Lyonese Persecuted
Novatianists In France
Waldenses In France And
Spain
Views
Of Baptism
Invasion Of The Saracens
Infant-Immersion Law
Itinerant Baptism
The
Albigenses
Paulician Puritans
"I will give power unto my
two witnesses,* and they shall prophesy," &c. — Rev, xi. 3,
4.
1. TAKING the general features of this
prophecy, it appears to have had a more exact accomplishment
in the Albigensian and Waldensian churches, than in any
other statement of religious communities on record. This
application to them of the terms, the two candlesticks and
two witnesses, appears more reasonable than any other
exposition given. It is rather
remarkable that these two churches took for their emblem a
candlestick and seven stars, surrounded with a motto of "the
light shining in darkness."
2. It has been asserted with considerable
grounds of probability, that the gospel was preached in Gaul
(France) 60 by
the great apostle of the Gentiles: but we have no records
that mention, with certainty, the establishment of
Christianity in Transalpine Gaul, before the second century.
Pothinus, or Photinus, a man of exemplary piety and zeal,
set out from Asia, and labored in the Christian cause with
success among the Gauls; that from his efforts churches were
established at…
* These witnesses were to prophesy
1260 days. In 533, the church and empire were both regulated
by the Justinian code; and in 1260 years after, the
Republican French government, in 1792-3, abrogated this
union, when the establishment of priesthood and church by
law was abolished. Here Justin's acts appear in reference to
a state-church entirely rescinded, and the consequence was
serious to the pope and his hierarchy.
Lyonese
Persecuted
…Lyons and Vienne, of which Photinus himself
was the 158
first pastor. Irenaeus is supposed to have visited Lyons
about A.D. 158, and succeeded to the pastorate of that
church after Photinus's death. While Irenaeus held this
situation, the churches experienced a severe
177 persecution,
under the emperor Marcus Aurelius, of which Irenaeus gave
some particulars to the churches of Asia. He asserts, that
the heathens were very bitter against the followers of the
Redeemer. The vilest calumnies were propagated against them,
consequently they were prohibited appearing in any house
except their own; they were forbidden to appear in the
baths, in the markets, or in any public places. The first
attack came from the populace by means of shouts, blows,
dragging their bodies, plundering their goods, with all the
indignities and indecencies that might be expected from a
fierce and outrageous multitude. Many were hurried to the
magistrates—others were led to martyrdom. Some professors,
at the beginning of the trial, lapsed into idolatry, which
occasioned the brethren the keenest sorrow, they knowing the
serious consequences of apostacy under such circumstances.
Most of those who fainted under the commencement of this
fiery trial were brought to repent, and were restored. A
woman named Biblis, under torture, said, in answer to her
accusers, "How could they (Christians) devour infants, which
were not suffered to eat the blood of brutes."* Their
sufferings are detailed in most histories. † This state of
things lasted eighteen years, during which period apologies
were written for the suffering churches and…
* See above
Sect. 2,
S
2, 4.
† Euseb. Ecc. Hist. Lib. 5,
cap. 1 Milner and Jones.
Novatianists
in France
…presented to the emperor, which in some
instances were found to moderate the prejudices of their
enemies.
While other nations were adoring trees,
fountains, and other ridiculous objects, the inhabitants of
Gaul were most of them Christians, and diverse churches
existed in the second century in Narbonne, Gaul.* Simondi
says that "Toulouse had scarcely ever been free of this
heresy from its first foundation, which the fathers
transmitted to their children from generation to generation,
almost from the origin of Christianity."†
3. The city of Lyons was again visited with
the vengeance of the emperor. Severus, in
202, treated
the Christians of this city with the
greatest cruelty. Such was the excess of his barbarity, that
the rivers were colored with human blood, and the public
places of the city were filled with the dead bodies of
professors. It is recorded of this church, that since its
formation it has been watered with the blood of twenty
thousand martyrs,
o These severities led
Christians to reside on the borders of kingdoms and in the
recesses of mountains; and it is probable the Pyrenees and
Alps afforded some of those persecuted people an asylum from
local irritation. It is more than probable that Piedmont
afforded shelter to some of these Lyonese, since it is
recorded that Christians in the valleys during the second
century did profess and practise the baptising of believers
which accords with the views of Irenaeus and others recorded
during the early ages. S
4. Novatian, whose labors were attended with
so much…
* Mezeray's Fr. Hist., p. 4,
fol.
