HISTORY of the CHRISTIAN CHURCH*
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
___________
Literature
C. Sagittarius: Introductio in historiam
ecclesiasticam.
Jen. 1694.
F. Walch: Grundsätze
der zur K. Gesch. nöthigen Vorbereitungslehren u. Bücherkenntnisse. 3d ed. Giessen, 1793.
Flügge: Einleitung
in das Studium u. die Liter. der K. G. Gött. 1801.
John G. Dowling: An Introduction to the Critical Study of Ecclesiastical History,
attempted in an account of the progress, and a short notice of the sources of
the history of the Church. London, 1838.
Möhler (R.
C.): Einleitung in die K. G. 1839 ("Verm. Schriften," ed.
Döllinger, II. 261 sqq.).
Kliefoth: Einleitung
in die Dogmengeschichte. Parchim & Ludwigslust, 1839.
Philip Schaff:
What is Church History? A
Vindication of the Idea of Historical Development. Philad. 1846.
H B. Smith: Nature and Worth of the
Science of Church History. Andover, 1851.
E. P. Humphrey: lnaugural Address,
delivered at the Danville Theol. Seminary. Cincinnati, 1854.
R. Turnbull: Christ in History; or, the
Central Power among Men. Bost. 1854, 2d ed. 1860.
W. G. T. Shedd: Lectures on the Philosophy of
History. Andover, Mass., 1856.
R. D. Hitchcock: The True Idea and Uses of
Church History. N. York, 1856.
C. Bunsen: Gott in der
Geschichte oder der Fortschritt des Glaubens an eine sittliche Weltordnung. Bd. I. Leipz. 1857. (Erstes
Buch. Allg. Einleit. p. 1-134.) Engl.
Transl.: God in History. By S. Winkworth. Lond. 1868. 3 vols.
A. P. Stanley: Three Introductory Lectures
on the Study of Eccles. History Lond.
1857. (Also incorporated in his History of the Eastern Church 1861.)
Goldwin Smith:
Lectures on the Study of History, delivered in Oxford, 1859-’61. Oxf.
and Lond. (republished in N. York) 1866.
J. Gust. Droysen: Grundriss
der Historik.
Leipz. 1868; new ed. 1882.
C. de Smedt (R. C.): Introductio generalis ad
historiam ecclesiasticam critice tractandam. Gandavi (Ghent), 1876 (533 pp.).
E. A. Freeman: The Methods of Historical
Study. Lond 1886.
O. Lorenz: Geschichtswissenschaft. Berlin, 1886.
Jos. Nirschl
(R. C.): Propädeutik der Kirchengeschichte. Mainz, 1888 (352 pp.).
On the philosophy of
history in general, see the works of Herder
(Ideen zur Philosophie der Gesch. der Menschheit), Fred. Schlegel, Hegel (1840, transl. by Sibree, 1870), Hermann
(1870), Rocholl (1878), Flint (The Philosophy of History in Europe.
Edinb., 1874, etc.), Lotze (Mikrokosmus,
bk. viith; 4th ed. 1884; Eng. transl. by Elizabeth
Hamilton and E. E. C. Jones, 1885, 3d ed. 1888). A philosophy of church
history is a desideratum. Herder and Lotze come nearest to it
A fuller
introduction, see in Schaff: History of the Apostolic Church; with a General
Introduction to Ch. H. (N. York, 1853), pp. 1-134.
§ 1. Nature of Church History.
History has two sides, a divine
and a human. On the part of God, it is his revelation in the order of time (as
the creation is his revelation in the order of space), and the successive
unfolding of a plan of infinite wisdom, justice, and mercy, looking to his
glory and the eternal happiness of mankind. On the part of man, history is the
biography of the human race, and the gradual development, both normal and
abnormal, of all its physical, intellectual, and moral forces to the final
consummation at the general judgment, with its eternal rewards and punishments.
The idea of universal history presupposes the Christian idea of the unity of
God, and the unity and common destiny of men, and was unknown to ancient Greece
and Rome. A view of history which overlooks or undervalues the divine factor
starts from deism and consistently runs into atheism; while the opposite view,
which overlooks the free agency of man and his moral responsibility and guilt,
is essentially fatalistic and pantheistic.
From the human agency we may
distinguish the Satanic, which enters as a third power into the history of the
race. In the temptation of Adam in Paradise, the temptation of Christ in the
wilderness, and at every great epoch, Satan appears as the antagonist of God,
endeavoring to defeat the plan of redemption and the progress of Christ’s
kingdom, and using weak and wicked men for his schemes, but is always defeated
in the end by the superior wisdom of God.
The central current and ultimate
aim of universal history is the Kingdom
of God established by Jesus Christ. This is the grandest and most
comprehensive institution in the world, as vast as humanity and as enduring as
eternity. All other institutions are made subservient to it, and in its
interest the whole world is governed. It is no after-thought of God, no
subsequent emendation of the plan of creation, but it is the eternal
forethought, the controlling idea, the beginning, the middle, and the end of
all his ways and works. The first Adam is a type of the second Adam; creation
looks to redemption as the solution of its problems. Secular history, far from
controlling sacred history, is controlled by it, must directly or indirectly
subserve its ends, and can only be fully understood in the central light of
Christian truth and the plan of salvation. The Father, who directs the history
of the world, "draws to the Son," who rules the history of the
church, and the Son leads back to the Father, that "God may be all in all."
"All things," says St. Paul, "were created through Christ and
unto Christ: and He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.
And He is the head of the body, the Church: who is the beginning, the firstborn
from the dead, that in all things He may have the pre-eminence." Col.
1:16-18. "The Gospel," says John von Müller, summing up the final
result of his lifelong studies in history, "is the fulfilment of all
hopes, the perfection of all philosophy, the interpreter of all revolutions,
the key of all seeming contradictions of the physical and moral worlds; it is
life_it is immortality."
The history of the church is the
rise and progress of the kingdom of heaven upon earth, for the glory of God and
the salvation of the world. It begins with the creation of Adam, and with that
promise of the serpent-bruiser, which relieved the loss of the paradise of
innocence by the hope of future redemption from the curse of sin. It comes down
through the preparatory revelations under the patriarchs, Moses, and the
prophets, to the immediate forerunner of the Saviour, who pointed his followers
to the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world. But this part of
its course was only introduction. Its proper starting-point is the incarnation
of the Eternal Word, who dwelt among us and revealed his glory, the glory as of
the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth; and next to this, the
miracle of the first Pentecost, when the Church took her place as a Christian
institution, filled with the Spirit of the glorified Redeemer and entrusted
with the conversion of all nations. Jesus Christ, the God-Man and Saviour of
the world, is the author of the new creation, the soul and the head of the
church, which is his body and his bride. In his person and work lies all the
fulness of the Godhead and of renewed humanity, the whole plan of redemption,
and the key of all history from the creation of man in the image of God to the
resurrection of the body unto everlasting life.
This is the objective conception
of church history.
In the subjective sense of the
word, considered as theological science and art, church history is the faithful
and life-like description of the origin and progress of this heavenly kingdom.
It aims to reproduce in thought and to embody in language its outward and
inward development down to the present time. It is a continuous commentary on
the Lord’s twin parables of the mustard-seed and of the leaven. It shows at
once how Christianity spreads over the world, and how it penetrates,
transforms, and sanctifies the individual and all the departments and
institutions of social life. It thus embraces not only the external fortunes of
Christendom, but more especially her inward experience, her religious life, her
mental and moral activity, her conflicts with the ungodly world, her sorrows
and sufferings, her joys and her triumphs over sin and error. It records the
deeds of those heroes of faith "who subdued kingdoms, wrought
righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the months of lions, quenched the
violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made
strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to flight the armies of aliens."
From Jesus Christ, since his
manifestation in the flesh, an unbroken stream of divine light and life has
been and is still flowing, and will continue to flow, in ever-growing volume
through the waste of our fallen race; and all that is truly great and good and
holy in the annals of church history is due, ultimately, to the impulse of his
spirit. He is the fly-wheel in the world’s progress. But he works upon the
world through sinful and fallible men, who, while as self-conscious and free
agents they are accountable for all their actions, must still, willing or
unwilling, serve the great purpose of God. As Christ, in the days of his flesh,
was bated, mocked, and crucified, his church likewise is assailed and
persecuted by the powers of darkness. The history of Christianity includes
therefore a history of Antichrist. With an unending succession of works of
saving power and manifestations of divine truth and holiness, it uncovers also
a fearful mass of corruption and error. The church militant must, from its very
nature, be at perpetual warfare with the world, the flesh, and the devil, both
without and within. For as Judas sat among the apostles, so "the man of
sin" sits in the temple of God; and as even a Peter denied the Lord,
though he afterwards wept bitterly and regained his holy office, so do many
disciples in all ages deny him in word and in deed.
But on the other hand, church
history shows that God is ever stronger than Satan, and that his kingdom of
light puts the kingdom of darkness to shame. The Lion of the tribe of Judah has
bruised the head of the serpent. With the crucifixion of Christ his
resurrection also is repeated ever anew in the history of his church on earth;
and there has never yet been a day without a witness of his presence and power
ordering all things according to his holy will. For he has received all power
in heaven and in earth for the good of his people, and from his heavenly throne
he rules even his foes. The infallible word of promise, confirmed by
experience, assures us that all corruptions, heresies, and schisms must, under
the guidance of divine wisdom and love, subserve the cause of truth, holiness, and
peace; till, at the last judgment, Christ shall make his enemies his footstool,
and rule undisputed with the sceptre of righteousness and peace, and his church
shall realize her idea and destiny as "the fullness of him that filleth
all in all."
