Baptist In Bohemia
Baptists Patrons
Waldo’s Labors
Character Of Picardians
Popery Introduced
Wickliff’s Works
Huss’s Efforts
Bohemians Divided
Jerome Arrested
Jerome’s Character
Jerome’s Trial
Jerome’s Defence
Jerome’s Martyrdom
His Labors
Empire Divided
Conflicts In Bohemia
United Brethren
State Of The Churches
Edicts Against The
Brethren
Baptists Alter Their
Creed
Comprehension Of The
Brethren
"Behold, I have set before thee an open door, and no man can
shut it." —Rev. 3:8.
Baptists
in Bohemia
1.
THE kingdom of Bohemia is, in point of territorial surface,
the most elevated ground, the most mountainous, and by
nature the strongest in Germany. The country is about three
hundred miles long, and two hundred and fifty broad, and is
almost surrounded with impenetrable forests and lofty
mountains. Bohemia derived its name from BOHMEN, which
signifies the country of the Boil, 590 a tribe of Celts, who
retired into the Hercynian forest, from Gaul, to avoid the
Roman yoke. The ancient inhabitants are represented by
contemporary historians as a people of a ruddy complexion,
and of enormous stature and muscular strength.*
2.
We have authentic evidence in the writings
55 of the apostle
Paul that he preached the gospel of Christ in Illyricum, and
that Titus visited Dalmatia; hence the Bohemians infer that
the gospel was preached in all the countries of Sclavonia in
the first ages of Christianity. They also say that Jerome,
who was a native of Stridom, a city of Illyricum, and was a
378 presbyter
in a church in Dalmatia,† translated the Scriptures into his
native tongue, and that all the nations of Sclavonian
extraction, the Poles, the Hungarians, the Russians, the
Wallachians, the Bohemians, and Vaudois, use this
translation to this day.o
3.
For want of records, we are necessitated to pass over the
early state and history of this people. It is not improbable
that some of the Vaudois who left Spain on
714 the invasion
of the Moors, reached Bohemia, since reference is often made
to their descendants, and their manner of attending the
ordinance.
S
The persecution…
*Jones's
Ch. Hist, v. ii. p. 195.
† Vide sup. ch. 1, sect. 4,
j; 4, A.D. 378.
o
Robinson's Res., pp. 475-479.
S
Taylor's Hist. Of the Gen. Bap., vol. i. p. 25.
Baptists'
Patrons
…845
experienced by the nonconformists in Greece
occasioned many of the Baptists to migrate, and Gibbon
says,* "they effected an entrance into Europe by the German
caravans," though Mosheim maintains that it was from Italy
the Bulgarians or Paulicians spread themselves
950 like an
inundation, through the provinces of Europe. † That such a
people were found at an early period in this kingdom,
becomes plain from records.
4. There were two great and powerful families
who patronized the Baptists in this quarter, and manifested
much attachment to them. The one was the noble family of
BOZKOVICZ, allied by blood or marriage to almost all the
grandees of the kingdom, and to several of the kings.
1140 In the reign
of Uladislaus II. (1140), Lady Bozkovicz became patroness to
those called heretics, and settled them on the family
estate. We do not discover in history the exact source from
whence these pious people at this time arose, though it is
not improbable they were followers of Peter de Bruys, Henry,
or Arnold of Brescia, which circumstance is supported by the
era of events, though at a later period they were named
Picards. These Baptists obtained this influence over ladies
of dignity in a manner highly to their honor. They kept a
school for young ladies, and the mode of education and the
purity of their manners were in such high repute, that the
daughters of a very great part of the nobility of Bohemia
were sent thither to be educated: and their bitterest
enemies say they kept young ladies from the company of the
other sex, and formed their manners with so much innocency,
that there was nothing reprehensible but their…
*
Ro. Hist., c. 54.
†
Hist. of the Church, Cent. 10, p. 2, ch. 5,
S
2.
Waldo's
Labors
…heresy.
Lady Bozkovicz, the patroness, with other women, expounded
the Scriptures to her fair pupils, and performed all
religious offices among them without a priest. When these
young ladies were returned to their parents and married,
they influenced their husbands, and children, and friends to
favor a people so harmless and so useful to society, and
this patronage preserved them nearly two centuries. The
other family, patrons and friends of the Baptists, was the
very ancient and noble house of SLAVATA. This family
descended from the dukes of Saltz, lords of the district,
where some of the first French refugees for religion are
said to have settled. Lord William was chancellor of the
kingdom of Bohemia. This gentleman was educated in one of
the Baptist schools until twenty years of age. Many great
families protected and employed the Baptists; but when the
great and noble lost their love for civil and religious
liberty, they neglected or persecuted these people.*
1176 5. When Waldo sought an
asylum in Bohemia, from the pope's measures, it is certain
that kingdom was immersed in great darkness and
superstition. Waldo and his friends found the inhabitants
tenacious of the rites and ceremonies of the Greek church,
which rites were nearly as superstitious as those of the
church of Rome. By unceasing efforts, these persons from
Picardy, afterward termed PICARDS, introduced more
extensively among the Bohemians, the knowledge of the
Christian faith in its purity, according to the word of
God.† In this kingdom, the pious reformers and evangelists
obtained permission to…
*
Robinson's Ecc. Res., pp. 532-4.
