OF THE FATHERS OF THE CHURCH
DXXV.
I will not presume to criticize too closely the writings of the Fathers, seeing
they are received at the church, and have great applause, for then I should be
held an apostate; but whoso reads Chrysostom, will find he digresses from the
chief points, and proceeds to other matter, saying nothing, or very little, of
what pertains to the business. When I was expounding the Epistle to the
Hebrews, and turned to what Chrysostom had written thereupon, I found nothing
to the purpose; yet I believe that he at that time, as being the chief
rhetorician, had many hearers, though he taught without profit; for the chief
office of a preacher is to teach uprightly, and diligently to look to the chief
points and grounds whereon he stands, and so instruct and teach the hearers
that they understand aright, and may be able to say: this is well taught. When
this is done, he may avail himself of rhetoric to adorn his subject and
admonish the people.
DXXXVI.
Behold what great darkness is in the books of
the Fathers concerning faith; yet if the article of justification be darkened,
it is impossible to smother the grossest errors of mankind. St Jerome, indeed,
wrote upon Matthew, upon the Epistles to Galatians and Titus; but, alas! very
coldly. Ambrose wrote six books upon the first book of Moses, but they are very
poor. Augustine wrote nothing to the purpose concerning faith; for he was first
roused up and made a man by the Pelagians, in striving against them. I can find
no exposition upon the Epistles to the Romans and Galatians, wherein anything
is taught pure and aright. O what a happy time have we now in regard to the
purity of the doctrine; but alas! we little esteem it. After the Fathers came
the pope, and with his mischievous traditions and human ordinances, like a
breaking water-cloud and deluge, overflowed the church, snared consciences,
touching eating of meat, friars hoods, masses, etc., so that daily he brought
abominable errors into the church of Christ; and to serve his own turn, took
hold on St Augustine's sentence, where he says, Evangelio non crederem,
etc. The asses could not see what occasioned Augustine to utter that
sentence, whereas he spoke it against the Manicheans, as much as to say: I
believe you not, for ye are damned heretics, but I believe and hold with the
church, the spouse of Christ, which cannot err.
DXXVII.
Epiphanius compiled a history of the church
long before Jerome; his writings are good and profitable, and, if separated
from dissentious agruments, worth printing.
DXXVIII.
I much like the hymns and spiritual songs of
Prudentius; he was the best of the Christian poets; if he had lived in the time
of Virgil, he would have been extolled above Horace. I wish the verses of
Prudentius were read in schools, but schools are now become heathenish, and the
Holy Scripture is banished from them, and sophisticated through philosophy.
DXXIX.
We must read the Fathers cautiously, and lay
them in the gold balance, for they often stumbled and went astray, and mingled
in their books many monkish things. Augustine had more work and labor, to wind
himself out of the Father's writings, then he had with the heretics. Gregory
expounds the five pounds mentioned in the Gospel, which the husbandman gave to
his servants to put to use, to be the five senses, which the beasts also
possess. The two pounds, he construes to be the reason and understanding.
DXXX.
The more I read the books of the Fathers, the
more I find myself offended; for they were but men, and, to speak the truth,
with all their repute and authority, undervalued the books and writings of the
sacred apostles of Christ. The papists were not ashamed to say, What is the
Scripture? we must read the holy Fathers and teachers, for they drew and sucked
the honey out of the Scripture. As if God's Word were to be understood and
conceived by none but by themselves, whereas the heavenly Father says: "Him
shall ye hear," who in the gospel taught most plainly in parables and
similitudes.
DXXXI.
Augustine was the ablest and purest of all
the doctors, but he could not of himself bring back things to their original
condition, and he often complains that the bishops, with their traditions and
ordinances, troubled the church more than did the Jews with their laws.
DXXXII.
Faithful Christians should heed only the
embassy of our blessed Saviour Christ, and what he says. All they who alter and
construe the Gospel through human authority, power, and repute, act very
unchristianlike and against God. No temporal potentate allows his ambassador to
exceed his instructions, not in one word; yet we, in this celestial and divine
embassage and legation, will be so presumptuous as to add and diminish to and
from our heavenly instructions, according to our own vain conceits and
self-will.
DXXXIII.
I am persuaded that if at this time, St
Peter, in person, should preach all the articles of Holy Scripture, and only
deny the pope's authority, power, and primacy, and say that the pope is not the
head of all Christendom, they would cause him to be hanged. Yea, if Christ
himself were again on earth, and should preach, without all doubt the pope
would crucify him again. Therefore let us expect the same treatment; but better
is it to build upon Christ, than upon the pope. If, from my heart, I did not
believe that after this life there were another, then I would sing another
song, and lay the burthen on another's neck.
DXXXIV.
Lyra's Commentaries upon the Bible are worthy
of all praise. I will order them diligently to be read, for they are exceeding
good, especially on the historical part of the Old Testament. Lyra is very
profitable to him that is well versed in the New Testament. The commentaries of
Paulus and Simigerus are very cold; they may well be omitted and left out, if
Lyra should be reprinted.
DXXXV.
Jerome should not be numbered among the
teachers of the church, for he was a heretic; yet I believe that he is saved
through faith in Christ. He speaks not of Christ, but merely carries his name
in his mouth.
DXXXVI.
The Terminists, among whom I was, are sectaries
in the high schools; they oppose the Thomists, the Scotists, and the
Albertists; they are also called Occamists, for Occam, their founder. They are
of the newest sect, and are not strongest in Paris.
The question with them was, whether the word
humanitas means a general humanity, residing in every human creature, as
Thomas and others hold. The Ocamists and Terminists say: It is not in general,
but it is spoken in particular of every human creature; as a picture of a human
creature signifies every human creature.
They are called Terminists, because they speak of
a thing in its own proper words, and do not apply them after a strange sort.
With a carpenter we must speak in his terms, and with such words as are used in
his craft, as a chisel, as axe. Even so we must let the words of Christ remain,
and speak of the sacraments in suis teminis, with such words as Christ
used and spake; as "Do this," must not be turned into "Offer this;" and the
word corpus must not signify both kinds, as the papists tear and torment
the words, and willfully wrest them against the clear text.
DXXXVII.
The master of sentences, Peter Lombard, was a
very diligent man, and of a high understanding; he wrote many excellent things.
If he had wholly given himself to the Holy Scriptures, he had been indeed a
great and a leading doctor of the church; but he introduced into his books
unprofitable questions, sophisticating and mingling all together. The school
divines were fine and delicate wits, but they lived not in such times as we.
They got so far that they taught mankind were not complete, pure, or sound, but
wounded in part, yet they said people by their own power, without grace, could
fulfill the law; though when they had obtained grace, they were able more
easily to accomplish the law, of their own proper power.
Such and the life horrible things they taught;
but they neither saw nor felt Adam's fall, nor that the law of God is a
spiritual law, requiring a complete and full obedience inwardly and outwardly,
both in body and soul.
DXXXVIII.
Gabriel Biel wrote a book upon the canon in
the mass, which at that time I held for the best; my heart bled when I read it.
I still keep those books which tormented me. Scotus wrote very well upon the
Magister sententiarum, and diligently essayed to teach upon those
matters. Occam was an able and sensible man.