
Leopold, who daily received a report of the
proceedings at Pistoia, was well satisfied with it all, and next year he summoned all the bishops of Tuscany to a national or general synod in the
Palazzo Pitti at Florence. Ricci had told him
beforehand that this was too hasty a step, because both priests and laymen were
still too unenlightened, and the bishops too fast bound to Rome. He had also
cautioned Leopold against summoning the national synod to Florence, where there
was an archbishop with Romish sympathies, a papal
nuncio, and a great army of fanatical monks. But with the feverish impatience
of an absolutism which is bent on reform, Leopold would neither wait nor call
the national synod to any other town than the capital.
It turned out as Ricci had said. Only the Bishops of Chiusi and Colle supported him
when he advocated the projected reforms; all the other bishops opposed him so
strongly that for a moment he even thought of resigning his see. Leopold ordered
him to retain his office, but as he saw the hopelessness of continuing the
proceedings, he dissolved the meeting. How indignant Leopold was with the
ruling tendency in the Church can be seen from his letters to his brother. In
his eyes Pius VI is an ignorant person, in French leading strings; a man
generally despised, capable of selling everything for money, and filled with
hatred of “our House”. Three years after the national synod in the Palazzo Pitti, when he was called to the Imperial throne, he was obliged
to leave the government of Tuscany to a
regency, but his advice to the regency was, that in church
matters and important questions they should never show any obsequiousness
towards the Court of Rome.
OPPOSITION TO RICCI
When Leopold left Tuscany, Ricci lost his main
support. The new government had neither the power nor the will to protect him,
and after receiving the imperial crown Leopold's zeal for reforming the Church
cooled considerably. The troubles in Hungary, the Turkish war, the loss of Belgium,
and the French Revolution gave him other things to think of, and warned him to
be careful. The exigences of the Emperor's position
did not escape the vigilance of opponents, and religious fanaticism was let
loose upon the unbefriended bishop. Even while the
national synod was still assembled, people had spread a report at Prato that
Ricci, who did not like exaggerated veneration of the relics of saints,
intended to pull down the altar in the cathedral of Prato which enclosed a
precious relic in the form of the girdle of the Blessed Virgin. This report
caused quite a revolution in Prato, and at last the waves rose so high in
Pistoia likewise that Ricci had to flee from his palace. After his flight “the
will of the people” destroyed all the fruits of the synod of Pistoia; and at
Pisa, Leghorn, and Florence the “Scipionists” were
subjected to persecution. In the country, where Ricci had sought sanctuary,
everyone left the parish church when he went up to the altar, so that he was
obliged to say his Mass in a private chapel.
The Emperor Leopold came to Florence, but Ricci got no
comfort from a conversation with him; the Emperor was silent and oppressed, and
engrossed by the threatening clouds which were gathering on the political
horizon. His successor, the young Archduke Ferdinand, had no appreciation of
the fight which his father and the Bishop of Pistoia had fought together. Under
such circumstances there was nothing for Ricci to do but to resign his
bishopric and seek shelter on an estate in the country. He took this step in
1791, but from his retreat he followed the course of events in France with the
greatest interest. Grégoire and the Gallicans had all his sympathy. Even before he laid down
his crosier, he had expressed in two letters to friends in France his approval
of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, and of the oath taken to it by the
Jansenist and Gallican bishops. His opinions were
not kept to himself, and in Tuscany he was now looked upon as a Jacobin. His
enemies and those of Febronianism were active at
Rome, and in 1794 Pius VI issued the Bull Auctorem fidei, which condemned the “errors” of
Ricci and of the synod of Pistoia. The same year both Zola and Tamburini were dismissed from their professorships at
Pavia.
During those troubled times, when one day the French
were in power, and the next day superstitious mobs which rushed along with the
picture of the Madonna for their banner and with the Madonna herself as their
heavenly Generalissimo, Ricci bore his part of his country's suffering. The
French did him no personal violence, but the mob with its Roman sympathies put
him for a time in prison. The hatred of this enemy of superstition was still
alive, and Ricci seemed to be firm in his Febronianism.
In 1796 he wrote to Bishop Gregoire: “The triumph of
the faith will not come about so long as the successor of the poor fisherman,
St Peter, is also the successor of the great Caesars”. But Rome worked with
untiring energy in hopes of wresting a retractation from the Italian Febronian, as had been done from Febronius himself. This
goal was reached when Pius VII passed through Florence in 1805 on his return
journey from the Imperial coronation at Paris. Ricci signed a mild form of
recantation and was afterwards kindly received in the Palazzo Pitti by the Pope and many of his old opponents.
It was not for the sake of his personal advantage that
he took this step; personally he gained nothing by it. But for a long time he
had been pained by the thought that he stood as a sign of strife within the
Church of Tuscany, and that he was a cause of offence to many simple souls. He
did not give up his Jansenism and Febronianism in
spite of his outward retractation; but he saw that the time had not yet come
for his opinions to gain the victory. Yet a smile must have flitted across the
old bishop’s face at the festival of reconciliation in the Palazzo Pitti, when Pius VII's confessor said that the synod at
Pistoia was the real cause of all the revolutions which then kept Europe in disturbance.
