Early Existence of
Baptists
Church Order
Puritans’ Claim
Their Ministers
Claude’s Efforts
Itinerating Baptists
Manner Of Teaching
Their Success
Peter De Bruys
Increase Of The Puritans
Vaudois And Troubadours
Protection Afforded
Reiner’s Testimony
Increase And Stability
Colonization
Increase In The Valleys
Persecuting Measures
Trials Of The Waldenses
Combination Of Enemies
Invasions On The
Waldenses
Manners Of The Waldenses
Degeneracy Of The Church
Comprehension And Numbers
Policy Of The Duke Of
Savoy
Confessions Of The
Waldenses
Union With Calvin
Remnant Of Waldenses
Waldenses Scattered
Amaud’s Efforts
Modern Waldenses
Appendix To The
Waldensian Section
Denominational
Sentiments
Denominational Views
Denominational Character
Testimonies Of Writers
Paedobaptism Among
The Waldenses
Examination Of
Paedobaptists
Perrin And
Wall’s Account Of Paedobaptism
Who Practised
Paedobaptism
Character Of Early
Paedobaptists
Grounds Of Paedobaptism
On Open Communion
Open Communion and
Socinianism
"Because thou hast kept the
word of my patience, I will also keep thee," &c.—Rev. Hi.
10.
1. THERE is a range of mountains, the highest
in Europe, extending from the Adriatic to the Mediterranean
Seas, and separating Italy from France, Switzerland, and
Germany. The principality of Piedmont derives its name from
its locality, being situated at the foot of the Alps; pede,
foot—montium, mountains. It is an extensive tract of rich
and fruitful valleys, containing a superficial extent of
thirteen thousand square miles, and is embosomed in
mountains, which are encircled again with other mountains
higher than they, intersected with deep and rapid rivers,
and exhibiting in strong contrasts the beauty and plenty of
Paradise, in sight of frightful precipices, wide lakes of
ice, and stupendous mountains of never-wasting snow. The
whole country is an interchange of hill and dale, mountain
and valley, traversed with four principal rivers; namely,
the Po, the Tanaro, the Stura, and the Dora, besides about
eight-and-twenty rivulets, great and small—which, winding
their courses in different directions, contribute to the
fertility of the valleys, which make the land, on a map, to
resemble a watered garden. Such was the surrounding scenery
of those people who were, at different periods, driven into
the wilderness—Rev. xii. 6. May we not…
Early
Existence of Baptists
…conclude, they had not only chosen the
better part, but were directed to an earthly Eden to enjoy
it?*
2. The origin and character of the people who
at an early age inhabited these valleys, has been shown; †
but such details have no interesting connexion with our
history. The same writer has proved, in a most satisfactory
way, that the class of people called Waldenses derived this
name from inhabiting valleys. In
Spain, these people were termed Navarri; in France, Vaudois
(vaux); in Lombardy, ecclesiastical writers named them
Valdenses, simply from their living in valleys,
o "They call themselves
Valdenses, because they abide in a valley of tears."
S
It is certain these valleys, at an early period in the
Christian era, became an asylum to the worshippers of the
Redeemer; who, at the remotest period, were known by the
term Credenti, believers. || However remote their antiquity,
no records exist as to any of these churches being
apostolical:([ though the fact is beyond all contradiction,
that early and late dissenters in religion were found in
these valleys, and in other provinces, who were never in
communion with the Church of Rome.**
3. Though we have no document proving
apostolic foundation for these churches, yet it becomes
evident that some communities did exist here in the second
century, since it is recorded they practised believers'
baptism by immersion.†† Whether these societies were
gathered by the…
* Lon.
Ency. art. Pied. Lady Morgan's Letters. Rob. Ecc. Res., p.
458. Jones's Ecc. Lect., vol. ii., p. 416.
† Robins. Res., p. 425.
oRobins.
Res. p. 302.
S
Bp. Newton's Diss. on the Proph., vol. ii., p. 248; and Maps
of Piedmont in Gilly's Narrative.
|| Robins. Res., p. 461.
([ Affix's Ch. of Pied., c.
1, p. 2.
** Robins. Res., pp. 425,
440, 448.
†† D. Belthazar in Bap. Mag.,
vol. i, p. 167.
…apostles, or their successors, or whether
they originated with those emigrants who left the cities
under the 162
persecuting edicts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, we have no
means of deciding. We have already observed* from Claudius
Seyssel, the popish archbishop, that one LEO was charged
with originating the Waldensian
331 heresy in the
valleys, in the days of Constantine the Great. When those
severe measures emanated from the emperor Honorius, against
rebaptizers, the 413
Baptists left the seats of opulence and power, and sought
retreats in the country and in the valleys of Piedmont—which
last place in particular became their retreat from imperial
oppression. † The assumption of power by the Roman
priesthood occasioned multitudes of private persons to
express publicly their abhorrence of clerical vice and
intolerance, and particularly of the lordly
601 ambition of
the Roman pontiffs. In the sixth and seventh centuries, many
withdrew from the scenes of sacerdotal oppression,
ignorance, and voluptuousness. These sought refuge in
Piedmont, and were called Valdenses: they abhorred popery,
o Here the Valdenses were more
at liberty to oppose the tyranny of those imperious
prelates.
S
The prevalency of Arianism in Lombardy was equally
afflictive to these Credenti; since some of the believers or
Valdenses, were deprived of their ministers by
602 Execution,
while others were led from the severity of the trial, to
compromise the affair by taking their children to the Arian
establishment for immersion. ||
* D.
Belthazar, Bap. Mag., vol. i., ch. 2, s. 1,
S
7.
† Sabast. Frank, in Bap.
Mag., vol. i. p. 256. A. Keith's Signs of the Times, vol.
ii., ch. 22, p. 64, &c.
o
Jortin's Rem., vol. iii., p. 419.
