Ronald Knox's Thoughts on his Conversion to
Catholicism
THE ESSENTIALS OF
SPIRITUAL UNITY
Ronald Knox
Printed after his death in 1957
Preface
When I began to be anxious about my position as an Anglican, I felt
that I had no right to plunge into Catholicism (although I then held
most of its doctrines) without going back over old ground and satisfying myself that I had not unduly
neglected the claims of other denominations to a hearing.
Among other experiments in this direction, I began to write down some
account of what I meant by "a Church." A Church I was determined to
have, but it seemed to me it might clear my mind if I started with the
bare idea and definition of a Church and followed out the implications
of that idea, wherever (as Plato says) the argument should lead.
My method was not that of Plato, but that of Aristotle, at least in his
"Ethics". For Plato knows what
he thinks beforehand, and his dialogue form is a literary artifice, but
Aristotle seems (at any rate) to set out on no other basis than that of
generally received ideas - What do we mean by "good"? What do we mean
by "deliberate"? and so on - and, by whittling away the rival
explanations that will not do, arrives in the end at the definition he
wants. This nice slovenly method I adopted.
When I found myself (as usual) "up against" the Catholic system, I
exchanged this experimentalist for an 'a
priori' method and began asking: If such and such a system of
religious organization is the only tolerable kind of Church, how would
such a Church (supposing it to exist) be likely to appear in the
records of history? How much should we expect historical and
geographical accidents to obscure, at first sight, the principles on
which it was based?
The first part was begun as early as August 1915, but the work went on
slowly and casually, as the mood took me, and the last part was never
really finished - the last page or two I actually wrote in September
1917, just before I was received. I have let it stand as I wrote it,
except for half a dozen incidental corrections which were suggested to
me. I do not pretend that it is the way in which one ought to arrive at
the idea of the Catholic Church; it is merely the way in which one soul
did.
January
1918
R. A. Knox
The Essentials Of Spiritual Unity
1.
The Church
a selection and one made by an agent
from without.
The name ecclesia seems to
postulate two points:
first, that the body
it denotes should be separated, i.e. there should be at least the human
possibility of some people being outside it;
second, that it is
called, that is, defined from without, not self-appointed or
self-determined like a club or a republic.
2.
The principle of selection must be based on some qualities in those
selected.
It is thus, in potency at any rate, exclusive. And since in an
institution whose essence is concerned with matters of ultimate moment
we could hardly expect the selection to be arbitrary, like that of a
club, we must suppose the exclusion to be due either to the unfitness
of certain people for membership on the ground of morals or belief or
else to the wilful refusal of certain people to join the institution,
which would be, viewed from inside, the repelling of those who showed
no aptitude for membership.
Such unclubableness would be hardly human if the refusal did not base
itself upon some tangible objection, an objection to certain
qualifications which had been set up as tests for membership.
3.
God selects, in the true sense, but this does not mean
that man cannot know who have
and who have not been selected
It would be well to know at once who is the agent who calls out and in
what sense he does it. No form of Christianity would dispute that this agent is God: The difference would
be that the Calvinist tendency, insofar as it is present in any view of
the Church, makes the selection arbitrary (from our point of view) and
based on pre-natal choice on God's part. But even supposing this to be
true, the Church as a visible institution must have, if not merits by
which its members are to be selected, at least marks by which they are
to be recognized, and all Calvinist schools demand an immediate faith
in salvation by atonement, most of them also a standard of practice
consistent with such beliefs. On the other side, no Christian would
claim that his embracing his creed was a matter purely of choice on his
own part.
4.
At least so far as a visible Church
is concerned, there may also be uncovenanted
mercies, with which we are not concerned.
Insofar as God calls us, and presumably foreknows us, there is no
inherent reason why we should expect to be able to say, this or that
man has been called of God - so as long as he knows his own sheep by
name, all is well with their salvation. But if the Church is to be a
visible institution, guarding common mysteries in its trust, or at the
lowest binding people together in conscious fellowship, there must be
marks by which they can be recognized. Here, it is almost universally
admitted, we can take heart over the case of those who do not qualify
for visible membership, yet puzzle us by the fact of their exclusion.
God may have called them, but called them by special and uncovenanted
paths; it is no business of ours on the one side to emulate or on the
other side to despair of them.
5.
Underlying causes of non-membership
must be
(a)
some moral weakness,
(b) some distortion of moral
standards, or
(c) some defect of speculative
belief.
The actual formula which carries with it membership of the Church is
not the explanation of anybody's inclusion or rejection; it is merely
(if non-miraculous) the mark or (if miraculous) the means of it. The
explanation must lie in some determination of the man's own mind which
is inconsistent with the terms of admission. Since there are to be no
arbitrary or accidental qualifications, other than that the applicant
should be a rational human being, the grounds of exclusion limit themselves to three.
1.(a)
He may, though in theory prepared to accept the moral standards upheld
by the society, fall so far short of them in practice that the
authorities judge him unfit.
2. (b)
He may, through want of sympathy with particular determinations in
detail of the moral code, be clearly incapable of entering into the
spirit of the institution.
3. (c)
There may be beliefs held by the society which he cannot admit, or vice
versa. Some, no doubt, would prefer to see this last, doctrinal test
abolished altogether or at least reduced to a minimum. But in any case
it must be reckoned with as a possibility.
Note - It might seem that
there was a fourth possibility of disqualification, a disciplinary
disqualification. The man might do and believe all that the members did
and believed, yet refuse to put himself within a circle of like-minded
people. But this, it will be easily seen, resolves itself either into a
doctrinal or into a moral disqualification. Either he does not wish his
own moral standards to be of universal application, in which case his
practice is not in fact morally determined, but due to taste,
preference, etc., or else, admitting he believes the doctrines, he does
not believe in the doctrines being vital, and in this absence of belief
in his beliefs he is at variance with the members of the body.
