Decian Dissent
Novatian Dissent
Church’s
Constitution and Practice
Character and Extent
Constantine’s Policy
Sufferings from
Catholics
Martyrs and Oppression
Retire Into Obscurity
Now I COMMAND you, brethren, in the name of
our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye withdraw yourselves from
every brother that walketh disorderly. 2 Thess. 3:6.
1.
WE have endeavored to detail, in the previous pages, the
features of the Christian churches generally. While the
interests of religion retained their scriptural character,
all were upon equality, and each society possessed its
government within itself; so that no one church originally
can claim our attention more than another. The churches,
during this early period, were strictly Baptist in their
practice and constitution.* These early interests stood
perfectly free of Rome, and at after periods refused her
communion. As churches rose into importance, contentions
about offices were frequent, and tumults ensued; but having
no secular aid, their rage against each other spent itself
in reproaches, and often subsided into apathy. The
disappointed, the disaffected, the oppressed, the injured,
with the pious, had only to retire from the scene of strife,
and they were safe; which evidently they did: and while the
express command, 2 Thess. 3:6, regulated dissidents, other
causes and motives combined to increase…
*
See above, ch. 1, s. 3,
S
7.
Decian
Dissent
…their
number, since by 250 they became very numerous, as already
stated. These dissidents, in small companies, or in more
general associations, unostentatiously worshipped God under
their own vine, and were not disturbed, unless the
government adopted measures involving all; but as dissidents
increased, political considerations regulated the governors.
2.
The religion of the New Testament commenced with Dissent.
John, Jesus, and his disciples were charged with
innovations, both at Jerusalem and in other cities, John
1:22; Luke 23:2, 5; Acts 11:28; 17:7; and 18:13. Their want
of conformity was a crime in the eyes of the unthinking or
secularizing multitude. The genuine spirit of religion has
been and will be preserved by those only, who dissent from
all establishments devised by human policy.* Liberty of soul
is the breath, the element, the existence of that religion
inculcated in the New Testament, of which liberty the
Baptists have ever been the most open advocates. † "Ye have
one master, even Christ, and all ye are brethren." The voice
of Moses and the prophets, with Jesus and his apostles, urge
on all who fear God, singleness of motive, blamelessness of
character; and in their social stations, purity of
communion. In obedience to these heavenly injunctions, men
and women have "come out" of impure communities, and with
such persons, actuated by divine motives, we now hope to
associate.
249
3. When Decius came to the throne in 249, he required by
edicts all persons in the empire to…
*
Church records prove purity to have existed only out of
establishments.
†
Robins. Resear. pp. 641 and 551, from Voltaire.
Novatian
Dissent
…conform
to Pagan worship. Forty years' toleration had greatly
increased professors, and they were found in every
department of the government. They had been so long
unaccustomed to trials, that the lives of many were unsuited
to suffering. Decius's edicts rent asunder the churches,
multitudes apostatized, and many were martyred. In two years
the trial abated, when many apostates applied for
restoration to Christian fellowship, and sanctioned their
application by letters, written by some eminent Christians
251
who had been martyrs during the persecution.*
The
flagrancy of some apostates occasioned an opposition to
their readmission. In the time of peace, many had entered
the church without calculating on trials, and when
persecution arose such persons revolted easily to idolatry,
and on trials subsiding, gained but too easy admittance
again to communion. One NOVATIAN, a presbyter in the church
of Rome, strongly opposed the readmission of apostates, but
he was not successful. The choice of a pastor in the same
church fell upon Cornelius, whose election Novatian opposed,
from his readiness to readmit apostates. Novatian
consequently separated himself from the church, and from
Cornelius's jurisdiction. †
4.
Novatian, with every considerate person, was disgusted with
the hasty admission of such apostates to communion, and with
the conduct of many pastors, who were more concerned about
numbers than purity of communion. Novatian was the first to
begin a separate interest with success, and which was known
for centuries by his name. One Novatus, of Carthage, coming
to Rome, united himself…
*
From this circumstance arose prayer to saints.
†
Dupin's Hist., c. 3, p. 125, &c.