†
Jones's Hist. of the Christian Church, vol. ii. p. 198.
…settle
at SALTZ and LUN, on the river Eger, just on the borders of
the kingdom: and near one hundred miles from Prague. A
description of this people is to be found in the Bohemian
records, which is satisfactory as to their denominational
aspect. 'With these and later Puritans, it was customary to
settle on the boundaries of kingdoms, so that in case of
surprise, they might be able by a few steps to remove
themselves out of one kingdom into another. Almost two
centuries after, another undoubted record of the same
country mentions a people of the same description, some of
whom were burnt at Prague, and others still inhabited the
borders of the country; and one hundred and fifty years
later, we find a people of the same class settled by
connivance in the metropolis, and in several other parts of
the kingdom. Other testimonies prove their existence to a
later date, so that after the twelfth century documents are
extant, proving the existence of Baptists in Bohemia* and
Poland.†
6.
Waldo's labors in Bohemia were crowned with remarkable
success. He spent his concluding years in this…
*Id. p. 39, and Rob. Res., pp. 480, 527.
†It
is recorded by Martin Cromer, that in very early ages great
numbers of Christians inhabited the woods of Poland, Rob.
Res., p. 555. Berenger's sentiments were here propagated
(Id. 557), and owing to the patronage of some nobles, Poland
abounded with Picards and Anabaptists. At an after period,
this kingdom was visited by Jerome of Prague, and these
churches made collections of money for their persecuted
brethren in Lombardy. Ib.
The mode of baptizing in Poland, when the
Catholic bishops visited the Poles and the Pomenarians, is
stated as follows: "In the 12th century, Otho, a Catholic
bishop, travelled through these kingdoms teaching and
baptizing. Such as expressed a willingness to be baptized
were put under tuition. After instruction, they were to fast
three days before baptism. Otho caused large tubs to be put
or let into the ground, and filled with water. Three such
places were provided for men, women and children, and each
was surrounded with curtains like a tent. After some
ceremonies, he baptized these all naked, by immersing them
in water, pronouncing the usual words." See Basnage's Obs.
in Rob. Hist. Bap., p. 288, &c.
NOTE.—We see that immersion was the action of
baptism up to this period, A.D. 1179—ED.
Character
of Picardians
…kingdom,
promoting the cause of his Master in every commendable
1179 way, until
1179, when he was rewarded with a crown that fadeth not
away. Waldo's asylum at Saltz afforded refuge to those
Albigenses who, in 1207
the ensuing year, being greatly increased in France, and
becoming formidable to the pontiffs, were constrained to
abandon their native soil from the cruel measures adopted
against them. Bohemia, Livonia, and Poland, afforded these
pious emigrants shelter from enraged enemies.
7.
The religious character of this people is so very different
from that of all others, that the likeness is not easily
mistaken. They had no priests, as a separate order of men,
but taught one another. They had no private property, for
they held all things jointly. They executed no offices, and
neither exacted or took oaths. They bore no arms, and rather
chose to suffer than resist wrong. They professed their
belief of Christianity by being baptized, and their love to
Christ and one another by receiving the Lord's Supper. They
aspired at neither wealth nor power, and their plan was
industry.* "The pious Picardians, as they were called, in
Bohemia and Moravia," says Witsius, "valued the article of
Justification, at its true price, when in their confession
of faith, Art. 6, they thus write: This sixth article is
accounted with us the most principal of all, as being the
sum of all Christianity and piety. Wherefore…
*
Robins. Ecc. Res., p. 527.
Popery
Introduced
…our
divines teach and handle it with all diligence and
application, and endeavor to instil it into others.'"*
8.
An inquisitor of the church of Rome says of the Bohemians,
they say the church of Rome is not the church of Jesus
Christ, but an assembly of ungodly men, and that it ceased
to be the true church at the time Pope Sylvester (330)
presided. They despise and reject all the ordinances and
statutes of the church, as being too many and very
burdensome. They condemn all the sacraments of the church.
Concerning the sacrament of baptism, they say, that the
catechism signifies nothing; that the absolution pronounced
over infants avails nothing; that godfathers and godmothers
do not understand what they answer the priest. That infants
cannot be saved by baptism, as they do not believe; † they
condemn the custom of believers communicating no more than
once a year, whereas they communicate every day (or every
Lord's day). They deride the dress of priests; and reproach
the church that she raises bastards, boys, and notorious
offenders, to high ecclesiastical dignities. Whatever is
preached without scripture proof, they account no better
than fables,
oWith this account agrees the
history of the Waldenses given by Aeneas Sylvius, afterwards
Pope Pius 11.
S
All Bohemian writers state that the Picards
or Waldenses settled early in this kingdom, and that these
people…
* Witsius
on the Covenants, vol. i., p. 391.
† Allix's Ch. Pied., C. 22,
p. 223.
oAllix's
ut. sup.
