Measures Adopted By
Innocent
Edict Of Ildefonsus
Raymond’s Affray
Legate Murdered
Crusades
Cruelties Of The
Crusaders
Raymond’s Opposition
Defeat Of Albigenses
Death Of Montford
Raymond’s Efforts
Albigenses Scattered
Remnant Of Albigenses
Persecution Maintained
Blanche’s Affairs
Raymond’s Condition
Surrender Of Raymond
Dispersion Of The
Albigenses
Raymond’s Persecution
Denominational Character
Testimonials
Here is the patience and the
faith of the saints. — Rev. 8:10, 14:12.
1. The thirteenth and fourteenth chapters of
Revelations should be read in connexion with the history of
these churches; and though we cannot give a full detail of
their sufferings, we will essay to epitomize the statements
given by different historians, while we acknowledge our
obligations principally to Mr. Jones, and at the same time
say, with John, "Here is the patience of the saints:" here
are they that kept the commandments of God, and the faith of
Jesus.
2. The severity of the pope's measures forced
Waldo from Lyons. In the same year, a synod was convened at
Tours, at which all the bishops and priests in the country…
* Allix's
Pied., Ch., c. 2.
…of Toulouse were strictly enjoined "to take
care, and to forbid, under pain of excommunication, every
person from presuming to give reception, or the least
assistance to the followers of this heresy; to have no
dealings with them in buying and selling, that thus, being
deprived of the common necessaries of life, they might be
compelled to repent of the evil of their way." The measures
caused many of the Albigenses to seek asylums in other
kingdoms: the influence of these measures of the pope on
sovereigns, was such as to occasion their first succumbing,
and then uniting to support the constuprated sanctuary of
Rome. The power embodying at this period to support the
beast, is enough to make all stand amazed. Louis VII., of
France, and Henry II., of England, became equerries to the
pope, holding the bridle of his horse, and afterwards
walking, one on the one side of him, the other on the other,
as royal grooms to his holiness. Here the submissive state
of things to the man of sin may be viewed, and the
prevalency of his voice, who was obeyed and feared more than
God. Lucius III. issued a decree, confirmatory of previous
mea 1181
sources in which was stated, "We declare all
Catharists, Paterines, Poor of Lyons, Passignes,
Josephists, Amoldists, to lie under a perpetual anathema."
These intolerant proceedings drove many of those people,
against whom they were directed, to leave France, cross the
Pyrenean mountains, and take up a residence in Spain.
1192
3. Innocent III. ascended the
pontifical throne in 1192. Many popes did badly, but this
man exceeded all in cruel turpitude. The man of sin had been
progressive in his character, actions, and inventions; but
now, if his Satanic majesty was ever incarnate, or had one
agent on earth that more resembled him in spirit, design,
and executive mischief, there can be no doubt of Innocent
being the man. He appears matured in the mystery of
iniquity; he exhibits in full view the man fully grown in
sin; and in his public character, handed round to the kings
of the earth the cup of abomination, from which they drank
into the same spirit and designs, participated in the
fellowship of crimes, and became intoxicated or glutted with
his iniquitous measures and sanguinary proceedings.
He judged that the church ought to keep no
measures with sectaries, or heretics; and that if it did not
crush them, if it did not extirpate their race, and strike
Christendom with terror, their example would soon be
followed; and that the fermentation of mind which was every
where manifest, would shortly produce a congregation
throughout the whole of Europe. As incapable of temporising
as he was of pity, the pope formed his plans without delay;
and this lovely and delightful region of France, inhabited
by the followers of the Lamb, was given up to destruction.
1193
4. in 1193, the pope sent Guy and Reiner, two legates,
into France, with instructions of the most sanguinary
description. Instead of making converts of the heretics,
their orders were to bum their leaders, confiscate their
goods, and disperse their flocks. They were not equally
successful in every province; the pope, therefore,
instigated the inert inhabitants of those provinces where
the legates were least successful, to persecute the
Albigenses; consequently, many of the leading persons among
them perished in the flames, for accession of years.
The measures now used against these people,
were found partly paralyzed by many lords and barons, who
had adopted their opinions, and consequently, instead of
consenting to persecute, protected this inoffensive people.
From different causes, a protection was cast round those
persons whom his holiness had doomed to destruction.
Innocent, not gaining his end, laid under an anathema such
lords and barons as should refuse to seize the heretics.
Finding his influence not sufficient in the locality of
those poor disciples, he addressed letters to the king of
France, reminding him that it was his duty to take up arms
against heretics. As an additional stimulus, the pope
offered the whole territory the heretics possessed, and
exhorted others of his own community to take possession of
all the Albigenses held. The legates labored, both by
exhortations and actions, in the extirpation of heresy.
These champions, in traversing the country to preach down
error, had one favorite text upon which they could
delightfully descant— Who will rise up for me against the
evil doers? or who will stand up for me against the workers
of iniquity?" Psalm xciv. 16. Though their preaching did not
bring all to see as they wished, it is said to have
occasioned vast multitudes repairing to the Catholic
churches.* Public disputations were held with the
Albigenses, but the Catholics could always carry by clamor
those points they were incapable of demonstrating by
argument, so that the victory was always claimed by one
party. To what extent these missionaries succeeded, as these
means were continued for some years, we do not know; but it
is certain a remnant was not defiled by the woman's
doctrines, for they remained virgins, and kept the
commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
* Collier's
Gr. Hist. Dict., art. Albig.
