Christians in Armenia
Nonconformity General
Mahomet and Paulicians
Paulicians Rise
Paulicians’ Sentiments
Paulicians’ Discipline
Primitive Christians
Sylvanus’s Death
Simeon’s Conversion
Persecutions and Deaths
Paulicians Emigrate
Take Root in Europe
It was needful for me to
write unto you, and exhort you that you should earnestly
contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the
saints. Jude 3.
1. The council of Nice, already referred to,
took notice of two sorts of Dissenters, who held separate
assemblies. These were the Cathari and Paulianists, the
latter were a kind of semi-Arians; the former were
Trinitarians…
Christians
in Armenia
…(Novatianists,) who viewed the Catholic
church as a worldly community. These Puritans or
Novatianists were exceedingly numerous in Phrygia.* These
Dissenters baptized all that joined their assemblies by
immersion in the name of the Trinity, on a personal
profession of faith; and if
350 they had been
baptized before, they re-baptized them.
Canons now were enacted by aspiring prelates,† yet
the Greek Christians paid very little regard to any
ecclesiastical rule, and though successive assemblies were
called, the more the bishops tried to enforce uniformity,
the faster what they called heresy spread; so that, in the
twelfth century, the world was full of (dissidents,)
heretics.‡
* Lardner,
Cred. of the Gos. v. iii. p. 2, c. 47, p. 310.
† During the last century,
baptism was viewed as preparing the soul for glory, and
sequently, it was delayed for years, or till death
approached. This delay and neglect, these prelates were
anxious to recover the people from, and in their expressions
and zeal for the ordinance, they brought the people to the
other extreme, and pernicious consequences ensued.
360 Basil expressed to his
people the bitter complaints those would make, who died
unbaptized.
360 Gregory Nazianzen speaks
of different punishments for different persons, in another
world, which is to be regulated by their treatment of
baptism.
374 Ambrose says, "For no one
comes to the kingdom of heaven but by baptism. Those not
baptized may have a freedom from punishment, which is not
clear."
380 Chrysostum declares,
there is no receiving the bequeathed inheritance before one
is baptized.
388
Angustin asserts, "Salvation of a person is completed by
baptism and conversion."
These assertions awakened each person under these
prelates' charge, to receive baptism; the penitent, the
prisoner, sickly persons and children, the dying, and dead
bodies, received the purifying rite, in order to avoid the
purgatory of the unbaptized. This was the strong limb to
paedobaptism !!!
‡ Rob. Res. pp. 71—3.
2. It appears highly probable, from many
circumstances, that both the greater and lesser Armenia were
enlightened with the knowledge of the truth, not long after
the first rise of Christianity. The interests in communion
with 350 Rome
and Constantinople were, in this fourth century,
incorporated with the parent society.* The character of the
Armenians was, that they were a frugal, laborious, stern,
and peaceable people, if let alone, but formidable and
warlike, if oppressed; which accounts for the policy of the
government at early periods, and the evils resulting in its
change of measures towards Dissenters in these and other
provinces. † While the Catholics were engaged about the
relics of Palestine, and professors in hierarchies were
subsiding into an awful and secure slumber, a reformer
appeared, in the person of one AERIUS, a…
* Mosheim
History, C. 4, pt. 1, chapter 1,
S
19. note. No one
circumstance ever gave such footing, or ever strengthened
national establishments so much, as infant baptism. Minor
baptism was confined to no age; it might have been at
fourteen years, as in the Georgian nation, which embraced
Christianity under Constantine, Wall, pt. 2, p. 260, or at
seven or six, as recorded, Rob. Hist. Bap. pp. 144, 299. But
the general 381
delay of baptism was a distress to the clergy. Id. 249.
Gregory at Constantinople, A. D., 381, and Austin, at Hippo,
introduced new views and rites. The first considered
children might be dipped at three years of age, Id. 349, and
also babes, if in danger of death. Id. 249, as dying
unbaptized, left their future state uncertain, ut sup.; the
latter asserts, infants are baptized for the pardon of sin.
