Heresy
The following describes the
differences among heresies, and the nature of heresy.
Differences Among Heresies
Rev. Richard hooker
Howbeit, we make a
difference of heresies, accounting them in the next degree to infidelity
which directly deny any one thing to be which is expressly acknowledged
in the articles of our belief; for out of any one article so denied the
denial of the very foundation itself is straightway inferred. As, for
example, if a man should say, "There is no Catholic Church," it
followeth immediately hereupon that this Jesus whom we call the Saviour
is not the Saviour of the world; because all the prophets bear witness
that the true Messias should "show a light unto the Gentiles," [Luke
2:32;
Acts 26:23] that is to say, gather such a church as is
catholic, not restrained any longer unto one circumcised nation. In a
second rank we place them out of whose positions the denial of any of
the foresaid articles may be with like facility concluded. Such are they
who have denied either the divinity of Christ, with Ebion, or with
Marcion his humanity, an example whereof may be that of Cassianus
defending the incarnation of the Son of God against Nestorius bishop of
Antioch [a slip for Constantinople], who held that the Virgin, when she
brought forth Christ, did not bring forth the Son of God but a sole and
mere man; [NOTE: Many scholars now doubt that Nestorius did indeed teach
the heresy which has been named after him] out of which heresy the
denial of the articles of the Christian faith he deduceth thus:
If thou dost deny our
Lord Jesus Christ to be God, in denying the Son thou canst not choose
but deny the Father; for, according to the voice of the Father himself,
"He that hath not the Son hath not the Father." [see
1 John 2:23] Wherefore denying him that is begotten thou
deniest him who doth beget. Again, denying the Son of God to have been
born in the flesh, how canst thou believe him to have suffered?
Believing not his passion, what remaineth but that thou deny his
resurrection? For we believe him not raised, except we first believe him
dead; neither can the reason of his rising from the dead stand without
the faith of his death going before. The denial of his death and passion
inferreth the denial of his rising from the depth. Whereupon it
followeth that thou also deny his ascension into heaven: the Apostle
affirming that "he who ascended did first descend." [Ephesians
4:9] So that, as much as lieth in thee, our Lord Jesus Christ
hath neither risen from the depth, nor is ascended into heaven, nor
sitteth at the right hand of God the Father, neither shall he come at
the day of final account, which is looked for, nor shall judge the quick
and dead. And darest thou yet set foot in the church? Canst thou think
thyself a bishop when thou hast denied all those things whereby thou
didst obtain a bishoply calling? [John Cassian, De Incarnatione
Domini Contra Nestorium, 6:17f]
Nestorius confessed all
the articles of the creed, but his opinion did imply the denial of every
part of his confession. Heresies there are of a third part, such as the
Church of Rome maintaineth, which, being removed by a greater distance
from the foundation, although indeed they overthrow it, yet because of
that weakness which the philosopher noteth in men's capacities when he
saith that the common sort cannot see things which follow in reason,
when they follow, as it were, afar off by many deductions; therefore the
repugnancy between such heresy and the foundation is not so quickly nor
so easily found but that an heretic of this sooner than of the former
kind may directly grant, and consequently nevertheless deny, the
foundation of faith.
If reason be suspected,
trial will show that the Church of Rome doth no otherwise by teaching
the doctrine she doth teach concerning works. Offer them the very
fundamental words, and what one man is there that will refuse to
subscribe unto them? Can they directly grant and deny directly one and
the selfsame thing? Our own proceedings in disputing against their works
satisfactory and meritorious do show not only that they hold, but that
we acknowledge them to hold, the foundation notwithstanding their
opinion. For are not these our arguments against them: "Christ alone
hath satisfied and appeased his Father's wrath; Christ hath merited
salvation alone"? We should do fondly to use such disputes, neither
could we think to prevail by them, if that whereupon we ground were a
thing which we know they do not hold, which we are assured they will not
grant. Their very answers to all such reasons as are in this controversy
brought against them will not permit us to doubt whether they hold the
foundation or no. Can any man who hath read their books concerning this
matter be ignorant how they draw all thelr answers unto these heads?
