Institutes of the Christian
Religion: Chapter II:
Comparison Between the False Church and the True
How
much the ministry of the word and sacraments should
weigh with us, and how far reverence for it should
extend, so as to be a perpetual badge for distinguishing
the Church, has been explained; for we have shown,
first, that wherever it exists entire and unimpaired,
no errors of conduct, no defects should prevent us
from giving the name of Church; and secondly, that
trivial errors in this ministry ought not to make
us regard it as illegitimate. Moreover, we have shown
that the errors to which such pardon is due, are those
by which the fundamental doctrine of religion is not
injured, and by which those articles of religion,
in which all believers should agree, are not suppressed,
while, in regard to the sacraments, the defects are
such as neither destroy nor impair the legitimate
institution of their Author. But as soon as falsehood
has forced its way into the citadel of religion, as
soon as the sum of necessary doctrine is inverted,
and the use of the sacraments is destroyed, the death
of the Church undoubtedly ensues, just as the life
of man is destroyed when his throat is pierced, or
his vitals mortally wounded. This is clearly evinced
by the words of Paul when he says, that the Church
is "built upon the foundation of the apostles
and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief
corner-stone"(Eph.2:20). If the Church is founded
on the doctrine of the apostles and prophets, by which
believers are enjoined to place their salvation in
Christ alone, then if that doctrine is destroyed,
how can the Church continue to stand? The Church must
necessarily fall whenever that sum of religion which
alone can sustain it has given way. Again, if the
true Church is "the pillar and ground of the
truth" (I Tim.3:15) , it is certain that there
is no Church where lying and falsehood have usurped
the ascendancy.
Since this is the state of matters
under the Papacy, we can understand how much of the
Church there survives. There, instead of the ministry
of the word, prevails a perverted government, compounded
of lies, a government which partly extinguishes, partly
suppresses, the pure light. In place of the Lord’s
Supper, the foulest sacrilege has entered, the worship
of God is deformed by a varied mass of intolerable
superstitions; doctrine (without which Christianity
exists not) is wholly buried and exploded, the public
assemblies are schools of idolatry and impiety. Wherefore,
in declining fatal participation in such wickedness,
we run no risk of being dissevered from the Church
of Christ. The communion of the Church was not instituted
to be a chain to bind us in idolatry, impiety, ignorance
of God, and other kinds of evil, but rather to retain
us in the fear of God and obedience of the truth.
They, indeed, vaunt loudly of their Church, as if
there was not another in the world; and then, as if
the matter were ended, they make out that all are
schismatics who withdraw from obedience to that Church
which they thus depict, that all are heretics who
presume to whisper against its doctrine. But by what
arguments do they prove their possession of the true
Church? They appeal to ancient records which formerly
existed in Italy, France, and Spain, pretending to
derive their origin from those holy men who, by sound
doctrine, founded and raised up churches, confirmed
the doctrine, and reared the edifice of the Church
with their blood; they pretend that the Church thus
consecrated by spiritual gifts and the blood of martyrs
was preserved from destruction by a perpetual succession
of bishops. They dwell on the importance which Irenaeus,
Tertullian, Origen, Augustine, and others, attached
to this succession. How frivolous and plainly ludicrous
these allegations are, I will enable any, who will
for a little consider the matter with me, to understand
without any difficulty. I would also exhort our opponents
to give their serious attention, if I had any hope
of being able to benefit them by instruction; but
since they have laid aside all regard to truth, and
make it their only aim to prosecute their own ends
in whatever way they can, I will only make a few observations
by which good men and lovers of truth may disentangle
themselves from their quibbles. First, I ask them
why they do not quote Africa, and Egypt, and all Asia,
just because in all those regions there was a cessation
of that sacred succession, by the aid of which they
vaunt of having continued churches. They therefore
fall back on the assertion, that they have the true
Church, because ever since it began to exist it was
never destitute of bishops, because they succeeded
each other in an unbroken series. But what if I bring
Greece before them? Therefore, I again ask them, Why
they say that the Church perished among the Greeks,
among whom there never was any interruption in the
succession of bishops – a succession, in their
opinion, the only guardian and preserver of the Church?
