HISTORY of the CHRISTIAN CHURCH*
CHAPTER XVI.
SERVETUS: HIS LIFE. OPINIONS,
TRIAL, AND EXECUTION.
§ 136 The Servetus
Literature.
I.
Theological Works of Michael Servetus.
DE
TRINI-
tatis erroribus
Libri Septem.
Per Michaelem Serueto, aliĂ s
Reues ab Aragonia
Hispanum
Anno MDXXXI.
This book was printed at Hagenau
in the Alsace, but without the name of the place, or of the publisher or
printer. It contains 120 pages.
Dialogo | rum de
Trinitate | Libri duo. | De justicia regni Chri | sti, Capitula quatuor. | Per
Michaelem Serveto, | aliâs Reves, ab Aragonia | Hispanum. | Anno MDXXXII. Likewise printed at
Hagenau. It concludes with the words: "Perdat Dominus omnes ecclesiae tyrannos. Amen.
Finis."
These two works (bound in one
volume in the copy before me) were incorporated in revised shape in the Restitutio.
Totius ecclesiae est
ad sua limina
vocatio, in integrum restituta cognitione Dei, fidei Chri-
sti, instificationis nostrae, regenerationes baptismi, et coe-
nae domini manducationis. Restituto denique nobis re-
gno caelsti, Babylonis impiae captiuitate soluta, et An-
tichristo cum fuis penitus destructo.
This work was printed at Vienne
in Dauphiné, at the expense of the author, who is indicated on the last page by
the initial letters M. S. V.; i.e. Michael Servetus Villanovanus. It contains in 734 octavo
pages: 1) Seven books on the Trinity (the ed. of 1531 revised); 2) Three books
on Faith and the Righteousness of the kingdom of Christ (revised); 3) Four
books on Regeneration and the kingdom of Antichrist; 4) Thirty Epistles to Calvin;
5) Sixty Signs of the reign of Antichrist; 6) Apology to Melanchthon and his
colleagues on the mystery of the Trinity and ancient discipline.
One thousand (some say eight
hundred) copies were printed and nearly all burnt or otherwise destroyed. Four
or five were saved: namely, one sent by Servetus through Frelon to Calvin; one
taken from the five bales seized at Lyons for the use of the Inquisitor Ory; a
third transmitted for inspection to the Swiss Churches and Councils; a fourth
sent by Calvin to Bullinger; a fifth given by Calvin to Colladon, one of the
judges of Servetus, in which the objectionable passages are marked, and which
was, perhaps, the same with the fourth copy. Castellio (1554) complained that
he could not get a copy.
At present only two copies of
the original edition are known to exist; one in the National Library of Paris
(the Collation copy), the other in the Imperial Library of Vienna. Willis gives
the curious history of these copies, pp. 535-541; Comp. his note on p. 196.
Audin says that he used the annotated copy which bears the name of Colladon on
the title-page, and the marks of the flames on the margins; how it was rescued,
he does not know. It is this copy which passed into the hands of Dr. Richard
Mead, a distinguished physician in London, who put a Latin note at the head of
the work: "Fuit
hic liber D. Colladon qui ipse nomen suum adscripsit. Ille vero simul cum
Calvino inter judices sedebat qui auctorem Servetum flammis damnarunt. Ipse
indicem in fine confecit. Et porro in ipso opere lineis ductis hic et illic
notavit verba quibus ejus blasphemias et errores coargueret. Hoc exemplar
unicum quantum scire licet flammis servatum restat: omnia enim quae reperire
poterat auctoritate sua ut comburerentur curavit Calvinus." (Quoted from Audin.) This must be the copy now in Paris. Dr. Mead
began to republish a handsome edition in 1723, but it was suppressed and burnt
by order of Gibson, the bishop of London.
In 1790, the book rose like a
phoenix from its ashes in the shape of an exact reprint, page for page, and
line for line, so that it can only be distinguished from the first edition by
the date of publication at the bottom of the last page in extremely small
figures_1790 (not 1791, as Trechsel, Staehelin, Willis, and others, say). The
reprint was made from the original copy in the Vienna Library by direction of
Chr. Th. Murr, M. D. (See his Adnotationes ad Bibliothecas Hallerianas, cum variis ad
scripta Michaelis Serveti pertinentibus, Erlangen, 1805, quoted by Willis.) The edition must have been small, for copies
are rare. My friend, the Rev. Samuel M. Jackson, is in possession of a copy
which I have used, and of which two pages, the first and the last, are given in
facsimile.
A German translation of the Restitutio by Dr. Bernhard
Spiess: Michael
Servets Wiederherstellung des Christenthums zum ersten Mal ĂĽbersetzt. Erster Bd., Wiesbaden
(Limbarth), 1892 (323 pp.). The second vol. has not yet appeared. He says in
the preface: "An Begeisterung fĂĽr Christus und an biblischem
Purismus ist Servet den meisten Theologen unserer Tage weit ĂĽberlegen [?]; von
eigentlichen Laesterungen ist nichts bei ihm zu entdecken." Dr. Spiess, like Dr. Tollin, is both a
defender of Servetus and an admirer of Calvin. He translated the first ed. of
his Institutes (1536) into German (Wiesbaden,
1887).
The geographical and medical
works of Servetus will be noticed in the next sections.
II.
Calvinistic Sources.
Calvin: Defensio orthodoxae fidei de
sacra trinitate contra prodigiosos errores Michaelis Serveti Hispani, ubi
ostenditur haereticos jure gladii coercendos esse, etc., written in 1554, in Opera, VIII. (Brunsw., 1870),
453-644. The same volume contains thirty letters of Servetus to Calvin,
645-720, and the Actes du procès de Mich. Servet., 721-872. See also the
correspondence of Calvin from the year 1553 in vol. XIV. 68 sqq. (The Defensio is in the Amsterdam ed., vol.
IX. 510-567.) Calvin refers to Servetus
after his death several times in the last ed. of the Institutes (I. III. § 10, 22; II. IX. § 3,
10; IV. XVI. 29, 81), in his Responsio ad Balduini Convitia (1562), Opera, IX. 575, and in his Commentary
on John 1:1 (written in 1554): "Servetus, superbissimus ex gente Hispanica nebulo."
Beza gives a
brief account in his Calvini Vita, ad a. 1553 and 1554, where he says that "Servetus was justly
punished at Geneva, not as a sectary, but as a monster made up of nothing but
impiety and horrid blasphemies, with which, by his speeches and writings, for
the space of thirty years, he had infected both heaven and earth." He thinks that Servetus uttered a satanic
prediction on the title-page of his book: "Great war took place in heaven,
Michael and his angels fighting with [not against] the dragon." He also wrote an elaborate defence of the
death-penalty for heresy in his tract De haereticis a civili magistratu puniendis, adversus
Martini Bellii [pseudonym]
farraginem et
novorum academicorum sectam. Geneva (Oliva Rob. Stephani), 1554; second ed. 1592; French
translation, 1560. See Heppe’s Beza, p. 38 sq.
III. Anti-Calvinistic.
Bolsec, in
his Histoire de la vie ... de Jean Calvin (1577), chs. III. and IV.,
discusses the trial of Servetus in a spirit hostile alike to Calvin and
Servetus. He represents the Roman Catholic view. He calls Servetus "a very
arrogant and insolent man," and a "monstrous heretic," who
deserved to be exterminated. "Desireroy," he says, p. 25, "que
tous semblables fussent exterminez: et l’église de nostre Seigneur fut bien
purgée de telle vermine." His more tolerant editor,
L. F. Chastel,
protests against this wish by an appeal to Luke 9:55.
IV.
Documentary Sources.
The Acts of the
process of Servetus at Vienne were published by the Abbé D’artigny, Paris, 1749 (Tom. II. des
Nouveaux Memoires)._The
Acts of the process at Geneva, first published by J. H. Albert
Rilliet: Relation
du procés criminel intenté a Genève en 1553 contre Michel Servet, rédigée
d’après les documents originaux. Genève, 1844. Reprinted in Opera, vol. VIII._English
translation, with notes and additions, by W. K. Tweedie: Calvin and Servetus. Edinburgh, 1846. German
translation by Brunnemann (see below).
V.
Modern Works.
*L. Mosheim, the famous Lutheran Church
historian (1694-1755), made the first impartial investigation of the Servetus
controversy, and marks a reaction of judgment in favor of Servetus, in two
monographs, Geschichte des berĂĽhmten Spanischen Arztes Michael
Serveto,
Helmstaedt, 1748, 4° (second vol. of his Ketzergeschichte); and Neue
Nachrichten von Serveto, 1750. He had first intrusted his materials to a pupil, Henr.
Ab. Allwoerden, who
published a Historia
Michaelis Serveti, Helmstadii, 1727 (238 pp., with a fine portrait of Servetus and the
scene of his execution) but as this book was severely criticised by Armand de
la Chapelle, the pastor of the French congregation at the Hague, Mosheim wrote
his first work chiefly from copies of the acts of the trial of Servetus at
Geneva (which are verified by the publication of the original documents in
1844), and his second work from the trial at Vienne, which were furnished to
him by a French ecclesiastic. Comp. Henry, III. 102 sq.; Dyer, 540 sq.
In the nineteenth century
Servetus has been thoroughly discussed by the biographers of Calvin: Henry (vol. III. 107 sqq., abridged in
Stebbing’s transl., vol. II.); Audin (chs. XL. and XLI.); Dyer (chs. IX. and X., pp. 296-367); Staehelin
(I. 422 sqq.; II.