Then will history itself, in its
present form, as a struggling and changeful development, give place to
perfection, and the stream of time come to rest in the ocean of eternity, but
this rest will be the highest form of life and activity in God and for God.
§ 2. Branches of Church History.
The kingdom of Christ, in its
principle and aim, is as comprehensive as humanity. It is truly catholic or
universal, designed and adapted for all nations and ages, for all the powers of
the soul, and all classes of society. It breathes into the mind, the heart, and
the will a higher, supernatural life, and consecrates the family, the state,
science, literature, art, and commerce to holy ends, till finally God becomes
all in all. Even the body, and the whole visible creation, which groans for
redemption from its bondage to vanity and for the glorious liberty of the
children of God, shall share in this universal transformation; for we look for
the resurrection of the body, and for the new earth, wherein dwelleth
righteousness. But we must not identify the kingdom of God with the visible
church or churches, which are only its temporary organs and agencies, more or
less inadequate, while the kingdom itself is more comprehensive, and will last
for ever.
Accordingly, church history has
various departments, corresponding to the different branches of secular history
and of natural life. The principal divisions are:
I. The history of missions, or
of the spread of Christianity among unconverted nations, whether barbarous or
civilized. This work must continue, till "the fullness of the Gentiles
shall come in," and "Israel shall be saved." The law of the
missionary progress is expressed in the two parables of the grain of
mustard-seed which grows into a tree, and of the leaven which gradually
pervades the whole lump. The first parable illustrates the outward expansion,
the second the all-penetrating and transforming power of Christianity. It is
difficult to convert a nation; it is more difficult to train it to the high
standard of the gospel; it is most difficult to revive and reform a dead or
apostate church.
The foreign mission work has
achieved three great conquests: first, the conversion of the elect remnant of
the Jews, and of civilized Greeks and Romans, in the first three centuries;
then the conversion of the barbarians of Northern and Western Europe, in the
middle ages; and last, the combined efforts of various churches and societies
for the conversion of the savage races in America, Africa, and Australia, and
the semi-civilized nations of Eastern Asia, in our own time. The whole
non-Christian world is now open to missionary labor, except the Mohammedan,
which will likewise become accessible at no distant day.
The domestic or home mission
work embraces the revival of Christian life in corrupt or neglected portions of
the church in old countries, the supply of emigrants in new countries with the
means of grace, and the labors, among the semi-heathenism populations of large
cities. Here we may mention the planting of a purer Christianity among the
petrified sects in Bible Lands, the labors of the Gustavus Adolphus Society,
and the Inner mission of Germany, the American Home Missionary Societies for
the western states and territories, the City Mission Societies in London, New
York, and other fast-growing cities.
II. The history of Persecution by hostile powers; as by
Judaism and Heathenism in the first three centuries, and by Mohammedanism in
the middle age. This apparent repression of the church proves a purifying
process, brings out the moral heroism of martyrdom, and thus works in the end
for the spread and establishment of Christianity. "The blood of martyrs is
the seed of the church."2 There are cases, however, where systematic
and persistent persecution has crushed out the church or reduced it to a mere
shadow, as in Palestine, Egypt, and North Africa, under the despotism of the
Moslems.
Persecution, like missions, is
both foreign and domestic. Besides being assailed from without by the followers
of false religions, the church suffers also from intestine wars and violence.
Witness the religious wars in France, Holland, and England, the Thirty Years’
War in Germany, all of which grew out of the Protestant Reformation and the
Papal Reaction; the crusade against the Albigenses and Waldenses, the horrors
of the Spanish Inquisition, the massacre of the Huguenots, the dragonnades of
Louis XIV., the crushing out of the Reformation in Bohemia, Belgium, and
Southern Europe; but also, on the Protestant side, the persecution of
Anabaptists, the burning of Servetus in Geneva the penal laws of the reign of
Elizabeth against Catholic and Puritan Dissenters, the hanging of witches and
Quakers in New England. More Christian blood has been shed by Christians than
by heathens and Mohammedans.
The persecutions of Christians
by Christians form the satanic chapters, the fiendish midnight scenes, in the
history of the church. But they show also the gradual progress of the truly
Christian spirit of religious toleration and freedom. Persecution exhausted
ends in toleration, and toleration is a step to freedom. The blood of patriots
is the price of civil, the blood of martyrs the price of religious liberty. The
conquest is dear, the progress slow and often interrupted, but steady and
irresistible. The principle of intolerance is now almost universally disowned
in the Christian world, except by ultramontane Romanism (which indirectly
reasserts it in the Papal Syllabus of 1864); but a ruling church, allied to the
state, under the influence of selfish human nature, and, relying on the arm of
flesh rather than the power of truth, is always tempted to impose or retain
unjust restrictions on dissenting sects, however innocent and useful they may
have proved to be.
In the United States all
Christian denominations and sects are placed on a basis of equality before the
law, and alike protected by the government in their property and right of
public worship, yet self-supporting and self-governing; and, in turn, they
strengthen the moral foundations of society by training loyal and virtuous
citizens. Freedom of religion must be recognized as one of the inalienable
rights of man, which lies in the sacred domain of conscience, beyond the
restraint and control of politics, and which the government is bound to protect
as much as any other fundamental right. Freedom is liable to abuse, and abuse
may be punished. But Christianity is itself the parent of true freedom from the
bondage of sin and error, and is the best protector and regulator of freedom.
III. The history of Church Government and Discipline. The
church is not only an invisible communion of saints, but at the same time a
visible body, needing organs, laws, and forms, to regulate its activity. Into
this department of history fall the various forms of church polity: the
apostolic, the primitive episcopal, the patriarchal, the papal, the
consistorial, the presbyterial, the congregational, etc.; and the history of
the law and discipline of the church, and her relation to the state, under all
these forms.
IV. The history of Worship, or divine service, by which
the church celebrates, revives, and strengthens her fellowship with her divine
head. This falls into such subdivisions as the history of preaching, of
catechisms, of liturgy, of rites and ceremonies, and of religious art,
particularly sacred poetry and music.
The history of church government
and the history of worship are often put together under the title of
Ecclesiastical Antiquities or Archaeology, and commonly confined to the
patristic age, whence most of the, Catholic institutions and usages of the
church date their origin. But they may as well be extended to the formative
period of Protestantism.
V. The history of Christian Life, or practical morality
and religion: the exhibition of the distinguishing virtues and vices of
different ages, of the development of Christian philanthropy, the regeneration
of domestic life, the gradual abatement and abolition of slavery and other
social evils, the mitigation and diminution of the horrors of war, the reform
of civil law and of government, the spread of civil and religious liberty, and
the whole progress of civilization, under the influence of Christianity.
VI. The history of Theology, or of Christian learning and
literature. Each branch of theology_exegetical, doctrinal, ethical, historical,
and practical_has a history of its own.
The history of doctrines or
dogmas is here the most important, and is therefore frequently treated by
itself. Its object is to show how the mind of the, church has gradually
apprehended and unfolded the divine truths of revelation, how the teachings of
scripture have been formulated and shaped into dogmas, and grown into creeds
and confessions of faith, or systems of doctrine stamped with public authority.
This growth of the church in the knowledge of the infallible word of God is a
constant struggle against error, misbelief, and unbelief; and the history of
heresies is an essential part of the history of doctrines.
Every important dogma now professed
by the Christian church is the result of a severe conflict with error. The
doctrine of the holy Trinity, for instance, was believed from the beginning,
but it required, in addition to the preparatory labors of the ante-Nicene age,
fifty years of controversy, in which the strongest intellects were absorbed,
until it was brought to the clear expression of the Niceno-Constantinopolitan
Creed. The Christological conflict was equally long and intense, until it was
brought to a settlement by the council of Chalcedon. The Reformation of the
sixteenth century was a continual warfare with popery. The doctrinal symbols of
the various churches, from the Apostles’ Creed down to the confessions of Dort
and Westminster, and more recent standards, embody the results of the
theological battles of the militant church.
The various departments of
church history have not a merely external and mechanical, but an organic
relation to each other, and form one living whole, and this relation the
historian must show. Each period also is entitled to a peculiar arrangement,
according to its character. The number, order, and extent of the different
divisions must be determined by their actual importance at a given time.
§ 3. Sources of Church History.
The sources of church history,
the data on which we rely for our knowledge, are partly divine, partly human.
For the history of the kingdom of God from the creation to the close of the
apostolic age, we have the inspired writings of the Old and New Testaments. But
after the death of the apostles we have only human authorities, which of course
cannot claim to be infallible. These human sources are partly written, partly
unwritten.
I. The written sources include:
(a) Official documents of
ecclesiastical and civil authorities: acts of councils and synods, confessions
of faith, liturgies, church laws, and the official letters of popes,
patriarchs, bishops, and representative bodies.
(b) Private writings of personal
actors in the history: the works of the church fathers, heretics, and heathen
authors, for the first six centuries; of the missionaries, scholastic and
mystic divines, for the middle age; and of the reformers and their opponents,
for the sixteenth century. These documents are the richest mines for the
historian. They give history in its birth and actual movement. But they must be
carefully sifted and weighed; especially the controversial writings, where fact
is generally more or less adulterated with party spirit, heretical and
orthodox.
(c) Accounts of chroniclers and
historians, whether friends or enemies, who were eye-witnesses of what they
relate. The value of these depends, of course, on the capacity and credibility
of the authors, to be determined by careful criticism. Subsequent historians
can be counted among the direct or immediate sources only so far as they have
drawn from reliable and contemporary documents, which have either been wholly
or partially lost, like many of Eusebius authorities for the period before
Constantine, or are inaccessible to historians generally, as are the papal regesta and other documents of the
Vatican library.