They make the Greeks schismatics. Why? Because, by
revolting from the Apostolic See, they lost their
privilege. What? Do not those who revolt from Christ
much more deserve to lose it? It follows, therefore,
that the pretence of succession is vain, if posterity
does not retain the truth of Christ, which was handed
down to them by their fathers, safe and uncorrupted,
and continue in it.
In the present day, therefore, the
pretence of the Romanists is just the same as that
which appears to have been formerly used by the Jews,
when the Prophets of the Lord charged them with blindness,
impiety, and idolatry. For as the Jews proudly vaunted
of their temple, ceremonies, and priesthood, by which,
with strong reason, as they supposed, they measured
the Church, so, instead of the Church, we are presented
by the Romanists with certain external masks, which
often are far from being connected with the Church,
and without which the Church can perfectly exist.
Wherefore, we need no other argument to refute them
than that with which Jeremiah opposed the foolish
confidence of the Jews – namely, "Trust
ye not in lying words, saying, The temple of the Lord,
The temple of the Lord, The temple of the Lord are
these" (Jer.7:4). The Lord recognizes nothing
as his own, save when his word is heard and religiously
observed. Thus, though the glory of God sat in the
sanctuary between the cherubim (Ezek.10:4), and he
had promised that he would there have his stated abode,
still when the priests corrupted his worship by depraved
superstitions, he transferred it elsewhere, and left
the place without any sanctity. If that temple which
seemed consecrated for the perpetual habitation of
God, could be abandoned by God and become profane,
the Romanists have no ground to pretend that God is
so bound to persons or places, and fixed to external
observances, that he must remain with those who have
only the name and semblance of a Church. This is the
question which Paul discusses in the Epistle to the
Romans, from the ninth to the twelfth chapter. Weak
consciences were greatly disturbed, when those who
seemed to be the people of God not only rejected,
but even persecuted the doctrine of the Gospel. Therefore,
after expounding doctrine, he removes this difficulty,
denying that those Jews, the enemies of the truth,
were the Church, though they wanted nothing which
might otherwise have been desired to the external
form of the Church. The ground of his denial is, that
they did not embrace Christ. In the Epistle to the
Galatians, when comparing Ishmael with Isaac, he says
still more expressly, that many hold a place in the
Church to whom the inheritance does not belong, because
they were not the offspring of a free parent. From
this he proceeds to draw a contrast between two Jerusalems,
because, as the Law was given on Mount Sinai, but
the Gospel proceeded from Jerusalem, so many who were
born and brought up in servitude confidently boast
that they are the sons of God and of the Church; nay,
while they are themselves degenerate, proudly despise
the genuine sons of God.
Let us also, in like manner, when
we hear that it was once declared from heaven, "Cast
out the bondmaid and her son," trust to this
inviolable decree, and boldly despise their un-meaning
boasts. For if they plume themselves on external profession,
Ishmael also was circumcised: if they found on antiquity,
he was the first-born: and yet we see that he was
rejected. If the reason is asked, Paul assigns it
(Rom.9:6), that those only are accounted sons who
are born of the pure and legitimate seed of doctrine.
On this ground God declares that he was not astricted
to impious priests, though he had made a covenant
with their father Levi, to be their angel, or interpreter
(Mal.2:4); nay, he retorts the false boast by which
they were wont to rise against the Prophets –
namely, that the dignity of the priesthood was to
be held in singular estimation. This he himself willingly
admits; and he disputes with them, on the ground that
he is ready to fulfil the covenant, while they, by
not fulfilling it on their part, deserve to be rejected.