That the remission of
all our sins, the pardon of all whatsoever punishments thereby deserved,
the rewards which God hath laid up in heaven, are by the blood of our
Lord Jesus Christ purchased and obtained sufficiently for all men; but
for no man effectually for his benefit in particular, except the blood
of Christ be applied particularly unto him by such means as God hath
appointed it to work by.
That those means of
themselves being dead things, only the blood of Christ is that which
putteth life, force, and efficacy in them to work, and to be available,
each in his kind, to our salvation.
Finally, that grace
being purchased for us by the blood of Christ, and freely without any
merit or desert at the first bestowed upon us, the good things which we
do, after grace received, are made satisfactory and meritorious.
Some of their sentences
to this effect I must allege for mine own warrant. If we desire to hear
foreign judgments, we find in one this confession:
He that would reckon
how many the virtues and merits of our Saviour Jesus Christ have been
might likewise understand how many the benefits have been that are come
unto us by him, forasmuch as men are made partakers of them all by the
means of his passion: by him is given unto us remission of our sins,
grace, glory, liberty, praise, peace, salvation, redemption,
justification, justice, sanctification, sacraments, merits, doctrine,
and all other things which we had, and were behoveful for our salvation.
[Lewis of Granada]
In another we have
these oppositions and answers made unto them:
All grace is given by
Christ Jesus. True; but not except Christ Jesus be applied. He is the
propitiation for our sins; by his stripes we are healed; he hath offered
up himself for us: all this is true, but apply it. [cf.
1 John 2:2;
Isaiah 53:5;
1 Peter 2:24;
Hebrews 7:27; 9:14; 10:12] We put all satisfaction in the
blood of Jesus Christ; but we hold that the means which Christ hath
appointed for us in this case to apply it are our penal works. [Francis
Panigarola]
Our countrymen in
Rheims [a gathering-place for Roman Catholic expatriates from England,
and the site of a Jesuit seminary for the training of English priests]
make the like answer, that they seek salvation no other way than by the
blood of Christ, and that humbly they do use prayers, fasting, alms,
faith, charity, sacrifice, sacraments, priests, only as the means
appointed by Christ, to apply the benefit of his holy blood unto them:
touching our good works, that in their own natures they are not
meritorious nor answerable unto the joys of heaven; it cometh by the
grace of Christ, and not of the work itself, that we have by well-doing
a right to heaven and deserve it worthily.
If any men think that
I seek to varnish their opinions, to set the better foot of a lame cause
foremost, let him know that since I began throughly to understand their
meaning I have found their halting in this doctrine greater than perhaps
it seemeth to them who know not the deepness of Satan, as the blessed
Divine speaketh. [Rev
2:24] For, although this be proof sufficient, that they do
not deny directly the foundation of faith, yet, if there were no other
leaven in the whole lump of their doctrine but this, this were
sufficient to prove that their doctrine is not agreeable with the
foundation of Christian faith. The Pelagians, being over-great friends
unto nature, made themselves enemies unto grace, for all their
confessing that men have their souls and all the faculties thereof,
their wills and the ability of their wills, from God. And is not the
Church of Rome still an adversary unto Christ's merits, because of her
acknowledging that we have received the power of meriting by the blood
of Christ? Sir Thomas More setteth down the odds between us and the
Church of Rome in the matter of works thus:
Like as we grant them
that no good work of man is rewardable in heaven of his own nature, but
through the goodness of God, that list to set so high a price upon so
poor a thing, and that this price God setteth through Christ's passion,
and for that also they be his own works with us (for good works to
God-ward worketh no man, without God work in him); and as we grant them
also that no man may be proud of his works for his own imperfect
working; and for that in all that man may do he can do no good, but is a
servant unprofitable and doth but his bare duty; as we, I say, grant
unto them these things, so this one thing or twain do they grant us
again, that men are bound to work good works if they have time and
power, and that whoso worketh in true faith most shall be most rewarded;
but then set they thereto that all his rewards shall be given him for
his faith alone, and nothing for his works at all, because his faith is
the thing, they say, and forceth him to work well. [Thomas More, A
Dialogue Of Comfort, I, 12]
I see by this of Sir
Thomas More how easy it is for men of great capacity and judgment to
mistake things written or spoken, as well on one side as on another.