(d) Inscriptions, especially
those on tombs and catacombs, revealing the faith and hope of Christians in
times of persecution. Among the ruins of Egypt and Babylonia whole libraries
have been disentombed and deciphered, containing mythological and religious
records, royal proclamations, historical, astronomical, and poetical
compositions, revealing an extinct civilization and shedding light on some
parts of Old Testament history.
II. The Unwritten sources are far less numerous: church edifices,
works of sculpture and painting, and other monuments, religious customs and
ceremonies, very important for the history of worship and ecclesiastical art,
and significant of the spirit of their age.3
The works of art are symbolical
embodiments of the various types of Christianity. The plain symbols and crude
sculptures of the catacombs correspond to the period of persecution; the basilicas
to the Nicene age; the Byzantine churches to the genius of the Byzantine
state-churchism; the Gothic cathedrals to the Romano-Germanic catholicism of
the middle ages; the renaissance style to the revival of letters.
To come down to
more recent times, the spirit of Romanism can be best appreciated amidst the
dead and living monuments of Rome, Italy, and Spain. Lutheranism must be
studied in Wittenberg, Northern Germany, and Scandinavia; Calvinism in Geneva,
France, Holland, and Scotland; Anglicanism at Oxford, Cambridge, and London;
Presbyterianism in Scotland and the United States; Congregationalism in England
and New England. For in the mother countries of these denominations we
generally find not only the largest printed and manuscript sources, but also
the architectural, sculptural, sepulchral, and other monumental remains, the
natural associations, oral traditions, and living representatives of the past,
who, however they may have departed from the faith of their ancestors, still
exhibit their national genius, social condition, habits, and customs_often in a
far more instructive manner than ponderous printed volumes.
§ 4. Periods of Church History.
The purely chronological or
annalistic method, though pursued by the learned Baronius and his continuators,
is now generally abandoned. It breaks the natural flow of events, separates
things which belong together, and degrades history to a mere chronicle.
The centurial plan, which
prevailed from Flacius to Mosheim, is an improvement. It allows a much better
view of the progress and connection of things. But it still imposes on the
history a forced and mechanical arrangement; for the salient points or epochs
very seldom coincide with the limits of our centuries. The rise of Constantine,
for example, together with the union of church and state, dates from the year
311; that of the absolute papacy, in Hildebrand, from 1049; the Reformation
from 1517; the peace of Westphalia took place in 1648; the landing of the
Pilgrim Fathers of New England in 1620; the American emancipation in 1776; the
French revolution in 1789; the revival of religious life in Germany began in
1817.
The true division must grow out
of the actual course of the history itself, and present the different phases of
its development or stages of its life. These we call periods or ages. The
beginning of a new period is called an epoch, or a stopping and starting point.
In regard to the number and
length of periods there is, indeed, no unanimity; the less, on account of the
various denominational differences establishing different points of view,
especially since the sixteenth century. The Reformation, for instance, has less
importance for the Roman church than for the Protestant, and almost none for
the Greek; and while the edict of Nantes forms a resting-place in the history
of French Protestantism, and the treaty of Westphalia in that of German,
neither of these events had as much to do with English Protestantism as the
accession of Elizabeth, the rise of Cromwell, the restoration of the Stuarts,
and the revolution of 1688.
But, in spite of all confusion
and difficulty in regard to details, it is generally agreed to divide the
history of Christianity into three principal parts_ancient, mediaeval, and
modern; though there is not a like agreement as to the dividing epochs, or
points of departure and points of termination.
I. The history of Ancient Christianity, from the birth of
Christ to Gregory the Great. a.d.
1-590.
This is the age of the
Graeco-Latin church, or of the Christian Fathers. Its field is the countries
around the Mediterranean_Western Asia, Northern Africa, and Southern
Europe_just the theatre of the old Roman empire and of classic heathendom. This
age lays the foundation, in doctrine, government, and worship, for all the
subsequent history. It is the common progenitor of all the various confessions.
The Life of Christ and the
Apostolic Church are by far the most important sections, and require separate
treatment. They form the divine-human groundwork of the church, and inspire,
regulate, and correct all subsequent periods.
Then, at the beginning of the
fourth century, the accession of Constantine, the first Christian emperor,
marks a decisive turn; Christianity rising from a persecuted sect to the
prevailing religion of the Graeco-Roman empire. In the history of doctrines,
the first oecumenical council of Nicaea, falling in the midst of Constantine’s
reign, a.d. 325, has the
prominence of an epoch.
Here, then, are three periods
within the first or patristic era, which we may severally designate as the
period of the Apostles, the period of the Martyrs, and the period of the
Christian Emperors and Patriarchs.
II. Medieval Christianity, from Gregory I to the Reformation. a.d. 590-1517.
The middle age is variously
reckoned_from Constantine, 306 or 311; from the fall of the West Roman empire,
476; from Gregory the Great, 590; from Charlemagne, 800. But it is very
generally regarded as closing at the beginning of the sixteenth century, and
more precisely, at the outbreak of the Reformation in 1517. Gregory the Great
seems to us to form the most proper ecclesiastical point of division. With him,
the author of the Anglo-Saxon mission, the last of the church fathers, and the
first of the proper popes, begins in earnest, and with decisive success, the
conversion of the barbarian tribes, and, at the same time, the development of
the absolute papacy, and the alienation of the eastern and western churches.
This suggests the distinctive
character of the middle age: the transition of the church from Asia and Africa
to Middle and Western Europe, from the Graeco-Roman nationality to that of the
Germanic, Celtic, and Slavonic races, and from the culture of the ancient
classic world to the modern civilization. The great work of the church then was
the conversion and education of the heathen barbarians, who conquered and
demolished the Roman empire, indeed, but were themselves conquered and
transformed by its Christianity. This work was performed mainly by the Latin
church, under a firm hierarchical constitution, culminating in the bishop of
Rome. The Greek church though she made some conquests among the Slavic tribes
of Eastern Europe, particularly in the Russian empire, since grown so
important, was in turn sorely pressed and reduced by Mohammedanism in Asia and
Africa, the very seat of primitive Christianity, and at last in Constantinople
itself; and in doctrine, worship, and organization, she stopped at the position
of the oecumenical councils and the patriarchal constitution of the fifth
century.
In the middle age the
development of the hierarchy occupies the foreground, so that it may be called
the church of the Popes, as distinct from the ancient church of the Fathers,
and the modern church of the Reformers.
In the growth and decay of the
Roman hierarchy three popes stand out as representatives of as many epochs:
Gregory I., or the Great (590), marks the rise of absolute papacy; Gregory
VII., or Hildebrand (1049), its summit; and Boniface VIII. (1294), its decline.
We thus have again three periods in mediaeval church history. We may briefly
distinguish them as the Missionary, the Papal, and the pre- or ante-Reformatory4 ages of Catholicism.
III. Modern Christianity, from the Reformation of the sixteenth
century to the present time. a.d.
1517-1880.
Modern history moves chiefly
among the nations of Europe, and from the seventeenth century finds a vast new
theatre in North America. Western Christendom now splits into two hostile
parts_one remaining on the old path, the other striking out a new one; while
the eastern church withdraws still further from the stage of history, and presents
a scene of almost undisturbed stagnation, except in modern Russia and Greece.
Modern church history is the age of Protestantism in conflict with Romanism, of
religious liberty and independence in conflict with the principle of authority
and tutelage, of individual and personal Christianity against an objective and
traditional church system.
Here again three different
periods appear, which may be denoted briefly by the terms, Reformation,
Revolution, and Revival.
The sixteenth century, next to
the apostolic age the most fruitful and interesting period of church history,
is the century of the evangelical renovation of the Church, and the papal
counter-reform. It is the cradle of all Protestant denominations and sects, and
of modern Romanism.
The seventeenth century is the
period of scholastic orthodoxy, polemic confessionalism, and comparative
stagnation. The reformatory motion ceases on the continent, but goes on in the
mighty Puritanic struggle in England, and extends even into the primitive
forests of the American colonies. The seventeenth century is the most fruitful
in the church history of England, and gave rise to the various nonconformist or
dissenting denominations which were transplanted to North America, and have
out-grown some of the older historic churches. Then comes, in the eighteenth
century, the Pietistic and Methodistic revival of practical religion in
opposition to dead orthodoxy and stiff formalism. In the Roman church Jesuitism
prevails but opposed by the half-evangelical Jansenism, and the quasiliberal
Gallicanism.
In the second half of the
eighteenth century begins the vast overturning of traditional ideas and
institutions, leading to revolution in state, and infidelity in church,
especially in Roman Catholic France and Protestant Germany. Deism in England,
atheism in France, rationalism in Germany, represent the various degrees of the
great modern apostasy from the orthodox creeds.
The nineteenth century presents,
in part, the further development of these negative and destructive tendencies,
but with it also the revival of Christian faith and church life, and the
beginnings of a new creation by the everlasting gospel. The revival may be
dated from the third centenary of the Reformation, in 1817.
In the same period North
America, English and Protestant in its prevailing character, but presenting an
asylum for all the nations, churches, and sects of the old world, with a
peaceful separation of the temporal and the spiritual power, comes upon the stage
like a young giant full of vigor and promise.
Thus we have, in all, nine
periods of church history, as follows:
First Period:
The Life of Christ, and the Apostolic church.
From the Incarnation to the death of St. John. a.d. 1-100.
Second Period:
Christianity under persecution in the Roman empire.
From the death of St. John to Constantine, the first Christian emperor. a.d. 100-311.
Third Period:
Christianity in
union with the Graeco-Roman empire, and amidst the storms of the great
migration of nations.
From Constantine the Great to Pope Gregory I. a.d.
311-590.
Fourth Period:
Christianity
planted among the Teutonic, Celtic, and Slavonic nations.