309 sqq.); and by Amédée Roget, in his Histoire du peuple de Genève (vol. IV., 1877, which gives the
history of 1553-1555). Henry, Staehelin, and Roget vindicate Calvin, but
dissent from his intolerance; Dyer aims to be impartial; Audin, like Bolsec,
condemns both Calvin and Servetus.
*F. Trechsel: Michael
Servet und seine Vorgaenger, Heidelberg, 1839 (the first part of his Die
protest. Antitrinitarier). He draws chiefly from Servetus’s works and from the proceedings of the
trial in the archives of Bern, which agree with those of Geneva, published
afterwards by Rilliet. His work is learned and
impartial, but with great respect for Calvin. Comp. his valuable article in the
first ed. of Herzog, vol. XIV. 286-301.
*W. K. Tweedie: Calvin and Servetus, London, 1846.
Emile Saisset:
Michael Servet, I. Doctrine
philosophique et religieuse de M. S.; II. Le procès et la mort de M. S. In the "Revue des deux Mondes" for
1848, and in his "Mélanges d’histoire," 1859, pp. 117-227. Saisset was the first to
assign Servetus his proper place among scientists and pantheists. He calls him
"le théologien philosophe panthéiste précurseur inattendu
de Malebranche et de Spinoza, de Schleiermacher et de Strauss."
J. S. Porter (Unitarian): Servetus and Calvin, 1854.
Karl Brunnemann: M. Serv., eine aktenmaessige Darstellung des 1553 in
Genf gegen ihn gefĂĽhrten Kriminal-processes, Berlin), 1865. (From Rilliet.)
*Henri
Tollin (Lic.
Theol., Dr. Med., and minister of the French Reformed Church at Magdeburg): I. Charakterbild
Michael Servets.
Berlin, 1876, 48 pp. 8° (transl. into French by Mme. Picheral-Dardier, Paris,
1879); II. Das
Lehrsystem Michael Servets, genetisch dargestellt, GĂĽtersloh, 1876-1878, 3 vols.
(besides many smaller tracts; see below).
*R. Willis (M. D.): Servetus and Calvin. London, 1877 (641 pp.), with a
fine portrait of Servetus and an ugly one of Calvin. More favorable to the
former.
Marcelino Menendez Pelayo (R. Cath.): Historia
de las Heterodoxos Espanjoles. Madrid, 1877. Tom. II. 249-313.
Don Pedro Gonzales De Velasco: Miguel Serveto. Madrid, 1880 (23 pp.). He has placed a statue of Serveto in the portico
of the Instituto antropologico at Madrid.
Prof. Dr. A. v.
d. Linde: Michael Servet, een Brandoffer der Gereformeerde
Inquisitie.
Groningen, 1891 (326 pp.). Hostile to Calvin, as the title indicates, and
severe also against Tollin, but valuable for the literary references,
distributed among the chapters.
(Articles in
Encyclop., by Charles Dardier, in Lichtenberger’s "Encycl. des Sciences
religieuses," vol. XI., pp. 570-582 (Paris, 1881); in Larousse’s
"Grand
Dictionnaire universel," vol. XIV. 621-623; Alex. Gordon, in "Encycl. Brit."
XXI. 684-686; by Bernh. Riggenbach, in Herzog2, XIV. 153-161.)
The theology of
Servetus is analyzed and criticised by Heberle: M. Servets
Trinitaetslehre und Christologie in the "TĂĽbinger Zeitschrift" for 1840; Baur: Die
christl. Lehre v. d. Dreieinigkeit und Menschwerdung Gottes (TĂĽbingen, 1843), III. 54-103; Dorner: Lehre v. d.
Person Christi (Berlin,
1853), II. 613, 629, 649-660; Punjer: De M. Serveti doctrina, Jena, 1876.
The tragedy of Servetus has been
dramatized by Max Ring (Die Genfer, 1850), José Echegaray (1880),
and Albert Hamann (1881).
Servetus has been more
thoroughly discussed and defended in recent times than any man connected with
the Reformation.
The greatest Servetus scholar
and vindicator is Dr. Tollin, pastor of a Huguenot Church in Germany, who calls
himself "a Calvinist by birth and a decided friend of toleration by
nature." He was led to the study
of Servetus by his interest in Calvin, and has written a Serveto-centric
library of about forty books and tracts, bearing upon every aspect of Servetus:
his Theology,
Anthropology, Soteriology, Eschatology, Diabology, Antichristology, his relations to the Reformers
(Luther, Bucer, Melanchthon), and to Thomas Aquinas, and also his medical and
geographical writings. He has kindly furnished me with a complete list, and I
will mention the most important below in their proper places.
Dr. Tollin assumes that Servetus
was radically misunderstood by all his opponents_Catholic, Calvinistic, and
Lutheran, and even by his Socinian and other Unitarian sympathizers. He thinks
that even Calvin misunderstood him, though he understood him better than his
other contemporaries. He makes Servetus a real hero, the peer of Calvin in
genius, the discoverer of the circulation of the blood, the founder of
comparative geography (the forerunner of Ritter), and the pioneer of modern
Christology, which, instead of beginning with the pre-existent Logos, rises
from the contemplation of the man Jesus to the recognition of Jesus Christ as
the Messiah, then as the Son of God, and last as God. But he has overdone the
subject, and put some of his own ideas into the brain of Servetus, who, like
Calvin, must be studied and judged in the light of the sixteenth, and not of
the nineteenth, century.
Next to Tollin, Professor
Harnack, Neander’s successor in Berlin, has formed a most favorable idea of
Servetus. Without entering into an analysis of his views, he thinks that in him
"the best of all that came to maturity in the sixteenth century was
united, if we except the evangelical Reformation," and thus characterizes
him: "Servede ist gleich bedeutend als empirischer
Forscher, als kritischer Denker, als speculativer Philosoph und als
christlicher Reformer im besten Sinn des Worts. Es ist eine Paradoxie der
Geschichte, dass Spanien_das Land, welches von den Ideen der neuen Zeit im 16
Jahrhundert am wenigsten berĂĽhrt gewesen ist_diesen einzigen Mann
hervorgebracht hat." (Dogmengeschichte, Bd. III. 661.)
§ 137. Calvin and Servetus.
We now come to the dark chapter
in the history of Calvin which has cast a gloom over his fair name, and exposed
him, not unjustly, to the charge of intolerance and persecution, which he
shares with his whole age.
The burning of Servetus and the decretum horribile are sufficient in the judgment
of a large part of the Christian world to condemn him and his theology, but
cannot destroy the rocky foundation of his rare virtues and lasting merits.
History knows only of one spotless being_the Saviour of sinners. Human
greatness and purity are spotted by marks of infirmity, which forbid idolatry.
Large bodies cast large shadows, and great virtues are often coupled with great
vices.
Calvin and Servetus_what a
contrast! The best abused men of the
sixteenth century, and yet direct antipodes of each other in spirit, doctrine,
and aim: the reformer and the deformer; the champion of orthodoxy and the
archheretic; the master architect of construction and the master architect of
ruin, brought together in deadly conflict for rule or ruin. Both were men of
brilliant genius and learning; both deadly foes of the Roman Antichrist; both
enthusiasts for a restoration of primitive Christianity, but with opposite
views of what Christianity is.
They were of the same age,
equally precocious, equally bold and independent, and relied on purely
intellectual and spiritual forces. The one, while a youth of twenty-seven,
wrote one of the best systems of theology and vindications of the Christian
faith; the other, when scarcely above the age of twenty, ventured on the
attempt to uproot the fundamental doctrine of orthodox Christendom. Both died
in the prime of manhood, the one a natural, the other a violent, death.
Calvin’s works are in every
theological library; the books of Servetus are among the greatest rareties.
Calvin left behind him flourishing churches, and his influence is felt to this
day in the whole Protestant world; Servetus passed away like a meteor, without
a sect, without a pupil; yet he still eloquently denounces from his funeral
pile the crime and folly of religious persecution, and has recently been
idealized by a Protestant divine as a prophetic forerunner of modern
christo-centric theology.
Calvin felt himself called by
Divine Providence to purify the Church of all corruptions, and to bring her
back to the Christianity of Christ, and regarded Servetus as a servant of
Antichrist, who aimed at the destruction of Christianity. Servetus was equally
confident of a divine call, and even identified himself with the archangel
Michael in his apocalyptic fight against the dragon of Rome and "the Simon
Magus of Geneva."
A mysterious force of attraction
and repulsion brought these intellectual giants together in the drama of the
Reformation. Servetus, as if inspired by a demoniac force, urged himself upon
the attention of Calvin, regarding him as the pope of orthodox Protestantism,
whom he was determined to convert or to dethrone. He challenged Calvin in Paris
to a disputation on the Trinity when the latter had scarcely left the Roman
Church, but failed to appear at the appointed place and hour.987 He bombarded him with letters from Vienne; and at last he
heedlessly rushed into his power at Geneva, and into the flames which have
immortalized his name.988
The judgment of historians on
these remarkable men has undergone a great change. Calvin’s course in the
tragedy of Servetus was fully approved by the best men in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries.989 It is as
fully condemned in the nineteenth century. Bishop Bossuet was able to affirm
that all Christians were happily agreed in maintaining the rightfulness of the
death penalty for obstinate heretics, as murderers of souls. A hundred years
later the great historian Gibbon echoed the opposite public sentiment when he
said: "I am more deeply scandalized at the single execution of Servetus
than at the hecatombs which have blazed at auto-da-fés of Spain and
Portugal."990
It would be preposterous to
compare Calvin with Torquemada.991 But it
must be admitted that the burning of Servetus is a typical case of Protestant
persecution, and makes Calvin responsible for a principle which may be made to
justify an indefinite number of applications. Persecution deserves much severer
condemnation in a Protestant than in a Roman Catholic, because it is
inconsistent. Protestantism must stand or fall with freedom of conscience and
freedom of worship.