Their doctrine, as he thought, maketh the works of man rewardable in the
world to come through the mere goodness of God, whom it pleaseth to set
so high a price upon so poor a thing; and ours, that a man doth receive
that eternal and high reward, not for his works, but for his faith's
sake by which he worketh; whereas in truth our doctrine is no other than
that which we have learned at the feet of Christ: namely, that God doth
justify the believing man, yet not for the worthiness of his belief, but
for his worthiness who is believed; God rewardeth abundantly everyone
who worketh, yet not for any meritorious dignity which is, or can be, in
the work, but through his mere mercy, by whose commandment he worketh.
Contrariwise, their doctrine is that, as pure water of itself hath no
savour, but if it pass through a sweet pipe it taketh a pleasant smell
of the pipe through which it passeth, so also, before grace received,
our works do neither satisfy nor merit; yet after, they do both the one
and the other. Every virtuous action hath then power in such sort to
satisfy that if we ourselves commit no mortal sin, no heinous crime,
whereupon to spend this treasure of satisfaction in our own behalf, it
turneth to the benefit of other men's release on whom it shall please
the steward of the house of God to bestow it; so that we may satisfy for
ourselves and for others, but merit only for ourselves. In meriting, our
actions do work with two hands: with the one they get their morning
stipend, the increase of grace; with the other their evening hire, the
everlasting crown of glory. Indeed, they teach that our good works do
not these things as they come from us, but as they come from grace in
us; which grace in us is another thing in their divinity than is the
mere goodness of God's mercy toward us in Christ Jesus. [perhaps based
on a passage in Panigarola; see also Trent, VI, chs 7,10]
If it were not a
strong deluding spirit which hath possesion of their hearts, were it
possible but that they should see how plainly they do herein gainsay the
very ground of apostolic faith? Is this that salvation by grace whereof
so plentiful mention is made in the sacred Scriptures of God? Was this
their meaning who first taught the world to look for salvation only by
Christ? By grace, the Apostle saith, and by grace in such sort as a
gift, a thing that cometh not of ourselves, not of our works, lest any
man should boast and say, "I have wrought out mine own salvation." [Eph
2:8f; NOTE that the injunction of
Phil 2:12, "work out your own salvation," is not an
exhortation to save oneself by one's works, but a challenge to put one's
salvation to work.] By grace they confess; but by grace in such sort
that as many as wear the diadem of bliss, they wear nothing but what
they have won. The Apostle, as if he had foreseen how the Church of Rome
would abuse the world in time by ambiguous terms, to declare in what
sense the name of grace must be taken, when we make it the cause of our
salvation, saith, "He saved us according to his mercy"; [Tit
3:5] which mercy, although it exclude not the washing of our
new birth, the renewing of our hearts by the Holy Ghost, the means, the
virtues, the duties which God requireth at their hands who shall be
saved, yet it is so repugnant unto merits that to say we are saved for
the worthiness of anything which is ours is to deny we are saved by
grace. Grace bestoweth freely, and therefore justly requireth the glory
of that which is bestowed. We deny the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,
we imbase, disannul, annihilate the benefit of his bitter passion, if we
rest in those proud imaginations that life everlasting is deservedly
ours, that we merit it, and that we are worthy of it.
Error and Heresy Not Always
Identical
Howbeit, considering how
many virtuous and just men, how many saints, how many martyrs, how many
of the ancient fathers of the Church have had their sundry perilous
opinions -- and among sundry of their opinions this, that they hoped to
make God some part of amends for their sins by the voluntary punishments
which they laid upon themselves: because by a consequent it may follow
hereupon that they were injurious unto Christ, shall we therefore make
such deadly epitaphs and set them upon their graves: "They denied the
foundation of faith directly, they are damned, there is no salvation for
them"? St. Augustine hath said, "Errare possum, haereticus esse nolo."