From Gregory I. to Hildebrand, or Gregory VII. a.d. 590-1049.
Fifth Period:
The Church under
the papal hierarchy, and the scholastic theology.
From Gregory VII. to Boniface VIII. a.d.
1049-1294.
Sixth Period:
The decay of mediaeval Catholicism, and the preparatory movements for the
Reformation.
From Boniface VIII. to Luther. a.d.
1294-1517.
Seventh Period:
The evangelical
Reformation, and the Roman Catholic Reaction.
From Luther to the Treaty of Westphalia. a.d.
1517-1648.
Eighth Period:
The age of polemic
orthodoxy and exclusive confessionalism, with reactionary and progressive movements.
From the Treaty of Westphalia to the French Revolution. a.d. 1648-1790.
Ninth Period:
The spread of infidelity, and the revival of Christianity in Europe and
America, with missionary efforts encircling the globe.
From the French Revolution to the present time. a.d. 1790-1880.
Christianity has thus passed
through many stages of its earthly life, and yet has hardly reached the period
of full manhood in Christ Jesus. During this long succession of centuries it
has outlived the destruction of Jerusalem, the dissolution of the Roman empire,
fierce persecutions from without, and heretical corruptions from within, the
barbarian invasion, the confusion of the dark ages, the papal tyranny, the
shock of infidelity, the ravages of revolution, the attacks of enemies and the
errors of friends, the rise and fall of proud kingdoms, empires, and republics,
philosophical systems, and social organizations without number. And, behold, it
still lives, and lives in greater strength and wider extent than ever; controlling
the progress of civilization, and the destinies of the world; marching over the
ruins of human wisdom and folly, ever forward and onward; spreading silently
its heavenly blessings from generation to generation, and from country to
country, to the ends of the earth. It can never die; it will never see the
decrepitude of old age; but, like its divine founder, it will live in the
unfading freshness of self-renewing youth and the unbroken vigor of manhood to
the end of time, and will outlive time itself. Single denominations and sects,
human forms of doctrine, government, and worship, after having served their
purpose, may disappear and go the way of all flesh; but the Church Universal of
Christ, in her divine life and substance, is too strong for the gates of hell.
She will only exchange her earthly garments for the festal dress of the Lamb’s
Bride, and rise from the state of humiliation to the state of exaltation and
glory. Then at the coming of Christ she will reap the final harvest of history,
and as the church triumphant in heaven celebrate and enjoy the eternal sabbath
of holiness and peace. This will be the endless end of history, as it was
foreshadowed already at the beginning of its course in the holy rest of God
after the completion of his work of creation.
§ 5. Uses of Church History.
Church history is the most
extensive, and, including the sacred history of the Old and New Testaments, the
most important branch of theology. It is the backbone of theology or which it
rests, and the storehouse from which it derives its supplies. It is the best
commentary of Christianity itself, under all its aspects and in all its
bearings. The fulness of the stream is the glory of the fountain from which it
flows.
Church history has, in the first
place, a general interest for every cultivated mind, as showing the moral and
religious development of our race, and the gradual execution of the divine plan
of redemption.
It has special value for the
theologian and minister of the gospel, as the key to the present condition of
Christendom and the guide to successful labor in her cause. The present is the
fruit of the past, and the germ of the future. No work can stand unless it grow
out of the real wants of the age and strike firm root in the soil of history.
No one who tramples on the rights of a past generation can claim the regard of
its posterity. Church history is no mere curiosity shop. Its facts are not dry
bones, but embody living realities, the general principles and laws for our own
guidance and action. Who studies church history studies Christianity itself in
all its phases, and human nature under the influence of Christianity as it now
is, and will be to the end of time.
Finally, the history of the
church has practical value for every Christian, as a storehouse of warning and
encouragement, of consolation and counsel. It is the philosophy of facts,
Christianity in living examples. If history in general be, as Cicero describes
it, "testis
temporum, lux veritatis, et magistra vitae," or, as Diodorus calls it, "the handmaid
of providence, the priestess of truth, and the mother of wisdom," the
history of the kingdom of heaven is all these in the highest degree. Next to
the holy scriptures, which are themselves a history and depository of divine
revelation, there is no stronger proof of the continual presence of Christ with
his people, no more thorough vindication of Christianity, no richer source of
spiritual wisdom and experience, no deeper incentive to virtue and piety, than
the history of Christ’s kingdom. Every age has a message from God to man, which
it is of the greatest importance for man to understand.
The Epistle to the Hebrews
describes, in stirring eloquence, the cloud of witnesses from the old
dispensation for the encouragement of the Christians. Why should not the
greater cloud of apostles, evangelists, martyrs, confessors, fathers,
reformers, and saints of every age and tongue, since the coming of Christ, be
held up for the same purpose? They were
the heroes of Christian faith and love, the living epistles of Christ, the salt
of the earth, the benefactors and glory of our race; and it is impossible
rightly to study their thoughts and deeds, their lives and deaths, without
being elevated, edified, comforted, and encouraged to follow their holy
example, that we at last, by the grace of God, be received into their
fellowship, to spend with them a blessed eternity in the praise and enjoyment
of the same God and Saviour.
§ 6. Duty of the Historian.
The first duty of the historian,
which comprehends all others, is fidelity and justice. He must reproduce the
history itself, making it live again in his representation. His highest and
only aim should be, like a witness, to tell the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth, and, like a judge, to do full justice to every person
and event which comes under his review.
To be thus faithful and just he
needs a threefold qualification_scientific, artistic, and religious.
1. He must master the sources. For
this purpose he must be acquainted with such auxiliary sciences as
ecclesiastical philology (especially the Greek and Latin languages, in which
most of the earliest documents are written), secular history, geography, and
chronology. Then, in making use of the sources, he must thoroughly and
impartially examine their genuineness and integrity, and the credibility and
capacity of the witnesses. Thus only can he duly separate fact from fiction,
truth from error.
The number of sources for
general history is so large and increasing so rapidly, that it is, of course,
impossible to read and digest them all in a short lifetime. Every historian
rests on the shoulders of his predecessors. He must take some things on trust
even after the most conscientious search, and avail himself of the invaluable
aid of documentary collections and digests, ample indexes, and exhaustive
monographs, where he cannot examine all the primary sources in detail. Only he
should always carefully indicate his authorities and verify facts, dates, and
quotations. A want of accuracy is fatal to the reputation of an historical
work.
2. Then comes the composition.
This is an art. It must not simply recount events, but reproduce the
development of the church in living process. History is not a heap of
skeletons, but an organism filled and ruled by a reasonable soul.
One of the greatest difficulties
here lies in arranging the material. The best method is to combine judiciously
the chronological and topical principles of division; presenting at once the
succession of events and the several parallel (and, indeed, interwoven)
departments of the history in due proportion. Accordingly, we first divide the
whole history into periods, not arbitrary, but determined by the actual course
of events; and then we present each of these periods in as many parallel
sections or chapters as the material itself requires. As to the number of the
periods and chapters, and as to the arrangement of the chapters, there are
indeed conflicting opinions, and in the application of our principle, as in our
whole representation, we can only make approaches to perfection. But the
principle itself is, nevertheless, the only true one.
The ancient classical
historians, and most of the English and French, generally present their subject
in one homogeneous composition of successive books or chapters, without
rubrical division. This method might seem to bring out better the living unity
and variety of the history at every point. Yet it really does not. Language,
unlike the pencil and the chisel, can exhibit only the succession in time, not
the local concomitance. And then this method, rigidly pursued, never gives a
complete view of any one subject, of doctrine, worship, or practical life. It
constantly mixes the various topics, breaking off from one to bring up another,
even by the most sudden transitions, till the alternation is exhausted. The
German method of periodical and rubrical arrangement has great practical
advantages for the student, in bringing to view the order of subjects as well
as the order of time. But it should not be made a uniform and monotonous
mechanism, as is done in the Magdeburg Centuries and many subsequent works.
For, while history has its order, both of subject and of time, it is yet, like
all life, full of variety. The period of the Reformation requires a very
different arrangement from the middle age; and in modern history the rubrical
division must be combined with and made subject to a division by confessions
and countries, as the Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed churches in Germany,
France, England, and America.
The historian should aim then to
reproduce both the unity and the variety of history, presenting the different
topics in their separate completeness, without overlooking their organic
connection. The scheme must not be arbitrarily made, and then pedantically
applied, as a Procrustean framework, to the history; but it must be deduced
from the history itself, and varied as the facts require.
Another difficulty even greater
than the arrangement of the material consists in the combination of brevity and
fulness. A general church history should give a complete view of the progress
of Christ’s kingdom in all its departments. But the material is so vast and
constantly increasing, that the utmost condensation should be studied by a
judicious selection of the salient points, which really make up the main body
of history. There is no use in writing books unless they are read. But who has
time in this busy age to weary through the forty folios of Baronius and his continuators,
or the thirteen folios of Flacius, or the forty-five octaves of Schroeckh? The student of ecclesiastical history, it is
true, wants not miniature pictures only (as in Hase’s admirable compend), but
full-length portraits. Yet much space may be gained by omitting the processes
and unessential details, which may be left to monographs and special treatises.
Brevity is a virtue in the historian, unless it makes him obscure and
enigmatic.5
The historian, moreover, must
make his work readable and interesting, without violating truth. Some parts of
history are dull and wearisome; but, upon the whole, the truth of history is
"stranger than fiction." It is God’s own epos. It needs no
embellishment. It speaks for itself if told with earnestness, vivacity, and
freshness. Unfortunately, church historians, with very few exceptions, are
behind the great secular historians in point of style, and represent the past
as a dead corpse rather than as a living and working power of abiding interest.
Hence church histories are so little read outside of professional circles.