† History of the Crusades, p.
6.
o
Collier's Gr. Hist. Diet. Art. Lyons.
S
See above, Sect. 2,
S 4.
…success
in Italy and in the East, is said to have influenced
250 some churches
in France. "About the year 250," says Mezeray, "divers holy
men came from Rome as preachers, who planted churches in
several parts, as at Thoulouse, Tours, and other places."*
Faustus, bishop of Lyons, with several other French bishops,
says Milner, 254
wrote to Stephen, bishop of Rome (254), concerning these
Novatianists, who again wrote to Cyprian, of Carthage.
This bishop replied to Stephen, supporting the views
and practice advocated by strongly the cause of the church
against schismatics. Marcian, pastor of Arelate, united
himself to the Novatianists. † Though the gospel had an
early footing in Gaul, it appears to have partaken of the
early corruptions, which were evidently checked by Novatian
and his adherents, which becomes clear from the anger and
reproach apparent among Cyprian, and his ambitious brethren.
430
In 430, the Burgundians, a people of Germany, who had
received the Christian faith, came into, and obtained a
settlement at, Vienne and Lyons;† but their influence on
these interests is not recorded, though their views of
baptism will be given in the German section. The soundness
of the Novatian 455
creed was allowed at Rome, and the same was seen in the
council of Aries, and at Lyons, where, from their views on
predestination, they appear to have been distinguished.
S
5. The south of France is separated from the
north of Spain by the Pyrenean mountains, which extend from
the…
* French
Hist., p. 4.
† Hist. of the Ch. C. 3, ch.
13.
o
Mezeray's Hist. Fr., p. 8.
S
Id., p. 19.
Waldenses
in France and Spain
…Mediterranean Sea to the Atlantic: that is above two
hundred miles, and in breadth, in several places, more than
a hundred. The surface is, as may be supposed, most
wonderfully diversified. Hills rise upon hills, mountains
over mountains, some bare of verdure, others covered with
forests of huge cork-trees, oak, beech, chestnut, and
evergreens. Nature, in all her original wildness and beauty,
is here seen undisturbed, and giving forth in profusion all
those productions which can gratify the eye, regale the
sense, and satisfy alike the peasant and the prince.
Numerous flocks of sheep and goats enliven the hills, while
the herdsmen and manufacturers of wool inhabit the valleys;
and corn and wine, flax and oil, hang on the slopes. When
travelers of taste pass over some parts of the Pyrenees,
they are in raptures, and are at a loss for words to express
what they behold. To these mountains, in all periods, the
sons of freedom fled. Here the Celts found shelter. Here the
Goths realized a refuge when the Saracens overran Spain. On
the south side of these mountains was Spain, and
particularly the province of Catelonia, which was inhabited
by those persons who originated the Waldenses. Persons
holding sentiments in accordance with the true Waldenses
were very numerous in Spain;* they were thousands, and tens
of…
* The early state of the Spanish churches is
unknown; nor do we know whether Paul paid his promised visit
to the Christians in this kingdom. In the third century,
several denominations of Christians prevailed in Spain. In
the fourth century, the Donatists visited it; and the
Hieracites, with the Manicheans, were there. There is no
regular history of Spain till 324, at which time the Roman
church had no influence over others; the primitive
discipline was maintained, and the independency of the
churches not greatly interrupted. These churches were united
by the tie of charity to the churches in Gascony, in France.
Their mode of administering baptism, in A. D. 409, was by
dipping; nor does it appear that they baptized any but
believers. Rob. Res. 197. In the sixth century, the subject
of single and trine immersion was agitated, which, in 617,
was adjusted among the Catholics, by Pope Gregory declaring
trine immersion not essential to salvation.