THE CONGRESS OF EMS
At the same time that the Grand Duke of Tuscany, with
the help of the Bishop of Pistoia, endeavored to carry out his church reforms, Febronianism was solemnly acknowledged by the great
princes of the Church, north of the Alps, who felt that their power was
threatened by the arrogance of Rome.
After the Reformation, the popes had sent nuncios to
Germany and Switzerland in order the better to carry on the war against
Protestantism by their aid. Vienna, Cologne, and Lucerne had gradually become
fixed places of residence for such emissaries, and the papal nuncio in Vienna
had often been useful as “an embodiment of the idea of the
Counter-Reformation”. These nuncios were always representatives of the Pope,
but their authority was not the same everywhere. The bishops had often felt
that their dignity was impaired by the establishment of the nunciatures, and now and then they had protested against
Rome's manner of proceeding. Thus, when a new nunciature was to be formed at
Munich, the bishops concerned became uneasy. Although there was no particularly
eminent prelate in Bavaria to feel aggrieved, this part of Germany was under
the Archbishop of Salzburg and the Elector of Mainz. These two princely
dignitaries, who held Febronian views, saw that the
object of the new nunciature was to destroy their influence in Bavaria, where
the Elector was in the leading strings of the ex-Jesuits. They made
representations accordingly to Rome; and on not receiving a satisfactory answer
to a question about the limits of the new nuncio's powers, they, in conjunction
with the Electors of Trier and Cologne, sent representatives to a congress held
in August 1786, in the Vier Thürme hotel at Ems.
Here the envoys of the four prince-bishops agreed to
the so-called “Points of Ems”, which were soon after acknowledged by the
prelates concerned, and handed to the Emperor, together with a letter in which
the three Electors and the Archbishop of Salzburg declared themselves willing,
in the name of freedom and nationality, to enter upon a contest against the
encroachments of Rome. The “Points” themselves are in the main a repetition of
the thirty Articles of Coblenz. The eminent princes of the Church declare, that in the Pope they see the
Primate of the Church, but that on no account will they acknowledge the power
which the successors of St Peter have assumed in virtue of the false Decretals of Isidore.
They appeal to the Emperor to call a synod, or in some other way to give the
bishops an opportunity of getting rid of those abuses which by degrees have
crept in, and to re-establish ecclesiastical discipline. If the Pope has not
acknowledged the “Points” of Ems within the course of two years, they desire
that a German National Council should meet to ensure their execution.
Hontheim, who, because of his great age, was not
present at Ems, expressed to his Elector his joy at “this great and happy step
towards the freedom of the German Church”; but he made no concealment of the slightness
of his faith in Councils. He thought that it had often been shown, and the last
time at Trent, that it was very difficult to protect such meetings against
intrigues proceeding from without or from within, and that the members of the
Councils were generally tempted to think more of their own advantage than of
the good of the Church and true discipline. This letter seems to have been the
last work which issued from the pen of the aged bishop. Four years after the
congress at Ems, he died, full of days, with a bright hope that his ideas were well on the way to gaining
the victory in the land he loved so well.
PACCA AT
COLOGNE
This hope was not fulfilled. Carrying out the “Points”
of Ems would of necessity lead to the total abolition of the Pope's primacy in
its mediaeval form; and in the face of such projects the Pope was, of course,
compelled to bring all his powers into action. The Emperor Joseph II received
the appeal of the prince-bishops very graciously, and called upon them in
conjunction with their suffragans “to shake off the Roman yoke”; but he was not
unaware that Rome was using all possible arts of intrigue. To the new nuncio at
Cologne, Bartolommeo Pacca, then a man of thirty
years of age, was committed the task of leading the host against the rebels of
Ems; and he acquitted himself of this difficult charge with great ability.
The Elector of Cologne, Max Franz, Maria Theresa's
youngest son, who had received the electorship in 1784, agreed with his two
elder brothers on church matters; and he was not too particular about
fulfilling his ecclesiastical duties. Now and then he contented himself with
attending Mass on horseback outside the church window, or in an open carriage
before the church door. But he had assumed a sort of ecclesiastical manner.
Mozart, who knew him at Salzburg, wrote of him in 1781, when he was still only
Coadjutor at Cologne: “When God gives anyone an office, He gives him also
understanding. This has been the case with the Archduke. Before he was a
priest, he was much cleverer and wittier, and he talked less, but with more
sense. Now you should see him! Stupidity glares out of his eyes; he chatters
and talks away forever, and all in a falsetto voice; his neck is swollen up. In
a word, it is as if he were turned quite upside down”. Max Franz refused to
receive Pacca before the new nuncio had renounced
all pretensions to jurisdiction, and soon after Pacca’s arrival the new University of Bonn was opened (November 1786). On this occasion
things were so “philosophically” done that one of the Canons of Cologne said
that the whole thing was “a solemn declaration of war against the Holy See”.