3. Both scientific research and
artistic representation must be guided by a sound moral and religious, that is,
a truly Christian spirit. The secular historian should be filled with universal
human sympathy, the church historian with universal Christian sympathy. The
motto of the former is: "Homo sum, nihil humani a me alienum puto;" the motto of the latter:
"Christianus
sum, nihil Christiani a me alienum puto."
The historian must first lay
aside all prejudice and party zeal, and proceed in the pure love of truth. Not
that he must become a tabula rasa. No man is able, or should attempt, to cast
off the educational influences which have made him what he is. But the
historian of the church of Christ must in every thing be as true as possible to
the objective fact, "sine ira et studio;" do justice to every person and event; and stand in the centre of
Christianity, whence he may see all points in the circumference, all individual
persons and events, all confessions, denominations, and sects, in their true
relations to each other and to the glorious whole. The famous threefold test of
catholic truth_universality of time (semper), place (ubique), and number (ab omnibus)_in its literal sense, is indeed untrue and
inapplicable. Nevertheless, there is a common Christianity in the Church, as
well as a common humanity in the world, which no Christian can disregard with
impunity. Christ is the divine harmony of all the discordant human creeds and
sects. It is the duty and the privilege of the historian to trace the image of
Christ in the various physiognomies of his disciples, and to act as a mediator
between the different sections of his kingdom.
Then he must be in thorough
sympathy with his subject, and enthusiastically devoted thereto. As no one can
interpret a poet without poetic feeling and taste, or a philosopher without
speculative talent, so no one can rightly comprehend and exhibit the history of
Christianity without a Christian spirit. An unbeliever could produce only a
repulsive caricature, or at best a lifeless statue. The higher the historian
stands on Christian ground, the larger is his horizon, and the more full and
clear his view of single regions below, and of their mutual bearings. Even
error can be fairly seen only from the position of truth. "Verum est index sui et falsi." Christianity is the
absolute truth, which, like the sun, both reveals itself and enlightens all
that is dark. Church history, like the Bible, is its own best interpreter.
So far as the historian combines
these three qualifications, he fulfils his office. In this life we can, of
course, only distantly approach perfection in this or in any other branch of
study. Absolute success would require infallibility; and this is denied to
mortal man. It is the exclusive privilege of the Divine mind to see the end
from the beginning, and to view events from all sides and in all their
bearings; while the human mind can only take up things consecutively and view
them partially or in fragments.
The full solution of the
mysteries of history is reserved for that heavenly state, when we shall see no
longer through a gloss darkly, but face to face, and shall survey the
developments of time from the heights of eternity. What St. Augustine so aptly
says of the mutual relation of the Old and New Testament, "Novum Testamentum in Vetere
latet, Vetus in Novo patet," may be applied also to the relation of this world and the world to
come. The history of the church militant is but a type and a prophecy of the
triumphant kingdom of God in heaven_a prophecy which will be perfectly understood
only in the light of its fulfilment.
§ 7. Literature of Church History.
Stäudlin: Geschichte
u. Literatur der K. Geschichte. Hann. 1827.
J. G. Dowling: An Introduction to the
Critical Study of Eccles. History. London, 1838. Quoted p. 1. The work is
chiefly an account of the ecclesiastical historians. pp. 1-212.
F. C. Baur: Die Epochen
der kirchlichen Geschichtschreibung. Tüb. 1852.
Philip Schaff:
Introduction to History of the Apost. Church (N. York, 1853), pp.
51-134.
Engelhardt: Uebersicht
der kirchengeschichtlichen Literatur vom Jahre 1825-1850. In Niedner’s
"Zeitschrift für historische Theologie," 1851.
G. Uhlhorn: Die
kirchenhist. Arbeiten von 1851-1860. In Niedner’s
"Zeitschrift für histor. Theologie," for 1866, Gotha, pp. 3-160. The
same: Die ältere Kirchengesch. in ihren neueren Darstellungen. In "Jahrbücher für
deutsche Theol." Vol. II. 648 sqq.
Brieger’s "Zeitschrift für Kirchengeschichte" (begun in 1877 and published in
Gotha) contains bibliographical articles of
Ad. Harnack, Möller, and others, on the latest literature.
Ch. K. Adams:
A Manual of Historical Literature. N. York, 3d ed. 1888.
Like every other science and
art, church historiography has a history of development toward its true
perfection. This history exhibits not only a continual growth of material, but
also a gradual, though sometimes long interrupted, improvement of method, from
the mere collection of names and dates in a Christian chronicle, to critical
research and discrimination, pragmatic reference to causes and motives,
scientific command of material, philosophical generalization, and artistic
reproduction of the actual history itself. In this progress also are marked the
various confessional and denominational phases of Christianity, giving
different points of view, and consequently different conceptions and
representations of the several periods and divisions of Christendom; so that
the development of the Church itself is mirrored in the development of church
historiography.
We can here do no more than
mention the leading works which mark the successive epochs in the growth of our
science.
I. The Apostolic Church.
The first works on church
history are the canonical Gospels of Matthew,
Mark, Luke, and John, the inspired biographical memoirs of Jesus Christ,
who is the theanthropic head of the Church universal.
These are followed by Luke’s Acts of the Apostles, which
describes the planting of Christianity among Jews and Gentiles from Jerusalem
to Rome, by the labors of the apostles, especially Peter and Paul.
II. The Greek Church historians.
The first post-apostolic works
on church history, as indeed all branches of theological literature, take their
rise in the Greek Church.
Eusebius, bishop of Caesarea, in
Palestine, and contemporary with Constantine the Great, composed a church
history in ten books (ejkklhsiastikh; iJstoriva, from the incarnation of the
Logos to the year 324), by which he has won the title of the Father of church
history, or the Christian Herodotus. Though by no means very critical and
discerning, and far inferior in literary talent and execution to the works of
the great classical historians, this ante-Nicene church history is invaluable
for its learning, moderation, and love of truth; for its use of so since totally
or partially lost; and for its interesting position of personal observation
between the last persecutions of the church and her establishment in the
Byzantine empire.
Eusebius was followed in similar
spirit and on the same plan by Socrates,
Sozomen, and Theodoret in the fifth century, and Theodorus and Evagrius
in the sixth, each taking up the thread of the narrative where his predecessor
had dropped it, and covering in part the same ground, from Constantine the
Great till toward the middle of the fifth century.6
Of the later Greek historians,
from the seventh century, to the fifteenth, the "Scriptores
Byzantini," as they are called, Nicephorus
Callisti (son of Callistus, about a.d.
1333) deserves special regard. His Ecclesiastical History was written with the
use of the large library of the church of St. Sophia in Constantinople, and
dedicated to the emperor Andronicus Palaeologus (d. 1327). It extends in
eighteen books (each of which begins with a letter of his name) from the birth
of Christ to the death of Phocas, a.d.
610, and gives in the preface a summary of five books more, which would have
brought it down to 911. He was an industrious and eloquent, but uncritical and
superstitious writer.7
III. Latin Church historians of the middle ages.
The Latin Church, before the
Reformation, was, in church history, as in all other theological studies, at
first wholly dependent on the Greek, and long content with mere translations
and extracts from Eusebius and his continuators.
The most popular of these was
the Historia
Tripartita, composed
by Cassiodorus, prime minister of
Theodoric, and afterwards abbot of a convent in Calabria (d. about a.d. 562). It is a compilation from the
histories of Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret, abridging and harmonizing them,
and supplied_together with the translation of Eusebius by Rufinus_the West for
several centuries with its knowledge of the fortunes of the ancient church.
The middle age produced no
general church history of consequence, but a host of chronicles, and histories
of particular nations, monastic orders, eminent popes, bishops, missionaries,
saints, etc. Though rarely worth much as compositions, these are yet of great
value as material, after a careful sifting of truth from legendary fiction.
The principal mediaeval
historians are Gregory of Tours (d.
595), who wrote a church history of the Franks; the Venerable Bede, (d. 735),
the father of English church history; Paulus Diaconus (d. 799), the historian
of the Lombards; Adam of Bremen, the chief authority for Scandinavian
church history from a.d.
788-1072; Haimo (or Haymo, Aimo,
a monk of Fulda, afterwards bishop of Halberstadt, d. 853), who described in
ten books, mostly from Rufinus, the history of the first four centuries (Hist oriae Sacrae Epitome); Anastasius (about 872), the author in part of the Liber Pontificalis, i.e., biographies of the Popes
till Stephen VI. (who died 891); Bartholomaeus
of Lucca. (about 1312), who composed a general church history from Christ
to a.d. 1312; St. Antoninus (Antonio Pierozzi),
archbishop of Florence (d. 1459), the author of the largest mediaeval work on
secular and sacred history (Summa Historialis), from the creation to a.d.
1457.
Historical criticism began with
the revival of letters, and revealed itself first in the doubts of Laurentius
Valla (d. 1457) and Nicolaus of Cusa (d. 1464) concerning the genuineness of
the donation of Constantine, the Isidorian Decretals, and other spurious
documents, which are now as universally rejected as they were once universally
accepted.
IV. Roman Catholic historians.
The Roman Catholic Church was
roused by the shock of the Reformation, in the sixteenth century, to great
activity in this and other departments of theology, and produced some works of
immense learning and antiquarian research, but generally characterized rather
by zeal for the papacy, and against Protestantism, than by the purely
historical spirit. Her best historians are either Italians, and ultramontane in
spirit, or Frenchmen, mostly on the side of the more liberal but less
consistent Gallicanism.