S
Mosh. Hist., vol. i., p. 445.
|| Ferrin refers to these
people, Allix's Ch. Pied., ch. 24, p. 242.
Church Order
4. The antiquity of the Valdenses, or
believers, is asserted by their friends, and corroborated by
their enemies. Dr. Machine, in Mosheim's history, says, "We
may affirm, with the learned Beza, that these people derived
their name from the valleys they inhabited; and hence Peter
of Lyons was called, in Latin, Valdus, because he had
adopted their doctrine." Reiner Sacco speaks of the Lionists
as a sect that had flourished above five hundred years (back
to 750); while he mentions authors of note among them, who
make their antiquity remount to the apostolic age.* Theodore
Belvedre, a popish monk, says, that the heresy had always
been in the valleys.† In the preface to the first French
Bible, the translators say, that they (the Valdenses) have
always had the full enipvment of the heavenly truth
contained in the holy Scriptures, ever since they were
enriched with the same by the apostles; having in fair MSS.
preserved the entire Bible in their native tongue, from
generation to generation.o
5. The old, or primitive Waldenses, were
distinguished by the doctrine and practice of Christian
liberty.
S
They held priesthood in abhorrence. It is not clear that the
ancient Waldenses had any clergy as distinct from laity.
Females were allowed to teach, as well as men; they laughed
at the different classes of the priesthood. They took no
oaths, but used a simple affirmation. They believed in the
doctrine of the Trinity, and baptized believers. || They
refused baptism to infants, when it came into use in other
churches:([ and were consequently reproached…
* Ecc.
Hist., vol. ii. p. 320, note.
† Danver's, p. 18.
o
Moreland's Hist., p. 14. Gilly's Life of F. Neff.
S
Robins. Res., p. 311.
||
Robins. Res., pp. 446, 461.
([ Id. p. 462..
Puritans'
Claim
…with the term re-baptizers, or
Anabaptists.'" "They admitted," says Dr. Allix, "the
catechumi, after an exact instruction, and baptized them on
Easter-day, and Whitsunday, and prepared them for receiving
of that sacrament by long continued fasts, in which the
church used to join * * * they were to make confession of
their sins in token of their contrition before they received
baptism * * * after which they were admitted to the
eucharist."† The mode of administering the ordinance is
proved from the account and description we have of their
baptisteries.o
The churches, at an early period, to which a baptistery was
annexed, were called baptismal churches: these were resorted
to by all persons living in that district for baptism; these
baptismal churches consequently became mother churches, and,
when possessed by the Catholics, cathedrals; and even a
shadow of this was to be found among the reformed churches
of Piedmont.
S
It is a fact, however superstition may have disguised it,
that the forming of Christian congregations in the
established church of Piedmont and Savoy, began like the
gospel itself, with baptism. ||
6. Knowing the people we are deciphering have
had many claimants to affinity, we shall subjoin, before we
proceed with their history, a few testimonies as to the
oneness of the Waldenses in views, with those Baptists whose
histories have been already given.
Eckbertus
and Emericus, two avowedly open and bitter enemies of the
Waldenses, do assert, that the new Puritans (Waldenses) do
conform to the doctrines and manners of…
* Id., pp.
310, 315, 467, 513.
† Ch. in Pied., ch. 2, p. 7.
o
Rob. Res., p. 468.
S
Robins. Hist. of Bap., p. 357; and Res., pp. 405, 468.
|| Id. p. 468.
…the old Puritans (i. e. the Novatianists).*
Bezel affirms * * * the Waldenses were the relics of the
pure primitive Christian churches; some of them were called
"the poor of Lyons." † Paul Perrin asserts, that the
Waldenses were time out of mind in Italy and Dalmatia, and
were the offspring of the Novatianists, who were persecuted
and driven from Rome, A.D. 400 (rather 413); and who, for
purity in communion, were called Puritans,† The name of
Paterines was given to the Waldenses; and who, for the most
part, held the same opinions, and have therefore been taken
for one and the same class of people, who continued till the
Reformation under name of Paterines or Waldenses.
S
There was no difference in religious views between
the Albigenses and Waldenses. || All those people inhabiting
the south of France were called, in general, Albigenses;
and, in doctrine and manners, were not distinct from the
Waldenses.([ Bossuet, bishop of Meaux, says, as to the
Vaudois, they were a species of Donatists, and worse than
the ancient Donatists; they formed their churches of only
good men; they all, without distinction, if they were
reputed good people, preached and administered the
ordinances.** The celebrated Matthew Francowitz says, the
Waldenses scent a little of anabaptism.†† The Waldenses
were, in religious sentiments, substantially the same as the
Paulicians, Paterines, Puritans, and Albigenses. ‡‡—See
appendix to this section.
* Danvers
on Bap., p. 273; and Jones's Led, vol. ii. p. 178.
†Danvers, ut sup., p. 18.
o
Id., p. 273.
S
Allix’s ch- pied- ch. 14, pp. 122, 128.
|| Mezeray's Fr. Hist. p.
278. Machine in Mosh. Hist., vol. ii., p. 320, note.
([ Miln. Ch. Hist., Cent. 13,
ch. 4.
** Rob. Res., p. 476.
†† Id. p. 311.
‡‡ Mosh. Hist., vol. ii., pp.
224, 226, 432, notes. Jones's Lect. vol. ii. pp. 371-6.