During this century, besides Jews and Catholics,
there were abounding in Spain Manicheans, Priscillianists,
Acephali (Paulicians), Sebellians, with others, all termed
heretics by Catholics. All these Christians administered
baptism by immersion, single or trine; and all baptized
those who offered themselves for their respective
communions. Id. p. 213. There is no trace of minor nor
infant baptism till 517, and in 572, the charges for
baptizing infants were so excessive, that many infants were
lost, which frightened timorous mothers into compliance; and
thus the rite and the trade of infant salvation went still
together. While these practices were found in the church,
persons holding believers' baptism were spread all over
Spain; but one class, from inhabiting Catalonia, at the foot
of the mountains, was called Navarri—i. e., inhabitants of
valleys; these, at after periods, left Spain for France and
other provinces, and were called Vaudois in France and
Piedmont. Rob. Res., ch. 9, 10. M'Crie's Reform, in Spain.
Views
of Baptism
…thousands.* On the north of these mountains
was France, particularly Gascony and Languedoc, which two
provinces became inhabited by persons of a corresponding
character with those of Spain. "At an early period' Dr.
Allix says,† "the churches of the north of Spain were always
united with those of the south of France." The religious
views of these people are now known by the term Albigenses,
from their residing at or near Aibi, a city about forty-two
miles north-east of Toulouse. These people were considered a
rough, uncultivated, and unpolite people by the historians
and writers of their day.o
* Rob. Res., p. 299.
† Albig. Ch., ch. 11, p. 109.
o A. D. 496. On the eve of
Christmas-day, Clovis, founder of the French monarchy, and
his sister Audofledis, "were plunged in the sacred
lavatory." More than three thousand of his subjects followed
his example. The Baptistery was erected for the occasion,
while the monarch was being instructed. Mezeray's Fr. Hist.,
p. 15. A sermon preached to Clovis and those baptized with
him, on our Savior's crucifixion, led the monarch to cry
out, "If I and my Frames had been there, THAT should not
have happened."
500
6. In the language of councils at this period, Christians
are denominated, either from their opinions, heretics, or
with a view to their discipline, schismatics; but there was
one article of discipline in which they all agreed, and from
which they were frequently named, that was BAPTISM. They
held the Catholic community, not to be a church of Christ;
they therefore rebaptized such as had been baptized in that
community, before they admitted them to their fellowship.
For this conduct they were called Anabaptists. These
Baptists in France and Spain called themselves Christians;
and censured the fraud of those who imposed on the world, by
being called Catholics. They quoted abundance of Scripture
to prove a New Testament church consisted only of virtuous
persons, born of water and the Holy Spirit; they separated
from the Catholics, on account of the impurity of their
church; they took the New Testament for the rule of their
faith and practice. "The Albigenses admitted the catechumi,"
says Dr. Allix, "after an exact instruction, and prepared
them for receiving baptism by long-continued fasts, which
the church observed with them.* Thus these Christians
baptized Pagans and Jews, they re-immersed all Catholics;
and they baptized none without a personal
524 profession of
faith. † In a council held at Lerida, 524, it was decreed,
that such as had fallen into the prevarication of
Ana-baptism, as the Novatianists, with others, if they
should return to the Catholic church, should be received,
provided they had been baptized in the name of the Trinity.
Dissidents made no such distinctions; they immersed
converts, and re-baptized others.
* Rem. on Ch. Pied., ch. 2, p. 7.
† Robinson's Eccles. Res., p. 246.
Invasion
of the Saracens
We have here stated the views and practices
of the early Baptists, and are compelled to consider the
inhabitants of the foot of the Pyrenees, whether living on
the Spanish side or in the French provinces, as one and the
same class of people, Vaudois, who could shift to either
kingdom, as circumstances of oppression or liberty occurred
in the respective kingdoms.
7. At how early a period the opinions of the
660 Bulgarans,
Paulicians, or Bogomilans, were propagated beyond the Alps,
is uncertain to us, though the period of awful ignorance in
the Catholic church, during the seventh century, would
suggest the time.* Neither have we any means of
ascertaining, whether the old Puritan churches originated
the name of Albigenses, or that a church of dissident was
formed at Albi, by emigrants from Bulgaria or Italy. Mosheim
says, they received their
teachers,
or the conformation of their officers to eldership,
714 from the
churches in Italy. † In 714, the Moors entered Spain, and
conquered that kingdom.o
Their conquest is said to have been rather favorable to…
* The state of the Catholic clergy in France
at this period was awful; Mezeray says, most of them pursued
a military life;—clergy kept concubines, and deacons, four
or five at a time. Ignorance alarmingly prevailed. Bishops
were enjoined to learn and understand the Lord's prayer. The
bishops could not be prevailed on to exhort the people.