(a) Italians:
First stands the Cardinal Caesar Baronius (d. 1607), with his Annales Ecclesiastici (Rom. 1588 sqq.), in 12 folio
volumes, on which he spent thirty years of unwearied study. They come down only
to the year 1198, but are continued by Raynaldi
(to 1565), Laderchi (to 1571), and Theiner (to 1584).8
This truly colossal and
monumental work is even to this day an invaluable storehouse of information
from the Vatican library and other archives, and will always be consulted by
professional scholars. It is written in dry, ever broken, unreadable style, and
contains many spurious documents. It stands wholly on the ground of absolute
papacy, and is designed as a positive refutation of the Magdeburg Centuries,
though it does not condescend directly to notice them. It gave immense aid and
comfort to the cause of Romanism, and was often epitomized and popularized in
several languages. But it was also severely criticized, and in part refuted,
not only by such Protestants as Casaubon, Spanheim, and Samuel Basnage, but by
Roman Catholic scholars also, especially two French Franciscans, Antoine and
François Pagi, who corrected the chronology.
Far less known and used than the
Annals of Baronius is the Historia Ecclesiastica of Caspar
Sacharelli, which comes down to a.d.
1185, and was published in Rome, 1771-1796, in 25 quarto volumes.
Invaluable contributions to
historical collections and special researches have been made by other Italian
scholars, as Muratori, Zaccagni,
Zaccaria, Mansi, Gallandi, Paolo Sarpi, Pallavicini (the last two on the
Council of Trent), the three Assemani, and Angelo Mai.
(b) French Catholic historians.
Natalis
(Noel) Alexander,
Professor and Provincial of the Dominican order (d. 1724), wrote his Historia Ecclesiastica Veteris
et Nova Testamenti to the year 1600 (Paris, 1676, 2d ed. 1699 sqq. 8 vols. fol.) in the
spirit of Gallicanism, with great learning, but in dry scholastic style.
Innocent XI. put it in the Index (1684). This gave rise to the corrected
editions.
The abbot Claude Fleury (d. 1723), in his Histoire ecclésiastique (Par. 1691-1720, in 20 vols.
quarto, down to a.d. 1414,
continued by Claude Fabre, a very
decided Gallican, to a.d. 1595),
furnished a much more popular work, commended by mildness of spirit and fluency
of style, and as useful for edification as for instruction. It is a minute and,
upon the whole, accurate narrative of the course of events as they occurred,
but without system and philosophical generalization, and hence tedious and
wearisome. When Fleury was asked why he unnecessarily darkened his pages with
so many discreditable facts, he properly replied that the survival and progress
of Christianity, notwithstanding the vices and crimes of its professors and
preachers, was the best proof of its divine origin.9
Jacques
Bénigne Bossuet,
the distinguished bishop of Meaux (d. 1704), an advocate of Romanism on the one
hand against Protestantism, but of Gallicanism on the other against
Ultramontanism, wrote with brilliant eloquence, and in the spirit of the
Catholic church, a universal history, in bold outlines for popular effect.10 This was continued in the German language by the Protestant
Cramer, with less elegance but more thoroughness, and with special reference to
the doctrine history of the middle age.
Sebastien
le Nain de Tillemont (d. 1698), a French nobleman and priest, without office and devoted
exclusively to study and prayer_a pupil and friend of the Jansenists and in
partial sympathy with Gallicanism_composed a most learned and useful history of
the first six centuries (till 513), in a series of minute biographies, with
great skill and conscientiousness, almost entirely in the words of the original
authorities, from which he carefully distinguishes his own additions. It is, as
far as it goes, the most valuable church history produced by Roman Catholic
industry and learning.11
Contemporaneously with
Tillemont, the Gallican, L. Ellies Dupin
(d. 1719), furnished a biographical and bibliographical church history
down to the seventeenth century.12 Remi Ceillier (d.
1761) followed with a similar work, which has the advantage of greater
completeness and accuracy.13 The French
Benedictines of the congregation of St. Maur, in the seventeenth and eighteenth
century, did immense service to historical theology by the best critical
editions of the fathers and extensive archaeological works. We can only mention
the names of Mabillon, Massuet,
Montfaucon, D’achery, Ruinart, Martène, Durand. Among the Jesuits, Sirmond and
Petau occupy a prominent place.
The Abbé Rohrbacher. (Professor of Church History at Nancy, d. 1856)
wrote an extensive Universal History of the Church, including that of
the Old Testament, down to 1848. It is less liberal than the great Gallican
writers of the seventeenth century, but shows familiarity with German
literature.14
(c) German Catholic historians.
The pioneer of modern German
Catholic historians of note is a poet and an ex-Protestant, Count Leopold Von Stolberg (d. 1819). With
the enthusiasm of an honest, noble, and devout, but credulous convert, he
began, in 1806, a very full Geschichte der Religion Jesu
Christi, and
brought it down in 15 volumes to the year 430. It was continued by F. Kerz (vols. 16-45, to a.d. 1192) and J. N. Brischar (vols. 45-53, to a.d. 1245).
Theod.
Katerkamp (d. at
Münster, 1834) wrote a church history, in the same spirit and pleasing style,
down to a.d. 1153.15 It remained unfinished, like the work of Locherer(d. 1837), which extends to 1073.16
Bishop Hefele’s History of the Councils (Conciliengeschichte, 1855-’86; revised edition and
continuation, 1873 sqq.) is a most valuable contribution to the history of
doctrine and discipline down to the Council of Trent.17
The best compendious histories
from the pens of German Romanists are produced by Jos. Ign. Ritter, Professor in Bonn and afterward in Breslau
(d. 1857);18 Joh. Adam Möhler,
formerly Professor in Tübingen, and then in Munich, the author of the famous Symbolik
(d. 1838);19 Joh. Alzog (d. 1878);20 H. Brück (Mayence, 2d ed., 1877); F. X. Kraus (Treves, 1873; 3d ed.,
1882); Card. Hergenröther (Freiburg, 3d ed., 1886, 3 vols.); F. X. Funk
(Tübingen, 1886; 2d ed., 1890).
A. F. Gfrörer (d. 1861) began his learned General Church History
as a Protestant, or rather as a Rationalist (1841-’46, 4 vols., till a.d. 1056), and continued it from
Gregory VII. on as a Romanist (1859-’61).
Dr. John Joseph Ignatius Döllinger (Professor in Munich, born
1799), the most learned historian of the Roman Church in the nineteenth
century, represents the opposite course from popery to anti-popery. He began,
but never finished, a Handbook of Christian Church History (Landshut,
1833, 2 vols.) till a.d. 680, and
a Manual of Church History (1836, 2d ed., 1843, 2 vols.) to the
fifteenth century, and in part to 1517.21 He wrote also learned works against the Reformation (Die
Reformation, 1846-’48,
in 3 vols.), on Hippolytus and Callistus (1853), on the preparation for
Christianity (Heidenthum u Judenthum, 1857), Christianity and the
Church in the time of its Founding (1860), The Church and the Churches (1862),
Papal Fables of the Middle Age (1865), The Pope and the Council (under the
assumed name of "Janus," 1869), etc.
During the Vatican Council in
1870 Döllinger broke with Rome, became the theological leader of the Old
Catholic recession, and was excommunicated by the Archbishop of Munich (his
former pupil), April 17, 1871, as being guilty of "the crime of open and
formal heresy." He knows too much of church history to believe in the
infallibility of the pope. He solemnly declared (March 28, 1871) that "as
a Christian, as a theologian, as a historian, and as a citizen," he could
not accept the Vatican decrees, because they contradict the spirit of the
gospel and the genuine tradition of the church, and, if carried out, must
involve church and state, the clergy and the laity, in irreconcilable conflict.22
V. The Protestant Church historians.
The Reformation of the sixteenth
century is the mother church history as a science and art in the proper sense
of term. It seemed at first to break off from the past and to depreciate church
history, by going back directly to the Bible as the only rule of faith and
practice, and especially to look most unfavorably on the Catholic middle age,
as a progressive corruption of the apostolic doctrine and discipline. But, on
the other hand, it exalted primitive Christianity, and awakened a new and
enthusiastic interest in all the documents of the apostolic church, with an
energetic effort to reproduce its spirit and institutions. It really repudiated
only the later tradition in favor of the older, taking its stand upon the
primitive historical basis of Christianity. Then again, in the course of
controversy with Rome, Protestantism found it desirable and necessary to wrest
from its opponent not only the scriptural argument, but also the historical,
and to turn it as far as possible to the side of the evangelical cause. For the
Protestants could never deny that the true Church of Christ is built on a rock,
and has the promise of indestructible permanence. Finally, the Reformation, by,
liberating the mind from the yoke of a despotic ecclesiastical authority, gave
an entirely new impulse, directly or indirectly to free investigation in every
department, and produced that historical criticism which claims to clear fact
from the accretions of fiction, and to bring out the truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth, of history. Of course this criticism may run to the
extreme of rationalism and scepticism, which oppose the authority of the
apostles and of Christ himself; as it actually did for a time, especially in
Germany. But the abuse of free investigation proves nothing against the right
use of it; and is to be regarded only as a temporary aberration, from which all
sound minds will return to a due appreciation of history, as a truly rational
unfolding of the plan of redemption, and a standing witness for the all-ruling
providence of God, and the divine character of the Christian religion.
(a) German, Swiss, and Dutch
historians.
Protestant church historiography
has thus far flourished most on German soil. A patient and painstaking industry
and conscientious love of truth and justice qualify German scholars for the
mining operations of research which bring forth the raw material for the
manufacturer; while French and English historians know best how to utilize and
popularize the material for the general reader.