[I may be mistaken, but I have not the will to be heretical.] And except
we put a difference between them that err and them that obstinately
persist in error, how is it possible that ever any man should hope to be
saved?
Surely, in this case, I
have no respect of any person alive or dead. Give me a man, of what
estate or condition soever, yea, a cardinal or a pope, whom at the
extreme point of his life affliction hath made to know himself, whose
heart God hath touched with true sorrow for all his sins, and filled
with love toward the Gospel of Christ, whose eyes are opened to see the
truth, and his mouth to renounce all heresy and error any way opposite
thereunto, this one opinion of merits excepted, which he thinketh God
will require at his hands, and because he wanteth, therefore trembleth
and is discouraged: "It may be I am forgetful or unskilful, not
furnished with things new and old, as a wise and learned scribe should
be," [Matthew
13:52] nor able to allege that whereunto, if it were alleged,
he doth bear a mind most willing to yield, and so to be recalled as well
from this as from other errors -- and shall I think, because of this
only error, that such a man toucheth not so much as the hem of Christ's
garment? If he do, wherefore should not I have hope that virtue may
proceed from Christ to save him? Because his error doth by consequent
overthrow his faith shall I therefore cast him off as one who hath
utterly cast of Christ, one who holdeth not so much as by a slender
thread? No, I will not be afraid to say unto a cardinal or to a pope in
this plight, "Be of good comfort, we have to do with a merciful God,
ready to make the best of that little which we hold well, and not with a
captious sophister who gathereth the worst out of everything wherein we
err." Is there any reason that I should be suspected, or you offended,
for this speech?
Let all affection [that
is, sentiment or predisposition] be laid aside; let the matter be
indifferently considered. Is it a dangerous thing to imagine that such
men may find mercy? The hour may come when we shall think it a blessed
thing to hear that if our sins were as the sins of the pope and
cardinals the bowels of the mercy of God are larger. I do not propose
unto you a pope with the neck of an emperor under his foot, a cardinal
riding his horse to the bridle in the blood of saints, but a pope or a
cardinal sorrowful, penitent, disrobed, stripped, not only of usurped
power, but also delivered and recalled from error and Antichrist,
converted and lying prostrate at the feet of Christ; and shall I think
that Christ will spurn him? Shall I cross and gainsay the merciful
promises of God generally made unto penitent sinners by opposing the
name of a pope or a cardinal? What difference is there between a pope
and cardinal, and a John a Style, in this case? If we think it
impossible for them, after they be once come within that rank, to be
afterwards touched with any such remorse, let that be granted. The
Apostle saith, "If I or an angel from heaven preach unto you," etc. [Galatians
1:8] Let it be as likely that St. Paul or an angel from
heaven should preach heresy as that a pope or a cardinal should be
brought so far forth to acknowledge the truth; yet if a pope or a
cardinal should, what could we find in their persons why they might not
be saved? It is not their persons, you will say, but the error wherein I
suppose them to die which excludeth them from hope of mercy: the opinion
of merits doth take away all possibility of salvation from them. What,
although they hold it only as an error; although they hold the truth
soundly and sincerely in all other parts of Christian faith; although
they have in some measure all the virtues and graces of the Spirit, all
other tokens of God's elect children in them; although they be far from
having any proud presumptuous opinion that they shall be saved for the
worthiness of their deeds; although the only thing which troubleth and
molesteth them be but a little too much dejection, somewhat too great a
fear, rising from an erroneous conceit [conception] that God will
require a worthiness in them which they are grieved to find wanting in
themselves; although they be not obstinate in this persuasion; although
they be willing and would be glad to forsake it, if any one reason were
brought to disprove it; although the only let [hindrance] why they do
not forsake it ere they die be the ignorance of the means whereby it
might be disproved; although the cause why the ignorance in this point
is not removed be the want of knowledge in such as should be able, and
are not, to remove it? Let me die if ever it be proved that simply an
error doth exclude a pope or a cardinal, in such a case, utterly from
hope of life. Surely, I must confess unto you, if it be an error to
think that God may be merciful to save men even when they err, my
greatest comfort is my error: were it not for the love I bear unto this
error, I would neither wish to speak nor to live.