Church’s
Constitution and Practice
…with
Novatian, and their combined efforts were at- tended with
remarkable success. It is evident that many persons were
previously in such a situation as to embrace the earliest
opportunity of uniting with churches whose communion was
scriptural. Novatian became the first pastor in the new
interest, and is accused of the crime of giving birth to an
innumerable multitude of congregations of puritans in every
part of the Roman empire; and yet all the influence he
exercised was, an upright example, and moral suasion: these
churches flourished until the fifth century.*
5.
There was no difference in point of doctrine between the
Novatianists and other Christians. Novatian had seen evils
result from readmitting apostates; he consequently refused
communion to all those who had fallen after baptism. The
terms of admission in those churches were, "It you wish to
join any of our churches, you may be admitted among us by
baptism; but observe, that if you fall away into idolatry or
vice, we shall separate you from our communion, and on no
account can you be readmitted among us. We shall never
attempt to injure you, in your person, property, or
character; we do not presume to judge the sincerity of your
repentance, or your future state; but you can never be
readmitted to the fellowship of our churches, without our
giving up the securest guardian we have for the purity of
our communion." † "They considered," says Mosheim, "the
Christian Church, as a society where virtue and innocence
reigned universally, and none of whose members, from their
entrance into it, had defiled…
*
Euseb. b. 6, c. 42. Dupin's Hist., c. 3, pp. 125 and 146.
Mosh., c. 3,.
S
17, 18.
† Robins. Res., p. 127.
Jones's Lect., 1, 306.
Character
and Extent
…themselves
with any enormous crimes; and, of consequence, they looked
upon every society, which readmitted heinous offenders to
its communion, as unworthy of the title of a true Christian
church. On account of the church's severity of discipline,
the example was followed by many, and churches of this order
flourished in the greatest part of those provinces which had
received the gospel.* Many advenient rites had been
appointed, and interwoven with baptism, with a threefold
administration of the ordinance, in the old interests, which
obscured the original simplicity and design of the
institutor. To remove all human appendages, the Novatianists
said to candidates, "If you be a virtuous believer, and will
accede to our confederacy against sin, you may be admitted
among us by baptism, or if any catholic has baptized you
before, by rebaptism." They were at later periods called
anabaptists.† The churches thus formed upon a plan of strict
communion and rigid discipline, obtained the reproach of
PURITANS; they were the oldest body of Christian churches,
of which we have any account, and a succession of them, we
shall prove, has continued to the present day. Novatian's
example had a powerful influence, and puritan churches rose
in different parts, in quick succession. So early as 254,
these Dissenters are complained of, as having infected
France with their doctrines,‡ which will aid us in the
Albigensian churches, where the same severity of discipline
is traced, S
and reprobated. ||
*
Hist. c. 3,
S
17.
† Rob. Res., p. 127.
Baronius' Ann., v. iii. 231. Chamb. Ency. Collier's Diet.
Ency. Brit. Art. Anabap. Formey’s Ecc. Hist., v. i. p. 64,
and Mosh. ubi sup.
‡ Mezeray's Hist., p. 4.
Miln. Ch. Hist, c. 3, c. 13.
S
Allix's Pied., c. 17, 156.
|| Modi. Hist., cent. 13, p.
2. c. 5,
S
7, note.
Constantine’s
Policy
6.
Learned men and historians have investigated the pretensions
of these churches to puritanical character, and have
conferred on them the palm of honor. Dupin says, "Novatian's
style is pure, clean and polite; his expressions choice, his
thoughts natural, and his way of reasoning just; he is full
of citations of texts of Scripture, that are always to the
purpose; and besides, there is a great deal of order and
method in those treatises of his we now have, and he never
speaks but with a world of moderation and candor."*
"Their manners," says Dr. A. Clarke, "were, in general,
simple and holy; indeed, their rigid discipline is no mean
proof of this." We well know that those called Pietists in
Germany, and Puritans in England, were in general, in their
respective times, among the most religious and holy people
in both nations. †
7.