From the standpoint of modern
Christianity and civilization, the burning of Servetus admits of no
justification. Even the most admiring biographers of Calvin lament and
disapprove his conduct in this tragedy, which has spotted his fame and given to
Servetus the glory of martyrdom.
But if we consider Calvin’s
course in the light of the sixteenth century, we must come to the conclusion
that he acted his part from a strict sense of duty and in harmony with the
public law and dominant sentiment of his age, which justified the death penalty
for heresy and blasphemy, and abhorred toleration as involving indifference to
truth Even Servetus admitted the
principle under which he suffered; for he said, that incorrigible obstinacy and
malice deserved death before God and men.992
Calvin’s prominence for
intolerance was his misfortune. It was an error of judgment, but not of the
heart, and must be excused, though it cannot be justified, by the spirit of his
age.993
Calvin never changed his views
or regretted his conduct towards Servetus. Nine years after his execution he justified
it in self-defence against the reproaches of Baudouin (1562), saying:
"Servetus suffered the penalty due to his heresies, but was it by my
will? Certainly his arrogance destroyed
him not less than his impiety. And what crime was it of mine if our Council, at
my exhortation, indeed, but in conformity with the opinion of several Churches,
took vengeance on his execrable blasphemies?
Let Baudouin abuse me as long as he will, provided that, by the judgment
of Melanchthon, posterity owes me a debt of gratitude for having purged the
Church of so pernicious a monster."994
In one respect he was in advance
of his times, by recommending to the Council of Geneva, though in vain, a
mitigation of punishment and the substitution of the sword for the stake.
Let us give him credit for this
comparative moderation in a semi-barbarous age when not only hosts of heretics,
but even innocent women, as witches, were cruelly tortured and roasted to
death. Let us remember also that it was not simply a case of fundamental
heresy, but of horrid blasphemy, with which he had to deal. If he was mistaken,
if he misunderstood the real opinions of Servetus, that was an error of
judgment, and an error which all the Catholics and Protestants of that age
shared. Nor should it be overlooked that Servetus was convicted of falsehood,
that he overwhelmed Calvin with abuse,995 and that he made common cause
with the Libertines, the bitter enemies of Calvin, who had a controlling
influence in the Council of Geneva at that time, and hoped to overthrow him.
It is objected that there was no
law in Geneva to justify the punishment of Servetus, since the canon law had
been abolished by the Reformation in 1535; but the Mosaic law was not
abolished, it was even more strictly enforced; and it is from the Mosaic law
against blasphemy that Calvin drew his chief argument.
On the other hand, however, we
must frankly admit that there were some aggravating circumstances which make it
difficult to reconcile Calvin’s conduct with the principles of justice and
humanity. Seven years before the death of Servetus he had expressed his
determination not to spare his life if he should come to Geneva. He wrote to
Farel (Feb. 13, 1546): "Servetus lately wrote to me, and coupled with his
letter a long volume of his delirious fancies, with the Thrasonic boast, that I
should see something astonishing and unheard of. He offers to come hither, if
it be agreeable to me. But I am unwilling to pledge my word for his safety; for
if he does come, and my authority be of any avail, I shall never suffer him to
depart alive."996 It was
not inconsistent with this design, if he aided, as it would seem, in bringing
the book of Servetus to the notice of the Roman inquisition in Lyons. He
procured his arrest on his arrival in Geneva. He showed personal bitterness
towards him during the trial. Servetus was a stranger in Geneva, and had
committed no offence in that city. Calvin should have permitted him quietly to
depart, or simply caused his expulsion from the territory of Geneva, as in the
case of Bolsec. This would have been sufficient punishment. If he had
recommended expulsion instead of decapitation, he would have saved himself the
reproaches of posterity, which will never forget and never forgive the burning
of Servetus.
In the interest of impartial
history we must condemn the intolerance of the victor as well as the error of
the victim, and admire in both the loyalty to conscientious conviction. Heresy
is an error; intolerance, a sin; persecution, a crime.
§ 138. Catholic Intolerance.
Comp. vol. VI. §§ 11
and 12 (pp. 50-86), and Schaff: The Progress of Religious Liberty as shown in the History of Toleration
Acts. New York,
1889.
This is the place to present the
chief facts on the subject of religious toleration and intolerance, which gives
to the case of Servetus its chief interest and importance in history. His
theological opinions are of far less consequence than his connection with the
theory of persecution which caused his death.
Persecution and war constitute
the devil’s chapter in history; but it is overruled by Providence for the
development of heroism, and for the progress of civil and religious freedom.
Without persecutors, there could be no martyrs. Every church, yea, every truth
and every good cause, has its martyrs, who stood the fiery trial and sacrificed
comfort and life itself to their sacred convictions. The blood of martyrs is
the seed of toleration; toleration is the seed of liberty; and liberty is the
most precious gift of God to every man who has been made in his image and
redeemed by Christ.
Of all forms of persecution,
religious persecution is the worst because it is enacted in the name of God. It
violates the sacred rights of conscience, and it rouses the strongest and
deepest passions. Persecution by word and pen, which springs from the hatred,
envy, and malice of the human heart, or from narrowness and mistaken zeal for
truth, will continue to the end of time; but persecution by fire and sword
contradicts the spirit of humanity and Christianity, and is inconsistent with
modern civilization. Civil offences against the State deserve civil punishment,
by fine, imprisonment, confiscation, exile, and death, according to the degree
of guilt. Spiritual offences against the Church should be spiritually judged,
and punished by admonition, deposition, and excommunication, with a view to the
reformation and restoration of the offender. This is the law of Christ. The
temporal punishment of heresy is the legitimate result of a union of Church and
State, and diminishes in rigor as this union is relaxed. A religion established
by law must be protected by law. Hence the Constitution of the United States in
securing full liberty of religion, forbids Congress to establish by law any
religion or church.997 The two
were regarded as inseparable. An established church must in self-defence
persecute dissenters, or abridge their liberties; a free church cannot
persecute. And yet there may be as much individual Christian kindness and
charity in an established church, and as much intolerance and bigotry in a free
church. The ante-Nicene Fathers had the same zeal for orthodoxy and the same
abhorrence of heresy as the Nicene and post-Nicene Fathers, the mediaeval popes
and schoolmen, and the Reformers; but they were confined to the spiritual
punishment of heresy. In the United States of America persecution is made
impossible, not because the zeal for truth or the passions of hatred and
intolerance have ceased, but because the union between Church and State has
ceased.
The theory of religious
persecution was borrowed from the Mosaic law, which punished idolatry and
blasphemy by death. "He that sacrificeth unto any god, save unto Jehovah
only, shall be utterly destroyed."998 He that blasphemeth the name of Jehovah, he shall surely be put to
death; all the congregation shall certainly stone him: as well the stranger, as
the home-born, when he blasphemeth the name of Jehovah, shall be put to
death."999
The Mosaic theocracy was
superseded in its national and temporal provisions by the kingdom of Christ,
which is "not of this world."
The confounding of the Old and New Testaments, of the law of Moses and the
gospel of Christ, was the source of a great many evils in the Church.
The New Testament furnishes not
a shadow of support for the doctrine of persecution. The whole teaching and
example of Christ and the Apostles are directly opposed to it. They suffered
persecution, but they persecuted no one. Their weapons were spiritual, not
carnal. They rendered to God the things that are God’s, and to Caesar the
things that are Caesar’s. The only passage which St. Augustin could quote in
favor of coercion, was the parabolic "Constrain them to come in"
(Luke 14:23), which in its literal acceptation would teach just the reverse,
namely, a forced salvation. St. Thomas Aquinas does not quote any passage from
the New Testament in favor of intolerance, but tries to explain away those
passages which commend toleration (Matt. 13:29, 30; 1 Cor. 11:19; 2 Tim. 2:24).
The Church has never entirely forgotten this teaching of Christ and always,
even in the darkest ages of persecution, avowed the principle, "Ecclesia non sitit sanguinem"; but she made the State
her executor.
In the first three centuries the
Church had neither the power nor the wish to persecute. Justin Martyr,
Tertullian, and Lactantius were the earliest advocates of the liberty of
conscience. The Toleration Edict of Constantine (313) anticipated the modern
theory of the right of every man to choose his religion and to worship
according to his conviction. But this was only a step towards the union of the
empire with the Church, when the Church assumed the position and power of the
heathen state religion.
The era of persecution within
the Church began with the first Oecumenical Council, which was called and
enforced by Constantine. This Council presents the first instance of a
subscription to a creed, and the first instance of banishment for refusing to
subscribe. Arius and two Egyptian bishops, who agreed with him, were banished
to Illyria. During the violent Arian controversies, which shook the empire
between the first and second Oecumenical Councils (325-381), both parties when
in power freely exercised persecution by imprisonment, deposition, and exile.