But in spite of his youth Pacca was quite equal to the occasion. Immediately after his arrival at Cologne, he
wrote to the priests in the electoral dioceses of Mainz, Trier, and Cologne. He
said that it had come to the ears of the Pope that certain archbishops had
overstepped the limits of their powers by granting dispensations, which were
the prerogative of Rome—especially for marriages between relatives. Children
born of such unions were to be counted as born in incest. And as Pacca had begun, so he continued. He was filled with a
burning enthusiasm for the cause of Rome, while the four ecclesiastical
princes, who had set up the “Points” of Ems, were ill-fitted to be church
reformers. The Elector of Mainz, Friedrich Carl Joseph von Erthal,
was a thoroughly worldly-minded man, who lived for society and hunting, for
pomp and grandeur. According to Pacca he only
remembered that he was a bishop, when there was a chance of causing the Pope
uneasiness or of opposing the Holy See. Several of his circle were Rationalists or Voltairians.
It could not be concealed from anyone that religious
indignation at the encroachments of the Papacy had not nearly so much to do
with the action of these high German prelates as worldly lust of power. They gained no support from their
suffragans, nor yet from the congregations. The Bishop of Speyer rose at once
and set himself vigorously against the policy of the electors. The other German
bishops afterwards made common cause with him—doubtless, not for church reasons
alone. Just as in the Middle Ages, the bishops preferred having the far-away
Pope as their immediate superior instead of a metropolitan close at hand. Religiously-minded
laymen, likewise, turned away from these pompous and worldly prelates, who
often were anything but blameless in their lives. Not in this form could Febronianism hold its own against Rome's persecution. By
order of the Curia an exhaustive official “reply” to the German prelates was
published in November 1789, partly composed by Pacca and Zaccaria. In this, Pius VI claimed supreme
authority in the Church, and he even dared to apply the text about obeying God,
rather than men, to those cases in which the Pope's will was contrary to the
law and statute of the land.
But the publication of this pamphlet was contemporary
with the outbreak of the French Revolution, and events in Paris soon threw a
veil of oblivion over the “Points” of Ems. Already in 1792, when Archbishop
Maury, as Papal Nuncio Extraordinary visited the prelates of the Rhine, a
couple of them had lost all sympathy for the “Points” of Ems. The Elector of
Mainz called the Archbishop of Salzburg “a madman”, and the Congress of Ems “a
collection of stupidities”; and Max Franz of Cologne himself spoke “with the
greatest contempt” of the Congress of Ems and of his colleague at Salzburg.
THE ILLUMINATI
Just as Gallicanism, in the
course of time, was in many cases influenced by the philosophical school, so Febronianism was influenced both by l'esprit philosophique, and by German
rationalism. In 1776 a secret order was formed in Germany, the so-called
“Illuminati”. Their organization was framed after the pattern of both the
Jesuit order and the Freemasons; and their object was to fight for the light
against the darkness of superstition, and especially against all Jesuitism. The
founder of this order was Adam Weishaupt, a moral
philosopher and Professor of Ecclesiastical Law at Ingolstadt, that ancient
stronghold of Jesuitism. Weishaupt himself was
educated by the Jesuits, but he was seized with the ideas which issued from
France, and became an enthusiast for “enlightenment”. The sign of the order of
the Illuminati was P.M.C.V. (Per me coeci vident, through me
the blind see), and their watchword was “to make Reason rule”. The members of
the different grades of the order were instructed in the dogmas of
enlightenment, just as were the pupils of the Jesuits in the Church of Rome.
Among the Illuminati the same obedience was exacted, and the same system of
espionage held sway, as among the Jesuits. The lower grades were to read books
which might serve to educate the heart; didactic poems and fables formed their
poetical reading, but besides these the writings of Seneca, Epictetus, Marcus
Aurelius, Plutarch, Adam Smith, Basedow, Helvetius,
and others were recommended. The higher grades were to lay special stress on a
civil and religious training; besides Weishaupt’s own works, which betray the powerful influence of Rousseau, they were to study
“books of religion”, such as the Système de la Nature and the works of Helvetius. The Illuminati extended far beyond the boundaries
of Germany and the Church of Rome; they had a few followers in Denmark, and
many in Sweden. But their great increase awoke in their opponents the lust of
persecution. Weishaupt was deprived of his office as
“a conceited usher”; and a price was even put upon his head, after he had taken
refuge with the Duke of Gotha, where he died in 1830. A few years after his flight from Ingolstadt the order began to
dwindle away, but not without having partly fulfilled its object—the gathering
together for common action of the enemies of Jesuitism in Germany. This object has been bequeathed to the Freemasons, who both north and south of
the Alps and the Pyrenees still wage vehement war against the followers of
Loyola and their work in State, Church, and school.
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