S
Jones's Church Hist., vol. ii. p. 39.
NOTE.—Let it be remembered that
Baptists in all ages have re-baptized, not because Catholics
did not immerse, or because those who came from the
Catholics were baptized in their infancy, but because they
regarded all ordinances administered in a corrupt or
anti-scriptural organization to be null and void.—ED.
Wickliff's
Works
…baptized
and re-baptized such persons as joined their churches, and
that they had always done so.* They are
1300 said in the
14th century to have numbered 80,000 in this
kingdom. †
9. Two monks, in the ninth century,
introduced popery into Bohemia, after five centuries; and
under Charles IV. it was fully established. Some opposition
was made by two of his Majesty's chaplains, who persuaded
the emperor 1360
to curb the pope and reform the church; but these friends to
the cause of liberty were banished, and the advocates of
reform lost all hopes of succeeding by the favor of the
emperor,
o By the banishment of those
two noblemen, the voice of reform at court was silenced;
ignorance, profligacy, and vice prevailed among all orders
of men in the national church; the inquisition was
introduced to enforce uniformity in matters of religion. The
consequence was, that multitudes withdrew themselves from
the public places of worship, and followed the dictates of
their own consciences, by worshipping God in private houses,
woods, and caves. Here they were persecuted, dragooned,
drowned, and killed; and thus matters went on, till Huss and
Jerome of Prague appeared.
S
1375
10. In the latter Part of Wickliff's life, Richard II., king
of England, married Anne, sister to the king of Bohemia, and
consequently opened a free intercourse between the two
kingdoms. Peter Payne, Principal of Edmund Hall, in the
University of Oxford, who became obnoxious to papal violence
for his opposition to the rites of that church, fled into
Bohemia, to which…
* Robins.
Res. pp. 506, 508, 517.
† Jones's ut sup., p. 119,
and Allix's Pied. c. 23.
o
Robins. Res. p. 480.
S
Jones's ut sup. p. 199.
Huss's
Efforts
…place
he brought a number of Wickliff's tracts. These were highly
esteemed by Huss and Jerome, and the greater part of the
university. The introduction of these writings into the
university gave great offence to the catholic clergy, and
the Archbishop of Prague issued his orders for all persons
possessing such books to bring them to him; consequently two
hundred volumes of them, finely written, and adorned with
costly covers and gold borders, were committed to the
flames. This conduct in Archbishop Sbynko excited great
disgust in the minds of the students of the university of
Prague, and Huss in particular.*
11. John Huss was born in the village of
Hussinetz, in 1373, of parents in affluent circumstances. He
studied in 1394
the University of Prague. At the age of twenty-one he
was raised to the dignity of Professor, and
1400 In 1400, he
was appointed to preach in one of the largest churches of
that city. He was irreproachable in his life, his manners
were the most affable and engaging; his talents were
popular; he was the idol of the people; but in gaining their
esteem, he drew on himself the execration of the priests. He
continued, like Claude of Turin and Wickliff of England, in
the catholic establishment, lamenting its corruptions, while
he strove to effect a reformation.
1407 He appeared
in the character of a reformer so early as 1407. He was
distinguished by erudition, eloquence, and his assiduity to
his pastoral functions. He is said to have embraced the
sentiments of the Waldenses.† He openly advocated the
reforming doctrines of Wickliff. His bold position in the
cause of reform, his appeal to the pope from the mandate of
the archbishop, in…
* Robins. Res., p. 480.
†Chamb. Die., Art. Huss.
…burning
Wickliff's books, proves his connexion, while it led his
Holiness to understand how deeply the reformers' writings
had taken root in Bohemia; in consequence of which, the pope
issued a bull against the new doctrine. Huss and the members
of the university entered
1410 a protest against the proceedings of the
archbishop, who had sent out processes against four eminent
members, for refusing to deliver up the proscribed works.
Huss was therefore cited before the pope; but he excused
himself from visiting Rome, and was supported in his plea by
all the leading persons in the kingdom, excepting the
clergy. Huss was excommunicated by the pope for contumacy,
and all his followers were involved in the same censure. He,
however, realized protection for some time from the king,
queen, and nobility of Bohemia; but in
1415, he was
shamefully betrayed, and afterwards tried for heresy,
convicted, and burnt. It is difficult to say what his
religious views were. His sermons are full of anabaptistical
errors, as they were so called, and many of his followers
became baptists.* His views found a prepared people in
Bohemia, in the persons of the Waldenses, Ficards, or
Beghards, of which party he has often been considered the
head.
12. Though we cannot decide on Huss's views,
yet his followers are easily deciphered, from a letter
written by Erasmus, wherein he states, that "the Hussites
renounced all rights and ceremonies of the catholic church,
they ridicule our doctrine and practice (as reformers) in
both the sacraments, they admit none until they are dipped
in -water, and they reckon one another, without distinctions
of rank, to be called brothers and sisters;"† which accords…
* Robins. Res., pp. 481-2.
† Ivimy's Hist. of the Eng. Bap.,
vol. i., p. 70.