The Arians were as intolerant as the orthodox. The practice furnished the basis
for a theory and public law.
The penal legislation against
heresy was inaugurated by Theodosius the Great after the final triumph of the
Nicene Creed in the second Oecumenical Council. He promulgated during his reign
(379-395) no less than fifteen severe edicts against heretics, especially those
who dissented from the doctrine of the Trinity. They were deprived of the right
of public worship, excluded from public offices, and exposed, in some cases, to
capital punishment.1000 His rival
and colleague, Maximus, put the theory into full practice, and shed the first
blood of heretics by causing Priscillian, a Spanish bishop of Manichaean
tendency, with six adherents, to be tortured, condemned, and executed by the
sword.
The better feeling of the Church
raised in Ambrose of Milan and Martin of Tours a protest against this act of
inhumanity. But public sentiment soon approved of it. Jerome seems to favor the
death penalty for heresy on the ground of Deut. 13:6-10. The great Augustin,
who had himself been a Manichaean heretic for nine years, justified forcible
measures against the Donatists, in contradiction to his noble sentiment:
"Nothing conquers but truth, the victory of truth is love."1001 The same Christian Father who ruled the thinking of the Church for
many centuries, and moulded the theology of the Reformers, excluded all
unbaptized infants from salvation, though Christ emphatically included them in
the kingdom of heaven. Leo I., the greatest of the early popes, advocated the
death penalty for heresy and approved of the execution of the Priscillianists.
Thomas Aquinas, the master theologian of the Middle Ages, lent the weight of
his authority to the doctrine of persecution, and demonstrated from the Old
Testament and from reason that heretics are worse criminals than debasers of
money, and ought to be put to death by the civil magistrate.1002 Heresy was regarded as the greatest sin, and worse than murder,
because it destroyed the soul. It took the place of idolatry in the Mosaic law.
The Theodosian Code was
completed in the Justinian Code (527-534); the Justinian Code passed into the
Holy Roman Empire, and became the basis of the legislation of Christian Europe.
Rome ruled the world longer by law and by the cross than she had ruled it by
the sword. The canon law likewise condemns to the flames persons convicted of heresy.1003 This law was generally accepted on the Continent in the thirteenth
century.1004 England
in her isolation was more independent, and built society on the foundation of
the common law; but Henry IV. and his Parliament devised the sanguinary statute
de haeretico
comburendo, by,
which William Sawtre, a parish priest, was publicly burnt at Smithfield (Feb.
26, 1401) for denying the doctrine of transubstantiation, and the bones of
Wiclif were burnt by Bishop Fleming of Lincoln (in 1428). The statute continued
in force till 1677, when it was formally abolished.
On this legal and theological
foundation the mediaeval Church has soiled her annals with the blood of an army
of heretics which is much larger than the army of Christian martyrs under
heathen Rome. We need only refer to the crusades against the Albigenses and
Waldenses, which were sanctioned by Innocent III., one of the best and greatest
of popes; the tortures and autos-da-fé of the Spanish Inquisition, which were
celebrated with religious festivities; the fifty thousand or more Protestants
who were executed during the reign of the Duke of Alva in the Netherlands
(1567-1573); the several hundred martyrs who were burned in Smithfield under
the reign of the bloody Mary; and the repeated wholesale persecutions of the
innocent Waldenses in France and Piedmont, which cried to heaven for vengeance.
It is vain to shift the
responsibility upon the civil government. Pope Gregory XIII. commemorated the
massacre of St. Bartholomew not only by a Te Deum in the churches of Rome, but more deliberately and
permanently by a medal which represents "The Slaughter of the
Huguenots" by an angel of wrath. The French bishops, under the lead of the
great Bossuet, lauded Louis XIV. as a new Constantine, a new Theodosius, a new
Charlemagne, a new exterminator of heretics, for his revocation of the Edict of
Nantes and the infamous dragoonades against the Huguenots.
Among the more prominent
individual cases of persecution, we may mention the burning of Hus (1415) and
Jerome of Prague (1416) by order of the Council of Constance, the burning of
Savonarola in Florence (1498), the burning of the three English Reformers at
Oxford (1556), of Aonio Paleario at Rome (1570), and of Giordano Bruno (1600)
in the same city and on the same spot where (1889) the liberals of Italy have
erected a statue to his memory. Servetus was condemned to death at the stake,
and burnt in effigy, by a Roman Catholic tribunal before he fell into the hands
of Calvin.
The Roman Church has lost the
power, and to a large extent also the disposition, to persecute by fire and
sword. Some of her highest dignitaries frankly disown the principle of
persecution, especially in America, where they enjoy the full benefit of
religious freedom.1005 But the
Roman curia has never officially disowned the theory on which the practice of
persecution is based. On the contrary, several popes since the Reformation have
indorsed it. Pope Clement VIII. denounced the Toleration Edict of Nantes as
"the most accursed that can be imagined, whereby liberty of conscience is
granted to everybody; which is the worst thing in the world." Pope Innocent X. "condemned, rejected,
and annulled" the toleration articles of the Westphalian Treaty of 1648,
and his successors have ever protested against it, though in vain. Pope Pius
IX., in the Syllabus of 1864, expressly condemned, among the errors of this
age, the doctrine of religious toleration and liberty.1006 And this pope has been declared to be officially infallible by the
Vatican decree of 1870, which embraces all his predecessors (notwithstanding
the stubborn case of Honorius I.) and all his successors in the chair of St.
Peter. Leo XIII. has moderately and cautiously indorsed the doctrine of the
Syllabus.1007
§ 139. Protestant Intolerance. Judgments of the Reformers on
Servetus.
The Reformers inherited the
doctrine of persecution from their mother Church, and practised it as far as
they had the power. They fought intolerance with intolerance. They differed
favorably from their opponents in the degree and extent, but not in the principle,
of intolerance. They broke down the tyranny of popery, and thus opened the way
for the development of religious freedom; but they denied to others the liberty
which they exercised themselves. The Protestant governments in Germany and
Switzerland excluded, within the limits of their jurisdiction, the Roman
Catholics from all religious and civil rights, and took exclusive possession of
their churches, convents, and other property. They banished, imprisoned,
drowned, beheaded, hanged, and burned Anabaptists, Antitrinitarians,
Schwenkfeldians, and other dissenters. In Saxony, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark
no religion and public worship was allowed but the Lutheran. The Synod of Dort
deposed and expatriated all Arminian ministers and school-teachers. The penal
code of Queen Elizabeth and the successive acts of Uniformity aimed at the
complete extermination of all dissent, whether papal or protestant, and made it
a crime for an Englishman to be anything else than an Episcopalian. The
Puritans when in power ejected two thousand ministers from their benefices for
non-conformity; and the Episcopalians paid them back in the same coin when they
returned to power. "The Reformers," says Gibbon, with sarcastic
severity, "were ambitious of succeeding the tyrants whom they had
dethroned. They imposed with equal rigor their creeds and confessions; they
asserted the right of the magistrate to punish heretics with death. The nature
of the tiger was the same, but he was gradually deprived of his teeth and
fangs."1008
Protestant persecution violates
the fundamental principle of the Reformation. Protestantism has no right to
exist except on the basis of freedom of conscience.
How, then, can we account for
this glaring inconsistency? There is a
reason for everything. Protestant persecution was necessary in self-defence and
in the struggle for existence. The times were not ripe for toleration. The
infant Churches could not have stood it. These Churches had first to be
consolidated and fortified against surrounding foes. Universal toleration at
that time would have resulted in universal confusion and upset the order of
society. From anarchy to absolute despotism is but one step. The division of
Protestantism into two rival camps, the Lutheran and the Reformed, weakened it;
further divisions within these camps would have ruined it and prepared an easy
triumph for united Romanism, which would have become more despotic than ever
before. This does not justify the principle, but it explains the practice, of
intolerance.
The Reformers and the Protestant
princes and magistrates were essentially agreed on this intolerant attitude,
both towards the Romanists and the heretical Protestants, at least to the
extent of imprisonment, deposition, and expatriation. They differed only as to
the degree of severity. They all believed that the papacy is anti-christian and
the mass idolatrous; that heresy is a sin against God and society; that the
denial of the Trinity and the divinity of Christ is the greatest of heresies,
which deserves death according to the laws of the empire, and eternal punishment
according to the Athanasian Creed (with its three damnatory clauses); and that
the civil government is as much bound to protect the first as the second table
of the Decalogue, and to vindicate the honor of God against blasphemy. They
were anxious to show their zeal for orthodoxy by severity against heresy. They
had no doubt that they themselves were orthodox according to the only true
standard of orthodoxy_the Word of God in the Holy Scriptures. And as regards
the dogmas of the Trinity and Incarnation, they were fully agreed with their
Catholic opponents, and equally opposed to the errors of Servetus, who denied
those dogmas with a boldness and contempt unknown before.
Let us ascertain the sentiments
of the leading Reformers with special reference to the case of Servetus. They
form a complete justification of Calvin as far as such a justification is
possible.
Luther.