The following are the principal
works:
Matthias
Flacius (d 1575), surnamed Illyricus, a zealous Lutheran, and an unsparing enemy of Papists,
Calvinists, and Melancthonians, heads the list of Protestant historians with
his great Eccelesiastica
Historia Novi Testamenti, commonly called Centuriae Magdeburgenses (Basle, 1560-’74), covering
thirteen centuries of the Christian era in as many folio volumes. He began the
work in Magdeburg, in connection with ten other, scholars of like Spirit and
zeal, and in the face of innumerable difficulties, for the purpose of exposing
the corruptions and, errors of the papacy, and of proving the doctrines of the
Lutheran Reformation orthodox by the "witnesses of the truth" in all
ages. The tone is therefore controversial throughout, and quite as partial as
that of the Annals of Baronius on the papal side. The style is tasteless and
repulsive, but the amount of persevering labor, the immense, though
ill-digested and unwieldy mass of material, and the boldness of the criticism,
are imposing and astonishing. The "Centuries" broke the path of free
historical study, and are the first general church history deserving of the
name. They introduced also a new method. They divide the material by centuries,
and each century by a uniform Procrustean scheme of not less than sixteen
rubrics: "de loco et propagatione ecclesiae; de persecutione et
tranquillitate ecclesiae; de doctrina; de haeresibus; de ceremoniis; de
politia; de schismatibus; de conciliis; de vitis episcoporum; de haereticis; de
martyribus; de miraculis et prodigiis; de rebus Judaicis; de aliis
religionibus; de mutationibus politicis." This plan destroys all symmetry,
and occasions wearisome diffuseness and repetition. Yet, in spite of its
mechanical uniformity and stiffness, it is more scientific than the annalistic
or chronicle method, and, with material improvements and considerable
curtailment of rubrics, it has been followed to this day.
The Swiss, J. H. Hottinger (d. 1667), in his Historia Ecclesiastica N.
Testamenti (Zurich,
1655-’67, 9 vols. fol.), furnished a Reformed counterpart to the Magdeburg
Centuries. It is less original and vigorous, but more sober and moderate. It
comes down to the sixteenth century, to which alone five volumes are devoted.
From Fred. Spanheim of Holland (d. 1649) we have a Summa Historia Ecclesiasticae (Lugd. Bat. 1689), coming down
to the sixteenth century. It is based on a thorough and critical knowledge of
the sources, and serves at the same time as a refutation of Baronius.
A new path was broken by Gottfried Arnold (d. 1714), in his,
Impartial History of the Church and Heretics to a.d. 1688.23 He is the
historian of the pietistic and mystic school. He made subjective piety the test
of the true faith, and the persecuted sects the main channel of true
Christianity; while the reigning church from Constantine down, and indeed not
the Catholic church only, but the orthodox Lutheran with it, he represented as
a progressive apostasy, a Babylon full of corruption and abomination. In this
way he boldly and effectually broke down the walls of ecclesiastical
exclusiveness and bigotry; but at the same time, without intending or
suspecting it, he opened the way to a rationalistic and sceptical treatment of
history. While, in his zeal for impartiality and personal piety, he endeavored
to do justice to all possible heretics and sectaries, he did great injustice to
the supporters of orthodoxy and ecclesiastical order. Arnold was also the first
to use the German language instead of the Latin in learned history; but his
style is tasteless and insipid.
J. L. von Mosheim (Chancellor of the University at Göttingen, d.
1755), a moderate and impartial Lutheran, is the father of church historiography
as an art, unless we prefer to concede this merit to Bossuet. In skilful
construction, clear, though mechanical and monotonous arrangement, critical
sagacity, pragmatic combination, freedom from passion, almost bordering on cool
indifferentism, and in easy elegance of Latin style, he surpasses all his
predecessors. His well-known Institutiones Historiae Ecclesiasticae antiquae et
recentioris (Helmstädt,
1755) follows the centurial plan of Flacius, but in simpler form, and, as
translated and supplemented by Maclaine, and Murdock, is still used extensively
as a text-book in England and America.24
J. M. Schröckh (d. 1808), a pupil of Mosheim, but already touched
with the neological spirit which Semler (d. 1791) introduced into the
historical theology of Germany, wrote with unwearied industry the largest
Protestant church history after the Magdeburg Centuries. He very properly
forsook the centurial plan still followed by Mosheim, and adopted the periodic.
His Christian Church History comprises forty-five volumes, and reaches
to the end of the eighteenth century. It is written in diffuse but clear and
easy style, with reliable knowledge of sources, and in a mild and candid
spirit, and is still a rich storehouse of historical matter.25
The very learned Institutiones Historiae
Ecclesiasticae V. et N. Testamenti of the Dutch Reformed divine, H. Venema (d. 1787), contain the history of the Jewish and
Christian Church down to the end of the sixteenth century (Lugd. Bat. 1777-’83,
in seven parts).
H. P. C. Henke (d. 1809) is the leading representative of the
rationalistic church historiography, which ignores Christ in history. In his
spirited and able Allgemeine Geschichte der christlichen Kirche, continued by Vater
(Braunschweig, 1788-1820, 9 vols.), the church appears not as the temple of God
on earth, but as a great infirmary and bedlam.
August
Neander. (Professor
of Church History in Berlin, d. 1850), the "father of modern church history,"
a child in spirit, a giant in learning, and a saint in piety, led back the
study of history from the dry heath of rationalism to the fresh fountain of
divine life in Christ, and made it a grand source of edification as well as
instruction for readers of every creed. His General History of the Christian
Religion and Church begins after the apostolic age (which he treated in a
separate work), and comes down to the Council of Basle in 1430, the
continuation being interrupted by his death.26 It is distinguished for thorough and conscientious use of the
sources, critical research, ingenious combination, tender love of truth and
justice, evangelical catholicity, hearty piety, and by masterly analysis of the
doctrinal systems and the subjective Christian life of men of God in past ages.
The edifying character is not introduced from without, but naturally grows out
of his conception of church history, viewed as a continuous revelation of Christ’s
presence and power in humanity, and as an illustration of the parable of the
leaven which gradually pervades and transforms the whole lump. The political
and artistic sections, and the outward machinery of history, were not congenial
to the humble, guileless simplicity of Neander. His style is monotonous,
involved, and diffuse, but unpretending, natural, and warmed by a genial glow
of sympathy and enthusiasm. It illustrates his motto: Pectus est quod theologum facit.
Torrey’s excellent translation
(Rose translated only the first three centuries), published in Boston,
Edinburgh, and London, in multiplied editions, has given Neander’s immortal
work even a much larger circulation in England and America than it has in
Germany itself.
Besides this general history,
Neander’s indefatigable industry produced also special works on the Life of
Christ (1837, 4th ed. 1845), the Apostolic Age (1832, 4th ed. 1842, translated
by J. E. Ryland, Edinburgh, 1842, and again by E. G. Robinson, N. York, 1865),
Memorials of Christian Life (1823, 3d ed. 1845, 3 vols.), the Gnostic Heresies
(1818), and biographies of representative characters, as Julian the Apostate
(1812), St. Bernard (1813, 2d ed. 1848), St. Chrysostom (1822, 3d ed. 1848),
and Tertullian (1825, 2d ed. 1849). His History a Christian Doctrines was
published after his death by Jacobi (1855), and translated by J. E. Ryland
(Lond., 1858).27
From J. C. L. Gieseler (Professor of Church History
in Göttingen, d. 1854), a profoundly learned, acute, calm, impartial,
conscientious, but cold and dry scholar, we have a Textbook of Church
History from the birth of Christ to 1854.28 He takes Tillemont’s method of giving the history in the very
words of the sources; only he does not form the text from them, but throws them
into notes. The chief excellence of this invaluable and indispensable work is
in its very carefully selected and critically elucidated extracts from the
original authorities down to the year 1648 (as far as he edited the work
himself). The skeleton-like text presents, indeed, the leading facts clearly
and concisely, but does not reach the inward life and spiritual marrow of the
church of Christ. The theological views of Gieseler hardly rise above the
jejune rationalism of Wegscheider, to whom he dedicated a portion of his
history; and with all his attempt at impartiality he cannot altogether conceal
the negative effect of a rationalistic conception of Christianity, which acts
like a chill upon the narrative of its history, and substitutes a skeleton of
dry bones for a living organism.
Neander and Gieseler matured
their works in respectful and friendly rivalry, during the same period of
thirty years of slow, but solid and steady growth. The former is perfectly
subjective, and reproduces the original sources in a continuous warm and
sympathetic composition, which reflects at the same time the author’s own mind
and heart; the latter is purely objective, and speaks with the indifference of
an outside spectator, through the ipsissima verba of the same sources, arranged as notes, and strung
together simply by a slender thread of narrative. The one gives the history
ready-made, and full of life and instruction; the other furnishes the material
and leaves the reader to animate and improve it for himself. With the one, the
text is everything; with the other, the notes. But both admirably complete each
other, and exhibit together the ripest fruit of German scholarship in general
church history in the first half of the nineteenth century.
Ferdinand
Christian Baur (Prof.
of Church History in Tübingen, d. 1860) must be named alongside with Neander
and Gieseler in the front rank of German church historians. He was equal to
both in independent and thorough scholarship, superior in constructive
criticism and philosophical generalization, but inferior in well-balanced
judgment and solid merit. He over-estimated theories and tendencies, and
undervalued persons and facts. He was an indefatigable investigator and bold
innovator. He completely revolutionized the history of apostolic and
post-apostolic Christianity, and resolved its rich spiritual life of faith and
love into a purely speculative process of conflicting tendencies, which started
from an antagonism of Petrinism and Paulinism, and were ultimately reconciled
in the compromise of ancient Catholicism. He fully brought to light, by a keen
critical analysis, the profound intellectual fermentation of the primitive
church, but eliminated from it the supernatural and miraculous element; yet as
an honest and serious sceptic he had to confess at last a psychological miracle
in the conversion of St. Paul, and to bow before the greater miracle of the
resurrection of Christ, without which the former is an inexplicable enigma. His
critical researches and speculations gave a powerful stimulus to a
reconsideration and modification of the traditional views on early
Christianity.