Wall, i. 303. The anxiety on the part of the orthodox, to
rescue children from the errors of the Arians, was in this
age manifest. No way promised so much success as the
obligations to keep the creed into which each was solemnly
baptized. This charity in both parties, Arians and
Trinitarians, furthered the infant cause, and gave
additional importance to those interests which aspired to
orthodoxy or eminency in numbers. See Eight causes
furthering Paedobaptism, Rob. Bap. c. 27.
† Rob. ut sup.
…375
Presbyter monk. "He excited divisions," says Mosheim,*
throughout ARMENIA.†
Pontus, and Cappadocia, by propagating opinions different
from those that were commonly received. He condemned prayers
for the dead, stated fasts, the celebration of Easter, and
other rites of that nature, in which the multitudes
erroneously imagine that the life and soul of religion
consists. One of his principal tenets was, that the bishops
were not distinguished from presbyters by any divine right;
but, that according to the institution of the New Testament,
their offices and authority were absolutely the same. His
great purpose seems to have been that of reducing
Christianity to its primitive simplicity.‡ He erected a new
society, and we know, with the utmost certainty, that it was
highly agreeable to many good Christians, who were no longer
able to bear the tyranny and arrogance of the bishops of
this century.
* Mosh. Hist. c. 4, p. 2, ch. 3,
S
21.
† Wolf,
the Missionary, says, "The priest (of Armenia) puts the
child 1825 into the
water, and washes the head with three handfuls of water, and
prays, and saith, 'I baptize thee in the name,' &c., and
then dips the child," &c., Bap. Mag. 1826, v. xviii. p. 29.
This is confirmed by Missionaries
1832 Smith and Dwight,
who say, according to the rules of the Armenian church,
baptism consists in plunging the whole body in water three
times, as the sacred formula is repeated. Miss. Resear. in
Armenia, p. 512, & c. See Simon's Critical History of the
Relig. and Customs of Eastern Nations, chap. 12 and 13, p.
134,&c.
‡ We are unacquainted with
this reformer's views and success. The mode of baptizing in
the East, is farther stated by Millar, who asserts, "In all
the oriental provinces with the northern nations, immersion
is the only mode of baptism, the child is dipped three times
in Russia, as in the Greek
church." Geog. v. ii. p. 48O,
col. 1.
Each house in the East has its bagnio, where there is
every convenience for bathing in hot or cold water, Lady
Montague's Letters, let. 43, v. ii. Rob. Bap. c. 9.
"The Russians baptize adults in the river, by trine
immersion," by Millar's Geog. ib. and see Authorities quoted
in Robinson's Letter to Dr. Turner, Works, v. iv. p. 235.
Bathing was a practice of great antiquity; the
Greeks, as well as the heroic age, are said to have
constantly bathed. Immersion would to such be very
agreeable, Floyer's Hist. of Bathing. Dr. G. S. Howard's New
Royal Encyclo. v. i. Art. Bathing. Sir R. Ker Porter's
Travels, v. i. p. 231. On Baths.
3. We have now no interesting matters to
give, nor can we detail any information, to break the
monotony of the aspect of the interests generally, for
nearly two centuries. The Nonconformists continued to be
dispersed all over the empire, and had trusted to Providence
for liberty to worship. Their history is large, and has
proved difficult to many. The clergy were always
troublesome, but never attempted their conversion. Some
emperors had been indifferent to them, others had cherished
them, others had persecuted them. We shall leave the general
history, and endeavor to identify one class of consistent
Puritans. Few 612
of the clergy of the establishments could compose
a discourse in the seventh century, when Mahomet arose to
scourge the nations.*
Mosheim speaks of a drooping faction, in this
century,…
* Mahomet
has rendered baptizo in the Koran, divine dying. Immersion
is only one part, the tinging of the soul with faith and
grace, is the other; or tincturing the mind with the
doctrines of the gospel, we should say. In this way all
through the Koran, he has fully translated the word, Rob.