6.
The argument for (a) [ some moral weakness,] as the
only obstacle appears logical,
satisfying to moral instincts, biblical, and traditional.
It might seem at first sight that (1) (a) was, if not of
sole, at least of primary importance. For all sects agree that,
whatever else is significant, moral action, which means precisely
living up to the best standard a man knows, is of the very first
importance. The Church would thus be a society of people united in the
effort after individual perfection, and a man would be a member of it
if and insofar as he achieved the standards required of him. This would
seem to agree well with Saint Paul's language, when he refers to the
members of the Christian community as saints and insists upon charity,
etc., as the true test of Christian character. It would also answer to
our Saviour's own test, "By their fruits ye shall know them."
If a man can be pronounced good he must 'ipso facto' be pronounced a member
of the Church and qualified as the recipient of all its graces. Pressed
to its furthest lengths, this argument would claim that all beliefs are
a matter of individual conviction, and, precisely because they cannot
conscientiously be abandoned or even suppressed to suit the convenience
of others, they are not suited to form a test of admission. Pressed
even further, it seems we should have to claim that various moral
standards must meet with equal respect, provided they were not
definitely underdeveloped or demonstrably calculated to militate
against the happiness of mankind in general or the society in
particular.
Indeed, it is often supposed that the first concern of the apostles was
to keep the Church holy, rather than to keep it orthodox or uniform.
The weapon of excommunication seems to have been used at first
hesitatingly and with reluctance. The heresies Saint Paul combats might
be said to have been condemned rather for their anti-social tendency,
as putting a barrier between Christian and Christian, than for their
false speculative views, whereas the moral discipline of the Church
seems to have been at its most severe in the early centuries. Apostasy
and adultery, certainly, were viewed so gravely that the author of them
was, if not technically deprived of Church membership, at least
debarred for life from the exercise of Church privileges.
Logically, then, this principle can claim that in rejecting a candidate
for membership you are basing your action on a clear delivery of the
conscience, a moral imperative, not on any point of dogma, not on any
speculative question about which, after all, you may be wrong and he
right. Sentimentally (to use the term in no unkind sense) it enables
you to avoid the feeling that you are rejecting one who is in point of
conduct just as good as yourself. Biblically, it corresponds with the
emphasis laid on moral purity by our Saviour and his disciples.
Historically, it seems to have much in common with what we know of the
practice of the earliest centuries.
7.
Until it is examined closely.
Are we to admit people who live up to
any standard, provided they do live up to it?
Preliminary objection to this view.
It is clear, however, that there is a point at which it becomes rather
difficult to draw the line between difference of moral standard and
incompatibility of moral practice. The good Mussulman will have - or at
least contemplate having - more than one wife; the good Hindu widow
would till lately go further and conceive it a moral duty to defy
Christian standards in immolating herself over her husband's pyre; the
Japanese, highly civilized in other ways, will commit suicide in grief
at the death of their Mikado with the applause of their
fellow-countrymen.
It is true we describe these standards of morality as lower standards
of morality, but are we sure we are not begging the question? They are
at least positive standards, and they do clearly evoke a certain spirit
of admiration in us, who have been otherwise educated. Would it be
possible to have a Christian society in which two different Christians
would conceive their duty, in the same given conditions, in
diametrically opposite ways or, at least, would base their outlook on
different views of the importance of human life and the relative value
of the two sexes?
All this clearly suggests that the moral demands of a religious society
are that its members should not merely live up, as far as possible,
each to his own standard, but should own to some extent at least common standards. The recognition
of common standards in morality brings us suspiciously close to dogma.
To put the case in a more concrete and probable form: It seems doubtful
if those Friends {Quakers} who are true to the spirit of their
institute could fail to regard the bearing of arms against an enemy as
anything but a total disqualification for membership.
8.
Further, have we a right to judge motives?
Can we be sure of distinguishing the penitent from the hypocrite?
Discipline may be used in these cases, but exclusion is, precisely
here, inappropriate.
But indeed there is a root
difficulty, far more serious. We immediately become confronted
with the problem of the moral struggle: "I find another law in my
members," etc. It is quite certain that the Christian society exists to
achieve the individual moral (and spiritual) perfection of its members,
but is it certain that this end is best served by debarring the sinner 'in toto' from communion? Is it not
rather to be anticipated that the sinner will find means to triumph
over his sins through membership, rather than by the fact of exclusion,
which may easily induce despair or defiance in his attitude toward the
body?
Who is to distinguish between the case of the hypocrite who continually
sins and continually feigns penitence and that of the 'recidivus' who constantly falls,
yet disowns, and to some extent atones for his faults by genuine
contrition? Is not he at least in a better position than the hypocrite
who retains his membership by dint of not being found out, by secret
sins and insincere confessions? Does not the example of the Friend of
publicans and sinners rather suggest, that while demanding a penitent
will on the part of the applicant for membership, we shall yet be
indulgent to the sins against which he struggles, but not always
successfully? In a word, is not the whole question of motives in
action, and responsibility in moral cases, too complicated to decide by
hard and fast rules of exclusion?
9.
And the tendency to deal with the 'recidivus' by kindness appears to be progressive.
Rightly or wrongly, this would appear to have been increasingly the
practice of the Church and under the influence of the Roman hierarch.