These churches existed for sixty years under a pagan
government, during which time, the old corrupt interests at
Rome, Carthage, and other places, possessed no means, but
those of persuasion and reproach, to stay the progress of
Dissent. During this period, the Novatian churches were very
prosperous, and were planted all over the Roman empire. †
"They were very numerous," says Lardner, "in Phrygia," and a
number of eminent men were raised up in the work of the
ministry. It is impossible to calculate the benefit of their
services to mankind. Their influence must have considerably
checked the spirit of innovation and secularity in the old
churches. Although rigid in discipline and schismatic in
character, yet they…
*
Dupin, c. 3, pp. 125, and 146.
† Sue. of Sac. Lit. Mosh. i.
2 22. Gill's cause of God, &c., v. iv. pp. 57 and 131. Miln.
Ch. Hist., c. 3, ch. 3 and 11. Neal's Hist. of the Puritans,
v. i. pref. vii.
† Jones's Lect, v. i. pp. 305
and 436.
…were
found extensive, and in a flourishing condition, when
306
Constantine came to the throne, 306. Their soundness Aug.
6 in doctrine, evident unity among themselves, with
their numbers, suggested to Constantine the propriety of
uniting them with the catholic church, but this union they
refused. These churches with other dissidents,
realized religious liberty in 313, from Constantine.*
In
331 he changed his policy towards these people, and they
were involved, with other denominations, in distress and
sufferings. Their books were sought for, they were forbidden
assembling together, and many lost their places of worship.
† The orthodoxy of the Novatian party, with…
* Constantine's father lived in Britain at
the time of his birth, 271. He was not baptized during
infancy, though his father was favorable to Christianity, if
not a professor of it. When he came to the throne, he
professed to receive the gospel, and many officers and
servants did the same. He gave Bishop Sylvester his mansion,
for a baptistery, and conferred freedom on those slaves who
would receive baptism. He offered a reward to others, on
their embracing Christianity, so that 12,000 men, besides
women and minors, were baptized in one year. In 319 he
relieved the clergy of taxes, and in 320, issued an edict
against the Donatists. He abolished heathen superstition,
and erected splendid churches, richly adorned with paintings
and images, bearing a striking resemblance to heathen
temples. Places were erected for baptizing, some over
running water, while others were supplied by pipes. In the
middle of the building was the bath, which was very large.
(Dr. Cave.) Distinct apartments were provided for men and
women, as are found in Baptist meeting houses at this day.
See Bing. Antiq. Robins. Hist. Bap. and Res. Gibbon's ch.
20. Campbell's Lect. No. 3, p. 35. Fosbroke's Ency. of
Antiq., v. i. p. 103. Pilkington's Sac. Elucidations, v. 2,
part 4.
† Constantine's conduct in
the church, has proved a kind of Pandora's box to the
interest of religion, and the hope of deliverance has tried
the faith of the godly to this day. The evils of splendid
churches and pensioned bishops were soon seen in their
persecuting ascendency, and in the ministers of religion,
exhorting their congregations to crown their talents with
clapping
their hand, and loud
applause.-See Lardner's Credibility of the Gospel History,
v. 4, part 2, c. 70, p. 169.
…the
influence of some of their ministers, is supposed to have
procured some mitigation of the law. Constantine's
oppressive measures prompted many to leave the scene of
sufferings, and retire into more sequestered spots. Claudius
Seyssel, the popish archbishop, TRACES the rise of the
Waldensian heresy to a pastor named Leo, leaving Rome at
this period, for the Valleys.*
352
The succeeding emperor, Constantius, embraced the Arian
faith, and severely oppressed the orthodox. In the territory
of Mantinium, a large district of Paphlagonia, the
Novatianists were extremely numerous. Being involved in the
massacre sanctioned by Constantius, a body of four thousand
troops was sent to exterminate them, with other
Trinitarians. The Novatian peasants, however, arming
themselves with scythes and axes, fought the invaders of
their homes in so desperate a manner, that they even
vanquished and destroyed the disciplined soldiery. † They
lost several of their places of worship, but Julian on
ascending the throne, required the Arians to rebuild and
restore them. In 375, the emperor Valens
375
embraced the Arian creed. He closed the Novatian churches,
banished their ministers,‡ and probably would have carried
his measures to extreme severity, had not his prejudices and
zeal been moderated by a pious man, named Marcion. During
this severe trial, the benevolent…
*
Facts opp. to Fict. p. 37.