Their
Ministers
7. Having stated their antiquity, and proved
their affinity to other classes of early dissidents, we now
come to describe the people, which originally were called
simply believers. These were distinguished from others by
their faith, while some professors were known principally by
pleading virtue; but these Christians distinguished
themselves by the soundness of their faith, of which the
apostles' creed was their standard; and though they were not
indifferent to virtue, yet virtue was a secondary object,
or, as it is now called, a fruit of faith. They did not
dissent from Rome on account of the doctrines taught in that
church, but on account of ceremonies, rejecting the popes,
prelates, and all its religious orders, with councils and
traditions, and adhering to Scripture alone as a rule
of faith, and by refusing all the papal ceremonies of
baptism and the Lord's Supper:* the attempts of these
believers, therefore, were not intended by way of imposing
or proposing new articles of faith to Christians; all they
aimed to do was, to reduce the form of ecclesiastical
government to that amiable simplicity, and primitive
sanctity, which characterized the apostolic ages. The
government of their churches was committed to elders,
presbyters, and deacons. Their elders, or bards, were every
one ministers or heads of their churches; but these could
proceed in no spiritual affair without the consent of the
brethren, teachers and people. Deacons expounded the gospel,
distributed the eucharist, baptized, and sometimes had the
oversight of churches, visited the sick, and took care of
the temporalities of the church. † They considered that
these orders…
* Robins. Res., p. 461.
† Dr. Allix's Rem. Ch. Pied.,
ch. 2, pp. 8, 9.
…should be like the
apostles;—poor, illiterate men, without worldly possessions,
and qualified to follow some laborious trade in order to
gain a livelihood. Their elders and officers do not appear
distinguished from their brethren by dress or names, but
every Christian was considered as capable, in a certain
measure, of instructing others, and of confirming the
brethren by exhortations. Their elders were the seniors of
the brethren, while the presbyters were the whole body of
the teachers, whether fixed or itinerating.* Their rules of
practice were regulated by a literal interpretation of
Christ's sermon on the mount. They consequently prohibited
wars, suits at law, acquisitions of wealth, capital
punishments, self-defence, and oaths of all kinds. The body
of believers was divided into two classes; one of which
contained the perfect, the other the imperfect Christians.
The former gave up all worldly possessions, the latter were
less austere, though they abstained, like the graver sort of
Anabaptists in later times, from all appearances of pomp and
luxury. † These people contended that a church was an
assembly of believers, faithful men, and that of such a
church the Lord Jesus Christ is head, and
he alone; that it is governed by his word, and guided
by the Holy Spirit; that it behooves all Christians to walk
in fellowship; that the only ordinances Christ hath
appointed for the churches, are baptism and the Lord's
Supper; that they are both symbolical ordinances, or signs
of holy things, "visible emblems of invisible blessings,"
and that believers are the proper participants of them.o
* See Camp. 4th Lect. on Ecc. History, p. 72.
† Mosh. Hist., vol. ii. p. 321, &c.
o Jones's Lect., vol. ii. p.
455. The first writers against the Vaudois, never censured
their mode of baptizing; for in those times all parties
administered baptism by dipping, except in cases of danger.
Rob. Res., pp. 447, 468-9.
8. On the Saracens invading Spain, near the
middle of the eighth century, many thousands of the Spanish
Vaudois, with their wives, children, and servants, under
cover of a large army emigrated over the Pyrenees, from the
Spanish 732 to
the French foot of the mountains. As the French provinces
became also invaded, it is very probable many of the
emigrants would seek a refuge in Piedmont, during those
military commotions. It is recorded, that the parts which
remained freest from the vices and contagion of those
marauders, were Savoy, Piedmont, and the southern parts of
France; and it is equally remarkable, that when the Saracens
approached to those parts inhabited by the Vaudois, they
were defeated with great slaughter, in several engagements
by the famous Charles Martel.*
9. At a period when ignorance, superstition,
and iniquity almost universally prevailed, and the members
of the Catholic community were locked up in a moral slumber,
817 one
character of respectability and importance, was raised up in
this community; Claude of Turin,† who successfully raised
his voice against prevailing corruptions. He was a Spaniard
by birth, and a disciple of Felix, of Urgel, the Arian; who,
in 794, published a work on the adoption of Jesus by the
Father.o
Churchmen say, Claude rejected tradition in matters of
religion, and that he entirely conformed to the sense of the
ancient…
*Mezeray's Fr. Hist., p. 82. Bp. Newton on
the Proph., vol. ii., p. 207.
†Claude lived and died a Catholic,
and most probably an Arian. He was a brave general, as well
as a bold preacher, and headed his own troops. In his days,
those children who could ask for baptism received it.
Robins, ut sup.
o Mezeray's Fr. Hist. p. 105.
…church!* How this could be, while he
remained in a community that was a sink of lewdness and
uncleanness,† we have yet to learn. His views are considered
evangelical. He asserted the equality of all the apostles,
and maintained that Jesus Christ was the only head of the
church. His labors were very beneficial to the interests of
religion in the valleys. He lived and died in the Catholic
church; he gave no encouragement to others to separate, or
form distinct communities, indeed he was an enemy to schism.
His continuing to labor in a church so awfully corrupt for
twenty-two years—his military enterprises—his association
with the bishop of Urgel, leave his orthodoxy doubtful: he
was in life beloved, and after death his memory was revered
by his disciples,
o It is stated by Gilly, that
Independent churches were first formed at the
820 time of
Claude.
S
The bishop of Turin gave no encouragement to such societies;
nor do we know what is to be understood by these first
Independent churches, since such churches existed among
dissenters from apostolic days. Probably after Claude's
death, his followers, who could not unite with the Baptists,
or Vaudois churches, attempted something of the kind, and
formed societies, similar to the Calixtines after Huss's
death; but of this we have no records. That the old
interests of the believers realized considerable accessions
from Claude's labors, there is no doubt :|| and many more of
corresponding features might have been formed, but of this
we can only conjecture.
* Allix's Ch. Pied., ch. 9,
p. 61. Newton, as above, p. 239.
† Mezeray ut sup. and pp.
112, 115.
o
Jones's Lect., vol. ii. p. 192.
S
Narrative p. 82.
|| London Ency., art. Reform.