Edict
of Ildefonsus
5. The temporary lodgment those harassed
people sought in Spain was disturbed. Ildefonsus, king of
Arragon, 1194
published an edict, 1194, commanding all "Waldenses. Poor of
Lyons, and other heretics, who cannot be numbered, being
excommunicated from the holy church, adversaries to the
cross of Christ, violators and corruptors of the Christian
religion, to depart out of our kingdom, and all our
dominions." And "whosoever, from that day forward, should
presume to receive or harbor them, or to afford them meat or
favor, were to be punished for high treason." This cruel
edict was to be published in all churches, in every city and
town in the Spanish dominions.
Such was the general state of things towards
this people at the end of this century, which may serve to
prepare us for the appalling scenes of slaughter which
followed.
6. Yet, notwithstanding these inhuman
proceedings, 1200
both in France and Spain, in the year 1200, the city of
Toulouse, and eighteen other principal towns in Languedoc,
Provence, and Dauphine, were filled with Waldenses and
Albigenses. This was owing, under a kind Providence, to the
lords, barons, viscounts, and others of the French nobility.
Their numbers and importance had awakened the jealousy of
the pope, who now felt additionally angry at the protection
given to those people. To those bulls and anathemas
mentioned, the influence of the legates in exciting the
clergy to duty, and the inhabitants to revenge the pope's
cause, much importance was attached; but the desired effects
of the commission were not so extensively realized: Rainer
the Monk and Pierre de Castelnau, archdeacon of Maguelone,
were
Raymond’s
Affray
…1206
charged with the ghostly commission. In 206, the
missionaries were strengthened by the Spaniard Dominic
uniting with them; and soon after, the order of preaching
friars was established, whose business it was to go through
all towns and villages, to preach the Faith; but secretly to
obtain information as to the dwellings of those who were
obnoxious to the pope's vengeance. When these heresy-hunters
had purged different provinces of the enemies of the Roman
faith, the pontiff became sensible of the value of their
services; and in a few years he placed in those towns, whose
inhabitants had the misfortune to be suspected of heresy,
missionaries of a like nature, though the people showed the
greatest reluctance to such institutions.*
7. By the adoption of such measures against
the Albigenses, the populace had been excited; many of them
compromised their principles on the terms of life, while for
years many had suffered martyrdom in many towns of France,
from 1198 and onwards; but Innocent III. perceived that the
labors of the inquisitors were not attended with the success
he at first anticipated: he consequently
1207 solicited
Philip, king of France, in 1207, with the leading men of
that nation, by the most alluring promises of indulgence, to
extirpate heresy by fire and sword. This appeal does not
appear to have had the desired effect, as new exhortations
were repeated, with fresh promises of favor. Raymond VI.,
the reigning count of Toulouse, was, in the spring of this
year, on the borders of the Rhone, engaged in a war against
the barons of Raux, and other lords of those countries,
where the…
* Mosh.
Ecc. Hist., Cent. 13, p. 2, ch. 5,
S
3, 4.
Legate
Murdered
...pope's legate, Peter of Castlenau, above
named, undertook to make peace between them. He first made
application to the barons, and obtained their promise that
if Raymond would acquiesce in their pretensions, they would
employ all their forces to exterminate heresy.
After settling matters with them in the form of a
treaty, for the extirpation of heretics, the legate repaired
to the count of Toulouse, and required him to sign it. The
latter was no way inclined to purchase, by the renunciation
of his rights, the entrance of an army, already hostile,
into his estates, who were to pillage or put to death all
those of his vassals whom the Roman clergy should fix upon
as the victims of their cruelty. He therefore refused his
consent; and Peter, the legate, in his wrath, excommunicated
him, laid his country under an interdict, and wrote to the
pope to ratify what he had done.
8. The pope was gratified at the
circumstance, being aware that his agents were insufficient
to destroy the heresy encouraged in Raymond's dominions. He
wrote an insolent letter to the count, dated May 29, 1207,
confirm ing the sentence of excommunication. Raymond,
terrified, signed the terms of peace, engaging to
exterminate all heretics from his territories. The count not
keeping peace
with the
legate's zeal against heresy, was reproached by him in no
moderate language; and was again, by him, excommunicated.
Raymond was excessively provoked, and threatened
Castlenau for his insulting conduct* Through these agitating
periods, it appears, the Albigenses had discussed the merits
of the points between the hierarchy and themselves. One of
the principal debaters…
*Lect. on
Ecc. Hist., W. Jones, v. ii., p. 380-1.
Crusades
…on the Albigensian side was Arnold Hot, with
whom the Catholic bishops felt themselves entangled. A
circumstance, mysterious in its consequences, now occurred.
Raymond, as observed, on parting with Castlenau, had
threatened to make him pay for his insolence with his life.
They parted without reconciliation, January 14, 1208. On the
fifteenth, after mass, one of Count Raymond's friends, who
appears to have known of the legate's insolence, entered
into a dispute with him respecting heresy and its
punishment. The legate never spared the most insulting
epithets to the advocates of toleration; and the gentleman,
irritated by his language, not less than by his quarrel with
Raymond, his lord, drew his poignard, struck Castlenau in
his side, and killed him. The intelligence of this murder
roused the pope to the highest pitch of fury.