So it was a pope who stood out for the rights of the lapsed in the
persecutions, and Pius X laid it down that Communion is too valuable a
preventive against sin to allow of our dissuading the weaker brethren
from its frequent reception. Whatever penances have been imposed, total
exclusion has come to be reserved for those who are manifestly
impenitent, since they will not abandon the sources of temptation; the
harlot will not give up her means of livelihood, the man who has
contracted an incestuous marriage will not live apart from his wife,
and so on. In a word, exclusion is held to be justifiable only when
immorality takes the form of moral obliquity, and the applicant for
membership not merely fails to amend but fails to admit even in theory
the Christian standard of morals. We are thus forced back again from
class (1) (a) of
possible obstacles to communion to class (2) (b).
10.
We fall back then on the set of
obstacles marked (b) [some distortion of
moral standards]. But we find
that (b), quite as much as (c) [some defect of speculative belief],
excludes people from the Church on the ground of their
conscientious convictions.
The difficulty then arises, whether class (2) (b) has any existence
independently of class (3)
(c). Or, to put it differently, whether for our purposes the two
varieties of possible obstacles might not have been classed under the
same head. As soon as you begin to talk of moral standards, moral
values, or moral codes, you have passed out of the region of practice
into that of theory.
True, the theory affects the question "How am I to live?" but it is a
theory for all that, because it is universal in its application. It
might be said that it is at least not a matter of mere intellectual
theory, for we speak of apprehending moral values, rather than making
moral judgements, but this is beside the point in matters of religious
discussion, for spiritual truth, like moral truth (if the term may be
used), is a matter of values.
All this does not affect the fact that a man may repudiate monogamy as
he repudiates monotheism, as a matter of conviction, and complain, in
the one case as in the other, that the Christian society is excluding
him by reason of a conviction which he cannot help holding, because it
alone satisfies his moral consciousness.
11.
Resumption of preceding paragraphs.
It seems, then, that the Church, being a selection from among mankind,
not an arbitrary selection, nor a hereditary selection (like the Church
of Israel which it superseded), nor yet simply an assembly of good
people (for motives, the tares in the wheat of the kingdom, are hard to
disentangle, and good and bad must grow side by side till the harvest)
must be selected, so far at least as it is a visible Church, on a
principle of qualification which involves a common speculative outlook.
It still remains for discussion, of course, whether this outlook need
be only in the sphere of moral theology, i.e. in matters which affect
actual conduct, or in purely speculative and devotional matters as well.
12.
A body, which is human in its institution and in the
promises which it offers, can include or exclude as it likes, because
it is responsible only to itself.
Insofar as any "church" or religious denomination is, as such, of
purely human formation, the responsibility of deciding who is to be
accepted and who rejected is almost intolerable - would be quite
intolerable, but that such a society does not (or should not) profess
to be the one Church of Christ and therefore can, like any club or
association, direct the disappointed applicant to some other society
which is more likely to be in sympathy with his aspirations.
But insofar as a church feels itself to be the one Church and the
guardian of certain divine privileges which, normally at least, can be
obtained through no other means - to that extent, we must suppose, its
authorities will be reluctant to disappoint any candidate, unless his
disqualifications are such as have been declared by a supernatural authority to be necessary
disqualifications.
The sense of responsibility naturally operates in both directions:
A society conscious that it is in the position not of a plenipotentiary, but of a trustee
should be more careful as to whom it admits, not merely as to whom it
rejects.
Thus, undoubtedly, those religious bodies (the Congregationalists, for
example) which claim no special divine charter, but merely the status
of cultural associations, feel far more liberty in refusing or in
accepting candidates for membership than, for example, the Church of
Rome.
13.
Is it possible that exclusion from
the Church should rest on practical considerations - considerations, that is, of the
exigencies of any society which is to have a corporate life?
We have, then, to consider the suggestion that religious tests should
be insisted upon only where the failure to accept them would mean the
failure to accept a common standard of behaviour necessary to the life
and coherence of the religious body in question. Thus, the mere
confusion which would be introduced into the social life of a
monogamous society by the admission of a person with four wives might
be held sufficient reason for refusing membership, without going into
the question of ultimate sanctions. Or, again, complete incompatibility
of outlook might be pleaded as a bar, if a professional soldier
desired, without abandoning his profession, to be enrolled among the
Society of Friends. [Quakers]
14.
These considerations may be cultural as well as merely moral.
More than this, there may be cultural incompatibility which is not
moral incompatibility. Thus, in a religious body whose members laid
stress on "the gathering of themselves together," a man conscientiously
convinced that all prayer was waste of time, who would consequently
refuse to take any part in public worship, would clearly be out of
place. Similarly, an observer of the Jewish Sabbath who refused to take
any notice of Sunday might be rejected by a body interested in Sunday
observance.
15.
Answer to the Question at Point 13:
Yes,
if the body be of human origin
and value.
No,
if it be of divine, for a
divine society is too important a thing to be regulated by
considerations of its own convenience.
But these purely moral and cultural considerations can be used as a
basis of exclusion only if and insofar as the body in question does not
profess to be of uniquely divine institution and the sole true
representative of fully-revealed religion. Their bearing, so far as we
have hitherto considered it, is social
only, and, if the spiritual privileges forfeited by exclusion from the
body are considerable, it becomes a question whether issues of social
convenience should be allowed to weigh; ought not the weaker brother,
for all his four wives and his refusal to attend church, to be admitted
to membership, if only as a weaker brother?
It appears that he should, unless the taboos which exclude him are of
an origin and a certainty no less
divine than the privileges from which exclusion debars him. In a
word, a society of human foundation, guarding human privileges - a
benevolent society, for example - is at liberty to reject applicants on
grounds which claim no more than the sanction of human instinct or
human theory - such a society may, for example, exclude all except
total abstainers. But a society which claims to be of divine foundation
and to be the trustee of divine privileges can exclude only where it
has a divine sanction for excluding.