Luther, the hero of Worms, the
champion of the sacred rights of conscience, was, in words, the most violent,
but in practice, the least intolerant, among the Reformers. He was nearest to
Romanism in the condemnation of heresy, but nearest to the genius of
Protestantism in the advocacy of religious freedom. He was deeply rooted in
mediaeval piety, and yet a mighty prophet of modern times. In his earlier
years, till 1529, he gave utterance to some of the noblest sentiments in favor
of religious liberty. "Belief is a free thing," he said, "which
cannot be enforced." "If
heretics were to be punished by death, the hangman would be the most orthodox
theologian." "Heresy is a
spiritual thing which no iron can hew down, no fire burn, no water drown."1009 To burn heretics is contrary to the will of the Holy Spirit."1010 False teachers should not be put to death; it is enough to banish
them."1011
But with advancing years he
became less liberal and more intolerant against Catholics, heretics, and Jews.
He exhorted the magistrates to forbid all preaching of Anabaptists, whom he
denounced without discrimination as false prophets and messengers of the devil,
and he urged their expulsion.1012 He raised no protest when the Diet of Speier, in 1529, passed the
cruel decree that the Anabaptists be executed by fire and sword without
distinction of sex, and even without a previous hearing before the spiritual
judges.1013 The
Elector of Saxony considered it his duty to execute this decree, and put a
number of Anabaptists to death in his dominions. His neighbor, Philip of Hesse,
who had more liberal instincts than the contemporary princes of Germany, could
not find it in his conscience to use the sword against differences of belief.1014 But the theologians of Wittenberg, on being consulted by the
Elector John Frederick about 1540 or 1541, gave their judgment in favor of
putting the Anabaptists to death, according to the laws of the empire. Luther
approved of this judgment under his own name, adding that it was cruel to
punish them by the sword, but more cruel that they should damn the ministry of
the Word and suppress the true doctrine, and attempt to destroy the kingdoms of
the world.1015
If we put a strict construction
on this sentence, Luther must be counted with the advocates of the
death-penalty for heresy. But he made a distinction between two classes of
Anabaptists_those who were seditious or revolutionary, and those who were mere
fanatics. The former should be put to death, the latter should be banished.1016 In a letter to Philip of Hesse, dated November 20, 1538, he
urgently requested him to expel from his territory the Anabaptists, whom he
characterizes as children of the devil, but says nothing of using the sword.1017 We should give him, therefore, the benefit of a liberal
construction.1018
At the same time, the
distinction was not always strictly observed, and fanatics were easily turned
into criminals, especially after the excesses of MĂĽnster, in 1535, which were
greatly exaggerated and made the pretext for punishing innocent men and women.1019 The whole history of the Anabaptist movement in the sixteenth
century has to be rewritten and disentangled from the odium theologicum.
As regards Servetus, Luther knew
only his first work against the Trinity, and pronounced it, in his Table Talk (1532), an "awfully bad
book."1020 Fortunately for his fame, he did not live to pronounce a judgment
in favor of his execution, and we must give him the benefit of silence.
His opinions on the treatment of
the Jews changed for the worse. In 1523 he had vigorously protested against the
cruel persecution of the Jews, but in 1543 he counselled their expulsion from
Christian lands, and the burning of their books, synagogues, and private houses
in which they blaspheme our Saviour and the Holy Virgin. He repeated this
advice in his last sermon, preached at Eisleben a few days before his death.1021
Melanchthon.
Melanchthon’s record on this
painful subject is unfortunately worse than Luther’s. This is all the more
significant because he was the mildest and gentlest among the Reformers. But we
should remember that his utterances on the subject are of a later date, several
years after Luther’s death. He thought that the Mosaic law against idolatry and
blasphemy was as binding upon Christian states as the Decalogue, and was
applicable to heresies as well.1022 He therefore fully and repeatedly justified the course of Calvin
and the Council of Geneva, and even held them up as models for imitation! In a letter to Calvin, dated Oct. 14, 1554,
nearly one year after the burning of Servetus, he wrote:_
"Reverend and dear Brother:
I have read your book, in which you have clearly refuted the horrid blasphemies
of Servetus; and I give thanks to the Son of God, who was the brabeuthv" [the awarder of your crown of victory] in this your combat. To you also the Church
owes gratitude at the present moment, and will owe it to the latest posterity.
I perfectly assent to your opinion. I affirm also that your magistrates did
right in punishing, after a regular trial, this blasphemous man."1023
A year later, Melanchthon wrote
to Bullinger, Aug. 20, 1555: _
"Reverend and dear Brother:
I have read your answer to the blasphemies of Servetus, and I approve of your
piety and opinions. I judge also that the Genevese Senate did perfectly right,
to put an end to this obstinate man, who could never cease blaspheming. And I
wonder at those who disapprove of this severity."1024
Three years later, April 10,
1557, Melanchthon incidentally (in the admonition in the case of Theobald
Thamer, who had returned to the Roman Church) adverted again to the execution
of Servetus, and called it, a pious and memorable example to all
posterity."1025 It is an
example, indeed, but certainly not for imitation.
This unqualified approval of the
death penalty for heresy and the connivance at the bigamy of Philip of Hesse
are the two dark spots on the fair name of this great and good man. But they
were errors of judgment. Calvin took great comfort from the endorsement of the
theological head of the Lutheran Church.1026
Martin
Bucer.
Bucer, who stands third in rank among
the Reformers of Germany, was of a gentle and conciliatory disposition, and
abstained from persecuting the Anabaptists in Strassburg. He knew Servetus
personally, and treated him at first with kindness, but after the publication
of his work on the Trinity, be refuted it in his lectures as a "most
pestilential book."1027 He even
declared in the pulpit or in the lecture-room that Servetus deserved to be
disembowelled and torn to pieces.1028 From this we may infer how fully he would have approved his
execution, had he lived till 1553.
The
Swiss Churches.
The Swiss Reformers ought to
have been in advance of those of Germany on this subject, but they were not.
They advised or approved the exclusion of Roman Catholics from the Reformed
Cantons, and violent measures against Anabaptists and Antitrinitarians. Six Anabaptists
were, by a cruel irony, drowned in the river Limmat at ZĂĽrich by order of the
government (between 1527 and 1532).1029 Other cantons took the same severe measures against the
Anabaptists. Zwingli, the most liberal among the Reformers, did not object to
their punishment, and counselled the forcible introduction of Protestantism
into the neutral territories and the Forest Cantons. Ochino was expelled from
ZĂĽrich and Basel (1563).
As regards the case of Servetus,
the churches and magistrates of ZĂĽrich, Schaffhausen, Basel, and Bern, on being
consulted during his trial, unanimously condemned his errors, and advised his
punishment, but without committing themselves to the mode of punishment.1030
Bullinger wrote to Calvin that
God had given the Council of Geneva a most favorable opportunity to vindicate
the truth against the pollution of heresy, and the honor of God against
blasphemy. In his Second Helvetic Confession (ch. XXX.) he teaches that it is
the duty of the magistrate to use the sword against blasphemers. Schaffhausen
fully agreed with ZĂĽrich. Even the authorities of Basel, which was the
headquarters of the sceptical Italians and enemies of Calvin, gave the advice
that Servetus, whom their own Oecolampadius had declared a most dangerous man,
be deprived of the power to harm the Church, if all efforts to convert him
should fail. Six years afterwards the Council of Basel, with the consent of the
clergy and the University, ordered the body of David Joris, a chiliastic
Anabaptist who had lived there under a false name (and died Aug. 25, 1556), to
be dug from the grave and burned, with his likeness and books, by the hangman
before a large multitude (1559).1031
Bern, which had advised
moderation in the affair of Bolsec two years earlier, judged more severely in
the case of Servetus, because he "had reckoned himself free to call in
question all the essential points of our religion," and expressed the wish
that the Council of Geneva might have prudence and strength to deliver the
Churches from "this pest."
Thirteen years after the death of Servetus, the Council of Bern executed
Valentino Gentile by the sword (Sept. 10, 1566) for an error similar to but
less obnoxious than that of Servetus, and scarcely a voice was raised in
disapproval of the sentence.1032
The Reformers of French
Switzerland went further than those of German Switzerland. Farel defended death
by fire, and feared that Calvin in advising a milder punishment was guided by
the feelings of a friend against his bitterest foe. Beza wrote a special work
in defence of the execution of Servetus, whom he characterized as "a
monstrous compound of mere impiety and horrid blasphemy."1033 Peter Martyr called him "a genuine son of the devil,"
whose "pestiferous and detestable doctrines" and "intolerable
blasphemies" justified the severe sentence of the magistracy.1034
Cranmer.
The English Reformers were not
behind those of the continent in the matter of intolerance. Several years
before the execution of Servetus, Archbishop Cranmer had persuaded the
reluctant young King Edward VI. to sign the death-warrant of two
Anabaptists_one a woman, called Joan Becher of Kent, and the other a foreigner
from Holland, George Van Pare; the former was burnt May 2, 1550, the latter,
April 6, 1551.
The only advocates of toleration
in the sixteenth century were Anabaptists and Antitrinitarians, who were
themselves sufferers from persecution. Let us give them credit for their
humanity.
Gradual
Triumph of Toleration and Liberty.
The reign of intolerance
continued to the end of the seventeenth century. It was gradually undermined
during the eighteenth century, and demolished by the combined influences of
Protestant Dissenters, as the Anabaptists, Socinians, Arminians, Quakers,
Presbyterians, Independents, of Anglican Latitudinarians, and of philosophers,
like Bayle, Grotius, Locke, Leibnitz; nor should we forget Voltaire and
Frederick the Great, who were unbelievers, but sincere and most influential
advocates of religious toleration; nor Franklin, Jefferson, and Madison in
America. Protestant Holland and Protestant England took the lead in the legal
recognition of the principles of civil and religious liberty, and the
Constitution of the United States completed the theory by putting all Christian
denominations on a parity before the law and guaranteeing them the full
enjoyment of equal rights.