He instantly published a bull, addressed to all
counts, barons, and knights, of the four southern provinces
of France. He laid under an interdict all places which
should afford a refuge to the murderers of the legate: he
demanded that Raymond of Toulouse should be publicly
anathematized in all churches, and "that we must not observe
faith towards those who keep not faith towards God, or who
are separated from the communion of the faithful." All
persons were relieved from their oaths of allegiance, they
were to pursue his person, and take possession of his
territories.
9. The first bull, as if taking little
effect, was followed by another: the pope at the same time
solicited the king of France to carry on the sacred war in
person, and to destroy all the wicked heresy of the
Albigenses. The legates and monks, at the same time,
received powers from Rome to publish a crusade among the
people, offering to those who should engage in this holy war
of plunder and extirpation against the Albigenses, the
utmost extent of indulgence which his predecessors had ever
granted to those who labored for the deliverance of the Holy
Land.* The ignorance of the times permitted these different
means to be but too successful. The people from all parts of
Europe hastened to France to enroll themselves in this new
array, actuated by superstition and their passions for wars
and adventures. They were, on their arrival, immediately
placed under the protection of the holy see, freed from
debts, and exempted from the jurisdiction of all tribunals;
and so were lawless, yet their services were to expiate all
the vices and crimes of a whole life:— awful delusion!
This lovely and delightful region, in a state
of growing prosperity, was delivered to the fury of
countless hordes of fanatics. The conference on the
different points between Arnold Hot and the bishops was
broken up by the…
* The
oppressions felt by the Asiatic churches from the
Mahometans, and a desire among the clergy to enlarge the
territories of the church in that quarter, had occasioned
the pope's suggesting a variety of means for the attainment
of that object. Peter the Hermit, on visiting Palestine, in
1093, was grieved to see holy places and persons in the
power of infidels. His zeal led him to travel through
Europe, sounding an alarm of war, and calling on princes and
nations to rescue the holy spot. After difficulties and
delays were overcome, he got together an innumerable
multitude of all ranks who volunteered for this sacred
expedition. These were named Croisade, from wearing a cross.
One argument used was, "We read that God said unto Abraham,
'Unto thy seed will I give this land:' we Christians are
heirs of the promise, and the Holy Land is given to us by
covenant, as our lawful possession." Against these federal
claims the Albigenses and Waldenses wrote, declaring such
crusades unlawful. Such crusades were now invited against
these people. Mosh. v. ii. p. 128, and C. 11, pt. 2, c. 1,
S
9, note.
Cruelties
of the Crusaders
…bishop of Villeneuse, declaring that nothing
could be determined, because "the army of the Crusaders was
at hand."
1209
10. In the year 1209, a formidable army of cross-bearers, of
forty days' service, was put into motion, destined to
destroy all heretics. This army consisted of, some say, 3,
others 500,000 men. At their head, as chief commander, was,—
let every Englishman blush— Simon de Montford, Earl of
Leicester. The cruelties of these Crusaders appear to have
had no parallel; in a few months there were sacrificed about
two hundred thousand lives, and barbarities practised before
unheard of, all which met the approbation of Innocent the
3rd.* Two large cities, Beziers and Carcassone, were reduced
to ashes, and thousands of victims perished by the sword;
while thousands of others, driven from their burning houses,
were wandering in the woods and mountains, sinking daily
under the pressure of want.†
11. In the fall of the same year, the monks
preached up another crusade against the more northerly
provinces of France. To stir the nation, they opened to all
volunteers the gates of paradise, with all its glories,
without any reformation of life or manners. The army raised
from 1210 these
efforts was directed in the ensuing spring, 1210, by ALICE,
Simon de Montford's wife. With this army, a renewal of last
year's cruelties commenced. All the inhabitants found were
hung on gibbets. A hundred of the inhabitants of BROM
had their eyes plucked out, and their noses cut off, and
then were sent…,
* Lon. Ency. v. x. p. 461.
† Simondi's History of the
Crusades, &c., p. 6, &c.
…under the guidance of a man with one eye
spared, to inform the garrisons of other towns what fate
awaited them. The destruction of property and life must have
been very great, from the sanguinary character of those who
managed these cruel measures. The most perfidious conduct
was conspicuous in the leaders of the Catholic cause, pope,
bishops, legates, and officers of the army; whatever terms
were submitted to availed the persecuted nothing, when in
the hands of their enemies. On the 22nd of July, the
Crusaders took possession of the castle of Minerva. The
Albigensian Christians were in the meantime assembled—the
men in one house, the women in another; and there, on their
knees, resigned to the awaiting circumstances. A learned
abbot preached to them, but they unanimously cried, "We have
renounced the church of Rome—we will have none of your
faith; your labor is in vain; for neither death nor life
will make us renounce the opinions that we have embraced."
An enormous pile of dry wood was prepared, and the abbot
thus addressed the Albigenses, "Be converted to the Catholic
faith, or ascend this pile;" but none of them were shaken.
They set fire to the wood, and brought them to the fire, but
it required no violence to precipitate them into the flames.
Thus, more than one hundred and forty willing victims
perished, after commending their souls to God. Tile
sacrifice of human life under this crusade cannot be
computed.