Bohemians
Divided
…with
what is said of the early Waldenses in Bohemia, as detailed
by Dr. Allix.* These Hussites prevailed in Hungary, Silicia,
and Poland; † though his followers were most numerous in
those cities of Germany that lay on the Rhine, especially at
Cologne,o
where anon we shall find the Lollards.
13. After Huss's death, we are informed by
Sleidan, "that the Bohemians were divided on the articles of
religion into three classes or sects. The first were such as
acknowledged the pope of Rome to be head of the church, and
vicar of Jesus Christ; the second were those that received
the Eucharist in both kinds, and in celebrating mass, read
some things in the vulgar tongue, but in all other matters
differed nothing from the church of Rome; the third were
those who went by the name of Picards or Beghards; these
called the pope of Rome and all his party antichrist, and
the whore described in the Revelation. They admitted of
nothing in the affairs of religion, but the Bible; they
chose their own priests and bishops, rather than teachers;
denied marriage to no man; performed no offices for the
dead; and had but very few holy days and ceremonies." It is
obvious, from what has been stated, that the latter class
alone were the genuine Waldenses,
S
to whom we constantly refer.
14. Jerome of Prague was the intimate friend
and companion of Huss, inferior to him in age, experience,
and authority, but his superior in all the liberal
endowments. He was educated in the university of his native
city. When he had Finished his studies, he travelled into
many…
*Ch. Pied.
c. 22, p. 214.
† Lon. Ency., Art. Huss and
Reform.
oMosh.
Hist., vol. ii., p. 509.
S
Hist. of the Reform., b. iii., p. 53.
Jerome
Arrested
…countries
of Europe, where he was admired, particularly for his
graceful elocution. During his travels he visited England,
where he obtained access to Wickliffs writings, which he
copied out and returned with them to Prague. He had
distinguished himself by an active cooperation with Huss in
all his hostility to the abominations of the times, which
caused him to be cited before the council of
1415 Constance on
the 17th of April, 1415, at the time his friend Huss was
confined in a castle near that city. Hearing how his friend
had been used, when he got near Constance, he prudently
retraced his steps to Iberlingen, an imperial city, from
whence he wrote to the emperor and the council, requesting a
safe conduct; but not obtaining one to his satisfaction, he
was preparing to return into Bohemia, when he was arrested
at Hirsechaw, and conveyed -to Constance. Huss and Jerome
were tried by the same council, and afterwards burnt by
their order. Huss suffered, July, 1415. He sustained his
sentence with the most heroic fortitude, praying for his
persecutors. The dread of suffering at first intimidated
Jerome, which caused his sentence to be delayed. His enemies
took the advantage of those symptoms, in hopes of gaining
him over; but he recovered his wonted vigor, and avowed his
sentiments in the most open manner, and supported
1416 them with
increasing confidence to the last. He expired in the flames,
singing, "Hanc animam, in flammis, offero, Christe, tibi; i.
e. This soul of mine, in flames of fire, 0 Christ, I offer
thee."*
15. Poggius, who was secretary to the pope, a
frank ingenuous man, saw and heard Jerome in the council,
and…
*Jones's Christian Ch., vol. ii., p.
205. Robin. Res., p. 513. Clark's Lives, p. 116.
Jerome's
Character
…wrote,
in a letter to his friend Leonard Aretin, an eulogium on
him, in a spirit of admiration and love. The letter being
interesting, we subjoin a copy, somewhat abridged. He says,
"Since my return to Constance, my attention has been wholly
engaged by Jerome, the Bohemian heretic, as he is called.
The eloquence and learning which this person has employed in
his own defence, are so extraordinary, that I cannot forbear
giving you a short account of him.
To confess the truth, I never knew the art of
speaking carried so near the model of ancient eloquence. It
was, indeed, amazing to hear with what force of expression,
with what Suency of language, and with what excellent
reasoning, he answered his adversaries. Nor was I less
struck with the gracefulness of his manner, the dignity of
his action, and the firmness and constancy of his whole
behavior. It grieved me to think so great a man was laboring
under so atrocious an accusation. Whether this accusation be
a just one, God knows: for myself, I inquire not into the
merits of it; resting satisfied with the decision of my
superiors. But I will just give you a summary of his trial.
After many articles had been proved against him, leave was
at length given him to answer each in its order; but Jerome
long refused, strenuously contending that he had many things
to say previously in his defence, and that he ought first to
be heard in general, before he descended to particulars.
When this was over-ruled, 'Here,' said he, standing in the
midst of the assembly, 'here is justice—here is equity!
Beset by my enemies, I am pronounced a heretic—I am
condemned before I am examined. Were you Gods omniscient,
instead of an assembly of fallible men, you could not act
with more sufficiency. Error is the lot of mortals; and you,
exalted as you are, are subject to…
Jerome's
Trial
…it.