Hand in hand with the growth of
tolerance went the zeal for prison reform, the abolition of torture and cruel
punishments, the abrogation of the slave trade, serfdom, and slavery, the
improvement of the condition of the poor and miserable, and similar movements
of philanthropy, which are the late but genuine outgrowth of the spirit of
Christianity.
§ 140. The Early Life of Servetus.
For our knowledge of the origin
and youth of Servetus we have to depend on the statements which he made at his
trials before the Roman Catholic court at Vienne in April, 1553, and before the
Calvinistic court at Geneva in August of the same year. These depositions are
meagre and inconsistent, either from defect of memory or want of honesty. In
Geneva he could not deceive the judges, as Calvin was well acquainted with his
antecedents. I give, therefore, the preference to his later testimony.1035
Michael
Serveto, better
known in the Latinized form Servetus, also called Reves,1036 was born at Villa-nueva or
Villanova in Aragon (hence "Villanovanus"), in 1509, the year of the
nativity of Calvin, his great antagonist.1037 He informed the court of Geneva that he was of an ancient and
noble Spanish family, and that his father was a lawyer and notary by
profession.
The hypothesis that he was of
Jewish or Moorish extraction is an unwarranted inference from his knowledge of
Hebrew and the Koran.
He was slender and delicate in
body, but precocious, inquisitive, imaginative, acute, independent, and inclined
to mysticism and fanaticism. He seems to have received his early education in a
Dominican convent and in the University of Saragossa, with a view at first to
the clerical vocation.
He was sent by his father to the
celebrated law-school of Toulouse, where he studied jurisprudence for two or
three years. The University of Toulouse was strictly orthodox, and kept a close
watch against the Lutheran heresy. But it was there that he first saw a
complete copy of the Bible, as Luther did after he entered the University of
Erfurt.
The Bible now became his guide.
He fully adopted the Protestant principle of the supremacy and sufficiency of
the Bible, but subjected it to his speculative fancy, and carried opposition to
Catholic tradition much farther than the Reformers did. He rejected the
oecumenical orthodoxy, while they rejected only the mediaeval scholastic
orthodoxy. It is characteristic of his mystical turn of mind that he made the
Apocalypse the basis of his speculations, while the sober and judicious Calvin
never commented on this book.
Servetus declared, in his first
work, that the Bible was the source of all his philosophy and science, and to
be read a thousand times.1038 He called
it a gift of God descended from heaven.1039 Next to the Bible, he esteemed the ante-Nicene Fathers, because of
their simpler and less definite teaching. He quotes them freely in his first
book.
We do not know whether, and how
far, he was influenced by the writings of the Reformers. He may have read some
tracts of Luther, which were early translated into Spanish, but he does not
quote from them.1040
We next find Servetus in the
employ of Juan Quintana, a Franciscan friar and confessor to the Emperor
Charles V. He seems to have attended his court at the coronation by Pope
Clement VII. in Bologna (1529), and on the journey to the Diet of Augsburg in
1530, which forms an epoch in the history of the Lutheran Reformation.1041 At Augsburg he may have seen Melanchthon and other leading
Lutherans, but he was too young and unknown to attract much attention.
In the autumn of 1530 he was
dismissed from the service of Quintana; we do not know for what reason,
probably on suspicion of heresy.
We have no account of a
conversion or moral struggle in any period of his life, such as the Reformers
passed through. He never was a Protestant, either Lutheran or Reformed, but a
radical at war with all orthodoxy. A mere youth of twenty-one or two, he boldly
or impudently struck out an independent path as a Reformer of the Reformation.
The Socinian society did not yet exist; and even there he would not have felt
at home, nor would he have long been tolerated. Nominally, he remained in the
Roman Church, and felt no scruple about conforming to its rites. As he stood alone,
so he died alone, leaving an influence, but no school nor sect.
From Germany Servetus went to
Switzerland and spent some time at Basel. There he first ventilated his
heresies on the trinity and the divinity of Christ.
He importuned Oecolampadius with
interviews and letters, hoping to convert him. But Oecolampadius was startled
and horrified. He informed his friends, Bucer, Zwingli, and Bullinger, who
happened to be at Basel in October, 1530, that he had been troubled of late by
a hot-headed Spaniard, who denied the divine trinity and the eternal divinity
of our Saviour. Zwingli advised him to try to convince Servetus of his error,
and by good and wholesome arguments to win him over to the truth. Oecolampadius
said that he could make no impression upon the haughty, daring, and contentious
man. Zwingli replied: "This is indeed a thing insufferable in the Church
of God. Therefore do everything possible to prevent the spread of such dreadful
blasphemy." Zwingli never saw the
objectionable book in print.
Servetus sought to satisfy
Oecolampadius by a misleading confession of faith, but the latter was not
deceived by the explanations and exhorted him to "confess the Son of God
to be coequal and coeternal with the Father;" otherwise he could not acknowledge
him as a Christian.
§ 141. The Book against the Holy Trinity.
Servetus was too vain and
obstinate to take advice. In the beginning of 1531, he secured a publisher for
his book on the "Errors of the Trinity," Conrad Koenig, who had shops
at Basel and Strassburg, and who sent the manuscript to Secerius, a printer at
Hagenau in Alsace. Servetus went to that place to read the proof. He also
visited Bucer and Capito at Strassburg, who received him with courtesy and
kindness and tried to convert him, but in vain.
In July, 1531, the book appeared
under the name of the author, and was furnished to the trade at Strassburg,
Frankfort, and Basel, but nobody knew where and by whom it was published.
Suspicion fell upon Basel.
This book is a very original
and, for so young a man, very remarkable treatise on the Trinity and
Incarnation in opposition to the traditional and oecumenical faith. The style
is crude and obscure, and not to be compared with Calvin’s, who at the same age
and in his earliest writings showed himself a master of lucid, methodical, and
convincing statement in elegant and forcible Latin. Servetus was familiar with
the Bible, the ante-Nicene Fathers (Tertullian and Irenaeus), and scholastic
theology, and teemed with new, but ill-digested ideas which he threw out like
firebrands. He afterwards embodied his first work in his last, but in revised
shape. The following is a summary of the Seven Books on the Trinity:_
In the first book he proceeds
from the historical Jesus of Nazareth, and proves, first, that this man is
Jesus the Christ; secondly, that he is the Son of God; and thirdly, that he is
God.1042 He begins
with the humanity in opposition to those who begin with the Logos and, in his
opinion, lose the true Christ. In this respect he anticipates the Socinian and
modern humanitarian Christology, but not in a rationalistic sense; for he
asserts a special indwelling of God in Christ (somewhat resembling Schleiermacher),
and a deification of Christ after his exaltation (like the Socinians).1043 He rejects the identity of the
Logos with the Son of God and the doctrine of the communication of attributes.
He distinguishes between the Hebrew names of God: Jehovah means exclusively the
one and eternal God; Elohim or El or Adonai are names of God and also of
angels, prophets, and kings (John 10:34-36).1044 The prologue of John speaks of things that were, not of things
that are. Everywhere else the Bible speaks of the man Christ. The Holy Spirit
means, according to the Hebrew ruach and the Greek pneuma, wind or breath, and denotes in the Bible now God
himself, now an angel, now the spirit of man, now a divine impulse.
He then explains away the proof
texts for the doctrine of the Trinity, 1 John 5:7 (which he accepts as genuine,
though Erasmus omitted it from his first edition); John 10:30; 14:11; Rom.
11:36. The chief passages, the baptismal formula (Matt. 28:19) and the
apostolic benediction (2 Cor. 13:14) where the Father, the Son, and the Spirit
are coordinated, he understands not of three persons, but of three dispositions
of God.
In the second book be treats of
the Logos, the person of Christ, and the Spirit of God, and chiefly explains
the prologue to the fourth Gospel. The Logos is not a metaphysical being, but
an oracle; the voice of God and the light of the world.1045 The Logos is a disposition or dispensation in God, so understood
by Tertullian and Irenaeus.1046 Before the incarnation the Logos was God himself speaking; after
the incarnation the Logos is Jesus Christ, who makes God known to us.1047 All that God before did through the Word, Christ does in the
flesh. To him God has given the kingdom and the power to atone and to gather
all things in him.
The third book is an exposition
of the relation of Christ to the divine Logos.
The fourth book discusses the
divine dispositions or manifestations. God appeared in the Son and in the
Spirit. Two divine manifestations are substituted for the orthodox
tripersonality. The position of the Father is not clear; he is now represented
as the divinity itself, now as a disposition and person. The orthodox
christology of two natures in one person is entirely rejected. God has no
nature (from nasci), and a person is not a
compound of two natures or things, but a unit.
The fifth book is a worthless
speculative exposition of the Hebrew names of God. The Lutheran doctrine of
justification is incidentally attacked as calculated to make man lazy and
indifferent to good works.
The sixth book shows that Christ
is the only fountain of all true knowledge of God, who is incomprehensible in
himself, but revealed himself in the person of his Son. He who sees the Son
sees the Father.
The seventh and last book is an
answer to objections, and contains a new attack on the doctrine of the Trinity,
which was introduced at the same time with the secular power of the pope.
Servetus probably believed in the fable of the donation of Constantine.