1211
12. In 1211, another army was mustered, and measures
were adopted for reducing all places suspected of heresy;
but it appeared now the desire of Montford to be fully
rewarded with the territories subdued, and it was found no
easy .matter to set bounds to his ambition. Cruelties of
different degrees of atrocity were…
Raymond's
Opposition
…committed by this army; but they met with a
salutary check, and an ultimate dispersion, by the vigorous
measures of Count Raymond. We are not prepared to say why
Raymond did not act with vigor before, whether from
timidity, or rather, perhaps, from the well-known principles
of the Albigenses, who allowed of no retaliation. It is
certain that oppression may goad men until they lose sight
of their principles, and become wildered into forced
measures.* Simon de Montford now began to experience a
decline of fortune. Count Raymond regained all the strong
places of Albigeois, and in more than fifty castles, the
inhabitants either expelled or massacred the French
garrisons, to surrender themselves to their ancient lord.
The demon of discord at this period began to influence the
leaders of the crusading army. The legate grasped at the
most conspicuous and profitable places. This conduct gave
many to view the massacres of the Albigenses by the monks
and their incited armies, only to allow them to take
possession of confiscated property; the leaders became
jealous of each other, and that union among the chiefs,
which had occasioned such awful devastation, was dissolved;
true it is, they had held together sufficiently long; its
cities were ruined; its population consumed by the…
* "The most furious and desperate rebels,"
says Gibbon, "are the sectaries of religion long persecuted,
and at length provoked. In a holy cause they are no longer
susceptible of fear or remorse; the justice of their arms
(cause) hardens them against the feelings of humanity; and
they revenge their fathers' wrongs on the children of their
tyrants." This view is illustrated in the History of the
Nonconformists in England, the Anabaptists in Germany, the
Hussites in Bohemia, the Calvinists in France, the
Albigenses under Raymond, the Paulicians in Armenia and in
Bulgaria, and the Donatists in Africa. See Rom. Hist. ch.
54.
Defeat
of Albigenses
…sword; its commerce destroyed, and the lamp
of heavenly light, which had shone so resplendent throughout
the whole region, was totally extinguished.
1212
13. The monks recommenced, in 1212, their preaching
throughout Christendom, with more ardor than before. The
army was renewed four times this year, each army professedly
serving forty days. The country
was now found almost destitute of victims; Montford resolved
therefore, to take advantage of his army, and conducting
them against Agenois, whose entire population *was
Catholics, he made the surviving inhabitants pay a sum of
money as a ransom for their lives. The crusaders contenting
themselves with this service, as fulfilling the conditions
of enlisting; the pope began to suspect the
1213 sings of
leaders, and in 1215, quite changed his tone towards his
tools of mischief, charging them with murder, usurpation,
cupidity, &c. It is supposed, the King of Arragon,
brother-in-law to Raymond, had by negociation turned the
tide of affairs. But Mont- ford, and all those monks who had
reaped the advantage of his cruel enterprise, now set aside
the pope's authority, and refused to listen to an infallible
voice, declaring, it was necessary to destroy Toulouse, and
extirpate its inhabitants, which they compared to Sodom. The
pope at first wavered, and then veered round to Simon's
measure against Raymond; war was again preached by the
officers of religion, but the pope's party was now opposed
by the King of Arragon, in union with the Counts of
Toulouse, Foix, and Cominges. In the first encounter, the
king lost his life, and his army was routed. This battle of
MURET was the
death-blow to the Albigensian party in Languedoc.
Death
of Montford
1215
In 1215, the prince Louis, son of the King of France,
performed a pilgrimage against heretics. He appeared before
Lyons* with a considerable force, and performed a duty of
forty days against the remaining Albigenses. In 1216,
Innocent paid his debt to nature and justice. Honorius, his
successor, pursued his cruel policy.
1218 The war was
renewed in 1217 and 1218, but in this last year, Montford
was killed at Toulouse, by the fall of a stone. The death of
Simon produced a momentary truce, and afforded these
harassed people a period to breathe. Louis of France became
Simon's successor in sanguinary proceedings, and proved
himself to be behind no servant of the pope, in zeal against
heresy. The most sanguinary conduct, in cold blood, was
displayed by the bishops and soldiers under him.†
Misfortunes had *now fully awakened Raymond to his
situation; he, the nobility, and magistrates, united in one
cause their persons and their property, and for a time, gave
a check to brutal encroachment. The king, Louis, retired
from the siege of…
* Perhaps in no-city have
Christians suffered so repeatedly and severely, as in Lyons.
In A. D., 177, they realized every indignity. In 202, they
experienced barbarities too indecent to record, and in
almost every persecution, the inhabitants suffered death m
every form; and now, the Albigenses were called to share in
a like treatment. It is said, the blood of twenty thousand
martyrs has been shed in this city! What an awful vengeance
and repayment did this city realize in 1793, under the
direction of the national convention, when 70,000 persons
perished by every cruel means which could be devised by an
enraged military force, and when France drank generally from
the retaliating cup of blood. Rev. xvi. 6. See Seymour's
Hist. of the Fr. Revol. v. i. 210.
† "The image of the beast," Rev.
xiii. 15. The interest of the beast was supported
principally by the kings of France, and these appear to have
had more of his image, in spirit and in conduct, than any
other set of men possessing imperial power. See Bicheno's
Signs of the Times, p. 26.