Bap. p. 7, and 493. But dying is not done by sprinkling or
pouring, but the subject dyed is dipped. Gale's Ref. Let. 3,
p. 83. The Mahometans are totally immersed, or bathed in
water. Sale's Koran, v. i. s. 4, pp. 138-40. This mode of
baptizing is further evident from the most respectable
historians. The mosque of Damascus, says Dr. Pocock, has an
octagon baptistery, View of the East, v. ii. b. 2, c. 8, p.
120. On each side of the mosque, are fountains for the
purpose of washing before worship. Id. v. ii. b. 5, ch. 1,
p. 128. No unbaptized person may enter a Mahometan church,
Lon. Ency. v. i. p. 59, col. 2. Pitt's Relig. and Customs of
the Mahom. pp. 80—2. Robins. Hist. Bap. c. 35. Gale's Ref.
Let. 4, p. 122.
The Syrians, the Armenians, the Persians, and all the
oriental nations, who must have understood the Greek word
baptize, have practised dipping, and it is so rendered in
their versions of the Scriptures, Rob. Hist. Bap. p. 7.
Ryland's Cand. Reasons.
Baptizo is rendered to dip, by the Peshito, Syriac,
Arabic, Ethiopic, Coptic, Gothic, German or Luther, Dutch,
Danish, and Swedish versions. See Greenfield's Def. of the
Mahratta version, pp. 40—44.
…with whom the Greek church was engaged in
the most bitter and violent controversy. This drooping
faction in 650
Armenia, he calls Manicheans, and says they were revived by
Paul and John, two brothers, who revived the doctrine, and
modified it, from which sprang a new sect. But as Dr.
Mosheim's account is at variance with others, we shall
select our materials of this new sect from other sources.
653 4. It
was about the year 653, that a new sect came into
notice in the East,* under the name of Paulicians, which
deserves our attention. There resided in the city of
Mananalis, in Armenia, an obscure person of the name of
CONSTANTINE, with whom this sect appears to have originated.
One day, a stranger called upon him, who had been a prisoner
among the Saracens, in Syria, and having obtained his
release, was returning home through this city; he was kindly
received by Constantine, and entertained some days at his
house. To requite the hospitality of his generous host, he
gave Constantine two manuscripts, which he had brought out
of Syria; and these were the four gospels, and the Epistles
of the apostle Paul.
* In Vaughan's Life of Wickliff , v. i. c. 2,
s. 1, p. 115, the denominational aspect of this sect is
suppressed, though Gibbon has spoken out; this course is
pursued through that work. Those who neglect part of the
commission, are afraid to mention its performance in other
denominations.
From the nature of the gift, it is not
unreasonable to conclude that the stranger set a value upon
these manuscripts, that he was acquainted with their
contents, and was one who knew the truth, all which receives
corroboration from the fact, that he had been an
office-bearer, a deacon in a Christian church. It is equally
probable that the conversation of Constantine and his guest
would occasionally turn upon the contents of these
manuscripts. That his conversation and present had some
effects on the mind of Constantine, is evident, for, from
the time he got acquainted with the contents of these
writings, it is said he would touch no other books. He threw
away his Manichean library, exploded and rejected many of
the absurd notions of his countrymen. He became a teacher of
the doctrines of Christ and his apostles.* "He formed to
himself," says Milner, "a plan of divinity from the New
Testament; and as Paul is the most systematic of all the
apostles, Constantine very properly attached himself to his
writings with peculiar attention. From the attention this
sect paid to this apostle's epistles and doctrine, they
obtained the name of Paulicians."
"In the present instance," continues Milner, "I see
reason to suppose the Paulicians to have been perfect
originals. The little that has been mentioned concerning
them, carries entirely this appearance; and I hope it may be
shortly evident that they originated from a heavenly
influence, teaching and converting them; and that, in them
we have one of those extraordinary effusions of the divine
Spirit (on his word), by which the knowledge of Christ and
the practice of godliness is kept alive in the world."†
*Jones's
Lect. on EC. Hist. v. ii. p. 179.
† History of Church, Cent. 9,
ch. 2.