Rob. Res., pp. 447, 467.
Itinerating
Baptists
10. It becomes very plain, that the early
dissenters, both in the east and west, adopted the system of
itinerating through kingdoms. This system was well suited to
the 850 state
of the world in the eighth and ninth centuries, when the
genuine religion and spirit of the gospel was utterly
unknown to the doctors of the first rank in the catholic
church. What aid the Piedmontese churches had from the
Spanish Vaudois, or the Paulicians in Armenia and Bulgaria,
we are not able to state. It was in the ninth century that
the Paulicians flourished most, and acquired astonishing
strength. As their religious views were at an early period
propagated "beyond the Alps," it is not unreasonable to
conclude, that they held some correspondence with these
believers. Robinson asserts, that Greece was the parent of
the Vaudois, while Piedmont was the jailer.* There is no
room to question but that Savoy became the fostering friend
of these dissenters. But to resume; the perfect class among
the Vaudois was well calculated for a migratory life. While
dispossessed of earthly possessions, and living celibate,
such a mode of existence would be rendered comparatively
easy. Such excursive undertakings, on such commissions,
always left their return precarious.
The different ministers of eminence raised up
in their churches, or brought over to their party from other
communities, were considerable helps to the interests
1020 generally was
Gundulphus in Italy, who espoused their views, and was
successful in gaining a great many disciples. The persons
who were thus converted were instructed in the main points
of religion,…
* Eccles. Researches, p. 320.
…and were sent through various provinces to
disseminate the truth; and it is allowed they were
successful in withdrawing many from the Roman church.*
While other kingdoms and provinces
barbarously used all dissidents, the valleys of Piedmont for
ages afforded an asylum (Rev. iii. 10) for all the
disaffected towards the church and state union. Blessed here
with security and liberty, and free from the impurities of
the menstrual shallot, they breathed their devotions in one
of the purest regions under heaven, while surrounded by the
corrupters elements. Their minds were fettered with no human
forms—their knees bowed to no delegated authority—their
devotion was guided by no adjusted rules—their lips made no
professions, but such as were stimulated by choice, and that
choice was the response of divine benevolence, aided by a
glowing gratitude, and presented alive to the author of all
their mercies, in an acceptable way, through the blood of
the Lamb. When their hearts became warm with spiritual
kindlings, and their torch lighted up by a celestial flame,
they marched forth, unaided and unabetted by the plenitude
of modern favors, into the surrounding and distant
territories, to enlighten the regions of darkness, to awaken
men from the slumberings of a moral death, and to exhibit,
in all the glow of heavenly benevolence, a fountain opened
for the pollutions of a world, and an ample and sufficient
balm for the sicknesses and moral diseases of a perishing
universe. Such were Novatian and Novatus, with Constantine,
Sylvanus, and Sergius of old; and such were Gundulphus and
his coadjutors, with Arnold, Valdo, Berengarius, Henry, and
Peter de Bruys.
*Dr.
Affix's Ch. Pied., c. 11, p. 91,
Manner
of Teaching
These worthy men, who went forth with their
lives in their hands, were the only moral means, in those
ages, of renovating the corrupt inhabitants of this world;
and no doubt, the success attending their efforts will be
evident in the great day of decision, when many stars will
be seen studding their crowns.
11. The attention paid by these Christians to
the cultivation of the mind in the word of God and spiritual
things, is highly commendable. The department of teaching
devolving on all believers, made the church an efficient
resource of moral means for the necessary instruction of
every class, within and without its community. Their enemies
lay to their charge, that "they were very zealous, that they
(men and women) never cease from teaching night and day."*
"They had the Old and New Testament," says an inquisitor,
"in the vulgar tongue; and they teach and learn so well,
that he had seen and heard a country clown recount all Job,
word for word; and divers, who could perfectly deliver all
the New Testament; and that men and women, little and great,
day and night, cease not to learn and teach." It is natural
for us to conclude, that these people, from their attention
to the divine oracles, were able to give a scriptural reason
for the hope within them, and to vindicate their
peculiarities, by a direct appeal to the source of all
authority in affairs of the soul. Indeed their habitude with
the Scriptures appears to have been their boast, as they
would say "there was scarcely a man or woman among them, who
was not far better read in the Bible, than the doctors of
the church." The advantages arising to them from having the
Scriptures in their vernacular tongue,…
* Jones's Lect., vol. ii., p. 274.
Their
Success
…were incalculable; and their attention to
its contents deserves the highest praise, while it presents
to us an example eminently worthy of our close imitation.
One rule among this people, already recorded,
was, that every Christian was in a certain measure qualified
and authorized to instruct, exhort, and confirm the brethren
in their Christian course. This arrangement educed every
talent among the brotherhood, and their gifts being
exercised in the church, became an excellent means of
qualifying every gifted brother for more general usefulness.
This mode of proceeding would operate as a stimulus to
spiritual acquirements, and a beneficial end must have been
realized in all the community, especially since the gifted
brethren's minds were richly laden with the inestimable
pearls of sacred truth. Thus qualified with mighty
weapons—clad with a spiritual armor, many whose hearts
expanded with divine benevolence for the welfare of immortal
souls, travelled through whole kingdoms, and became known by
the name of the Wandering Anabaptists.* To effectuate the
object of their mission, they carried with them a basket of
portable wares, as our pedlars do, which often gained them
access to persons of great respectability, when, if an
opportunity offered, they would introduce some part of the
history of John or Jesus. Reiner, the Judas among them, gave
a full detail of their mode of instruction, and their views
of the catholic church. Father Gretzer, who edited Reiner's
works in the fifteenth century, affirms that this
description of the Waldenses was a true picture of the
heretics of his age, particularly of the Anabaptists. † This
plan in the proceedings of these pious and…
*Rob. Res., pp. 467, 51?.