Raymond's
Efforts
…Toulouse, quite dispirited. The clergy
became disgusted with the crusaders, the bishops could no
longer succeed in exciting fanaticism. Much blood had been
spilt, yet all things had returned to their ancient masters.
However drunk, or glutted, or weary the kings of the earth
were with these measures, the pope and his emissaries were
still athirst and unsatisfied. The pope endeavored to arouse
the king of France, but he could not be moved. Bishops and
others were called upon to commit heretics to tie flames,
but all parties were inert, and nearly tired of the
conflict. The murdering appeals of the pope awakened some
enemies in the northern provinces, from which the
Albigensian refugees were forced to move, and these directed
their steps into Languedoc, where they experienced some
respite. This mortifying state of affairs, to the papal
party, was felt by Cardinal Bertrand, who, to remedy this
almost hopeless state of affairs, set himself as the pope's
legate, to establish a body of men more completely devoted
to the destruction of heretics and the lukewarm. Sanctioned
by 1221 the
pope, he, in 1221, instituted "the order of the holy faith
of Jesus Christ," for the defence of the church, and the
destruction of heretics. The crusading armies were again put
in motion in this and the ensuing year, 1222, but they
generally realized adverse fortune.
14. The Albigensian church was now drowned in
blood; their race for the present disappeared; their
opinions ceased to influence society. Hundreds of villages
had seen all their inhabitants massacred with a blind fury,
and without the crusaders giving themselves the trouble to
examine whether they contained a single heretic!!! It is
impossible to ascertain the number, who, from frenzied…
Albigenses
Scattered
…zeal, engaged in this war of extirpation.
But we know armies arrived for seven or eight successive
years, more numerous than were employed in other wars. These
considered it as their right to live at the expense of the
country, and therefore, with a rapacious hand, seized all
the harvests of the peasants, and merchandize of the
citizens. No calculations can ascertain the quantity of
wealth dissipated, or the destruction of human life, which
resulted from these crusades. "I have," says Mr. Jones,
"traced the total extermination of the Albigenses, and with
it, the extinction of the cause of reformation, so happily
introduced in the 12th century. The slaughter had been so
prodigious —the massacres so universal—the terror so
profound, and of so long duration, that the church of Rome
appeared completely to have attained her object. The
churches were drowned in the blood of their members, or
everywhere broken up and scattered—the public worship of the
Albigenses had everywhere ceased. All teaching was be come
impossible. Almost every pastor or elder had perished in a
frightful manner; and the very small number of those who had
succeeded in escaping the edge of the sword, now sought an
asylum in distant countries, and were enabled to avoid new
persecutions, only by preserving the most studied silence
respecting their opinions. The private members who had not
perished by either fire or sword, or who had not withdrawn
by flight from the scrutiny of the inquisition, knew that
they could only preserve their lives by burying their creed
in their bosoms. For them there were no more sermons—no more
public prayers—no more ordinances of the Lord's house—even
their children were not to be made acquainted, for a time at
least, with…
Remnant
of Albigenses
…their sentiments."* "The visible assemblies
of the Paulicians or Albigeois," says Gibbon, "were
extirpated by fire and sword; and the bleeding remnant
escaped by flight, concealment, or catholic conformity. But
the invincible spirit which they had kindled, still lived
and breathed in the western world. In the state, in the
church, and even in the cloister, a. latent succession was
preserved of the disciples of Paul (Paulicians), who
protested against the tyranny of Rome, embraced the Bible as
a rule of faith, and purified their creed from all the
visions of a false theology." † The timid who remained in
the land, were subject to the severities of the
inquisitions; these escaped only by frequently denying their
belief. Terror became extreme, suspicion universal, all
teaching of the proscribed doctrines had ceased, the very
sight of a book made the people tremble, and ignorance was
for the greater number, a salutary guarantee. So complete
was the triumph of the Catholic party, that the persecutors,
in confidence of victory, became divided, made war
reciprocally on each other, and were thereby weakened and
ruined. Aug. 6, 1221, Dominic died.
15. The Albigenses, who had been compelled to
return into Languedoc, found themselves, with successive
1222
accessions' sufficiently numerous in 1222,
in the places wherein their fathers had suffered, to animate
them with a hope of renewing their instructions and
reorganizing their churches. The monks and inquisitors, from
some cause, being at this period destitute of aid from the
secular arm, were reduced to the necessity of only noting
the following: "About one hundred of the principal…
* Lect. on EC. Hist., Lect. 41 to 44. Mosh.
Ec. Hist., v. ii., p. 432.
† Ros. Hist. c. 54, v. x, 170.
…Albigenses held a meeting at a place called
Pieussau Rasez, at which Guillabert de Cashes presided." He
was one of the oldest of their preachers, and had escaped
there searches of the fanatics. This assembly provided
pastors or teachers for the destitute churches, whose former
office bearers had perished in the flames, by the sword, or
gibbet. Not only was there a languishing in the conduct of
bishops, clergy, and the army; but even young Montford, who
possessed from his father the confiscated estates, saw him
self without money or men, and those few castles he held
only waited a favorable opportunity to welcome their old
landlords. So desperate were Montford's affairs, that he
offered all his blood-bought patrimony as a gift to the king
of France, and the pope sanctioned the donatives, provided
the king would still prosecute the war against the
Albigenses, and extirpate the newly-arisen heresy, but which
the king declined.