† Mosh. Hist. Cent. 4, S 14.
J. R. Peyrin's Def. of the Vaudois, p. 362. It is said
Liberius, Bishop of Rome, in 360, baptized 8,800 persons on
one Saturday, and that a boy was drowned on the occasion,
‡This Valens, who
required baptism for his dying son, sent 80 ministers into
banishment, but before the vessel had gotten far from land,
it fired, and all of them perished.
Sufferings
from the Catholics
…feelings
of the Novationists became so apparent, as
380
to extort admiration from their enemies. About this period,
380, Pacianus, Bishop of Barcelona, wrote some treatises
against these people. He observes to Sempronianus, one of
the Novatian ministers, "You have forsaken the tradition of
the church, under pretence of reformation: likewise you say,
that the church is a body of men regenerated by water and
the Holy Spirit, who have not denied the name of Christ,
which is the temple and house of God, the Pillar and Ground
of truth: we 383
say the same also."* In 383, Theodosius assembled a synod,
with a view to establish unity among churches. On the
Novatianists stating their views of discipline; the emperor,
says Socrates, † "wondered at their consent and harmony
touching the faith." He passed a law, securing to them
liberty, civil and religious, all their property, with all
churches of the same faith and practice. While these pure
churches were in peace and concord, it is stated that
discord prevailed in the national churches.
390
8. At the conclusion of this fourth century, the
Novatianists had three, if not four churches, in
Constantinople; they had also churches at Nice, Nicomedia,
and Cotiveus, in Phrygia, all of them large and extensive
bodies, besides which, they were very numerous in the
Western empire. There were several churches of this
410
people in the city of Alexandria, in the beginning
412
of the fifth century. In 412, Cyril was ordained bishop of
the catholic church in this city. One of his first acts, was
to shut up the churches of the Novatianists, ‡ to…
*
Dupin, cent. 4. pp. 81-3.
† Lib. 5, cap. 10.
‡Persecution in the
first ages was confined to the edict of the Emperors; but in
Cyril and Innocent's conduct, we see the spirit and rising
power of the man of sin.
…strip
them of all their sacred vessels and ornaments. One
minister, Cyril deprived of everything he possessed. They
experienced very similar treatment at Rome, from Innocent,
who was one of the first bishops to persecute the
Dissenters, and rob them of their churches. This proceeding
is easily accounted for. The clergy of the establishments
were an idle and ignorant class of men, and unacquainted
with the Scriptures. Innocent wrote many letters to various
bishops, containing the rules of discipline in his church,
plainly with the intention of establishing uniformity.* This
uniformity could not be imposed on the Novatianists, nor
would they receive his views on children's baptism and
communion; they, consequently, became the object of his
aversion. Another means of awakening the catholic prelates'
anger, was rebaptizing. When this was first introduced,
purity of communion, with a strict adherence to Zion's laws,
was no doubt intended; but when the Arians arose, different
creeds were formed, and the candidates' acquaintance with
the creed was, in each church, the sine qua non for baptism.
The catholic party, now accumulating power, saw, in other
churches' rebaptizing, a virtual renunciation of the baptism
they had conferred upon those who went over to the other
party; as understood by the pasdobaptists of the present
day: consequently a spirit of persecution was raised
against all those who rebaptized catholics. In the fourth
Lateran council, canons were made to banish them as
heretics, and 413
these canons were supported by an edict in 413, issued by
the emperors, Theodosius and Honorius, declaring that all
persons rebaptized, and the rebaptizers, should be both
punished with death. Accordingly,…
*
Dupin, c. 5. pp. 195-8.