Here, then, is the value of succession when not conjoined
with imitation and corresponding conduct: posterity,
as soon as they are convicted of having revolted from
their origin, are deprived of all honour; unless,
indeed, we are prepared to say, that because Caiaphas
succeeded many pious priests (nay, the series from
Aaron to him was continuous), that accursed assembly
deserved the name of Church. Even in earthly governments,
no one would bear to see the tyranny of Caligula,
Nero, Heliogabalus, and the like, described as the
true condition of a republic, because they succeeded
such men as Brutus, Scipio, and Camillus. That in
the government of the Church especially, nothing is
more absurd that to disregard doctrine, and place
succession in persons. Nor, indeed, was anything
farther from the intention of the holy teachers, whom
they falsely obtrude upon us, than to maintain distinctly
that churches exist, as by hereditary right, wherever
bishops have been uniformly succeeded by bishops.
But while it was without controversy that no change
had been made in doctrine from the beginning down
to their day, they assumed it to be a sufficient refutation
of all their errors, that they were opposed to the
doctrine maintained constantly, and with unanimous
consent, even by the apostles themselves. They have,
therefore, no longer any ground for proceeding to
make a gloss of the name of the Church, which we regard
with due reverence; but when we come to definition,
not only (to use the common expression) does the water
adhere to them, but they stick in their own mire,
because they substitute a vile prostitute for the
sacred spouse of Christ. That the substitution may
not deceive us, let us, among other admonitions, attend
to the following from Augustine. Speaking of the Church,
he say, "She herself is sometimes obscured, and,
as it were, beclouded by a multitude of scandals;
sometimes, in a time of tranquillity, she appears
quiet and free; sometime she is covered and tossed
by the billows of tribulation and trial." (August.ad
Vincent. Epist.48). As instances, he mentions that
the strongest pillars of the Church often bravely
endured exile for the faith, or lay hid throughout
the world.
In this way the Romanists assail
us in the present day, and terrify the unskillful
with the name of Church, while they are the deadly
adversaries of Christ. Therefore, although they exhibit
a temple, a priesthood, and other similar masks, the
empty glare by which they dazzle the eyes of the simple
should not move us in the least to admit that there
is a Church where the word of God appears not. The
Lord furnished us with an unfailing test when he said,
"Everyone that is of the truth heareth my voice"
(John 18:37). Again, "I am the good shepherd,
and know my sheep, and am known of mine." "My
sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow
me." A little before he had said, when the shepherd
"putteth forth his own sheep, he goeth before
them, and the sheep follow him; for they know his
voice. And a stranger will they not follow, but will
flee from him: for they know not the voice of strangers"
(John 10:14,4,5). Why then do we, of our own accord,
form so infatuated an estimate of the Church, since
Christ has designated it by a sign in which is nothing
in the least degree equivocal, a sign which is everywhere
seen, the existence of which infallibly proves the
existence of the Church, while its absence proves
the absence of everything that properly bears the
name of Church? Paul declares that the Church
is not founded either upon the judgments of men or
the priesthood, but upon the doctrine of the Apostles
and Prophets (Eph.2:20). Nay, Jerusalem is to be distinguished
from Babylon, the Church of Christ from a conspiracy
of Satan, by the discriminating test which our Saviour
has applied to them, "He that is of God, heareth
God’s words: ye therefore hear them not, because
ye are not of God" (John 8:47). In short,
since the Church is the kingdom of Christ, and he
reigns only by his word, can there be any doubt as
to the falsehood of those statements by which the
kingdom of Christ is represented without his sceptre,
in other words, without his sacred word?
As to their charge of heresy and
schism, because we preach a different doctrine, and
submit not to their laws, and meet apart from them
for Prayer, Baptism, the administration of he Supper,
and other sacred rites, it is indeed a very serious
accusation, but one which needs not a long and laboured
defense. The name of heretics and schismatics is applied
to those who, by dissenting from the Church, destroy
its communion. This communion is held together by
two chains – viz. Consent in sound doctrine
and brotherly charity. Hence the distinction which
Augustine makes between heretics and schismatics is,
that the former corrupt the purity of the faith by
false dogmas, whereas the latter sometimes, even while
holding the same faith, break the bond of union (August.