It is not surprising that this
book gave great offence to Catholics and Protestants alike, and appeared to
them blasphemous. Servetus calls the Trinitarians tritheists and atheists.1048 He frivolously asked such questions as whether God had a spiritual
wife or was without sex.1049 He calls
the three gods of the Trinitarians a deception of the devil, yea (in his later
writings), a three-headed monster.1050
Zwingli and Oecolampadius died a
few months after the publication of the book, but condemned its contents
beforehand. Luther’s and Bucer’s views on it have already been noticed.
Melanchthon felt the difficulties of the trinitarian and christological
problems and foresaw future controversies. He gave his judgment in a letter to
his learned friend Camerarius (dated 5 Id. Febr. 1533): _
"You ask me what I think of
Servetus? I see him indeed sufficiently
sharp and subtle in disputation, but I do not give him credit for much depth.
He is possessed, as it seems to me, of confused imaginations, and his thoughts
are not well matured on the subjects he discusses. He manifestly talks
foolishness when he speaks of justification. peri; th'" triavdo" [on the subject of the Trinity] you know, I have always
feared that serious difficulties would one day arise. Good God! to what
tragedies will not these questions give occasion in times to come: ei[ ejstin uJpovstasi" oJ logvo" [is the Logos an hypostasis]? ei[ ejstin
ujpovstasi" to; pneu'ma [is the Holy Spirit an hypostasis]?
For my own part I refer to those passages of Scripture that bid us call
on Christ, which is to ascribe divine honors to him, and find them full of
consolation."1051
Cochlaeus directed the attention
of Quintana, at the Diet of Regensburg, in 1532, to the book of Servetus which
was sold there, and Quintana at once took measures to suppress it. The Emperor
prohibited it, and the book soon disappeared.
Servetus published in 1532 two
dialogues on the Trinity, and a treatise on Justification. He retracted, in the
preface, all he had said in his former work, not, however, as false, but as
childish.1052 He
rejected the Lutheran doctrine of justification, and also both the Lutheran and
Zwinglian views of the sacrament. He concluded the book by invoking a
malediction on "all tyrants of the Church."1053
§ 142. Servetus as a Geographer.
As Servetus was repulsed by the
Reformers of Switzerland and Germany, he left for France and assumed the name
of Michel de Villeneuve. His real name and his obnoxious books disappeared from the sight of the
world till they emerged twenty years later at Vienne and at Geneva. He devoted
himself to the study of mathematics, geography, astrology, and medicine.
In 1534 he was in Paris, and
challenged the young Calvin to a disputation, but failed to appear at the
appointed hour.
He spent some time at Lyons as
proof-reader and publisher of the famous printers, Melchior and Caspar
Trechsel. He issued through them, in 1535, under the name of
"Villanovanus," a magnificent edition of Ptolemy’s Geography, with a
self-laudatory preface, which concludes with the hope that "no one will
underestimate the labor, though pleasant in itself, that is implied in the
collation of our text with that of earlier editions, unless it be some Zoilus
of contracted brow, who cannot look without envy upon the zealous labors of
others." A second and improved
edition appeared in 1541.1054
The discoveries of Columbus and
his successors gave a strong impulse to geographical studies, and called forth
several editions of the work of Ptolemy the famous Alexandrian geographer and
astronomer of the second century.1055 The edition of Villeneuve is based upon that of Pirkheimer of
NĂĽrnberg, which appeared at Strassburg, 1525, with fifty charts, but contains
considerable improvements, and gave to the author great reputation. It is a
very remarkable work, considering that Servetus was then only twenty-six years
of age. A year later Calvin astonished the world with an equally precocious and
far more important and enduring work_the Institutes of the Christian Religion.
The most interesting features in
the edition of Villeneuve are his descriptions of countries and nations. The
following extracts give a fair idea, and have some bearing on the church
history of the times: _
"The Spaniard
is of a restless
disposition, apt enough of understanding, but learning imperfectly or amiss, so
that you shall find a learned Spaniard almost anywhere sooner than in Spain.1056 Half-informed, he thinks himself brimful of information, and
always pretends to more knowledge than he has in fact. He is much given to vast
projects never realized; and in conversation he delights in subtleties and
sophistry. Teachers commonly prefer to speak Spanish rather than Latin in the
schools and colleges of the country; but the people in general have little
taste for letters, and produce few books themselves, mostly procuring those
they want, from France … . The people have many barbarous notions and usages,
derived by implication from their old Moorish conquerors and fellow-denizens …
. The women have a custom, that would be held barbarous in France, of piercing
their ears and hanging gold rings in them, often set with precious stones. They
besmirch their faces, too, with minium and ecruse_red and white lead_and walk
about on clogs a foot or a foot and a half high, so that they seem to walk
above rather than on the earth. The people are extremely temperate, and the
women never drink wine … . Spaniards are notably the most superstitious people
in the world in their religious notions; but they are brave in the field, of
signal endurance under privation and difficulty, and by their voyages of
discovery have spread their name over the face of the globe."
"England
is wonderfully
well-peopled, and the inhabitants are long-lived. Tall in stature, they are
fair in complexion, and have blue eyes. They are brave in war, and admirable
bowmen ...."
"The people of Scotland
are hot-tempered,
prone to revenge, and fierce in their anger; but valiant in war, and patient
beyond belief of cold, hunger, and fatigue. They are handsome in person, and
their clothing and language are the same as those of the Irish; their tunics
being dyed yellow, their legs bare, and their feet protected by sandals of
undressed hide. They live mainly on fish and flesh. They are not a particularly
religious people ...."
"The Italians
make use in their
everyday talk of the most horrid oaths and imprecations. Holding all the rest
of the world in contempt, and calling them barbarians, they themselves have
nevertheless been alternately the prey of the French, the Spaniards, and the
Germans ...."1057
"Germany
is overgrown by
vast forests, and defaced by frightful swamps. Its climate is as insufferably
hot in summer as it is bitterly cold in winter .... Hungary is commonly said to
produce oxen; Bavaria, swine; Franconia, onions, turnips, and licorice; Swabia,
harlots; Bohemia, heretics; Switzerland, butchers; Westphalia, cheats; and the whole
country gluttons and drunkards … . The Germans, however, are a religious
people; not easily turned from opinions they have once espoused, and not
readily persuaded to concord in matters of schism; every one valiantly and
obstinately defending the heresy he has himself adopted."1058
This unfavorable account of
Germany, borrowed in part from Tacitus, was much modified and abridged in the
second edition, in which it appears as "a pleasant country with a
temperate climate." Of the
Swabians he speaks as a singularly gifted people.1059 The fling at the ignorance and superstition of the Spaniards, his
own countrymen, was also omitted.
The most interesting part of
this geographical work on account of its theological bearing, is the description
of Palestine. He declared in the first edition that "it is mere boasting
and untruth when so much of excellence is ascribed to this land; the experience
of merchants and travellers who have visited it, proving it to be inhospitable,
barren, and altogether without amenity. Wherefore you may say that the land was
promised indeed, but is of little promise when, spoken of in everyday
terms." He omitted this passage in
the second edition in deference to Archbishop Palmier. Nevertheless, it was
made a ground of accusation at the trial of Servetus, for its apparent
contradiction with the Mosaic account of the land, flowing with milk and
honey."
§ 143. Servetus as a Physician, Scientist, and Astrologer.
Being supplied with the
necessary funds, Servetus returned to Paris in 1536 and took his degrees as
magister and doctor of medicine. He acquired great fame as a physician.
The medical world was then
divided into two schools,_the Galenists, who followed Hippocrates and Galen,
and the Averrhoists, who followed Averrhoes and Avicenna. Servetus was a pupil
of Champier, and joined the Greek school, but had an open eye to the truth of
the Arabians.
He published in 1537 a learned
treatise on Syrups and their use in medicine. It is his most popular book, and
passed through four editions in ten years.1060
He discovered the pulmonary
circulation of the blood or the passage of the blood from the right to the left
chamber of the heart through the lungs by the pulmonary artery and vein. He
published it, not separately, but in his work on the Restitution of
Christianity, as a part of his theological speculation on the vital spirits.
The discovery was burnt and buried with this book; but nearly a hundred years
later William Harvey (1578-1658), independently, made the same discovery.1061
Servetus lectured in the
University on geography and astrology, and gained much applause, but excited
also the envy and ill-will of his colleagues, whom he treated with overbearing
pride and contempt.
He wrote an "Apologetic
Dissertation on Astrology,"1062 and severely attacked the
physicians as ignoramuses, who in return denounced him as an impostor and
wind-bag. The senate of the University sided with the physicians, and the
Parliament of Paris forbade him to lecture on astrology and to prophesy from
the stars (1538).1063
He left Paris for Charlieu, a
small town near Lyons, and practised medicine for two or three years.
At his thirtieth year he thought
that, after the example of Christ, he should be rebaptized, since his former
baptism was of no value. He denied the analogy of circumcision. The Jews, he
says, circumcised infants, but baptized only adults. This was the practice of
John the Baptist; and Christ, who had been circumcised on the eighth day, was
baptized when he entered the public ministry. The promise is given to believers
only, and infants have no faith. Baptism is the beginning of regeneration, and
the entrance into the kingdom of heaven. He wrote two letters to Calvin on the
subject, and exhorted him to follow his example.1064
His arrogance made him so
unpopular that he had to leave Charlieu.1065
§ 144. Servetus at Vienne. His Annotations to the Bible.