Paulicians'
Sentiments
These originals, or rather, restorers of the
New Testament order of things, being allowed by all
historians to have been the encouragers, if not the main
strength of the Albigensian churches in France, at after
periods; we shall be the more particular in our attention to
their character and practice.*
5. The Paulicians sincerely condemned the
memory and opinions of the Manichean sect, and complained of
the injustice which impressed that invidious name on the
simple followers of Paul and Christ. The objects which had
been transformed by the magic of superstition, appeared to
the eyes of the Paulicians in their genuine and naked
colors. Of the ecclesiastical chain, many links were broken
by these reformers; and against the gradual innovations of
discipline and doctrine, they were strongly guarded by habit
and aversion, as by the silence of Paul and the Evangelists.
They attached themselves with peculiar devotion to the
writings and character of Paul, and in whom they gloried. In
the gospels, and epistles of Paul, Constantine investigated
the creed of the primitive Christians; and whatever might be
the success, a Protestant reader will applaud the spirit of
the inquiry. In practice, or at least in theory, of the
sacraments, the Paulicians were inclined to abolish all
visible objects of worship, and the words of the gospel
were, in their judgments, the baptism and communion of the
faithful. A creed thus simple and spiritual, was not adapted
to the genius of the times, and the rational Christian was
offended at the violation offered to his religion by the
Paulicians. †
6. In confirmation of the above historian, as
to their views of the ordinance of Baptism, we subjoin the
authorities of a few respectable writers.
* Gibbon's Ro. Hist. Ch. 54.
†
Gibbon, ut sup.
Paulicians'
Discipline
In these churches of the Paulicians, the
sacraments of baptism and the Lord's Supper, they held to be
peculiar to the communion of the faithful; i.e., to be
restricted to believers.*
The Paulicians or Bogomilians baptized and
re-baptized adults by immersion, as the Manicheans and all
other denominations did in the East, upon which mode there
was no dispute in the Grecian church. †
"It is evident," says Mosheim, "they rejected
the baptism of infants. They were not charged with any error
concerning baptism."‡
"They, with the Manicheans, were Anabaptists,
or rejecters of infant baptism," says Dr. Allix, "and were
consequently often reproached with that term."
S
"They were simply scriptural in the use of
the sacraments," says Milner, "they were orthodox in the
doctrine of the Trinity, they knew of no other Mediator than
the Lord Jesus Christ."||
7. These people were called Acephali, or
headless (from having no distinct order of clergy, or
presiding person in their assemblies) and were hooted in
councils for re-baptizing in private houses, says Robinson,
and holding conventicles; and for calling the established
church a worldly community, and re-baptizing such as joined
their churches.
([ The religious principles and practices of these
people are purposely mangled and misrepresented, but it is
possible…
* Jones's Lect. v. ii. p. 181.
† Rob. Bapt. p. 211; and Res.
pp. 90 —93.
‡ Mosh. Hist., Cent. 2, pt.
2, ch. 5,
S
4 and note.
S
Rem. Ch. Pied. ch. 15, p. 138, and Rob. Bap., p. 497.
|| Ch. Hist. Cent. 9, ch. 2.
([ Res. p. 92.
…to obtain some evidences of what they were.
They are charged with neglecting the Old Testament; but they
knew that economy was abolished, they therefore rejected it
as a rule of faith, not as history. The expounders of
Genesis filled the church with vain disputes about matter
and spirit, the origin and duration of the world. They saw
the priests set up Exodus, Numbers, Leviticus, and
Deuteronomy, as rules for an hierarchy. The books of Joshua,
Judges, Samuel, Kings, and Chronicles, gave kings authority
to slay and kill in the cause of Jesus. And the infant cause
not complied with, required the cutting off, which has been
but too successfully prosecuted by the advocates of the
rite. The Paulicians, with other dissenters, rejected the
Pentateuch and the historical books down to Job, as a rule
of faith and practice in a Christian community, and received
the devotional and prophetical parts with the New Testament,
as a law for the Lord's house.* The writings and the lives
of their eminent ministers are totally lost; so that we know
nothing of these men but from the pens of their enemies, yet
even these confess their excellency. †
8. But we
now return to their efforts. Constantine gave himself the
scriptural name of Sylvanus. He preached with great success
in Pontus and Cappadocia, regions once enlightened and
renowned for Christianity and suffering piety (1 Pet. i.)
were again blessed with the gospel through his exertions.‡
Great numbers of disciples were made and gathered into
societies. The body of Christians in Armenia came over to
the Paulicians, and…
* Res. p.