† Id. p. 314.
...benevolent people, will remove one
difficulty, as to their maintaining their numbers and
influence over almost whole provinces, when we are assured
their enemies on every side
1025 for ages
combined all their energies for their annihilation. This is
the key to the success of Gundulphus and Valdo, who had many
disciples, with Berenger, Valdo's friend and follower.* Each
believer's gifts and talents were brought into requisition,
and a multiplication of adherents ensued.
1100
It is recorded, that so early as 1100, the religion of the
Waldenses had spread itself almost in all parts of Europe,
even among the Poles. That their doctrine differed little
from the first protestants, and their numbers were such as
to defeat all power that opposed it.† They were described
nearly in the following language: "If a man loves those that
desire to love God and Jesus Christ, if he will neither
curse, nor swear, nor lie, nor commit lewdness, nor kill,
nor deceive his neighbor, nor avenge himself of his enemies,
they presently say, he is a Vaudois—he deserves to be
punished."
o
12. The centuriators of Magdeburgh, under the
twelfth century, recite from an old manuscript the outlines
of the Waldensian creed: viz. "In articles of faith, the
authority of the Holy Scripture is the highest authority;
and for that reason it is the standard of judging; so that
whatever doth not agree with the word of God is deservedly
to be rejected and avoided. The sacraments of the church of
Christ are two, baptism and the Lord's supper. That is…
* Rob.
Res., p. 303.
† Danvers on Bap., p. 24, and
Jones's Lect., vol. ii. p. 429, from Sieur de la
Popeliniere, see above, c. 2, s. 8,
S
11.
o
Allix's Pied. Ch., c. 18, p. 163.
Peter
De Bruys
…the
church of Christ which hears the pure doctrine of Christ,
and observes the ordinances instituted by Him, in whatever
place it exists."*
1110
About the same period, Peter de Bruys appeared as a public
teacher. He was one of the chief doctors of the Vaudois. He
stands first on the list of those pastors or bards of the
valleys of Piedmont, † His views have been already given,
o
1120
In 1120, the Vaudois put forth a confession of their faith,
from which we give the following statements:—Art. 11. We
hold in abhorrence all human inventions, as proceeding from
antichrist, &c. Art. 12. We do believe that the sacraments
are signs of the holy things, or as visible emblems of
invisible blessings. We regard it as proper, and even
necessary, that believers use these symbols or visible
forms, when it can be done. Not-withstanding which, we
maintain that believers may be saved without these signs,
when they have neither place nor opportunity of observing
them. S
1130
13. The united labors of Arnold of Brescia, Peter de Bruys,
and Henry of Toulouse, must have been productive of an
amazing amount of good. These good men held corresponding
views of religion, which we have already noticed; and their
united services gave considerable encouragement to
dissenters. Their numerous
followers were called locally, for a considerable period,
after the names of their leaders, or their country; yet, in
the course of time, they were all known from…
* Jones's
Hist. of the Ch., vol. ii. p. 56.
† Jones's Lect. vol. ii., p.
207.
o
Vide above, c. 2, s. 8,
S
6.
S
Jones's Hist. of the Church, vol. ii. p. 55. Gilly's Nan.
app. 12.
Increase
of the Puritans
…inhabiting the valleys, under the generic
term of Waldenses.* The success of Henry and others have
been recorded in a previous section; the complaints of
Bernard and his fraternity, with the united endeavors of the
pontiff, the patrician, and the plebeian, to stay their
increase, were unsuccessful; "for the purity and simplicity
of that religion which these good men taught, the spotless
innocence of their lives, their neglect of riches and
honors, with an agreeable conversation, appeared so engaging
to all who had any true estimate of piety, as secured the
increase of numbers to their interests from time to time."†
1160
To aid the cause of real religion, a tract was sent
forth by the Puritans, about this period, in the language of
the ancient inhabitants of the valleys, entitled. The noble
Lesson. The writer, supposing the world was drawing to a
conclusion, refers to the scriptures as a rule of guidance,
and exhorts his brethren to prayer, watching, and renouncing
of the world. He speaks with energy of death and judgment,
the different issues of godliness and wickedness; and from a
review of scripture history connected with the experience of
the times in 1170
which he lived, concludes that there are but few (in
comparison of the world) that shall be saved. In speaking of
the apostles, it is observed, "they spoke, without fear, of
the doctrine of Christ; they preached to Jews and Greeks,
working miracles; and those that believed, they baptized in
the name of Jesus."
o This poetic…
* Jones's Led, vol. ii. p. 214.
† Mosh. Hist. C. 12, pt. 2, c. 5, S
12-13.
o Moreland's Hist., B. 1, c. 6,
pp. 99, 116. Date of the noble lesson, says J. R. Peyrin, is
from 1170 to 1190. The 1100 years in that work does not
refer to the lesson, but to the time elapsed since John
wrote. Rev. ii. 18. Hist, Def., &c. p. 147.
Vaudois
and Troubadours
…effusion, with others from the Puritans, was
supported by the poets of the age, called Troubadours, who
united with the Vaudois in condemning the reigning vices of
the times; their satires were chiefly directed against the
clergy and monks, whose crimes were exposed in no measured
terms. These Troubadours resorted to, and were great
favorites in different courts; and their productions,
written in the ancient language of Provence, were read by
the 1180
inhabitants of Italy and Spain.* These circumstances, with
the persecution of Waldo and his followers at Lyons, many of
whom fled for an asylum into the valleys of Piedmont, with
the new translation of the Bible, combined to increase
dissenters, and strengthen the interests of religion in
these abodes of peace. Their
1200 numbers
became so formidable, says Mosheim, as to menace the papal
jurisdiction with a fatal overthrow; which has been before
stated, with the evils resulting to the Albingensian
churches from the crusading
1208 armies. A
catechism, bearing date this century, says, "By the holy
catholic church is meant all the elect of God, from the
beginning to the end, by the grace of God, through the
merits of Christ, gathered together by the Holy Spirit, and
fore-ordained to eternal life." This creed has no allusion
to baptism.