Villeneuve now repaired to
Vienne in Dauphiné and settled down as a physician under the patronage of
Pierre Palmier, one of his former bearers in Paris, and a patron of learning,
who had been appointed archbishop of that see. He was provided with lodgings in
the archiepiscopal palace, and made a comfortable living by his medical
practice. He spent thirteen years at Vienne, from 1540 to 1553, which were
probably the happiest of his fitful life. He conformed to the Catholic
religion, and was on good terms with the higher clergy. Nobody suspected his
heresy, or knew anything of his connection with the work on the "Errors of
the Trinity."
He devoted his leisure to his
favorite literary and theological studies, and kept the publishers of Lyons
busy. We have already mentioned the second edition of his "Ptolemy",
which he dedicated to Palmier with a complimentary preface.
A year afterwards (1542) he
published a new and elegant edition of the Latin Bible of Santes Pagnini, a
learned Dominican monk and pupil of Savonarola, but an enemy of the Reformed
religion.1066 He
accompanied it with explanatory notes, aiming to give "the old historical
but hitherto neglected sense of the Scriptures." He anticipated modern exegesis in substituting the typical for
the allegorical method and giving to the Old Testament prophecies an immediate
bearing on their times, and a remote bearing on Christ. Thus he refers Psalms
II., VIII., XXII., and CX. to David, as the type of Christ. It is not likely
that he learned this method from Calvin, and it is certain that Calvin did not
learn it from him. But Servetus goes further than Calvin, and anticipates the
rationalistic explanation of Deutero-Isaiah by referring "the servant of
Jehovah" to Cyrus as the anointed of the Lord. Rome put his comments on
the Index (1559). Calvin brought them up against him at the trial, and, without
knowing that the text of the book was literally taken from another edition
without acknowledgment, said that he dexterously filched five hundred livres
from the publisher in payment for the vain trifles and impious follies with
which he had encumbered almost every page of the book.1067
§ 145. Correspondence of Servetus with Calvin and Poupin.
While engaged in the preparation
of his last work at Vienne, Servetus opened a correspondence with Calvin
through Jean Frellon, a learned publisher at Lyons and a personal friend of
both.1068 He sent
him a copy of his book as far as then finished, and told him that he would find
in it "stupendous things never heard of before."1069 He also proposed to him three questions: 1) Is the man Jesus
Christ the Son of God, and how? 2) Is
the kingdom of God in man, when does man enter into it, and when is he born
again? 3) Must Christian baptism
presuppose faith, like the Lord’s Supper, and to what end are both sacraments
instituted in the New Testament?1070
Calvin seems to have had no time
to read the whole manuscript, but courteously answered the questions to the
effect, 1) that Christ is the Son of God both according to his divine nature
eternally begotten, and according to his human nature as the Wisdom of God made
flesh; 2) that the kingdom of God begins in man when he is born again, but that
the process of regeneration is not completed in a moment, but goes on till
death;3) that faith is necessary for baptism, but not in the same personal way
as in the Lord’s Supper; for according to the type of circumcision the promise
was given also to the children of the faithful. Baptism and the Lord’s Supper
are related to each other as circumcision and the passover. He referred to his
books for details, but was ready to give further explanation if desired.1071
Servetus was by no means
satisfied with the answer, and wrote back that Calvin made two or three Sons of
God; that the Wisdom of God spoken of by Solomon was allegorical and
impersonal; that regeneration took place in the moment of baptism by water and
the spirit, but never in infant baptism. He denied that circumcision
corresponded to baptism. He put five new theological questions to Calvin, and
asked him to read the fourth chapter on baptism in the manuscript of the Restitutio which he had sent him.1072
To these objections Calvin sent
another and more lengthy response.1073 He again offered further explanation, though he had no time to
write whole books for him, and had discussed all these topics in his Institutes.1074
So far there is nothing to
indicate any disposition in Calvin to injure Servetus. On the contrary we must
admire his patience and moderation in giving so much of his precious time to
the questions of a troublesome stranger and pronounced opponent. Servetus
continued to press Calvin with letters, and returned the copy of the Institutes with copious critical
objections. "There is hardly a page," says Calvin, "that is not
defiled by his vomit."1075
Calvin sent a final answer to
the questions of Servetus, which is lost, together with a French letter to
Frellon, which is preserved.1076 This letter is dated Feb. 13, 1546, under his well-known pseudonym
of Charles Despeville, and is as follows:_
"Seigneur Jehan, As your
last letter was brought to me on my departure, I had no leisure to reply to the
enclosure it contained. After my return I use the first moment of my leisure to
comply with your desire; not indeed that I have any great hope of proving
serviceable to such a man, seeing him disposed as I do. But I will try once
more, if there be any means left of bringing him to reason, and this will
happen when God shall have so wrought in him that he has become altogether
another man. Since he has written to me in so proud a spirit, I have been led
to write to him more sharply than is my wont, being minded to take him down a little
in his presumption.1077 But I
could not do otherwise. For I assure you there is no lesson he needs so much to
learn as humility. This must come to him through the grace of God, not
otherwise. But we, too, ought to lend a helping hand. If God give such grace to
him and to us that the present answer will turn to his profit, I shall have
cause to rejoice. If he persists, however, in the style he has hitherto seen
fit to use, you will only lose your time in soliciting me further in his
behalf; for I have other affairs that concern me more nearly, and I shall make
it a matter of conscience not to busy myself further, not doubting that he is a
Satan who would divert me from more profitable studies. Let me beg of you,
therefore, to be content with what I have already done, unless you see occasion
for acting differently."
Frellon sent this letter to
Villeneuve by a special messenger, together with a note in which be addresses
him as his "dear brother and friend."1078
On the same day Calvin wrote the
famous letter to Farel already quoted. He had arrived at the settled conviction
that Servetus was an incorrigible and dangerous heretic, who deserved to die.1079 But he did nothing to induce him to come to Geneva, as he wished,
and left him severely alone. . In 1548 he wrote to Viret that he would have
nothing more to do with this desperately obstinate heretic, who shall force no
more letters from him.1080
Servetus continued to trouble
Calvin, and published in his Restitutio no less than thirty letters to him, but without dates
and without replies from Calvin.1081 They are conceived in a haughty and self-sufficient spirit. He
writes to the greatest divine of the age, not as a learner, or even an equal,
but as a superior. In the first of these printed letters he charges Calvin with
holding absurd, confused, and contradictory opinions on the sonship of Christ,
on the Logos, and on the Trinity. In the second letter he tells him: "You
make three Sons of God: the human nature is a son to you, the divine nature is
a son, and the whole Christ is a son … . All such tritheistic notions are a
three-headed illusion of the Dragon, which easily crept in among the sophists
in the present reign of Antichrist. Or have you not read of the spirit of the
dragon, the spirit of the beast, the spirit of the false prophets, three
spirits? Those who acknowledge the
trinity of the beast are possessed by three spirits of demons. These three
spirits incite war against the immaculate Lamb, Jesus Christ (Apoc. 16). False
are all the invisible gods of the Trinitarians, as false as the gods of the
Babylonians. Farewell."1082 He begins the third letter with the oft-repeated warning (saepius te monui) not to admit that
impossible_monster of three things in God. In another letter he calls him a
reprobate and blasphemer (improbus et blasphemus) for calumniating good works. He charges him with
ignorance of the true nature of faith, justification, regeneration, baptism,
and the kingdom of heaven.
These are fair specimens of the
arrogant, irritating, and even insulting tone of his letters. At last Servetus
himself broke off his correspondence with Calvin, who, it seems, had long
ceased to answer them, but he now addressed his colleagues. He wrote three
letters to Abel Poupin, who was minister at Geneva from 1543 to 1556, when he
died. The last is preserved, and was used in evidence at the trial.1083 It is not dated, but must have been written in 1548 or later.
Servetus charges the Reformed Christians of Geneva that they had a gospel
without a God, without true faith, without good works; and that instead of the
true God they worshipped a three-headed Cerberus. "Your faith in
Christ," he continues, "is a mere pretence and without effect; your
man is an inert trunk, and your God a fabulous monster of the enslaved will.
You reject baptismal regeneration and shut the kingdom of heaven against men.
Woe unto you, woe, woe!"1084
He concludes this remarkable
letter with the prediction that he would die for this cause and become like
unto his Master.1085
§ 146. "The Restitution of Christianity."
During his sojourn at Vienne,
Servetus prepared his chief theological work under the title, "The
Restitution of Christianity." He
must have finished the greater part of it in manuscript as early as 1546, seven
years before its publication in print; for in that year, as we have seen, he
sent a copy to Calvin, which he tried to get back to make some corrections, but
Calvin had sent it to Viret at Lausanne, where it was detained. It was
afterwards used at the trial and ordered by the Council of Geneva to be burnt
at the stake, together with the printed volume.1086
The proud title indicates the
pretentious and radical character of the book. It was chosen, probably, with
reference to Calvin’s, Institution of the Christian Religion." In opposition to the great Reformer he
claimed to be a Restorer. The Hebrew motto on the title-page was taken from
Dan. 12:1: "And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great
prince;" the Greek motto from Rev. 12:7: "And there was war in heaven,"
which is followed by the words, "Michael and his angels going forth to war
with the dragon; and the dragon warred, and his angels; and they prevailed not,
neither was their place found any more in heaven. And the great dragon was