90, and Hist. of Bap. p. 450.
† Milner's Ch. Hist. Cent. 9,
ch. 2.
‡ Ibid.
Primitive
Christians
…embraced their views. In a little time,
congregations were gathered in the provinces of Asia Minor,
to the westward of the river Euphrates. Their opinions were
also silently propagated in Rome, Milan, and in the kingdom
beyond the Alps (France).
Churches were formed as much upon the plan
and model of the apostolic churches as it was in their power
to bring them. Six of their principal churches took the
names of those to which Paul addressed his epistles, Rome,
Corinth, Ephesus, Philippi, Colosse, Thessalonica; while the
names of Sylvanus's fellow-teachers were Titus, Timothy,
Tychicus, "This innocent allegory," says Gibbon,* "revived
the memory and example of the first ages." The Paulician
teachers were thus distinguished only by their scriptural
names. They were known by the modest title of
fellow-pilgrims, by the austerity of their lives, their zeal
or knowledge, and the credit of some extraordinary gifts of
the Holy Spirit. They were incapable of desiring the wealth
and honors of the Catholic prelacy; such antichristian pride
they bitterly censured; and even the rank of elders or
presbyters was condemned as an institution of the Jewish
synagogue. † There is no mention in all the account of this
people of any clergy among them.‡ Though charged with the
Manichean errors, they have been honorably freed from this
reproach by respectable writers.
S
They called themselves Christians, but the Catholics
they named Romans, as if they had been heathens. ||
9. We have here exhibited a confession of
simple…
* Ro. Hist., ch. 54.
† Id. note, "The candor of
Gibbon is remarkable in this part of his history."—Milner.
‡ Rob. Res. p. 80.
S
Jortin's Rem. on Hist. v. iii., p. 498, and Lardner's Cred.
of the Gosp. History, pt. 2, ch. 63, v. iii., p. 546.
||
Lardner, Id. p. 407.
…worship, a scriptural constitution to their
churches and its officers, with a blameless feature in the
manners of these Christians, which has been conceded by
their enemies. Their standard of
perfection was so high in Christian morals that their
increasing congregations were divided into two classes of
disciples.* They had not any ecclesiastical government,
administered by bishops, priests, or deacons: they had no
sacred order of men distinguished by their manner of life,
their habit, or any other circumstance from the rest of the
assembly. They had certain teachers whom they called
companions in the journey of life; among these there reigned
a perfect equality, and they had no peculiar rights,
privileges, nor any external mark of dignity to distinguish
them from the people. They recommended to the people without
exception, and that with the most affecting and ardent zeal,
the constant and assiduous perusal of the Scriptures, and
expressed the utmost indignation against the Greeks who
allowed to the priests alone an access to those sacred
fountains of divine knowledge.†
No object can be more laudable than the
attempt to bring back the Christian profession to its
original simplicity, which evidently appears to have been
the aim of the Paulicians, though for this commendable
conduct, terms of reproach and epithets of disgrace have
been heaped on their memories by interested historians and
dictionary writers. In this good work of preaching and
680 evangelizing
provinces, Sylvanus spent twenty seven years of his life,
taking up his residence at…
* These two classes can be traced through the
Albigensian, Waldensian, German, and Dutch Baptist Churches,
from this parent stock.
†
Mosh. Hist. C. 9. p. 2, ch. 5.
S 5.
Simeon's
Conversion
…COBOSSA, and disseminating his opinions all
around. The united exertions of these people, their
scriptural views, doctrine, discipline, and itinerating
system, were attended with evident displays of divine
approbation, and multitudes embraced a gospel simply and
fully preached.