Women gave blessings to the people with the sign of the
cross; and conferred on virgins sacerdotal authority. Even a
woman, named Joan, filled the office of pontiff. Fr. Hist.,
p. 112, 115, 138. "The genuine religion of Jesus was unknown
in this century to clergy and laity, excepting a few of its
doctrines contained in the creed." The offices of religion
devolved on boys. Mezeray's Ib. Mosh. Hist., v. ii., p.
167), 421, and v. iii., p. 132, and v. i., p. 503. Rob.
Res., p. 258. Dr. Wall. Hist, pt. 1, p. 256.
† Mosh. Hist., v. ii., p. 224, note.
o Ockley's Hist. and Conq. of
the Saracens.
…liberty, and even religious freedom could be
procured for a small sum, yet these Baptists disdained to
purchase a native right, consequently they fled to the
mountains which separate Catalonia from Narbonensian Gaul.*
732
France was alike subject to those marauders from 721 to 732,
with the rest of the western empire. At the latter date,
Charles Martel was successful in recovering his kingdom from
the usurpers: and this military chieftain took the
treasuries of the church, with which he rewarded his
soldiers. † To what extent the Puritan churches realized
injury from the barbarians, we do not know; though it is
evident the mountains afforded an asylum to many Christians
while they governed those kingdoms: and when tranquility was
restored, the Spanish refugees emigrated and settled in the
French provinces, near the foot of the Pyrenees. Near the
middle of the eighth century, many thousands of these
people, with their wives, children, and servants, of whose
views and practice in religion we have spoken, emigrated
over the Pyrenees, from the Spanish to the French foot of
the mountains.o
8. During the sovereignty of Charles the
Great, the several kingdoms and provinces contiguous to
France, were kept in agitation from his military
enterprises. In his religious career, he brought into France
from Rome, the Georgian liturgy, which was appointed to
supersede the Gallican, this bold innovation caused some
confusion in the kingdom. He resolved on subduing the
Saxons, who were pagans, and inhabited a great part of
Germany, but this he found impracticable. In the end, his
imperial majesty…
* Jones's Eccl. Led, v. ii., p. 409.
† Mezeray's Fr. Hist., p. 82.
oGibbon's Ro. Hist., c. 52, and
Rob. Res., p. 242.
Infant-Immersion Law
…proposed to the whole nation the dreadful
alternative, either of being assassinated by the troops, or
of accepting life on condition of professing themselves
Christians, by 789
being baptized, and the severe laws, yet stand in the
capitularies of this monarch, by which they were obliged, on
pain of death, to be baptized themselves, and of heavy
fines, to baptize their children within the year of their
birth. These people, with Frisians and Huns, were
constrained to embrace the Christian religion. This was the
first law in Europe for infant baptism, and it was consigned
to the clergy to enforce, which they did by converting all
the irrational part of kingdoms, to the profession of
Christianity. The clergy dwelt largely on the ceremonies of
baptism, particularly the necessity of trine immersion,* and
the church was fully engaged in adjusting the internal
divisions and appointing officers for this newly acquired
territory. Probably the devotion of Charlemagne and the
clergy to Germany, allowed the unassuming Vaudois to realize
some tranquility; we are unacquainted with the influence of
this human injunction on the Dissenters in the south of
France.
850
9. it is recorded of Hinchmar, Bishop of Laudan, in
France, that he renounced infant baptism, and that his
diocese were accused in the synod of Accinicus of not
baptizing children.† This minister
* Rob. Hist. of Bap., p. 282, ch. 26.
† "Baptism remained in the Catholic
church," says Mezeray, (Fr. Hist., p. 117, xxiii. king,)
"the same, and was performed by dipping or plunging, not by
throwing or sprinkling." Stephen, the pontiff, 754, gave his
opinion, that if children were sickly, pouring should in
such cases of necessity be valid baptism; but ordinarily, it
was administered by three dippings. "Immersion was first
left off in France," says Dr. Wall, (Hist. Inf. Bap., pt. 2,
p. 220,) "and there, the Anti-paedobaptists are traced."