16.
Instance of the difficulty here raised the
sanction of sabbatarianism in the Church of England.
Thus even moral and cultural considerations can be considered a bar in
the absolute sense only when their validity is guaranteed by the divine
voice. The observance of Sunday in the Church of England is an
interesting case in point. If the Church of England appeals only to
Scripture, it is doubtful whether the observance of the first day in
the week can be justified. If it appeals to the practice of the Church
in former times, that is a different matter. But for a frank Erastian
[who believes that the subordination has occurred of ecclesiastical to
secular power,] it seems it would be possible never to go to church on
Sunday at all: He might regard the day as of purely conventional
significance, set apart only by the action of the State, to the views
of which he is not bound to conform, or, at best, by a consensus of
ecclesiastical officials, whose injunctions, as being human
injunctions, he may safely disregard.
17.
A crucial instance resumed:
Why do Christian sects insist on monogamy?
Not on any purely ethical ground, for
such ground is lacking.
Let us take monogamy as a case in point. On what ground is a Church
which claims divine institution to deny access to her privileges to the
bigamist? It is very hard to say that the principle is part of the
common delivery of the conscience of mankind; the Moslem followers of
Islam known as Mohammedans, sanction other practices, so did the
ancient Jews - communities where we find clear recognition of the
intimate tie between morality and religion. The utilitarian test,
always doubtful in this connection, breaks down absolutely in face of a
great war [such as {World War I} ] that stamps out a large part of the
male population.
We might say that in Europe it has become part of the recognized
principles of society and could not therefore be abrogated without
infinite confusions, but even this return to the practical appeal would
be nugatory [trifling] in those African countries where society at
large tolerates the principle of the harem and those who desire to
become Christians find great social difficulties in consequence. We
must have a divine utterance to support us if we are to incur the odium
of insisting on this particular taboo.
18.
In this case, it appears, we are
bound to invoke a supernatural
authority, and, if we have once invoked it, we are henceforward its servants,
wherever it chooses to lead us.
That is to say, we must invoke an authority. In doing so, we must see
clearly what we are doing. In order to plead an authority here, we are
submitting to the dictation of our authority (whatever it may be) on all subjects on which it may choose
to dictate - not merely on all
matters on which we find it convenient to appeal to it, for
this is clearly destructive of the very essence of authority. It must
be such that we cannot say "I do not agree with it here" - for, if not,
our friend with the four wives will ask us to take no notice of it in
his case either. In emancipating ourselves from the indecisive rule of
King Log - practical convenience, etc. - we are electing King Stork. In
appealing to the bramble for a ruling, we are making it king of all the
trees - not for this or that occasion, over this or that issue, but at
all times and everywhere alike: With it, not with us, rests the
decision as to how far it will carry us. [See Judges 9: 7-20 for some
of the literary references.]
19.
Three possible ground-works of qualificatory beliefs;
reducing themselves to two:
(1) a
written contract,
(2) a living voice.
It does not appear that any religious system has ever appealed to an
authority which was not expressed in one of three ways:
1.
By supernatural illumination
accorded to individuals generally in moments of prophetic exaltation.
2.
By the written word, which is
really a variant of (1), since it implies illumination granted to an
individual (or set of individuals) the content of which has been
committed to paper. In some systems the revelation once given is closed
for all time; in others, it is capable of being supplemented by fresh
illumination accorded later. ["The
Principle of the Bible."]
3.
By certain powers of inerrant
judgement vested in an individual or set of individuals and
guaranteed to operate only when such and such conditions are unfilled.
It seems clear that any such succession of individuals demands some
process of co-optation, in order to insure that the empowered officials
C and D are the legitimate successors of A and B. ["The Principle of the Church."]
Reduced to a logical absurdity, principle
(1) would mean simply "one man one church." The people who quote
the text "All thy people shall be taught of God" do not make this
claim, but it is doubtful if they ought not to. If, contrary to Saint
Paul's assumption, all were apostles and all prophets, a Church like
that at Corinth might divide itself, not simply into followers of Paul
and followers of Cephas, but into a number of sects equal to the number
of those who had been members of the Church, each regarding the
illuminations accorded to himself as of paramount authority and
excommunicating the rest if and insofar as they disagreed with him. We
might have supposed, of course, that a miraculous consensus of opinion
would be granted to all who earnestly ask the guidance of the Holy
Spirit, without further ado, but the history of Christendom does not
fortify us in this opinion.
As a matter of fact, private inspirations are more usually claimed by a
large number of people for some one person of special spiritual gifts;
if the content of this revelation is sufficiently startling to make the
disciples disown, or be disowned by, the religious body from which they
started, the new inspiration, in passing into an institution,
necessarily comes to base itself either on the principle of the Bible
or on that of the Church.
Either the original founder's words are carefully treasured in writing,
and, while susceptible of expansion or of interpretation, are not
considered susceptible of alteration or correction, or else a
succession of prophets has somehow to be guaranteed, mediating a
succession of divine illuminations adequate to any emergency that may
arise. We can, in fact, have no quarrel with private inspirations as
such - they have been granted to St. Gertrude, St. Teresa, Blessed [now
Saint] Margaret Mary, etc.; they do not in reality form a distinct
basis of authority until they become the foundations either of a new
Bible or of a new Church.
Thus we can neglect the first of our
three headings and say that only a Bible or a Church, or some
compromise between or combination of the two, can give us the authority
which we find necessary to the delimitation of a visible Church.
20.
Whether 'a priori' or on grounds of
experience, it is difficult not
to suppose that a religious body, however much it professes to be
purely biblical in its standards, must fall back on some kind of living authority, if only for
interpretation.