But consider, that the higher you are exalted, of the more
dangerous consequence are your errors. As for me, I know I
am a wretch below your notice; but at least consider, that
an unjust action in such an assembly will be of dangerous
example.' This, and much more, he spoke with great eloquence
of language, in the midst of a very unruly and indecent
assembly; and thus far, at least, he prevailed; the council
ordered that he should first answer objections, and promised
that he should then have liberty to speak. It is incredible
with what acuteness he answered, and with what amazing
dexterity he warded off every stroke of his adversaries.
Nothing escaped him: his whole behavior was truly great and
pious. If he were, indeed, the man his defence spoke him, he
was so far from meriting death,
that, in my judgment, he was not in any degree culpable. In
a word, he endeavored to prove, that the greater part of the
charges were purely the inventions of his adversaries. Among
other things, being accused of hating and defaming the holy
see, the pope, the cardinals, the prelates, and the whole
estate of the clergy, he stretched out his hands, and said,
in a most moving accent, 'On which side, reverend fathers,
shall I turn for redress? Whom shall I implore? Whose
assistance can I expect? Which of you hath not this
malicious charge entirely alienated from me? Which of you
hath it not changed from a judge into an inveterate enemy?
It was artfully alleged indeed! Though other parts of their
charge were of less moment, my accusers might well imagine,
that if this were fastened on me, it could not fail in
drawing upon me the united indignation of my judges.” It
appears from this secretary, Poggio Bracciotini, that on the
third day of his trial, Jerome obtained leave to…
Jerome's
Defence
…defend
himself. He first began with prayer to God, whose assistance
he pathetically implored. He then referred to profane
history, and to unjust sentences given against Socrates,
Plato, Anaxagoras. He next referred to the Scriptures, and
exhibited the sufferings of the worthies; and then he dwelt
on the merits of the cause pending, resting entirely on the
credit of witnesses, who avowedly hated him; and here his
appeal made a strong impression upon the minds of his
hearers, and not a little shook the credit of the witnesses.
"It was," says the secretary, "impossible to hear this
pathetic speaker without emotion. Every ear was captivated,
and every heart touched. But wishes in his favor are vain;
he threw himself beyond a possibility of mercy. Braving
death, he even provoked the vengeance which was hanging over
him. Through this whole oration, he showed a most amazing
strength of memory. He had been confined almost a year in a
dungeon, the severity of which usage he complained of, but
in the language of a great and good man. In this horrid
place, he was deprived of books and papers; yet
notwithstanding this, and the constant anxiety which must
have hung over him, he was at no more loss for proper
authorities and quotations, than if he had spent the
intermediate time at leisure in his study." In his defence,
"his voice was sweet, distinct and full; his action every
way the most proper, either to express indignation or to
raise pity, though he made no affected application to the
passions of his audience. Firm and intrepid, he stood before
the council, collected in himself, and not only contemning,
but seeming even desirous of death. The greatest character
in ancient story could not possibly go beyond him. If there
is any justice in history, this man will be admired by all…
Jerome's
Martyrdom
…posterity.
What I admired, was his learning, his eloquence, and amazing
acuteness. God knows whether these things were the
ground-work of his ruin. With cheerful countenance, and more
than stoical constancy, he met his fate; fearing neither
death itself, nor the horrible form in
1416 which it
appeared." He suffered
martyrdom, May 20, 1416.*
16. It is recorded of Jerome, that he was
baptized by immersion, by some of the Greek church. This
view of Jerome's, with his being a layman, will account for
many historians omitting his name altogether. The neglect of
some writers has been amply repaid by the secretary's
statement, which we felt called on to detail. Jerome held
almost the same doctrines as Wickliff had taught, and took
unwearied pains to convince the common people that they
might, without any authority from the pope or the clergy,
read, judge, and explain the Holy Scriptures; that any one
who could might preach, baptize, and administer the Lord's
Supper, and that these exercises were as effectual to answer
all the ends for which they were instituted, in the hands of
the laity as in those of the clergy. He travelled into
Russia, Poland, Silicia, and Lithuania for the same purpose,
and was every where heard with admiration and respect. He
was one of the most eminent of the reformers, though little
is said of him in history. † Huss and Jerome both taught
those errors charged on the Anabaptists. This accusation can
be brought against those reformers, who advocated a
separation from worldly establishments, and a liberty to
choose the way of preferring devotion to the great Head of
the church. It is true some reformers, as Claude, Wickliff,
Huss, stated Christian…
* Jones's Hist. of the Ch., vol. ii., pp.
207—11.
† Robins. Res., p. 513.
His
Labors
…liberty,
but these, with others, set forth no example of its value,
or the duty involved in the command, by coming out of
corrupt communities; while other reformers left the Roman
church, and formed new associations, on the same principle,
and with similar materials, to the one from which they had
seceded. A few were found at different periods, who left the
hierarchy, and these carried their views and principles into
practice before the world, and are now denominated by
historians witnesses for the truth, though they encountered
the odium of heresy from Rome, and the stigma of Anabaptist
from their German brethren and their successors.*
17. The Baptists, from the time of their
early settlement, lived about the forests and mines. These
people were now multiplied by accessions from other
kingdoms, and by those converted under Huss and Jerome.