1224
16. On Louis VIII. ascending the throne, he entered into
the spirit of extirpation, and the aspect of affairs became
exceedingly dark; but some circumstances in the affairs of
Frederick the emperor interrupted the enemy's designs. The
Albigenses were too insignificant now to give the pope any
disquietude, but yet there was Raymond's vineyard, which the
French king had a desire to possess. Animated by Honorius,
the French king took the field with an army of fifty
thousand horse, to 1226
annihilate Raymond and heresy.
The terror which this formidable army inspired is not to be
described. All those persons who made conscience of religion
sought an asylum in the neighboring countries, bordering on
the Pyrenean mountains; in the valleys of Piedmont; and
probably in some of the German States; which…
Persecution
Maintained
…former places became early filled with
Dissenters from the Roman church; those who travelled
farther, carried with them the germ of reformation through
nearly all the provinces of Christendom. This army was very
formidable; fear became extreme; the bonds of society, of
relations, and of affection, were now dissolved. A nobleman
who had married a daughter of Raymond VII. sent her back to
him, declaring that, after the summons of the king and
church, he broke off all connexion with him. Thus the pope's
voice opposed and exalted itself, and prevailed against a
divine ordinance, supported by the strongest and most tender
ties.
17. Submissions were made by part of those
States the king came to conquer; but some he found with
Raymond disposed to hold out. Raymond knew he could not
encounter the enemy in the field, therefore hoped that the
elongation of the war would perhaps give his embarrassed
1226 affairs a favorable turn. On the 10th of June the siege
of Avignon was commenced, which proved more difficult than
was first anticipated. Famine, disease, a fever, and other
causes, removed vast numbers of horses and men in the
crusading army; the stench of the dead infected the army;
unhappily, the besiegers consented to a capitulation on the
12th September, which terms were shamefully violated.
Fifteen days after the capitulation, a terrible inundation
of the river Durance covered all the space which had been
occupied by the French camp. Had not the soldiers previously
taken up their quarters within the walls, they would
certainly have been swept away by the water, with their
tents and baggage. The next enterprise of the crusading army
was against Toulouse, but their utmost efforts only produced
one heretic, an old man…
Blanche's
Affairs
…and infirm preacher, named PETER ISARN: he
was committed to the flames, with the parade of a great
triumph. This one life, this one heretic, had cost the king
the amazing amount of 20,000 men, besides horses and money.
The king, under considerable disappointment in not attaining
his object, returned to his court, and, from grief or
infection, died Nov. 8th, 1226. These severities and
harassing in Languedoc led a section to seek an asylum in
the province of Gascony, which district at that time
depended on the kings of England, but where the authority of
the government was nearly disregarded.
1227
18. In 1227 a new army was raised against Jews and
heretics, personally enumerating as heretics Raymond, the
Count of Foix, and the Viscount of Beziers. They first
attacked the castle of Becede, in Lauraquais. The Archbishop
of Narbonne, with the Bishop of Toulouse, hastened to aid in
-the siege. Part of the besieged made their escape, the rest
were either knocked on the head or put to the sword. It is
said the Bishop of Toulouse saved several from the violence
of the soldiers, that he might be gratified in seeing them
perish in the flames. Similar instances of cruelty were
exhibited during all the period of this crusade, though the
spirit of fanaticism was considerably abated. During the
minority of Louis IX., the management of affairs devolved on
his mother Blanche, who was by birth a Spaniard, and in the
estimation of her church very religious. She was what the
age made her, which, according to historians, exempts her,
with Calvin and Luther, and all persecutors, horn condign
reproach; 'the fault of the times' has relieved the
criminal, on the grounds of custom! The queen-mother had the
talent to terminate the conquest of the Albigenses,…
Raymond's
Condition
…and to gather the fruits of this
long-cultivated ACELDAMA. Against the queen's army, Raymond
now took the field, 1228,
flattering himself that the civil wars, risings and revolts
of the barons, which threatened the queen's affairs, and the
enthusiastic among the crusaders being engaged against the
Holy Land, allowed him some grounds to hope he should
recover his possessions. His trials had now driven him to
fury, and the cruelties of his soldiers and party disgrace
the page of history. Those who fell into his hands were
mutilated with odious cruelty. From the moment of his
adopting this cruel policy, the tide of affairs changed, his
success and prospects ended with his clemency.
19. Fouquet, Bishop of Toulouse, had never
quitted the crusaders; he surpassed all his compeers in
sanguinary zeal, by which zeal he obtained the cognomen of
"Bishop of Devils." To meet Raymond's opposition, many
bishops preached up a crusade, and by the middle of June a
numerous and fanatical army was brought before Toulouse. The
citizens, affrighted, shut themselves up within the walls,
abandoning the surrounding country, and nattering themselves
with the hope of wearying the besiegers. The crusading army,
under Fouquet and a lieutenant, drew the troops up near to
the city every morning, and then retiring by different
routes each day to the mountains, they destroyed, through
all the space they passed over, every vestige of fruit,
corn, and vegetables, with vines, trees, and houses; so that
there remained no traces of the industry or the riches of
man. For three months the army without interruption
continued thus methodically to ravage all the adjacent
country. At the end of the campaign, the city was only
surrounded by a frightful desert; all its richest…
Surrender
of Raymond
…inhabitants, whether catholic or otherwise,
were ruined; and their courage no longer enabled them to
brave such a merciless warfare. Several lords, hitherto
friends, now abandoned them, submitting their castles to the
king of France; and nearly at the same time, Raymond
listened to proposals of peace. Raymond appears to have been
so overwhelmed with terror, as well as his subjects, that he
no longer preserved any hope of defending himself.