The difficulty would naturally occur to us, even if we had no history
for our guide.
What is to happen in the case of a religious body avowing a book as its
sole source of religious authority, if two sections of thought should
disagree as to the way in which this or that document should be
interpreted?
The only solution of such a problem seems to be to go to law before the
unbelievers and appeal to a purely common-sense tribunal to decide
whether faction A or faction B is truer to the letter of the
title-deeds.
But, although this may be a necessary step where temporalities are
concerned in the dispute, it is obviously an expedient to which any
religious body would have recourse only with the greatest reluctance.
If there is any meaning in Saint Paul's contrasts between the letter
and the spirit, if there is any truth in his contention that the
spiritual man has the sole right of interpreting spiritual things, then
it is clear that the value of such an appeal is purely a matter of
convenience.
No, if there is to be any uniform standard of belief, even supposing
the original message to have been delivered in the clearest terms of
which human language is capable, a situation is humanly speaking bound
to arise in which two rival schools of interpretation will wish to
submit their differences, not to a
mere arbitration, but to competent judgement.
Since the written letter stands, judgement must be pronounced by
some person or body of persons conceived
as divinely commissioned to issue a decision - divinely
commissioned, because a mere 'consensus
theologorum' - and a consensus of this kind is not easily
arrived at - would not be accepted by the losing side, who would plead
that if the matter were purely one of intellectual conviction, their
own failure to see eye to eye with the pundits could not fairly be held
to disqualify them for communion. It is unnecessary to elaborate
historical instances which illustrate this tendency on the part of
every body to appeal to some sort of authority, however vaguely it may
in some cases be conceived. Probably only very new religious bodies,
such as the Irvingites or the Christian Scientists, have escaped such
difficulties.
21.
Whatever therefore be avowed as the
ground of belief the definient
authority from time to time must be a living voice.
It is perfectly possible for a man, asked why he believes this or that,
to say, "Because the Bible says so."
His Bible or Koran may be the ground of his faith.
But if he be challenged with the question, "Why do you believe this
rather than that, when the Bible seems to admit of two possible
interpretations?" he must appeal to some living voice which has,
however vaguely, defined the doctrine in question. This is presumably
the substratum of meaning which underlies the very misleading catchword
"The Church to teach and the Bible to prove." Whether, in this case,
the definient authority does not become also the ultimate authority is
a difficult question, but does not concern us here; it is enough for
our purposes that any religious body may be forced, and must be
prepared to be forced, to produce an authority for what it holds in
common, even on questions of morality; this will probably be the fate
of most religious bodies soon on the cardinal problem of the
dissolubility or indissolubility of marriage.
22.
The principle of "one man, one vote" does not solve
the problem of authority.
However excellent the purely democratic principle may be in a country
or in a fictitious institution such as a club - the principle, that is,
of counting heads to avoid breaking them - a "poll of the members" does
not seem to be an expedient often adopted by religious bodies. The
reason is not difficult to find.
A majority may have a right to decide on a purely practical point -
e.g. whether seats should be free or rented - in matters where only the
well-being of the body as a human society is concerned. But if the
problem be, not to arrive at the will of the society, but to arrive at
the will of God, it is not to be wondered at if an appeal to the vote
leaves the minority unconvinced and prepared for schism. "They are
slaves who dare not be in the right with two or three." We have no
divine guarantee that the voice of the people will be the voice of God;
rather, we must be prepared to expect that in any society which is not
violently rigorist, the majority will be largely composed of people
whose spiritual insight is not of the keenest.
23.
A variation of the popular principle
- the conciliar theory.
There is, however, a variation of this theory which, discredited as it
is now, appears to have commended itself to solid thinkers - the
Tractarians. This is the pure conciliar theory, according to which
certain representatives of the body, meeting in conclave, were actually
prevented by the overruling influence of God from arriving at a false
conclusion. Such a body is not representative in the strict sense, for
even if all the members of it had been popularly elected, it was still
not in virtue of their election, but in virtue of a special gift 'ab extra' that they were preserved
from error. The difficulty of this doctrine is twofold.
24.
Difficulties
of the pure conciliar theory.
1.
It does not seem to be claimed by any tradition of the Church that our
Saviour himself attached any promise of infallibility to such
gatherings. Nor does the Church seem to have acted on the understanding
that a decision of this kind was necessarily final. There were still
Judaizers after the Council of Jerusalem in communion with Christians
who rejected their views, though the tendency to sever communion was
constant.
2.
We should surely have expected that, if this miraculous guidance was to
be bestowed, there would always be an overwhelming majority in favour
of the right side, if not complete unanimity. Yet we see that at
various periods rival doctrines could claim very nearly the same number
of upholders among the bishops.
25.
A more modern conciliar view.
The conciliar doctrine therefore seems to have undergone an amendment
in recent times, and the decisions of the councils are now claimed as
binding (or something like it) not on the ground that the councils were
directly inspired, but on the ground that the Church, by no sudden show
of hands, but by slow processes of assimilation and rejection, came to
hold one view or the other and so ratified the decree.
Such a view can at least claim texts such as "He shall guide you into
all truth," "All thy people shall be taught of God," etc. It does not
seem difficult to suppose that God has implanted in the hearts of those
who endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit an infallible tendency
toward, or instinct for, the truth which, like the red corpuscles of a
healthy body, ejects naturally the invasions of alien doctrine.
Such a view is also very comfortable at the present day. If we are
prepared to look upon the ecclesiastical history of the last four
hundred years as an interlude, and to call by the name of Christian all
those who seriously claim the title, we can console ourselves with the
hope that perhaps after all the questions raised at and since the
Reformation are only specially gristly mouthfuls, which the Church is
slowly taking her time to digest; nothing is settled as yet, but, being
all Churchmen, we shall inevitably, in the end, come to see things in
the same light. Probably this view is held, in one form or another, by
almost all Christians outside the Roman and Eastern Churches who are
seriously exercised about the question of Church unity and Church
authority.