These people were of different sentiments on doctrinal
subjects, but in general they entertained the same ideas of
religion as the old Vaudois did.
They were all indiscriminately called Waldenses and Picards,
and it is said they all rebaptized. Huss, while in prison,
wrote a letter to a friend at Prague, in which he said,
"Salute also my brother teachers in Christ, shoemakers,
tailors and writers; and tell them to attend diligently to
the Holy Scripture." The effects of Huss and Jerome's
instruction were now visible in the multitude, in the
disregard they paid to relicts and the Catholic priests. The
priesthood suffered every indignity from these aroused
people. Crato, physician to the emperor Maximilian, was one
day riding with him in the royal carriage, when his imperial
Majesty asked the doctor what sect he thought came nearest
the simplicity of the…
* Robins. Res., p. 482.
…liberty, but these, with others, set forth
no example of its value, or the duty involved in the
command, by coming out of corrupt communities; while other
reformers left the Roman church, and formed new
associations, on the same principle, and with similar
materials, to the one from which they had seceded. A few
were found at different periods, who left the hierarchy, and
these carried their views and principles into practice
before the world, and are now denominated by historians
witnesses for the truth, though they encountered the odium
of heresy from Rome, and the stigma of anabaptism from their
German brethren and their successors.*
17. The Baptists, from the time of their
early settlement, lived about the forests and mines. These
people were now multiplied by accessions from other
kingdoms, and by those converted under Huss and Jerome.
These people were of different sentiments on doctrinal
subjects, but in general they entertained the same ideas of
religion as the old Vaudois did. They were all
indiscriminately called Waldenses and Picards, and it is
said they all rebaptized. Huss, while in prison, wrote a
letter to a friend at Prague, in which he said, "Salute also
my brother teachers in Christ, shoemakers, tailors and
writers; and tell them to attend diligently to the Holy
Scripture." The effects of Huss and Jerome's instruction
were now visible in the multitude, in the disregard they
paid to relicts and the Catholic priests. The priesthood
suffered every indignity from these aroused people. Crato,
physician to the emperor Maximilian, was one day riding with
him in the royal carriage, when his imperial Majesty asked
the doctor what sect he thought came nearest the simplicity
of the…
* Robins. Res., p. 482.
Empire Divided
…apostles?
Crato replied, "I verily think the people called Ficards;"
the emperor replied, "I think so too."*
18. To resume our details: the proceedings of
the Council of Constance flew like lightning all over the
kingdom, and Bohemia was all in an uproar. The king,
Winceslaus, was seldom sober, and paid little regard to the
welfare of his subjects. The nation was divided into three
religious bodies, and the nobles were divided into factions,
some zealous to resent the insult offered to the nation by
the council, and to repel the forces of foreigners, who had
been excited by the pope to visit and suppress heresy in
Bohemia, and to oblige that fierce nation to establish
uniformity in religion. The king put himself under the
emperor, and the latter gave his support to the Catholic
party, promising to suppress heresy, and settle the affairs
both of church and state. The measures now adopted by the
priesthood to suppress heresy aroused all men, particularly
the patriot and plebeian. These were changed from a harmless
inquisitive multitude into a resentful community. Feeling
their importance, and seeing the union of efforts in order
to suppress their privileges, they gathered together in
multitudes in the country, about five miles from Prague,
where the people met for worship: they elected their own
preachers, who administered to this company of various
sentiments, the Lord's Supper, at three hundred tables
(boards 1240
laid on casks), to forty thousand people. The conflict now
commenced between the Hussites and Catholics; confusion
ensued, riots and murders were frequent. In the city of
Prague, the enraged citizens threw twelve imperial officers
out of the windows of the council-chamber. The emperor
entered Bohemia with an…
* Robins.
Res., pp. 508—21.
Conflicts
in Bohemia
…armed force, while the Protestants, to
defend their rights, took up arms, and chose Ziska as their
general.
19. The protestant army was made up of
different parties, uniting in one common cause of defence
from various causes; but it would appear that the Vaudois,
Waldenses, or Picards did not enter Ziska's army during the
war. We know their principles were opposed to war, and they
do not seem to have borne arms at any time. During such
commotions, it is said of them, that "they were always going
and coming, retiring from the cities while others were
coming to reside. When they were persecuted in one city,
they fled to another. They do not seem to have had any
regular (i. e., separate class) minister.* A portion of this
people, called Waldenses, came down from the mountains to
live in peace under the protection of Ziska. This state of
civil discord lasted upwards of twelve years. The agitated
state of the kingdom for so many years must have been very
injurious to the cause of under
1433 filed
religion. The Council of Basil, in 1433, took great pains to
bring the Protestant delegates to submit implicitly to the
council; but they utterly refused. After many intrigues by
the Catholics, a division was effected among the
Protestants, consequently their importance became lessened.
The affairs of the kingdom remained in a very unsettled
state even to the middle of this century, about which time
Rokyzan, archbishop of Prague, tired with contentions,
advised the advocates of reform to retire to the lordship of
Latitz, about twenty miles from Prague, a place desolated by
war, where they might establish their own way of worship,
choose their own…
* Robins. Res. p. 517.