10. Alarmed at the progress these novel
opinions were making, and discovering the growing importance
of the Paulicians, the church party "engaged in the most
bitter and virulent controversy with them." Ineffectual in
their efforts the Greek emperors began to persecute them
with the most sanguinary severity. The Paulicians were
sentenced to be capitally punished, and their books,
wherever found, to be committed to the flames; and further,
that if any person was found to have secreted them, he was
to be put to death, and his goods confiscated.
A Greek officer named Simeon, armed with
legal and military authority, appeared at CORONIA to strike
the shepherd, Sylvanus, and to reclaim, it possible, the
lost sheep. By a refinement of cruelty, this minister of
justice placed the unfortunate Sylvanus before a line of his
disciples, who were commanded, as the price of their pardon,
and as proof of their penitence, to stone to death their
spiritual Father. The affectionate flock turned aside from
the impious office; the stones dropped from their filial
hands; and of the whole number, only one executioner could
be found. This apostate, Justus, after putting Sylvanus to
death, gained by some means admittance into communion, and
again deceived and betrayed his unsuspecting brethren; and
as many as were treacherously ascertained, and could be
collected, were massed together into an immense pile, and by
order of the emperor, consumed to ashes. Simeon, the
officer, struck with astonishment at the readiness with
which the Paulicians could die for their religion, examined
their arguments, and became himself a convert, renounced his
honors and fortune, and three years
692 afterwards
went to Cobossa, and became the successor of Constantine
Sylvanus, a zealous preacher among the Paulicians, and at
last sealed his testimony with his blood.* To free the East
from those troubles and commotions said to arise from the
Paulician doctrines, a great number of them were transported
into THRACE during this century; but still a greater number
were left in Syria and the adjoining countries. From Thrace
these people passed into Bulgaria and Sclavonia, where they
took root, and settled in their own church order.
From these churches, at after periods
colonies were sent out, and they are said to have inundated
Europe, † though some relics of these ancient communities
were to be traced till the fifteenth century.
700
11. From the blood and ashes of the first Paulician victims,
a succession of teachers and congregations repeatedly arose.
The Greeks, to subdue them, made use both of arguments and
arms, with all the terror of penal laws, without effecting
their object. The great instrument of this people's
multiplication was, the alone use of the New Testament, of
which some pleasing anecdotes are related. One Sergius was
recommended by a Paulician woman to read Paul's writings,
and his attention to the sacred records brought him to
embrace their views. For thirty-four years he devoted
himself to the ministry of the gospel. Through every city
and province that Sergius…
*
Milner and Jones, ut sup.
† Mosh. Hist. c. 11, p. 2,
ch. 5,
S
2, 3.
Persecutions
and Deaths
…could reach, he spread abroad the savor of
the knowledge of Christ, and with such success, that the
clergy in the hierarchies considered him to be the
forerunner of Antichrist; and declared he was producing the
great apostacy 703
foretold by Paul. The emperors, in conjunction with the
clergy, exerted their zeal with a peculiar degree of
bitterness and fury against this people. Though every kind
of oppressive measure and means was used, yet all efforts
for their suppression proved fruitless, "nor could all their
power and all their barbarity, exhaust the
741 patience nor
conquer the obstinacy of that inflexible people, who
possessed," says Mosheim, "a fortitude worthy of a better
cause"!!!
795 12. The face of things changed
towards the end of the eighth century, and the prospects of
this harassed people brightened under the emperor
Nicephorus, who restored to them their civil and religious
802 privileges.
During this auspicious season the Paulicians widely
disseminated their opinions, and it is recorded that they
became formidable to the East.* Those persecuting laws which
had been suspended for some years, were renewed and enforced
with redoubled fury un 811
der the reigns of Michael and Leo, who made strict
inquisition throughout every province in the Grecian empire,
and inflicted capital punishment upon such of them as
refused to return to the bosom of the church. These decrees
drove the Paulicians into desperate measures. "Oppression
maketh a wise man mad."† The Paulicians are now charged with
having put to death some…
* Chambers' Cyclop. Art. Paulicians.