26.
This view seems to put us back where we were before.
This doctrine, in the form in which it has become popular among
Nonconformists and laxiorist Anglicans, is destructive of the whole
principle of a visible Church or an audible authority. If we believe
what we believe about the Trinity, not in obedience to formulas laid
down at Nicaea and elsewhere but because "Christians" have in course of
time come to believe such doctrines and found them suited to their
religious needs, then we must be prepared to revise those beliefs in
conformity with what "Christians" are coming to believe or may come to
believe about the divine nature, fortified now by methods of criticism
wholly different from those of the Fathers.
Nothing has been defined, nothing
ever will be. The "churches" are but a number of philosophical
sects within "the Church," holding various but equally tenable opinions
on almost all points - whether the Unitarians are to be counted among
these, and if not, why not, seems at least a legitimate speculation.
Anybody is at liberty to revive the principles of the Agapemonites
[Footnote from webmaster's assistant: I had to look that one up. "Sect
believed to practice 'free love' on Christian principle, founded in
Somerset in 1850"] without forfeiting his title to Christian
membership. The one visible Church, if it ever existed, only survived
by a few years its divine Founder and can expect a renascence only in
the remote future, when prayerful application to historical documents
shall have produced a basis which we all feel conscientiously bound to
accept.
27.
A refinement of this doctrine seems
to confound its own supporters.
There is, however, a refinement of this doctrine commonly held among
more rigorist Anglicans. According to this view, although the Church
does make up its mind, not by sudden conciliar illumination, but by a
gradual process of assimilation, yet the doctrines once so assimilated
have become "defined" and therefore irreversible (however much they may
admit of interpretation).
The Church may make up her mind, centuries hence, on such a point as
the withholding of the chalice or (from their point of view) the
Immaculate Conception, but what has once been sealed, in the early
ages, is sealed for ever - e.g. the marriage laws, the three creeds,
the three orders of the ministry, at least two sacraments, etc. Since
the schism between the East and the West, the Church has been unable to
formulate any opinion which "counts," seeing that she has been divided.
But we must press for an answer:
Do we hold such and such doctrines to be of faith because the Church
has come to believe them or because they have been defined by councils?
If the former, then what right
have we to assume that the Church has finally made up her mind on (say)
the doctrine of the Trinity? Why should the process of doctrinal
development have petrified? How are we to distinguish between kernel
and husk, between what in traditional belief is part of the 'depositum fidei' and what is
merely accidental and suited to the needs of an age? We fall back once
more on private opinion to determine this, which it does with no
certain sound.
If on the other hand we say
that the councils are the defining voice, but we accept them not
insofar as they spoke in the heat of controversy, but insofar as they
registered beliefs which by their time had become unquestioned - if,
that is to say, the controversy on circumcision was really settled at
Nicaea, and the controversy on Arianism at Constantinople, and so on -
then indeed we avoid all sceptical difficulties about "snap votes,"
"undue influence," and the like, but are we really better off? There
still remains the objection that we have no proof that a majority can
define a generally accepted doctrine any more than decide a
controversy, with the assurance of divine ratification.
28.
We are, in fact, still left with a circular argument or a bare
confidence in numbers.
In fact, whether it be the continuous history of the councils or the
continuous history of the Church at large to which we appeal when we
say that this or that doctrine is irreversible, we are still arguing in
a circle. Asked what is the orthodox faith, we say, "What was and is
believed by the orthodox Church." Pressed as to what the orthodox
Church may be, we fall back on defining it as the body which holds the
orthodox faith. If all the Episcopal Churches of the world were
re-united tomorrow and had a schism the day after, we should be reduced
to voting with the majority:
This view is supported by "N"
prelates - 'Dieu le veult';
that view is supported by "N -
(minus) L" prelates - 'anathema
sit.'
Even then we should have to admit sadly that it was left for our grandchildren to know which party
was in the right.
29.
Logical
outcome of the divided Church
theory.
If anybody is disposed to rest content with the view that all appeals
for authority should be made to the early and united Church, or at best
to a consensus of opinion between the Church of Rome and the Orthodox
Churches of the East, he has still to face a difficulty. Let him ask
the theologians of the still undivided Church, let him ask any
theologian, Western or Eastern, who wrote between the schism and the
beginning of this [20th] century, a pertinent question: "Can the true
Church of Christ lack the mark of visible unity?" The answer will
surely be "No." And thus the very authority to which he appeals will be
found to disallow the assumption on which he appealed to it.
30.
Logical
outcome of the bare-majority
theory.
If on the other hand we are disposed to treat the schism between East
and West on a line with all other schisms and say that the fragments it
left constitute
(i) a true Church and
(ii) a schismatic body,
then, whatever the precise numerical proportion of bishops, it is
difficult not to feel that the West has it, as representing more
different countries, more active thought, more vigorous life.
We are thrown back on a merely platonic Gallicanism, which (however) insists that the bishops of the Roman
communion met in council are infallible, and, if we admit that,
then in obedience to them we must admit the whole Roman claim.
31.
Logical outcome of pure "consensus-fideliumism."
["Consensus-fideliumism' =
theory of the consent of the faithful being a sufficient guide.]