Lib. Quaest. in Evang. Matth.). But the thing
to be observed is, that this union of charity so depends
on unity of faith, as to have in it its beginning,
its end, in fine, its only rule. Let us therefore
remember, that whenever ecclesiastical unity is commended
to us, the thing required is, that while our minds
consent in Christ, our wills also be united together
by mutual good will in Christ. Accordingly Paul, when
he exhorts us to it, takes for his fundamental principle
that there is "one God, one faith, one baptism"
(Eph.4:5). Nay, when he tells us to be "of one
accord, of one mind", he immediately adds, "Let
this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus"
(Phil.2:2,5); intimating, that where the word of the
Lord is not, it is not a union of believers, but a
faction of the ungodly.
Cyprian, also, following Paul, derives
the fountain of ecclesiastical concord from the one
bishopric of Christ, and afterwards adds. "There
is one Church, which by increase from fecundity is
more widely extended to a multitude, just as there
are many rays of the sun, but one light, and many
branches of a tree, but one trunk upheld by the tenacious
root. When many streams flow from one fountain, though
there seems wide spreading numerosity from the overflowing
copiousness of the supply, yet unity remains in the
origin. Pluck a ray from the body of the sun, and
the unity sustains no division. Break a branch from
a tree, and the branch will not germinate. Cut off
a stream from a fountain, that which is thus cut off
dries up. So the Church, pervaded by the light of
the Lord, extends over the whole globe, and yet the
light which is everywhere diffused is one" (Cyprian,
de Simplicit. Praelat.). Words could not more elegantly
express the inseparable connection which all the members
of Christ have with each other. We see how he constantly
calls us back to the head. Accordingly, he declares
that when heresies and schisms arise, it is because
men return not to the origin of the truth, because
they seek not the head, because they keep not the
doctrine of the heavenly Master. Let them
now go and clamour against us as heretics for having
withdrawn from their Church, since the only cause
of our estrangement is, that they cannot tolerate
a pure profession of the truth. I say nothing of their
having expelled us by anathemas and curses. The fact
is more than sufficient to excuse us, unless they
would also make schismatics of the apostles, with
whom we have a common cause. Christ, I say,
forewarned his apostles, "they shall put you
out of the synagogues" (John 16:2). The synagogues
of which he speaks were then held to be lawful churches.
Seeing then it is certain that we were cast out, and
we are prepared to show that this was done for the
name of Christ, the cause should first be ascertained
before any decision is given either for or against
us. This, however, if they choose, I am willing to
leave to them; to me it is enough that we behooved
to withdraw from them in order to draw near to Christ.
The place which we ought to assign
to all the churches on which the tyranny of the Romish
idol was seized will better appear if we compare them
with the ancient Israelitish Church, as delineated
by the prophets. So long as the Jews and Israelites
persisted in the laws of the covenant, a true Church
existed among them; in other words, they by the kindness
of God obtained the benefits of a Church. True doctrine
was contained in the law, and the ministry of it was
committed to the prophets and priests. They were initiated
in religion by the sign of circumcision, and by the
other sacraments trained and confirmed in the faith.
There can be no doubt that the titles with which the
Lord honoured his Church were applicable to their
society. After they forsook the law of the Lord, and
degenerated into idolatry and superstition, they partly
lost the privilege. For who can presume to deny the
title of the Church to those with whom the Lord deposited
the preaching of his word and the observance of his
mysteries? On the other hand, who may presume to give
the name of Church, without reservation, to that assembly
by which the word of God is openly and with impunity
trampled under foot – where his ministry, its
chief support, and the very soul of the Church, is
destroyed?
What then? (someone will say); was
there not a particle of the Church left to the Jews
from the date of their revolt to idolatry? The answer
is easy. First, I say that in the defection itself
there were several graduations; for we cannot hold
that the lapses by which both Judah and Israel turned
aside from the pure worship of God were the same.
Jeroboam, when he fabricated the calves against the
express prohibition of God, and dedicated an unlawful
place for worship, corrupted religion entirely. The
Jews became degenerate in manners and superstitious
opinions before they made any improper change in the
external form of religion. For although they had adopted
many perverse ceremonies under Rehoboam, yet, as the
doctrine of the law and the priesthood, and the rites
which God had instituted, continued at Jerusalem,
the pious still had the Church in a tolerable state.