…ministers, introduce their own discipline
and order, according to their own consciences and judgments.
Numbers adopted the suggestion, and embraced the privilege,
and 1457 In
1457 they formed themselves into a society. This body being
made up of persons entertaining religious views wide of each
other, they chose the name of UNITAS FRATRUM, or THE UNITED
BRETHREN, though they were generally called Picards. These
brethren bound themselves to a vigorous discipline in church
affairs, and not to defend themselves with the sword, but
suffer the 1459
loss of all for conscience sake.* In 1459 these godly
people, made up of all classes, obtained from their king,
Pogiebracius, a place to worship in, where they established
a society on the model of primitive simplicity.† These
brethren re-baptized all such as joined themselves to their
congregation.o
1460
20. Three years had scarcely elapsed before their
numbers were considerable; pious persons flocked to them,
not only from different parts of Bohemia, but even from
every distant quarter of the whole empire: and churches were
gathered every where throughout Bohemia and Moravia. Many of
the old-fashioned Waldenses, who had been lurking about in
dens and caves of the earth,…
* Robins.
Res. pp. 498-9.
† Clark's Martyr, p. 127.
o
Buck's Theo. Diet. 4 Ed. Lon. Ency. art. Bohem. Brethren.
The brethren in their writings retain the early mode. Trobe
says of Christ's baptism, externally his body was washed
with pure water, nay, even dipped into it, and as it was,
buried by the ministry of a servant of Christ.
S
138. Again, "The dipping or over streaming with water cannot
of itself procure us salvation, see 1 Pet. iii. 21; but the
participation of the death of Jesus, which faith lays hold
of, is that upon which all depends in baptism."
S
139. Exposition of the Christian doctrine of the United
Brethren, by Benj. La Trobe.
State
of the Churches
…as
well as upon the tops of mountains, now came forward with
alacrity, joined themselves to the "United Brethren," and
became eminently serviceable to the newly-formed societies,
in consequence of their more advanced state of religious
knowledge and experience. Many persons who had previously
held infant baptism renounced those views, and the ministers
baptized them before they received them into church
communion.* The multiplication of these brethren raised a
clamor among the Catholic priesthood; the archbishop was
censured, and reproached with the terms used to signalize
the brethren; consequently he changed his course of conduct
towards them. Three years had scarcely elapsed from their
establishment in religious
1462 freedom, when
a terrible persecution broke out against them, and which
trial was calculated to prove what spirit they were of. They
were declared by the state unworthy the common rights of
subjects; and in the depth of winter, expelled from their
homes in towns and villages, with the forfeiture of all
their goods. Even the sick were cast into the open fields,
where numbers perished through cold and hunger. Every kind
of indignity was realized by these inoffensive people, with
the loss of all that was dear. Many retired into the woods,
caves, &c., so that almost every society of these people in
the kingdom became scattered. In the ensuing reign, the
dispersed brethren were suffered to return to their homes,
to occupy their lands, and were allowed ease and prosperity.
They now took such deep root, and extended their branches so
far and wide, that after this settlement it was impossible…
* Robins. Res. p. 449.
…1500
to extirpate them. In 1500, there were two hundred
congregations of the united brethren in Bohemia and Moravia.
Many counts, barons, and noblemen joined their churches, who
built them meeting-houses in their cities and villages.
These Baptists got the Bible translated into the Bohemian
tongue, and printed at Venice: when that edition was
disposed of, they obtained two more, printed at Nuremberg.
Finding the demand for the Holy Scriptures continuing to
increase, they established a printing-office at Prague,
another at Bunzlaw, in Bohemia, and a third at Kralitz, in
Moravia, where at first they printed nothing but Bohemian
Bibles.*
21. The disposition of the king of Bohemia
might be perceived from the import of the prayer he
preferred mom-ing and night. His anxiety for peace in his
empire led him to offer these words continually: "Give peace
in my time, 0 Lord." The Catholic clergy were unceasingly
teasing him to suppress heresy. He in return ordered them to
converse with the Picards, in order to convince them of
their errors. Taking hold of the queen's gravid situation,
they thought it a favorable opportunity to move his fears,
in which they were but too successful; for at length they
obtained an edict for the suppression of the Picards. The
king, on the recollection of what was done, was grieved at
his conduct, and professedly sought forgiveness of God for
his act. The edict became law four years
1507 after, when
the brethren were prohibited from holding any religious
assemblies, public or private; commanding that all their
meeting-houses should be shut up, and that within a given
time the Picards or…
* Robins. Res. p. 502.