Nor do we escape
the impasse by appealing from episcopal councils to the general sense
of the great body of Christian people. The great body of Christian
people, unless we are prepared to suppose that anyone who now claims
the title of Christian is necessarily a member of it, must in some way
be defined, and the only conceivable definitions of it (if we are
taking our stand on historic continuity with the sub-apostolic Church)
would be
(i) the Church of Rome or
(ii) the Orthodox Churches of the East
- not both at once, for the faithful of either rite disown the
company of the other.
Here again, if we set aside the kudos which, since the division, has
accrued to the Orthodox Church through the rise of the political power
of Russia, could any casual observer fail to find the true 'fideles' in the communion of Rome
- more especially when we remember how intimately the doctrines of the
Greek Church seem to have been bound up with those of the reigning
Emperor, long after the Church in the West had become, corporately at
any rate, independent of such influences?
32.
Especial
claim to a hearing of the Roman
Church if we take the 'consensus
fidelium' basis.
The salient difficulty of any 'consensus
fidelium' theory is surely this, that, if the test is to be a
real test, the term "fideles"
must have a definite meaning in extension. While we look in vain for
any other definition of their extent which will not be a merely
circular definition, the Roman Catholic has a ready answer: "The 'fideles', be they many or few, be
their doctrine apparently traditional or apparently innovatory, be
their champions honest or unscrupulous, are simply those who are in
visible communion with the see of Rome." No doubt in the long run this
means the people who are so orthodox that Rome has seen no reason to
excommunicate them, so that unity and orthodoxy still react upon one
another; but the fact remains that the Roman theory does give a test
for defining the 'fideles'
without the question-begging preliminary of ascertaining who the 'fideles' are, from an examination
of their tenets.
In fact there can be little doubt that in the West our labelling of
this party as orthodox and that as heterodox in early Church history
comes down to us from authors who were applying this test of orthodoxy
and no other and that we, at the Reformation, made our appeal (insofar
as we did make any appeal) to the Churches of Jerusalem and Alexandria,
meaning thereby not the Nestorian or Monophysite claimants to these
sees, but the representatives of the body (hence admitted as
"Orthodox") which had remained longest in communion with the Roman
Church.
33.
The difficulties
of principle, which produce these logical results, investigated.
All conciliar theories of the Church (except those which at once fix an
arbitrary limit to the number of the councils, neglect the question,
"Whence do the councils derive their authority?" and apparently blind
themselves to historical phenomena) seem on examination to labour from
a single root defect - they attempt to define the Church by the faith,
not the faith by the Church. They posit the faith as a known quantity.
It may be simply belief that Jesus is God; it may be the doctrines
(roughly speaking) of the Judicious Richard Hooker; it may be the
Council of Trent; it may be anything betwixt and between.
But in any case you posit the faith as a known thing, defining it by an
arbitrary standard, and then say, "Who are there who believe these
doctrines? They are my brothers." True, you may insist, in questions
like that of ordinations, that the faith shall be attested by
corresponding ecclesiastical practice and even that this practice can
show continuity (what of the Swedish Church, for instance?), but in any
case you assume that Catholicity is something that you instinctively
know and can apply as a test to any religious body you examine. By this
means you accept the Greek Orthodox and the Old Catholics, while you
reject the Nestorians and the Presbyterians. This is (except on the
narrow conciliar view above described) what you are doing when you
speak of "orthodox" and "heretical" tenets in Early Church history.
But how, apart from pure bibliolatry or miraculous revelation, are we
to know what is the minimum of belief and practice that can be called
orthodox, unless we have one visible and continuous Church to teach us
on the point? How much more
satisfactory, if the Church were a body which leapt to the eye,
self-credentialed, so that we could posit it for our starting-point and
infer from its teaching what was true and what was false!
34.
If there were a single Church,
designed to be the standard of the faith (and not 'vice versa'), how should we expect it to be constituted?
It may be following an idle fancy, but it is surely not altogether
presumptuous to blot out history as far as possible from the mind's eye
and imagine how we should expect the one, indivisible Church to be
constituted, so as to be a safe guardian of the faith.
We should expect that either a single body of men, kept in close touch
with one another and divinely guaranteed against serious doctrinal
disagreement, or (better still) a single man, since in the last resort
it is the casting vote that counts, would be selected from among the
immediate followers of the Founder, in the last resort the safe camp to
pitch your tent under. Let us suppose a single man. We should expect
that such a man would be open to advice, even (if he seemed to be
hesitating in following his conscience) to reproof from the highest
officials round him.
That, as the first missionary work was done, while the Founder's words
were still fresh in men's ears and his chosen disciples yet alive,
little recourse would be had to such a man or indeed be geographically
possible. That while disagreements would be few in that blessed sunrise
(except perhaps in connection with some who from the first had
misconceived the scope of the whole enterprise), these disagreements
would be dealt with locally, on their own authority, by other officials
who saw their duty clearly.
That the malcontents in these cases would attempt to plead the
authority of the absent X (let us call him) and that the official they
were opposing would (while insisting on his own exceptional knowledge
of the Founder's intentions) be occasionally at pains to show that his
views did not differ from - perhaps even were instrumental in forming -
the views of X.
That X would be divinely guided to make the headquarters sooner or
later at Y, the most prominent or most central city of the then-known
world, where he would very likely be associated for missionary purposes
with that official whose task it had been to organize most of the
churches on the way to Y from their original starting-point, and that
the churches more immediately under the care of this official (Z) would
be in close contact with the Church at Y. And now, what happens at X's
death?
35.
Transmission
of the centralized authority.
We might think it probable that X would nominate and solemnly appoint
his own successor, guided in his choice by the same infallible
assurance which would make it impossible that he should take the wrong
side in a doctrinal dispute. But this is to assume that the gift which
makes him what he is a sort of habitual grace, which can only be
conferred by him who already possesses it. If, on the contrary, the
gift were rather in the nature of an actual grace, conferred according
to a covenant "on condition
of" his holding a certain position, but not in and through the
act of his elevation to that position, then the appointment might be
left to others - not, in such geographical conditions, it is evident,
to the whole Church.