In regard to the Israelites, matters which, up to
the time of Ahab, had certainly not been reformed,
then became worse. Those who succeeded him, until
the overthrow of the kingdom, were partly like him,
and partly (when they wished to be somewhat better)
followed the example of Jeroboam, while all, without
exception, were wicked and idolatrous. In Judea different
changes now and then took place, some kings corrupting
the worship of God by false and superstitious inventions,
and others attempting to reform it, until, at length,
the priests themselves polluted the temple of God
by profane and abominable rites.
Now then let the Papists, in order
to extenuate their vices as much as possible, deny,
if the can, that the state of religion is as much
vitiated and corrupted with them as it was in the
kingdom of Israel under Jeroboam. They have a grosser
idolatry, and in doctrine are not one whit more pure;
rather, perhaps, they are even still more impure.
God, nay, even those possessed of a moderate degree
of judgement, will bear me witness, and the thing
itself is too manifest to require me to enlarge upon
it. When they would force us to the communion of their
Church, they make two demands upon us – first,
that we join in their prayers, their sacrifices, and
all their ceremonies; and, secondly, that whatever
honour, power, and jurisdiction, Christ has given
to his Church, the same we must attribute to theirs.
In regard to the first, I admit that all the prophets
who were at Jerusalem, when matters there were very
corrupt, neither sacrificed apart nor held separate
meetings for prayer. For they had the command of God,
which enjoined them to meet in the temple of Soloman,
and they knew that the Levitical priests, whom the
Lord had appointed over sacred matters, and who were
not yet discarded, how unworthy soever they might
be of that honour, were still entitled to hold it
(Exod.29:9). But the principal point in the whole
question is, that they were not compelled to any superstitious
worship, nay, they undertook nothing but what had
been instituted by God. But in these men,
I mean the Papists, where is the resemblance? Scarcely
can we hold any meeting with them without polluting
ourselves with open idolatry. Their principal bond
of communion is undoubtedly in the Mass, which we
abominate as the greatest sacrilege.
Whether this is justly or rashly
done will be elsewhere seen (see chap.xviii.; see
also Book II., chap.xv., sec. 6). It is now sufficient
to show that our case is different from that of the
prophets, who, when they were present at the sacred
rites of the ungodly, were not obliged to witness
or use any ceremonies but those which were instituted
by God. But if we would have an example in all respects
similar, let us take one from the kingdom of Israel.
Under the ordinance of Jeroboam, circumcision remained,
sacrifices were offered, the law was deemed holy,
and the God whom they had received from their fathers
was worshipped; but in consequence of invented and
forbidden modes of worship, everything which was done
there God disapproved and condemned. Show me one prophet
or pious man who once worshipped or offered sacrifice
in Bethel. They knew that they could not do it without
defiling themselves with some kind of sacrilege. We
hold, therefore, that the communion of the Church
ought not to be carried so far by the godly as to
lay them under a necessity of following it when it
has degenerated to profane and polluted rites.
With regard to the second point,
our objections are still stronger. For when the Church
is considered in that particular point of view as
the Church, whose judgment we are bound to revere,
whose authority acknowledge, whose admonitions obey,
whose censures dread, whose communion religiously
cultivate in every respect, we cannot concede that
they have a Church, without obliging ourselves to
subjection and obedience. Still we are willing to
concede what the Prophets conceded to the Jews and
Israelites of their day, when with them matters were
in a similar, or even in a better condition. For we
see how they uniformly exclaim against their meetings
as profane conventicles, to which it is not more lawful
for them to assent than to abjure God (Isa.1:14).