Albanus,
a zealous minister, with others, was punished with death,
for rebaptizing.* The edict was probably obtained by the
influence of Augustine, who could endure no rival, nor would
he bear with any who questioned the virtue of his rites, or
the sanctity of his brethren, or the soundness of the
Catholic creed; and these points being disputed by the
Novatianists and Donatists, two powerful and extensive
bodies of dissidents in Italy and Africa, they were
consequently made to feel the weight of his influence. These
combined modes of oppression led the faithful to abandon the
cities, and seek retreats in the country, which they did,
particularly in the valleys of Piedmont, the inhabitants of
which began to be called Waldenses.†
415
9. The Novatianists had hitherto flourished mightily in
Rome, having a great many places of worship, and large
congregations; but the rising power of the Catholic
interest, its union with the sword, the…
*
Bap. Mag. vol. i. p. 256. Circumstances become here
apparent, and unite their evidence to prove WHEN infant
baptism was publicly espoused. We have already noticed the
writers who declared against the innovation. In 412, the
Baptists were banished as heretics. In 413, Innocent sent
letters of advice to various ministers. In the same year,
the Baptists, for rebaptizing, were sentenced to death. In
416, a council at Mela, accursed all those who denied
forgiveness to accompany infant baptism, and in 418, a
council at Carthage enforced the same curse. Augustine,
Cyril, Innocent and others, concurred in its expediency,
Rob. Res. 151. They borrowed the sword of the magistrate, to
enforce what their arguments and views could not do. Wall,
i. p. 111. The sword, and the infant rite have always been
companions, Rob. Bap. 438 and 450; and the early advocates
accursed the parents who withheld the blessing from
the child. Its support by the sword has called the Baptists
to extreme sufferings, but they are additionally convinced
of its origin from its companion and defence, and know that
every rite defended by the sword shall perish by the sword.
† Bap. Mag. ib.
Retire
Into Obscurity
…ambitious
character of its officers, with the tyrannical spirit of its
bishops, prompted them to crush every opposing interest.
They, consequently, robbed the Novatianists of all their
churches, and drove them into obscurity. About this time,
some epistles appeared against them,
425
written by different individuals, which had a baneful
influence at this period on the interests of this people.
One individual, whose hostility was felt by the
432
Novatianists, was Celestines, one of Innocent's successors,
A.D., 432. He took possession of all their churches in the
city of Rome, and compelled them to worship in private
houses, in the most obscure places.
455
A council was convened at Aries, and at Lyons, in 455, in
which the views of the Novatianists on predestination were
controverted, and by which name they were stigmatized.*
These
holy people now retired from public notice; yet it is pretty
manifest that, while some of them sought asylums in other
kingdoms, many of these despised people continued in Italy,
and a succession of them will be found under another name.†
476
In 476, on the 23rd of August, a period was put
to all persecution in Italy, by the subjection of that
kingdom to the Goths, whose laws breathed the purest spirit
of equal and universal liberty. The state of religion out of
the Catholic church is not made apparent This civil and
religious liberty continued for about three centuries,
during which time the dissidents, no doubt, greatly
increased.‡ The accounts given of the Novatianists,…
* Mezeray, p. 19, Clovis.
† Mosh. Hist. cent. 12, p. 2,
c. 5,
S
4, note; and cent. 11, p. 2, c. 5,
S
2, note; and cent. 11, p. 2, c. 2,
S
13, note.
‡ Rob. Res. ch. 8, pp.
151,157.
…by Eusebius and Socrates in their histories,
are decided proofs of their extensive influence. That they
575
subsisted towards the end of the sixth century, is evident
from the book of Eulogius, bishop of Alexander. Dr. Lardner
remarks, "The vast extent of this sect is manifest from the
names of the authors who have mentioned or written against
them, and from the several parts of the Roman empire in
which they were found. It is evident, too, that these
churches had among them some individuals of note and
eminence."
10.
The rise of these puritans at so critical a period, their
soundness in the faith, their regard to character and purity
of communion, their vast extent, and long success, must have
had a powerful influence in all the vicinity of their
churches, in checking the ambition and secularity of the
established clergy, and in shedding a moral auspice on
benighted provinces. These sealed witnesses, Rev. vii. 3,
were the Erst protestant dissenters from assuming
hierarchies; and it is most gratifying to be able to prove
ourselves the successors of a class of men who first set the
example of contending for the purity and simplicity of
Christian worship, and a firm adherence to the laws of the
King of Zion.*
*
Robins. EC. Res. ch. 8. Jones' Lect., 25. See a detailed
account of the Novatianists in Lardner's Credibility of the
Gospel History, vol. iii. Part 2, c. 47, p. 206-seq.