The appointment can safely be made in such conditions and by such
electors as would be common in the ordinary election of the officials
of the body in local cases, for the gift which determines his special
character being a charisma, which overrules (presumably) any natural
tendencies in the man which would unfit him for his special office,
could be bestowed on any candidate thus appointed, even were he not
"the best man in." It would not be unnatural to suppose, in fact, that
the providential character would be conferred on the man whom the
Church at Y selected as its head (the bishop, let us call him). They
elect and enthrone him, and God immediately bestows 'ab extra' the special grace needed
for a special position.
(There are other ways, clearly, in which the thing might be managed,
but in the absence of a claim on the part of any other succession of
persons to a caliphate of this description, this way of managing it
would seem a very natural one.)
36.
Early centrifugal influences to be
expected.
We should expect that while the congregations in various parts were
poor, scattered, and persecuted, there should be little intercourse
between the Church at Y and those elsewhere (although it would
naturally be mentioned with some deference, when mentioned at all).
That the Church, rather than the bishop, would be the object of
respectful allusion, since
(1) his power derived from his
position,
(2) the local church was more of a distinct unit when converts were
few,
(3) the bishop himself would be likely to live in some obscurity owing
to his exposed position in time of persecution.
That we should not find him interfering in the affairs of other
churches except those within a fairly easy radius by sea.
That when local quarrels arose, they should be settled by local
councils, especially while men were alive who had had speech with the
immediate followers of the Founder - it would rather be the innovators
who would seek, and would fail to find, recognition for their doctrines
at Y.
That old-established or central congregations would naturally come to
exercise a sort of local satrapy over other congregations around them.
That bishops of great learning, or such as had showed great courage in
persecution or sanctity of life, would be more prominent to the
ordinary eye than an official living at a distance.
That minor differences of usage would crop up between various churches,
that Y would become involved in them, that Y's first attempts to make
regulations of ecumenic force would be resented, and that
recriminations would come from both sides where matters of
old-established usage were concerned.
That if the bishop of Y seemed to be exercising his presidential
prerogative with undue assertiveness, he would be remonstrated with in
impatient language.
That he, as having the interests of a wider community at heart, would
take a gentler and less rigorist view on matters of discipline than the
official of outlying churches.
37.
Effects of State recognition on the churches.
If it should so fall out that the chief temporal power in the world
should come into the hands of one who was at least sympathetic with if
not actually committed to the principles of this Church, he would
naturally be concerned with the settlement of any disputes that might
arise; in the case of a considerable dispute, it would be he who would
facilitate the travels of officials from distant parts to a single
centre and be present at the discussion in the person of his
representatives to secure "a free field and no favour" in times when
bluntness of speech and hastiness of temper were not unknown in high
ecclesiastical circles. If the Bishop of Y should, in virtue of the
importance of his see, be unable to be present in person, it is
possible that his legates would not occupy the chairman's place, which
would be given (no doubt with the bishop of Y's sanction) to another
bishop of high standing.
Human nature being what it is it is only natural that this temporal
authority should at times be wielded by persons who attempted to
exercise a direct influence on the councils of the Church by intriguing
for the appointment of this or that candidate for vacant sees, by
"summoning" councils in unrepresentative geographical conditions, etc.
Owing to the force of the secular arm, the candidate favoured by such a
ruler in a given case would be likely to gain the temporalities of the
see, and the dispossessed candidate, were he right or wrong in his
views, would appeal from this secular compulsion to the bishop of Y.
The secular ruler would therefore make every effort to influence the
views of the bishop of Y - would, in an extreme case, persecute him,
and try to wring from him a decision against his conscience. If and
insofar as such a decision should be given under the influence of
physical force or insufficient information, or a combination of the
two, then it would be right for those who looked to Y for guidance to
stick to his previous and uninfluenced judgements, rather than to any
extorted profession, as the norm of right belief.
If the secular authority should build a second city, intended to
outstrip Y in dignity, it would be natural that the bishop of this new
city (C) should, if worldly-minded or ambitious, try to set himself up
as in some way on a level with the bishop of Y. If the secular empire
should then be divided between Y and C, the Emperor of C would be all
the more inclined to support the bishop of C in such pretensions. The
bishops of churches nearer C than Y, accustomed to rally round the
bishop of C as their patriarch, might easily come to be more
overshadowed in practice (without justification in theory) by the
Church at C than by the Church at Y, and law-abiding citizens, in the
event of a schism in the Church at C, might be tempted to support the
candidate backed by the Emperor of C, without troubling much to inquire
which candidate was supported by the bishop of Y. This process, though
contrary to the original intentions of the Founder, would take place by
insensible stages and largely without conscious revolt: Only at time of
open breach between the Bishop of Y and the Emperor of C would the case
definitely present itself to the conscience - Is it to be God or Caesar?
For so long as, and insofar as, the churches accustomed to look to C
for a lead were united by the unity of faith with the bishop of Y, they
would be rightly called "orthodox," but at whatever periods they
supported the bishop of C against the bishop of Y they would be
formally disobedient, with whatever excuse of deficient information,
etc. If at any time a definite and formal breach took place, the party,
however large or important, which sided against Y would be guilty of
formal schism. However faithfully henceforward they guarded the deposit
common to the churches of C and of Y, they would nevertheless be cut
off from the unity of the Church.
* * * * * *
Msgr. Ronald Knox (1888-1957), a
convert from Anglicanism, was famed for his Bible translation and his
detective stories.