And certainly if those were churches, it follows,
that Elijah, Micaiah, and others in Israel, Isaiah,
Jeremiah, Hosea, and those of like character in Judah,
whom the prophets, priests, and people of their day,
hated and execrated more than the uncircumcised, were
aliens from the Church of God. If those were churches,
then the Church was no longer the pillar of the truth,
but the stay of falsehood, not the tabernacle of the
living God, but a receptacle of idols. They were,
therefore, under the necessity of refusing consent
to their meetings, since consent was nothing else
than impious conspiracy against God. For this
same reason, should anyone acknowledge those meetings
of the present day, which are contaminated by idolatry,
superstition, and impious doctrine, as churches, full
communion with which a Christian must maintain so
far as to agree with them even in doctrine, he will
greatly err. For if they are churches, the power of
the keys belongs to them, whereas the keys are inseparably
connected with the word which they have put to flight.
Again, if they are churches, they can claim the promise
of Christ, "Whatsoever ye bind," &c;
whereas, on the contrary, they discard from their
communion all who sincerely profess themselves the
servants of Christ. Therefore, either the
promise of Christ is vain, or in this respect, at
least, they are not churches. In fine, instead of
the ministry of the word, they have schools of impiety,
and sinks of all kinds of error. Therefore, in this
point of view, they either are not churches, or no
badge will remain by which the lawful meeting of the
faithful can be distinguished from the meetings of
Turks.
Still, as in ancient times, there
remained among the Jews certain special privileges
of a Church, so in the present day we deny not to
the Papists those vestiges of a Church which the Lord
has allowed to remain among them amid the dissipation.
When the Lord had once made his covenant with the
Jews, it was preserved not so much by them as by its
own strength, supported by which it withstood their
impiety. Such, then, is the certainty and constancy
of the divine goodness, that the covenant of the Lord
continued there, and his faith could not be obliterated
by their perfidy; nor could circumcision be so profaned
by their impure hands as not still to be a true sign
and sacrament of his covenant. Hence the children
who were born to them the Lord called his own (Ezek.16:20),
though, unless by special blessing, they in no respect
belonged to him. So having deposited his covenant
in Gaul, Italy, Germany, Spain, and England, when
these countries were oppressed by the tyranny of Antichrist,
He, in order that his covenant might remain inviolable,
first preserved baptism there as an evidence of the
covenant; -baptism, which, consecrated by his lips,
retains its power in spite of human depravity; secondly,
He provided by his providence that there should be
other remains also to prevent the Church from utterly
perishing. But as in pulling down buildings the foundations
and ruins are often permitted to remain, so he did
not suffer Antichrist either to subvert his Church
from its foundation, or to level it with the ground
(though, to punish the ingratitude of men who had
despised his word, he allowed a fearful shaking and
dismembering to take place), but was pleased that
amid the devastation the edifice should remain, though
half in ruins.
Therefore, while we are unwilling
simply to concede the name of Church to the Papists,
we do not deny that there are churches among them.
The question we raise only relates to the true and
legitimate constitution of the Church, implying communion
in sacred rites, which are the signs of profession,
and especially in doctrine. Daniel and Paul
foretold that Antichrist would sit in the temple of
God (Dan.ix.27; 2 Thess.ii.4); we regard the Roman
Pontiff as the leader and standard-bearer of that
wicked and abominable kingdom. By placing
his seat in the temple of God, it is intimated that
his kingdom would not be such as to destroy the name
either of Christ or of his Church. Hence, then, it
is obvious that we do not at all deny that churches
remain under his tyranny; churches, however, which
by sacrilegious impiety he has profaned, by cruel
domination has oppressed, by evil and deadly doctrines
like poisoned potions has corrupted and almost slain;
churches where Christ lies half-buried, the gospel
is suppressed, piety is put to flight, and the worship
of God almost abolished; where, in short, all things
are in such disorder as to present the appearance
of Babylon rather than the holy city of God. In one
word, I call them churches, inasmuch as the Lord there
wondrously preserves some remains of his people, though
miserably torn and scattered, and inasmuch as some
symbols of the Church still remain – symbols
especially whose efficacy neither the craft of the
devil nor human depravity can destroy. But
as, on the other hand, those marks to which we ought
especially to have respect in this discussion are
effaced, I say that the whole body, as well as every
single assembly, want the form of a legitimate Church.
|