14. It has been observed, and the thing is
worthy of notice, that at a period when all the potentates
of Europe *were combined to second the intolerant measures
of the court of Rome, the Dukes of Savoy, who were now
become the most absolute monarchs in Christendom, should
have…
* M'Crie's
Hist. of the Reform, in Italy, p. 15, &c. Mrs. Dobson's
History of the Troubadours.
Protection
Afforded
…allowed their subjects liberty of
conscience, and protected them in the legitimate exercise of
their civil and religious principles; and Rev. iii. 10,
appears remarkably accomplished in this state of things.
Secluded in a considerable degree from general observation,
and taught by their religion to lead "quiet and peaceable
lives in all godliness and honesty;" the princes and
governors of the country in which they lived were
continually receiving the most favorable reports of them, as
a people simple in their manners, free from deceit and
malice, upright in their dealings, loyal to their governors,
and ever ready to yield them a cheerful obedience in
everything that did not interfere with the claims of
conscience; and consequently, the governors constantly
turned a deaf ear to the solicitations of priests and monks,
to disturb their tranquility. The tolerant principles of the
dukes, with the sequestered habitations of these people; the
difficulties of approaching their territories; their little
intercourse with the world, connected with their rusticity
of manners, were favorable circumstances to all the pious of
the glens of Piedmont, while it afforded nothing inviting to
strangers and the polite. Consequently, these people appear
to have enjoyed a consider
1210 able share of
tranquility, while their brethren in the south of France
were experiencing the fury of papal vengeance. It is
natural, therefore, to conclude, that, when persecution
raged against the churches of France, the disciples of the
Saviour in the French provinces would seek an asylum among
the Alps on the one side, and the recesses of the Pyrenees
on the other. These mountains, at all trying seasons,
afforded a retreat to all the sons of civil and religious
freedom. Those Albigenses who retired before the crusading
army visited…
Reiner's
Testimony
…France, lived long in the interior parts of
the country, in obscurity, and busied themselves, says
Voltaire, in the culture of barren lands. They had no
priests, nor had they any quarrels about religious worship.
From 1215
various accessions, the Waldenses had about this period, so
greatly multiplied in the valleys, as to require fresh
abodes and territories in order to support their rising
families.
15. The zeal and activity of the Waldenses
were not cooled or checked by the destruction of the
Albigensian brotherhood, but they continued in their vigor,
promoting 1223
the "Crests of religion. In
1223, they had good and extensive churches in many provinces
and kingdoms.* In 1229, they had spread themselves in great
number throughout all Italy. They had ten schools in
Valcamonica alone, which were supported by
1250 contributions
their societies. In 1250, Reiner Sacco, who had lived
seventeen years among them, left the Waldenses, and went
over to the Catholic party, and from his persecuting
propensities, was raised to the office of inquisitor. He
wrote an account of this people, and their heresy; he says
in his time there was an innumerable multitude of Waldenses.
He has stated their antiquity with their sentiments on the
ordinances. † Their increase and stability in the valleys
occasioned an effort to be made
1252 so early as
1252, to introduce the inquisition into Piedmont; but the
sanguinary proceedings of those officers of his holiness,
against the Languedocians, had sufficiently opened the eyes
of the inhabitants to the spirit and design of that infernal
court; besides, it was…
* Danvers
Hist., p. 23. M'Crie's Italy, p. 5, &c.
†
Wall's Hist. of Inf. Bap., pt. 2, p. 246.
Increase
and Stability
…found to interfere with the duties of the
magistrate; it also came into conflict with resident bishops
and priests of the same community, which occasioned
considerable opposition from various quarters; but the
Piedmontese, like some others, townsmen and citizens, wisely
resisted its establishment among them at this early period.*
These pious inhabitants of the valleys maintained evidently
their footing in the face of all opposition; since Perrin
estimates 1260
their number in 1260, at eight hundred thousand persons. †
It is true, they had sustained in France and Germany,
within this century, by deaths in every form, the loss of
innumerable multitudes; yet, such were their number and
remaining strength, their churches were still found to exist
in Albania, Lombardy, Milan, in Romagna, Vicenza, Florence,
Val Spoletine, and Constantinople, Philadelphia, Sclavonia,
Bulgaria, Diagonitia; at after periods they were found in
considerable numbers…
* In 1270 this office of inquisition was
matured. The inquiry after heretics and their property in
1208, led to the organization of a society for the
destruction of the liberties, properties, and lives of all
persons suspected of incredulity towards the Roman
hierarchy. ' Wherever the holy office was
established, terror was inspired to such a degree,
that suspicion seemed there to have a sovereign reign.
Ignorance, and .3 servile conduct to the officers of the
order, appeared the only palladium to life or property.
Religion was not the only object promoted by this machine.
Beauty and money had charms, and were interwoven in its
movements. Millions were ruined, and millions were banished
by it. Limborch's Inquis. ab. ed. 1816. Gavin's Master Key
to Popery. Jones's Ecc. Lect., vol. ii. p. 355.
†Hist. of the Old Wald., b. 2, c. 11.
Benedict, in his History of the American Baptists, computes
seven adherents to each communicant; suppose we say three to
each communicant of this name, this would make the adherents
alone to these churches amount to nearly two millions and a
half; these, added to the members or communicants, 800,000,
produce 3,200,000 persons possessing evangelical views. This
number will quadrate by and by, with the moving shoals of
Anabaptists in Germany and other kingdoms.