We have from his fertile pen a
general History of the Christian Church, in five volumes (1853-1863),
three of which were, published after his death and lack the originality and
careful finish of the first and second, which cover the first six centuries;
Lectures on Christian Doctrine History (Dogmengeschichte),
published by his son (1865-’67, in 3 volumes), and a
brief Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte, edited by himself (1847, 2d ed. 1858). Even more
valuable are his monographs: on St. Paul, for whom he had a profound
veneration, although he recognized only four of his Epistles as genuine (1845,
2d ed. by E. Zeller, 1867, 2 vols., translated into English, 1875); on Gnosticism,
with which he had a strong spiritual affinity (Die
christliche Gnosis oder die christliche Religionsphilosophie, 1835); the history of the
Doctrine of the Atonement (1838, 1 vol.), and of the Trinity and
Incarnation (1841-’43, in 3 vols.), and his masterly vindication of
Protestantism against Möhler’s Symbolik (2d ed. 1836).29
Karl
Rudolph Hagenbach (Professor
of Church History at Basel, d. 1874) wrote, in the mild and impartial spirit of
Neander, with poetic taste and good judgment, and in pleasing popular style, a
general History of the Christian Church in seven volumes (4th ed.
1868-’72),30 and a History of Christian Doctrines, in two
volumes (1841, 4th ed. 1857).31
Protestant Germany is richer
than any other country in, manuals and compends of church history for the use
of students. We mention Engelhardt
(1834), Niedner (Geschichte der christl. Kirche, 1846,
and Lehrbuch, 1866), Hase (11th ed. 1886),
Guericke (9th ed. 1866, 3 vols.), Lindner (1848-’54), Jacobi (1850, unfinished), Fricke (1850), Kurtz (Lehrbuch,
10th ed. 1887, in 2 vols., the larger Handbuch, unfinished), Hasse (edited by Köhler, 1864, in 3
small vols.), Köllner (1864), Ebrard
(1866) 2 vols.), Rothe (lectures
edited by Weingarten, 1875, 2
vols.), Herzog (1876-’82, 3 vols.), H. Schmid (1881, 2 vols.).
Niedner’s Lehrbuch (1866) stands first for independent and thorough
scholarship, but is heavy. Hase’s Compend is unsurpassed for condensation, wit,
point, and artistic taste, as a miniature picture.32 Herzog’s Abriss keeps the medium between voluminous
fulness and enigmatic brevity, and is written in a candid Christian spirit. Kurtz
is clear, concise, and evangelical.33 A new manual was begun by Möller,
1889.
The best works on doctrine
history (Dogmengeschichte) are by Münscher,
Geiseler, Neander, Baur, Hagenbach, Thomasius, H. Schmid, Nitzsch, and Harnack
(1887).
It is impossible to do justice
here to the immense service which Protestant Germany has done to special
departments of church history. Most of the fathers, popes, schoolmen and
reformers, and the principal doctrines of Christianity have been made the
subject of minute and exhaustive historical treatment. We have already
mentioned the monographs of Neander and Baur, and fully equal to them are such
masterly and enduring works as Rothe’s
Beginnings of the Christian Church, Ullmann’s
Reformers before the Reformation, Hasse’s
Anselm of Canterbury, and
Dorner’s History of Christology.
(b) French works.
Dr. Etienne L. Chastel (Professor of Church History in the
National Church at Geneva, d. 1886) wrote a complete Histoire du
Christianisme (Paris,
1881-’85, 5 vols.).
Dr. Merle D’aubigné (Professor of Church History in the
independent Reformed Seminary at Geneva, d. 1872) reproduced in elegant and
eloquent French an extensive history both of the Lutheran and Calvinistic
Reformation, with an evangelical enthusiasm and a dramatic vivacity which
secured it an extraordinary circulation in England and America (far greater,
than on the Continent), and made it the most popular work on that important
period. Its value as a history is somewhat diminished by polemical bias and the
occasional want of accuracy. Dr. Merle conceived the idea of the work during
the celebration of the third centenary of the German Reformation in 1817, in
the Wartburg at Eisenach, where Luther translated, the New Testament and threw
his inkstand at the devil. He labored on it till the year of his death.34
Dr. Edmund De Pressensé (pastor of a free church in Paris, member
of the National Assembly, then senator of France), and able scholar, with
evangelical Protestant convictions similar to those of Dr. Merle, wrote a Life
of Christ against Renan, and a History of Ancient Christianity, both of which are
translated into English.35
Ernest
Renan, the
celebrated Orientalist and member of the French Academy, prepared from the
opposite standpoint of sceptical criticism, and mixing history with romance,
but in brilliant, and fascinating style, the Life of Christ, and the history of
the Beginnings of Christianity to the middle of the second century.36
(c) English works.
English literature is rich in
works on Christian antiquity, English church history, and other special
departments, but poor in general histories of Christianity.
The first place among English
historians, perhaps, is due to Edward
Gibbon (d. 1794). In his monumental History of the Decline and Fall
of the Roman Empire (finished after twenty years’ labor, at Lausanne, June
27,1787), he notices throughout the chief events in ecclesiastical history from
the introduction of the Christian religion to the times of the crusades and the
capture of Constantinople (1453), with an accurate knowledge of the chief
sources and the consummate skill of a master in the art of composition, with
occasional admiration for heroic characters like Athanasius and Chrysostom, but
with a keener eye to the failings of Christians and the imperfections of the
visible church, and unfortunately without sympathy and understanding of the
spirit of Christianity which runs like a golden thread even through the darkest
centuries. He conceived the idea of his magnificent work in papal Rome, among
the ruins of the Capitol, and in tracing the gradual decline and fall of imperial
Rome, which he calls "the greatest, perhaps, and most awful scene in the
history of mankind," he has involuntarily become a witness to the gradual
growth and triumph of the religion of the cross, of which no historian of the
future will ever record a history of decline and fall, though some "lonely
traveller from New Zealand," taking his stand on "a broken arch"
of the bridge of St. Angelo, may sketch the ruins of St. Peter’s.37
Joseph
Milner (Vicar of
Hull, d. 1797) wrote a History of the Church of Christ for popular
edification, selecting those portions which best suited his standard of
evangelical orthodoxy and piety. "Nothing," he says in the preface,
"but what appears to me to belong to Christ’s kingdom shall be admitted;
genuine piety is the only thing I intend to celebrate. He may be called the
English Arnold, less learned, but free from polemics and far more readable and
useful than the German pietist. His work was corrected and continued by his
brother, Isaac Milner (d. 1820), by Thomas Grantham and Dr.
Stebbing.38
Dr. Waddington (Dean of Durham) prepared three volumes on the
history of the Church before the Reformation (1835) and three volumes on the
Continental Reformation (1841). Evangelical.
Canon James C. Robertson of Canterbury (Prof. of Church History in
King’s College, d. 1882) brings his History of the Christian Church from
the Apostolic Age down to the Reformation (a.d.
64-1517). The work was first published in four octavo volumes (1854 sqq.) and
then in eight duodecimo volumes (Lond. 1874), and is the best, as it is the
latest, general church history written by an Episcopalian. It deserves praise for
its candor, moderation, and careful indication of authorities.
From Charles Hardwick (Archdeacon of Ely, d. 1859) we have a
useful manual of the Church History of the Middle Age (1853, 3d ed. by
Prof. W. Stubbs, 1872), and another on the Reformation (1856, 3d ed. by
W. Stubbs, London, 1873). His History of the Anglican Articles of Religion
(1859) is a valuable contribution to English church history.
Dr. Trench, Archbishop of Dublin, has published his Lectures
on Mediaeval Church History (Lond. 1877), delivered before the girls of
Queen’s College, London. They are conceived in a spirit of devout churchly
piety and interspersed with judicious reflections.
Philip
Smith’s History
of the Christian Church during the First Ten Centuries (1879), and during the Middle Ages (1885),
in 2 vols., is a skilful and useful manual for students.39
The most popular and successful
modern church historians in the English or any other language are Dean Milman of St. Paul’s, Dean Stanley of Westminster Abbey, and
Archdeacon Farrar of Westminster.
They belong to the broad church school of the Church of England, are familiar
with Continental learning, and adorn their chosen themes with all the charms of
elegant, eloquent, and picturesque diction. Henry
Hart Milman (d. 1868) describes, with the stately march of Gibbon and as
a counterpart of his decline and fall of Paganism, the rise and progress of
Ancient and Latin Christianity, with special reference to its bearing on the
progress of civilization.40 Arthur Penrhyn Stanley (d. 1881)
unrolls a picture gallery of great men and events in the Jewish theocracy, from
Abraham to the Christian era, and in the Greek church, from Constantine the
Great to Peter the Great.41 Frederic W. Farrar (b. 1831)
illuminates with classical and rabbinical learning, and with exuberant rhetoric
the Life of Christ, and of the great Apostle of the Gentiles, and the Early
Days of Christianity.42
(d) American works.
American literature is still in
its early youth, but rapidly growing in every department of knowledge. Prescott, Washington Irving, Motley, and
Bancroft have cultivated
interesting portions of the history of Spain, Holland, and the United States,
and have taken rank among the classical historians in the English language.
In ecclesiastical history the
Americans have naturally so far been mostly in the attitude of learners and
translators, but with every prospect of becoming producers. They have, as
already noticed, furnished the best translations of Mosheim, Neander, and
Gieseler.
Henry
B. Smith (late
Professor in the Union Theol. Seminary, New York, d. 1877) has prepa