Wherefore, to resume
that mother-sentence, whereof I little thought that so much trouble
would have grown, "I doubt not but God was merciful to save thousands of
our fathers living in popish superstitions, inasmuch as they sinned
ignorantly": alas, what bloody matter is there contained in this
sentence that it should be an occasion of so many hard censures! Did I
say that "thousands of our fathers might be saved"? I have showed which
way it cannot be denied. Did I say, "I doubt it not but they were
saved"? I see no impiety in this persuasion, though I had no reason in
the world for it. Did I say. "Their ignorance doth make me hope they did
find mercy and so were saved"? What doth hinder salvation but sin? Sins
are not equal; and ignorance, though it do not make sin to be no sin,
yet, seeing it did make their sin the less, why should it not make our
hope concerning their life the greater? We pity the most, and I doubt
not but God hath most compassion over, them that sin for want of
understanding. As much is confessed by sundry others, almost in the
selfsame words which I have used. It is but only my ill hap that the
same sentences which favor verity in other men's books should seem to
bolster heresy when they are once by me recited. [cf. the opinion of
Calvin, cited above] If I be deceived in this point, not they but the
blessed Apostle hath deceived me. What I said of others, the same he
saith of himself: "I obtained mercy, for I did it ignorantly." [1
Timothy 1:13] Construe his words, and ye cannot misconstrue
mine. I speak no otherwise, I meant no otherwise.
Thus have I brought the
question concerning our fathers at the length unto an end; of whose
estate, upon so fit an occasion as was offered me, handling the weighty
causes of separation between the Church of Rome and us, and the weak
motives which commonly are brought to retain men in that society,
amongst which motives the example of our fathers deceased is one;
although I saw it convenient to utter that sentence which I did, to the
end that all men might thereby understand how untruly we are said to
condemn as many as have been before us otherwise persuaded than we
ourselves are; yet more than one sentence I did not think it expedient
to utter, judging it a great deal meeter for us to have regard to our
own estate than to sift over curiously what is become of other men; and
fearing lest that such questions as this, if voluntarily they should be
too far waded in, might seem worthy of that rebuke which our Saviour
thought needful in a case not unlike: "What is this unto thee?" [John
21:22] When as I was forced, much besides mine expectation,
to render a reason of my speech, I could not but yield at the call of
others to proceed as duty bound me for the fuller satisfaction of men's
minds. Wherein I have walked, as with reverence, so with fear: with
reverence in regard of our fathers who lived in former times; not
without fear, considering them that are alive.
I am not ignorant how
ready men are to feed and soothe up themselves in evil. Shall I (will
the man say that loveth the present world more than he loveth Christ),
shall I incur the high displeasure of the mightiest upon earth, shall I
hazard my goods, endanger my estate, put my life in jeopardy, rather
than yield to that which so many of my fathers have embraced, and yet
found favour in the sight of God? "Curse Meroz, saith the Lord, curse
her inhabitants because they help not the Lord, they help him not
against the mighty." [Judges
5:23] If I should not only not help the Lord against the
mighty, but help to strengthen them that are mighty against the Lord,
worthily might I fall under the burden of that curse, worthy I were to
bear my own judgment. But if the doctrine which I teach be a flower
gathered in the garden of the Lord, a part of the saving truth of the
Gospel, from whence notwithstanding poisoned creatures do suck venom, I
can but wish it were otherwise and content myself with the lot that hath
befallen me, the rather because it hath not befallen me alone. St. Paul
did preach a truth, and a comfortable truth, when he taught that the
greater our misery is in respect of our iniquities the readier is the
mercy of our God for our release, if we seek unto him; the more we have
sinned, the more praise and glory and honour unto him that pardoneth our
sin.