Colonization
…in Sicily, and posterior to their
persecution in Picardy, they dispersed themselves into
Livonia and Sarmatia, spreading themselves over other
provinces and kingdoms.*
1300
16. In 1300 many of the Waldenses emigrated; some went into
Provence, and settled in the district of Avignon, where they
labored and lived in credit; others obtained grants of land
in the marquisate of Salucis; many took up their residence
on the river Dora; while the greater portion of emigrants,
at an after period, went into Calabria, in the extremity of
Italy on the east, to which place they were invited by the
lords of the soil; and where arrangements were made for
their enjoying civil and religious privileges. Here they
erected villages, and the colony prospered for a
considerable time; of which success we have already spoken.
The Waldenses, in their emigrations, went off from the main
body in the valleys, in sufficient numbers to form colonies
in other parts of different dimensions, and in their
newly-acquired places, they were not only mutual aids in the
common concerns of life, but, carrying with them the
enkindled ember, they lighted up the lamp and altar, as
companions and safeguards to their tents; assembled
themselves as a church, and so diffused the sacred
illumination all around. As expressive of their characters
and designs, they selected a lamp ignited, with the motto,
"the light shineth in darkness." In this capacity, in the
new region, this people formed a nucleus, around which the
materials of the district were collected, and under the
smiles of their Redeemer were gathered in, and impregnated
with the same particles of sanctity as dignified the
founders of the interest.
* Jones's Lect. vol. ii. pp. 255, 430, 488.
Increase
in the Valleys
17. For one hundred and thirty years after
the destruction of the churches in France, the Waldenses in
these valleys experienced a tolerable portion of ease, and a
respite from the severity of a general persecution; all
which time they multiplied greatly, and were as a people
whom the Lord had evidently blessed; they took deep root,
they filled the land, they covered the hills with their
shadow, and sent out their boughs unto the sea, and their
branches unto the river. Yet they were occasionally troubled
by the inquisitors, who severely used those who
1320 fell into
their hands, as was experienced in some parts of Germany. In
Picardy, the severity of their afflictions drove many into
Poland, but here 1330
they were disturbed in 1330, by the inquisitors.
1370 "In 1370'"
says M’Crie “the Vaudois who resided in the valleys of
Pragela, finding themselves straitened, sent out a colony to
Calabria, where they 1390
flourished for nearly two centuries." Towards the latter end
of this century, some of the Waldenses suffered in Paris
from the monks.
1400 18. About the year 1400, a
violent outrage was committed upon the Waldenses inhabiting
the valley Pragela, in Piedmont, by a Catholic party
residing in the neighborhood. The attack, which seems to
have been of the most furious kind, was made towards the end
of December, when the mountains were covered with snow, and
thereby rendered so difficult of access that the peaceable
inhabitants of these valleys were wholly unapprised that any
such attempt was meditated; and the persecutors were in
actual possession of their caves ere the owners seem to have
been apprised of any hostile design against them. In this
pitiable strait they had recourse to…
Persecuting
Measures
…the only alternative which remained for
saving their lives—they fled, though at that inauspicious
season of the year, to one of the highest mountains of the
Alps, with their wives and children; the unhappy mothers
carrying the cradle in one hand, and in the other, leading
such of the offspring as were able to walk. Their inhuman
invaders pursued them in their flight, until darkness
obscured the objects of their fury. Many were slain before
they could reach the mountains. Overtaken by the shades of
night, these afflicted outcasts wandered up and down the
mountains covered with snow; destitute of the means of
shelter from the inclemency of the weather, or of supporting
themselves under it, by any of the comforts which Providence
has destined for that purpose; benumbed with cold, some fell
asleep, and became an easy prey to the severity of the
climate; and when the night had passed away, there were
found in their cradles, or lying upon the snow, fourscore of
their infants, deprived of life; many of their mothers were
dead by their side, and others just on the point of
expiring. During the night their enemies had plundered their
abodes of everything that was valuable. This seems to have
been the first general attack made by the Catholic peasantry
on the Waldenses. They had been hitherto sheltered from the
pontiff's measures, by the Dukes of Savoy, so that the rage
of their enemies had been restrained to a few solitary cases
of arrested heresy; but this kind of assault, planned, no
doubt, by the clergy, was of a novel character; and so
deeply impressed were the minds of these people with the
circumstances of the sufferers, as to speak of it for a
century after, with feelings of apparent horror. We have
rather minutely detailed this affair, in order to show its
influence on the minds of the Waldenses and to account, in
some measure, for the change which took place soon after, in
their views and conduct.
19. The combination of enemies and powers
against this people, becomes now more ostensible. The
valleys Fraissiniere, Argentiere, and Loyse, seem to have
abounded 1460
with Waldenses in 1460; at which period, a Franciscan monk,
armed with inquisitorial power, was sent on a mission of
persecution, and to drive the inhabitants from the
neighborhood. Such was the ardor with which this zealot
proceeded in his odious measures, that scarcely any persons
in those valleys escaped being apprehended, either as
heretics, or as their abettors. The king of France, on
application, interfered on behalf of the inoffensive
Vaudois, but his majesty's instructions were so interpreted
as to give sanction to additional acts of cruelty; and to
every remonstrance this emissary of evil turned a deaf ear.