Edicts
Against the Brethren
…1510
Brethren should all hold communion with either Calixtines or
Catholics.* The clergy could not…
* It is said that some of the brethren, to
ward off this law, had presented to the king, while in
Hungary, a confession of their faith. This confession is
called Waldensian by the Pasdobaptists, and was presented in
1508. The confession is entitled, A Confession of Faith of
the Waldensian Brethren, and is addressed to king
Uladislaus, in Hungary. It begins with informing the king
that they were not Waldenses, though they were persecuted
under that name. It goes on to speak of their sufferings,
and the reason for laying before him the most sacred
articles of their religion, which they say were revealed by
the Holy Spirit, and deposited in the Holy Scriptures, and
are perfectly agreeable to the apostles' creed, and the
faith of the primitive church. Then follows the creed, which
consists of fourteen short articles. The sixth is on
baptism, viz.: "Whoever, having arrived at years of
discretion, hath believed by hearing the word, and hath
acquired power over sin by renewing and enlightening of his
mind, ought to profess the inward cleansing of his mind by
exterior washing, and is to be baptized into the unity of
the holy church, in the name of, &c. This our profession
extends to children, who, by an apostolic canon, as
Dionysius writes, ought to be baptized." On this confession
we observe there were eight editions in twenty-five years;
each was improved; and the last was prefaced by Luther, when
their anabaptism ceased. The brethren complained that their
creed was translated into German by some one who knew not
the Bohemian language, and who had altered some things, and
added others. There was apparently no Hungarian king in the
sixteenth century of the name of Uladislaus, and the
petitioners deny being Waldenses. Now we believe this creed
emanated from the Calixtines, a mixed body of professors,
while the confession indirectly confirms this view, since it
is expressive of believers' and unbelievers' baptism. Dr.
Allix's Ch. Pied. c. 24; and this date and society in 1440
agree with Uladislaus' reign. The Picards or Brethren ever
boasted of their Waldensian ancestors, and were ever found
regulating all their religious affairs by the Scriptures
alone, discarding the writings of the Fathers as fables. It
is recorded at a later period, that the Bohemian brethren,
or the successors to these people, were comprehended in the
Lutheran church, when they consented to leave off
re-baptizing; but re-baptizing and Paedobaptism have ever
been at variance. Rob. Res. pp. 503 and 507. Osiander in
Danver's, pp. 328, &c. See Dr. Allix's Ch. Pied. p. 241. See
Appendix to the Waldensian History.
Baptists
Alter Their Creed
…prevail
with all to pursue their cruel measures, though many of the
brethren were called to severe sufferings. Some of them
emigrated, others retired into the forests and caves,
worshipping God in private. Those detected in their
devotions were arrested and brought before priests, who
required them to own them as their shepherds. They replied,
"Christ is the Shepherd of our souls;" upon which they were
convicted and burned. In this confused
and suffering state the affairs of the brethren
continued, until Luther appeared as a reformer in Germany.
So wearied were the United Brethren of sufferings, that they
1516 had been
meditating a compromise with the Catholic church; and when
the reformer appeared, they actually wrote to him for his
advice on the subject. Luther's admonitions in the end
brought them to submit their creed to him, who revised it,
and prefaced it with praises for orthodoxy, admiring the
agreement of this modern creed with their ancient church.
They now, under his protection, agreed to leave off
re-baptizing, which should in future be called ana-baptism.
Luther
1522 said,” He had
formerly been prejudiced against the brethren called
Picards; though he had always admired their aptness in the
Holy Scriptures; and it was no wonder they had expressed
themselves obscurely, because the learned languages had been
little understood in general, and as these people had
entertained such an aversion to the subtleties of the
school." To this creed and people we shall again refer.*
22. It is certain that the ancient Waldensian
church subsisted at the Reformation, and that they left off
baptizing…
*Robins.
Res. ch. 13.
Comprehension
of the Brethren
…adults
on their profession of faith. Whether all those churches of
the brethren ultimately fell into the Lutheran community,
and consequently were comprehended by imperial law, cannot
be positively decided. It is plain here that the patience of
the saints was worn out. Dan. 7:25. It appears the
assistance rendered them by able divines, and which enabled
them to conclude there was no need to re-baptize, regulated
the conduct of many; yet the Baptists were still a scattered
community, and were named now Anabaptists * and Picard
Calvinists. The emperor expressed his astonishment at their
numbers, and horror at their principal error, which was,
that, according to the express declarations of Scripture,
they were to submit to no human authority, 1 Cor. 7:23. Some
of them kept schools, and preached; others practised physic.
Luther strongly objected to those Anabaptists, who taught
and followed a worldly calling. These people lived in
forty-five divisions, called colleges, exactly as their
ancestors had done previously
1526
to their banishment from France, about four hundred
and fifty years before. But their views of liberty
occasioned the emperor's displeasure, he consequently
banished all Anabaptists from his dominions on pain of
death; † though it was found very difficult to get rid of
these Baptists. They must be comprehended in future in the
term Anabaptist, since this term, which originated in
Germany among the reformers, was given to all those who
denied infant sprinkling,
o The Moravians contend that
they are the descendants of these churches of the unitas
fratrum. S
See Anabaptists, sect. 12,
S 19.
* Ency.
Brit. Art. Anab.
† Jones's Church Hist., vol.
ii., C. 5. Robins. Res., c. 13.
o
Good and Gregory's Cyclop, art. Anap.
S
Dav. Crantz's Hist. of the Brethren.
Bost. Hist. of the Brethren.