† Gibbon renders an indirect
apology for the conduct of these people at this period.
Hist. ch. 54.
…of their clerical oppressors, and also of
taking refuge in those provinces governed by Saracens, and
that in union with those barbarians, they infested the
Grecian states.
The power and influence of these dissidents
were found to be so great as to suggest the policy of
allowing them to return to their own habitations, and
dwelling there in tranquility. The severest persecution
experienced by them 845
was encouraged by the empress Theodora, A. D. 845.
Her decrees were severe, but the cruelty with which they
were put in execution by her officers was horrible beyond
expression. Mountains and hills were covered with
inhabitants. Her sanguinary inquisitors explored cities and
mountains in lesser Asia. After confiscating the goods and
property of one hundred thousand of these people, the owners
to that number were put to death in the most barbarous
manner, and made to expire slowly under a variety of the
most exquisite tortures. The flatterers of the empress boast
of having extirpated in nine years that number of
Paulicians. Many of them were scattered abroad, particularly
in Bulgaria. Some fortified the city of Tephrice and
Philippopolis, from which last city they were called
Philippopolitans; and though they were driven hence, yet the
spirit of independence was not subdued. A portion of this
people emigrated from Thrace, and their doctrines soon
struck deep root in European soil. Such as escaped from the
inquisitors fled to the Saracens, who received them with
compassion; and in conjunction with whom, under experienced
officers, they maintained a war with the Grecian nation for
the period of one hundred
975 and fifty years. During the reign of John
Zimicus, they gained considerable strength, and during the
tenth century, they spread themselves abroad…
…throughout different provinces. From
Bulgaria they removed into Italy, and spreading themselves
from thence through the other provinces of Europe, "they
became extremely troublesome to the Roman pontiffs upon many
occasions." Here the history of this interesting people
rests, so far as it respects the Levant; but we shall give a
slight statement of their migratory movements in order to
make our future sections illustrative of these people,
though under different names.
13. "From Italy," says Mosheim, "the
Paulicians sent colonies into almost all the other provinces
of Europe, and formed gradually a considerable number of
religious assemblies, who adhered to their doctrine, and who
realized every opposition and indignity from the popes. It
is undoubtedly certain, from the most authentic records,
that a 1050
considerable number of them were, about the middle of the
eleventh century, settled in Lombardy, Insubria, but
principally at Milan; and that many of them led a wandering
life in France, Germany, and other countries, where they
captivated the esteem and admiration of the multitude by
their sanctity. In Italy, they were called Paterini and
Cathari. In France, they were denominated Bulgarians, from
the kingdom of their emigration, also Publicans, instead of
Paulicians, and boni homines, good men; but were chiefly
known by the term Albigenses, from the town of Alby, in the
Upper Langue doc. The first religious assembly which the
Paulicians 1017
formed in Europe is said to have been at Orleans, in the
year 1017, on which we shall enlarge under the churches in
France, to which we shall repair after we have traced their
existence and labors in the kingdom of Italy.
Take Root in Europe
14. Here we may be permitted to review the
apostolic character and exertions of this extensive body of
people, while we may express our surprise at the virulent
opposition, the cruel measures used, and the extensive
sacrifice of human life, for successive ages, on the alone
ground of religious views. A special instance of divine
grace was displayed in this people's rise and early success;
and we must attribute their preservation and enlargement to
the exercise of the same compassion. An evident mark of
apostolic spirit possessed by this people must be admitted
by all; without any funds or public societies to countenance
or support the arduous undertaking, otherwise than their
respective churches, the Paulicians fearlessly penetrated
the most barbarous parts of Europe, and went single-handed,
and single eyed, to the conflict with every grade of
character. In several instances they suffered death or
martyrdom, not counting their lives dear, so that they could
promote the cause of their Redeemer. See Mosheim's History.
Gibbon's Ro. Hist. ch. 54. Robinson's Eccl. Res. ch. 6, pp.
74—79. Jones's Lectures on Eccl. Hist. v. ii., pp. 179-184.