Pouring, aspersion, lustrations, and sprinklings, were
customs among the heathen, before Christ or Moses, Potter's
Antiq. of Gr., v. ii. p. 284, &c. Dr. Wall's Hist. Inf. Bap.
pt. 1, p. 501. These lustrations, holy water, and
sprinklings, were by the Catholics borrowed from the
heathens, as is fully shown in Dr. Middleton's letter from
Rome, pref. xv. and pp. 136—143, and Rob. Hist. of Bap., pp.
421, 458.
Itinerant
Baptism
…comes in for his share of reproach from
Catholics and Protestants, which is no obscure proof of his
reforming measures disturbing the hirelings in office. The
ensuing age 900
has been fitly termed, by Baronius, a Catholic annalist, the
iron, leaden, and obscure age; he says, "Christ was then, as
it appears, in a very deep sleep, there were wanting
disciples who, by their cries, might awaken him, being
themselves all fast asleep." This is perfectly true of the
Catholic community; but while this long night of silence and
deep sleep, with awful darkness, brooded over every branch
of that establishment, the BAPTISTS were not inactive. It
was in the tenth century that the Paulicians emigrated from
Bulgaria, and spread themselves abroad through every
province of Europe.*
When we consider their object in diffusing
truths and holding up the lamp
for others guidance, their self-denials and trials, we
cannot withhold from them the praise due to their names. The
boon such a people proved, to the nations sitting in
darkness and death, will be made evident in the day of
decision. They rest from their labors, and their works will
follow them. Many of the Bulgarian Baptists lived single,
and adopted an itinerant life, purposely to serve the cause
of their Redeemer. "It was in the country of the Albigeois,
in the southern provinces of France," remarks Gibbon,†
"where the Paulicians mostly…
* Mosh. Hist., C. 10, pt. 2, ch. 5,
S 2.
† Ro. Hist., ch. 54.
The
Albigenses
…took root. These people were known by
different names in various provinces.*
10. The French Paulicians or Albigenses, were
plainly of the same order in church affairs, as the
Bulgarians. They had no bishops; † the candidates were
prepared for baptism by instruction and stated fasts.o
They viewed baptism as adding nothing to justification, and
affording no benefit to children.
S
They received members into their churches after baptism, by
prayer, with imposition of hands and the kiss of charity. ||
They did not allow of the catholic baptism of
infants, but baptized those again who went over from that
church to their community.([
They were divided into two classes, the
perfect and imperfect, the latter class lived in the
enjoyment of things like other men.** They were agreed in
regarding the church of Rome as an apostate church. They
rejected her sacraments as frivolous. While her clergy were
ornamented and arrayed in rich vestments, the Albigensian
teachers were satisfied with a black coat.
990
11. While the catholic community was in an awful
slumber, or under those feelings of consternation, as this
century drew to a close, and the clergy immured in luxury
and vice, the Paulicians or Albigenses were endeavoring to
reform men by a simple exhibition of divine benevolence.
"Many efforts were made," says Mosheim, "by Protestants, the
witnesses of the truth, by…
*Mosh. Hist., v. ii., p. 224, Chamb. Diet.
Art. Paul. and Albig.
† See above, ch. 5, sec. 5,
S 7.
o
Dr. Allix's Rem. Ch. Pied. ch. 2, p. 7, and ch. 12, pp.
103-4.
S
Id. ch. 11, p. 95. Dr. Jortin's Rem. on Ecc. Hist., vol. v.,
p. 226. Ency. Brit. Art. Albig.
|| Jones's Lect., v. ii. p.
275.
([ Rob. Res., p. 463.
** Ency. Brit. art. Albig.
Paulician
Puritans
…whom are meant such pius and judicious
Christians as adhered to the pure religion of the gospel,
and remained uncorrupted amidst superstitions. It was
principally in Italy and France that this heroic piety was
exhibited."* This is an honorable concession to these
reforming Baptists. The Paterines were the zealous advocates
of reform in Italy, while the same class of Christians,
under the name of Bulgarians, Publicans, boni homines,
Albigenses, with several other titles,† openly avowed in
France the same doctrines and discipline of the Redeemer.