Independent of those that fell by the sword, or were
committed to the flames by the soldiers and magistrates, the
inquisition was constantly at work from 1206 to 1228, and
produced the most dreadful havoc among the disciples of
Christ In this last year, the Archbishops of Aix, Arks, and
Narbonne found it necessary to intercede with the monks of
the inquisition, to defer a little their work of
imprisonment, until the pope could be apprised of the
immense numbers apprehended,—numbers so great that it was
impossible to defray the charge of their subsistence, or
even to provide stone and mortar to build prisons for
1228 them. On Dec.
10, 1228 Raymond gave full power powers to the Abbot of
Grandselve to negociate with the courts of France and Rome.
He demanded neither liberty of conscience for his subjects,
nor the preservation of his sovereignty. He abandoned all
thoughts of maintaining any longer his independence.
1229
On the 12th of April, 1229, Raymond abandoned to
the king all his French possessions, and' to the pope's
legate all that he possessed in the kingdom of Aries. He was
now required, in order to prove the sincerity of his
submission to the Roman see, to make war on his friend, the
Count of Foix: Raymond preferred being a prisoner, or
serving five years in a crusade to the…
Dispersion
of the Albigenses
…Holy Land. He submitted to the most
humiliating penance. He repaired with his feet naked, and
with only his shirt and trousers, to the church of Notre
Dame, at Paris, where a cardinal, after administering the
discipline upon his naked back, conducted him to the foot of
the grand altar, and on account of his humility and
devotion, he pronounced absolution, on condition of
fulfilling his treaty at Paris. Raymond remained six weeks a
prisoner, his daughter was taken under the queen's care, and
his territories were passed into other hands. The
inhabitants, his late subjects, appeared to be resigned to
all impending ill; they only asked for liberty of
conscience, but this was denied them; and in the ensuing
November the council of Toulouse established the inquisition
to complete the work 1229
of heresy; and in the year 1229, first forbade the use of
the Scriptures in the vulgar tongue.*
20. Driven from their homes, the Albigenses
had migrated into Germany, Switzerland; some crossed the
Alps, and found an asylum in the valleys of Piedmont, which
were under the clement sceptre of the dukes of Savoy; while
the Pyrenean mountains afforded a convenient retreat to
thousands of these exiles. In Gascony some sojourned, while
others visited the churches in Italy,
where Gregory IX. called for aid, in order to their
extirpation. This call had been supported by Frederick, who
denounced all Catharines, Paterines, poor of Lyons, and
other heretics. By this edict the emperor commanded all
magistrates and judges immediately to deliver to the flames
every man who should be convicted of heresy by the bishops,
and to pull out the tongues of those to whom…
* At Toulouse it is said the first
society in France was formed for circulating the Bible in
the vernacular tongue.
Raymond's Persecution
…the bishops should show favor, that they
might not corrupt others by justifying themselves. Even
Raymond no longer refused to persecute his unhappy subjects,
being led to expect, on this condition, the restoration of
part of his property.
1232
In 1232 Raymond united with the bishop of Toulouse,
and surprised by night a house, in which they discovered
nineteen men and women, probably assembled for worship, whom
they committed to the flames. The infamous conduct of the
inquisitors, under Gregory's directions, disgusted many who
were friendly to the Church of Rome; and the opposition to
that tribunal was so great in Languedoc, that the
inquisition was at last, Nov. 5, 1235, expelled from the
city. The inquisition, by an order from the court of Rome,
remained in a state of total inactivity from 1237 to 1241,
which was supposed to arise from the combination of various
cities formed for its destruction.
1240
The unhappy Raymond now cultivated the friendship of the
emperor of Germany, and, hoping to gain his lost property,
managed to assemble an army for the recovery of Provence.
The people revered the names of their ancient lords, and
rose in arms; he recovered a few small places; but the
prompt measures of Louis, and the forces he brought into the
field, filled Raymond with apprehensions of seeing the
crusades against the Albigenses renewed in all their
horrors; he therefore humbled himself to all the terms of
the Roman court; but 1241
in the following year he made another effort to free himself
and his country from the chains of
1242 slavery A war
between France and England gave some grounds to anticipate
success, and a…
Denominational
Character
…great many barons promised their aid; and
the country, hoping the hour of deliverance had arrived,
flocked to his standard. Several ecclesiastics and monks
were surprised and cut in pieces, which so effectually
awakened the ire of the pope, that his thundering measures
occasioned a defection among Raymond's allies, his courage
drooped, and he unconditionally submitted to Louis; and the
whole territory of the Albigensian churches was delivered
over to the 1243
will of the pope and king, which later latter, in January,
1243, received a personal acknowledgment of Raymond's
homage, and the land became quiet.* Thus terminated all hope
with the extinction of one million of inoffensive lives. Yet
after all this waste of life, it is asserted on good
authority that the Gospellers, or
1260 Berengarians,
amounted to 800,000 persons in 1260. —Clark. Martyr.