But mark what lewd
collections were made hereupon by some: "Why then am I condemned for a
sinner?" And, saith the Apostle, "as we are blamed and as some affirm
that we say, why do we not evil that good may come of it?" [Romans
3:7f] He was accused to teach that which ill-disposed men did
gather by his teaching, though it were clean not only beside but also
against his meaning. The Apostle addeth: "Their condemnation who thus do
is just." I am not hasty to apply sentences of condemnation: I wish from
my heart their conversion, whosoever are thus perversely affected. For I
must needs say, their case is fearful, their estate dangerous, who
harden themselves, presuming on the mercy of God towards others. It is
true that God is merciful, but let us beware of presumptuous sins. [Ps
19:13] God delivered Jonah from the bottom of the sea: will
you therefore cast yourselves headlong from the tops of rocks and say in
your hearts, "God shall deliver us"? [cf.
Matthew 4:5-7] He pitieth the blind that would gladly see;
but will God pity him that may see and hardeneth himself in blindness?
No; Christ hath spoken too much unto you for you to claim the privilege
of your fathers.
As for us that have
handled this cause concerning the condition of our fathers, whether it
be this thing or any other which we bring unto you, the counsel is good
which the wise man giveth: "Stand thou fast in thy sure understanding,
in the way and knowledge of the Lord, and have but one manner of word,
and follow the word of peace and righteousness." [Ecclesiastes
5:10] As a loose tooth is a great grief unto him that eateth,
so doth a wavering and unstable word, in speech that tendeth to
instruction, offend. "Shall a wise man speak words of the wind," saith
Eliphaz -- light, inconstant, unstable words? [Job
15:2] Surely the wisest may speak words of the wind: such is
the untoward constitution of our nature that we neither do so perfectly
understand the way and knowledge of the Lord, nor so steadfastly embrace
it when it is understood, nor so graciously utter it when it is
embraced, nor so peaceably maintain it when it is uttered, but that the
best of us are overtaken sometimes through blindness, sometimes through
hastiness, sometimes through impatience, sometimes through other
passions of the mind, whereunto (God doth know) we are too subject.
We must therefore be
contented both to pardon others and to crave that others may pardon us
for such things. Let no man who speaketh as a man think himself (whilst
he liveth) always freed from scapes and oversights in his speech. The
things themselves which I have spoken unto you I hope are sound,
howsoever they have seemed otherwise unto some, at whose hands if I
have, in that respect, received injury, I willingly forget it; although,
in truth, considering the benefit which I have reaped by this necessary
search of truth, I rather incline unto that of the Apostle, "They have
not injured me at all." [2
Corinthians 2:5,10] I have cause to wish, and I do wish them
as many blessings in the kingdom of heaven as they have forced me to
utter words and syllables in this cause, wherein I could not be more
sparing in speech than I have been. "It becometh no man," saith St.
Jerome, "to be patient in the crime of heresy." [that is, "patient when
under suspicion of heresy." Jerome, AGAINST JOHN OF JERUSALEM, 2 J P
Migne, PATROLOGIOE LATINAE, vol. 33] Patient, as I take it, we should be
always, though the crime of heresy were intended; but silent in a thing
of so great consequence I could not, beloved, I durst not be; especially
the love which I bear to the truth in Christ Jesus being hereby somewhat
called in question. Whereof I beseech them, in the meekness of Christ, [2
Cor 10:1] that have been the first original cause, to
consider that a watchman may cry "An enemy!" when indeed a friend
cometh. In which case, as I deem such a watchman to be more worthy to be
loved for his care than misliked for his error, so I have judged it my
own part in this case, as much as in me lieth, to take away all
suspicion of any unfriendly intent or meaning against the truth, from
which, God doth know, my heart is free.
Now to you, beloved,
who have heard these things I will use no other words of admonition than
those which are offered me by St. James: "My brethren, have not this
faith of our glorious Lord Jesus Christ in respect of persons." [Jas
2:1] Ye are now to learn that, as of itself it is not
hurtful, so neither should it be to any man scandalous and offensive, in
doubtful cases, to hear the different judgment of men. Be it that Cephas
hath one interpretation and Apollos hath another, that Paul is of this
mind and Barnabas of that; if this offend you, the fault is yours. Carry
peaceable minds, and ye may have comfort by this variety.
Now the God of peace
give you peaceable minds and turn it to your everlasting comfort! |
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