Their united efforts were directed to restore Christianity
to her original purity, and to her legitimate and exalted
claims. We have now imperfectly detailed, to the end of the
tenth century, an account of the only religious body of
people who were not immured in the corruptions of the times,
and who unceasingly proclaimed the word of truth, in the
face of every class of superstitions, and every degree of
vice both in clergy and laity.
12. Having stated the views of the early
Dissenters, Euchites, Novatianists, Manicheans, Bogomilans,
Bulgarians or Paulicians; and proved their denominational
character, it will be necessary to conclude this section by
reference to modem writers. "No point," asserts Mosheim, "is
more strongly maintained than this, that the term Albigenses
in its more confined sense, was used to denote those
heretics who inclined toward the Manichean system, and who
were originally and otherwise known by the denominations of
Catharists, Publicans, or Paulicians, or Bulgarians. This
appears evidently, from many incontestable authorities."o
This slur of heterodoxy is asserted…
* Hist., v. ii. p. 198.
† Ib. p. 225.
o
Ch. Hist, C. 11, pt. 2, ch. 5,
S
2, note, and Cent. 13, pt. 2, ch. 5,
S
7, note.
…by Robinson; but what import he intended to
convey by the term, we know not. The same writer asserts,
"Greece was the parent of these Dissenters; Spain and
Navarre, the nurses; and that France was the step-mother."*
Dr. Allix allows the Albigenses to be looked upon as a
colony of the Vaudois.† Being satisfied of their genealogy,
we observe the reproach of Manicheism has been improperly
applied. We have no means of ascertaining what this
offensive doctrine was, as enemies cannot be safely credited
where their interest is involved.
It is said, the Manicheans held that good and
evil proceeded from opposite causes: if this is all their
heresy, if fully investigated, probably many of our modern
churches would be involved in the same crime; but since the
Paulicians sincerely condemned the memory and opinions of
the Manicheans, and complained of the injustice of giving
them that term,o
whatever those errors were, they ought not to be united with
their name. The reproach is allowed by Dr. Allix as not
belonging to the Albigenses;
S which is
conceded by Dr. Jortin, who asserts they had very little of
the Manichean system attached to them.|| It is very probable
the Albigenses held some opinions in common with the
Manicheans, as they did in the discipline of believers'
baptism,([ but these Vaudois were not heretical in their
views. Baronius says, "they were confuted at a conference
before the Bishop of Aibi, from the New Testament, which
alone they admitted; they professed the catholic…
* Ec. Res.,
p. 320.
† Rem. on the Albig. Ch., C.
11, p. 114.
o
Gibbon's Ro. Hist., ch. 54, vol. x., p. 156.
S
Rem- Albig. Ch. pref xi. and ch. 11, p. 95.
|| Rem. on Ec. Hist., vol.
v., p. 53.
([ Mosh. Corn. on the affairs
of the Christians before Constant, s. 111.
…faith, but would not swear, and were
therefore condemned."* The centuriators of Magdeburgh clear
them of heresy. † Bishops Usher and Newton, with Dr. Cave,
have declared their soundness in the faith of the gospel.
13. Dr. Mosheim says, "The Waldenses were
less pernicious than the Albigenses, but this view is
combated by modern writers, without giving any satisfactory
elucidation. S
Now, it must appear plain that the Albigensian churches, in
their original constitution, did partake of the early
puritan discipline, since those societies were, to some
extent, made up of those who retained the stern views of
Novatian. There is no impropriety in our supposing the
"pernicious" difference to consist in some, if not all, of
those churches, like the Novatian societies, refusing
communion to those who apostatized or fell into flagrant
sins, while this severe exclusion might not have been
enforced in the churches of Piedmont. That the Albigensian
churches partook of this excluding discipline, is
acknowledged by Dr. Allix.||
*Annals, Cent. 12.
† Annals, vol. iii.. Cent. 12, cap.
8, pp. 548-9. Lord Lyttleton's Life of Henry II., vol. iv.,
p. 395, oct.
oCh. Hist. v. ii., p. 432,
note.
S
Dr. Maclean in Mosheim, and Jones's History of the Christian
Church, vol. ii., p. 36, 5th ed.
|| Rem. on Albig. Ch. c. 16, p. 145,
and Pied. Ch. c. 17, p. 166.