21. Having brought the outlines of the
Albigensian history to the period of their church's
destruction, and the transfer of the territory to the see of
Rome, we shall now submit a few observations and testimonies
on their denominational aspect.
The purity of their lives, and
inoffensiveness in character and conduct of these witnesses
of the truth, with the soundness of their religious creed, †
through the domination of the man of sin, has occasioned
almost every class of modern Christians to claim them as
their predecessors,…
* See Jones's Christian Church, vol. ii. ch.
5,
S
6, p. 119, &c.; also his Ecc. Hist., lect. 46. Dr. Bray's
Usurpation and Tyranny of Popery, with Perrin's History,
translated. Chandler's translation of Limborch's Hist. Of
the Inquisition. Bishop Newton on Prophecies,
† Toplady's Hist. Proofs,
vol. i., p. 151, &c. Dr. Cave's Prim. Christianity, and
Collier's Hist. Diet., art. Albigenses.
…but proofs are required to support such
claims, and these only will satisfy the impartial inquirer.
First, It has been fully admitted by
all creditable historians, that the Albigenses were
orginally called Puritans, from the Novatian, Paulician, and
Paterine dissenters,* whose sentiments have passed under
review.
Secondly, The constitution of all
those dissenting churches left on record, viz.,
Novatianists, Donatists, Paulicians, with the Albigenses, †
was strictly on the terms of "believers' baptism
indispensable to church fellowship."
Thirdly, After Novatian, Novatus, and
Constantine appeared as reformers, Gundulphus, Arnold of
Brescia, Berenger, Peter de Bruys, Henry of Toulouse, and
Peter Waldo, who all equally renounced infant baptism, with
those who were called after their names, which subject we
shall refer to in a future section.
o
Fourthly, The productions of their
pens, their creed, or confession of Faith, the Noble Lesson,
and What is Antichrist, are in accordance with Baptist
views, as already exhibited.
Fifthly, When severe measures were
used by the dominant party, those examined denied the
utility of infant baptism.
* Mosh.
Ecc. Hist., Cent. 12, p. 2, ch. 5,
S
4, with notes and references, and C. 13, p. 2, c. 5,
S
7, note. Gibbon's Rom. Hist., vol. x, p. 170, c. 54. Miln.
Church Hist., Cent. 3, ch. 13. Jones's Ecc. Lect., vol. ii,
p. 276.
† Dr. Allix's Rem. on Anc.
Ch. Pied., c. 2, p. 6. Ency. Brit., art. Alb.
o
The controversy in the eleventh century about single and
trine immersion, decides the early mode; see Mosh. Eccl.
Hist., C. 11, p. 2, c. 3,
S
11. Dr. Wall says, the Latins never made three
immersions essential to baptism, Hist. Inf. Bap., pt. 2, p.
384.
Testimonials
Sixthly, The decrees of popes, the
canons of councils, with the testimony of enemies, are plain
proofs that the Baptists' views did widely prevail for
centuries; and we believe it would be difficult to find a
community existing at this period deserving the name of
Christian, whose views are not in accordance with the
anti-paedobaptists. The submission of a creed, containing a
belief of the infant rite, and an injunction to practise it,
shows the jealousy of the dominant party toward the
Albigenses on this subject.
22. The testimonies of avowed enemies and
friends we take leave to record.
1160
Dr. Ecbertus says, the principal reason the Arnoldists bring
against infant baptism is Matt. xxviii. 19, and Mark xvi.
16. The Albigenses say, concerning the baptizing of
children, that through their incapacity it nothing profiteth
them to salvation; and that baptism ought to be deferred
till they come to years of discretion, and when they can
with their own mouth make a profession of faith.*
Erbardus, a great doctor of that time, says.
The Puritans do deny baptism to children, because they want
understanding. †
1017
The citizens of Orleans, the first Albigenses, denied
baptismal grace.
o
Dr. Wall records that the Lionists, or
followers of Waldo, say that the washing given to children
does no good.
S
They condemn all the
sacraments of the Catholic church. ||
* Danver's Bap. p. 292-7.
† Idem.
o
Milner's Ch. Hist., Cent. 11, ch. 2, from Usher.
S
Hist. Inf. Bap, p. 2, 233.
|| Jones's Ecc. Lect., vol.
ii., p. 486.
"Baptism added nothing to justification, and
afforded no benefit to children."*
1192
Alanus affirms that some of the Puritans believed that
baptism was no use to infants, but only to those of riper
age, and that others saw no use in baptism at all.†
Favin the historian says, "the Albigeois do
esteem the baptizing of infants superstitious.o
Izam the troubadour, a Dominican persecutor,
says, "they admitted another baptism" to what the church
did,—that is, believers' baptism.
S
Chassanion says, "I cannot deny
that the Albigeois for the greater part were opposed to
infant baptism; the truth is, they did not reject the
sacrament as useless, but only as unnecessary to infants."
||
Other testimonies will be given under the
Waldensian section.
* Dr. Allix's Rem. Pied. ch. 11, p. 95.
† Id., ch. 17, p. 155, and
Dr. Wall, pt. 2, p. 240. The anti-baptismists and the
Anti-paedobaptists are allowed by Wall and others, but these
writers cannot, at this period, establish pasdobaptism out
of the church of Rome and Greece.
o
Danver on Bap., p. 301.
S
Rob. Ecc. Res., p. 463.
|| Facts opposed to Fiction,
p. 48.