1480
20. At this period 1480, Claudius Seisselius. Archbishop of
Turin, resided in the valleys; from his situation and
office, he must have known something of these people. He
says of the Waldenses, "Their heresy excepted, they
generally live a purer life than other Christians. They
never swear but by compulsion, and rarely take God's name in
vain. They fulfill their promise with punctuality, and live,
for the most part, in poverty; they profess to preserve the
apostolic life and doctrine. They also profess it to be
their desire to overcome only by the simplicity of faith, by
purity of conscience, and integrity of life; not by
philosophical niceties, and theological subtleties. In their
lives and morals they are perfectly irreprehensible, and
without reproach among men, addicting themselves with all
their might to observe…
Trials
of the Waldenses
…the commands of God. All sorts of people
have repeatedly endeavored, but in vain, to root them out;
for, even yet contrary to the opinion of all men, they still
remain conquerors, or at least wholly invincible."*
1484
21. Innocent the 8th, was promoted to the Tiara in 1484.
This pontiff, in the spirit of his predecessor, of infamous
notoriety. Innocent III., issued his bulls for the
extirpation of the Waldenses, and appointed officers to
carry the same into effect. "We have heard," said the pope,
"and it is come to our knowledge, not without much
displeasure, that certain sons of iniquity, followers of
that abominable and pernicious sect of malignant men, called
'the poor of Lyons,' or Waldenses, who have so long ago
endeavored, in Piedmont and other places, to ensnare the
sheep belonging to God," &c. These indications of vengeance,
and the ensuing measures, had considerable influence on
them. Whether the halcyon days of these people had permitted
them to subside into a Laodicean state, or whether they were
terrified by the pope's threats we cannot ascertain, but one
thing is certain, their line of policy subsequently adopted,
of defending themselves with the sword, was a wide departure
from their early creed, which suggests their degeneracy, and
their wavering faith in the divine promises.
22. The pontiff's measures were not vapor. An
army was soon raised by Albert, the pope's legate, and
marched directly into the valley of Loyse. The inhabitants,
apprised of their approach, fled to their caves at the tops
of the mountains, carrying with them their children, and
whatever valuables they possessed, as well as what was…
* Jones's Hist. of Christian Ch., vol. ii.
pp. 47, 79.
Combination
of Enemies
…thought necessary for their support. The
lieutenant, finding the inhabitants all fled, and that not
an individual appeared with whom he could converse, had
considerable trouble in discovering their retreats; when,
causing quantities of wood to be placed at the entrance of
their caves, he ordered the same to be set on fire. The
consequence of this inhuman conduct was, four hundred
children were suffocated in their cradles, or in the arms of
their dead mothers, while multitudes to avoid death by
suffocation, or being committed to the flames, precipitated
themselves headlong from their caverns upon the rocks below,
where they were dashed to pieces; if any escaped death by
the fall, they were immediately slaughtered by the brutal
soldiers. It appears more than three thousand men and women,
belonging to the valley of Loyse, perished on this occasion.
Measures equally ferocious, were adopted against the
inoffensive inhabitants of other valleys, and with a like
cruel success. Sentences were now publicly given against
them in various churches. Innocent VIII. appeared as
resolved at this period to free the world of these
dissenters, as Innocent the III. had been in the thirteenth
century, to rid Languedoc of the Albigenses. The pontiff was
himself filled with terrible apprehensions of danger. The
Turks threatened Europe generally on the one hand, and
dangers were seen to await the church from dissidents, on
the other. The pope strongly
exhorted European princes to put a stop to the progress of
both. In order to have pecuniary means adequate to the
expenses of these undertakings, indulgences to sin were sold
by the servants of the church, and pardons for crimes past,
or to be committed, could be purchased of those Panders of
hell. So effectual were the papal measures, that the
inhabitants…
Invasions
on the Waldenses
were wholly extirpated in the above-named
valleys, and these abodes were afterwards peopled with new
inhabitants.*
1487
In 1487, scenes of barbarous cruelty awaited those long
privileged people, who inhabited other districts of
Piedmont, and in the ensuing year, to complete the work of
destruction, an army of eighteen thousand men marched into
those sequestered parts. The early Waldenses forbade war,
and even prohibited self-defense, but their patience was now
worn out, Dan. vii. 25, and they now departed from their
ancestors' creed. They armed themselves with wooden targets
and cross-bows, availing themselves of the advantages of
their situation and country, every where defended the
defiles of their mountains, and repulsed the invaders. The
women and children, an affecting sight, were on their knees
during the conflict, and in the simplest language, arising
from overwhelming distress, and the prospect of losing all
(their religion and their lives), entreated the Lord to
spare and protect his people. Such were the feelings
inspired in the bosoms of this people, by the sanguinary and
brutal conduct of the inquisitors and soldiers, that FEAR
led them to avoid public worship, and in time their worship
was observed wholly in private. Some of the Waldenses found
it expedient occasionally to conform to that communion which
their ancestors had ever viewed as the harlot in the
Apocalypse. Evidences now increase, and become but too
apparent of a degeneracy from their primitive purity and
practice. A succession of adverse circumstances awaited the
Waldenses. The inquisitors, who lay in ambush, issued out
their processes daily against them, and as often…
* See Lady Morgan's Letters for the present
state of the valleys.
Manners
of the Waldenses
…as they could apprehend any of them, they
were delivered over to the secular arm for punishment. The
sanguinary proceedings of Rome appeared either to have
triumphed over its enemies, or to have exhausted its malice.
The heretics, or Waldenses, were destroyed or driven into
obscurity, and the state of the Catholic church at the
1500 beginning of
the sixteenth century was unusually calm and tranquil. The
witnesses ceased to trouble the church.*
23. Under cover of convincing them of their
errors, and preventing the effusion of blood, a monk was
deputed to hold a conference with them; but the monk
returned in confusion, owning that, in his whole life, he
had never known so much of the Scriptures as he had learned,
during those few days he conversed with heretics. Others
visited them by the bishop's appointment, and returned with
similar views and convictions. The king of France, Francis
I., being informed of the charges brought against the
Waldenses in Provence, deputed a nobleman to inquire into
their characters and mode of living. The report of the
nobleman to his Majesty reflected great credit on the
Waldenses. Louis XII., in 1498, deputed two confidential
servants to investigate and report on accusations brought
against these people. On their return to court, they said,
"their places of worship were free from those ornaments
found in Catholic churches. They discovered no crimes, but
on the contrary, they keep the Sabbath-day, observe the
ordinance of baptism according to the primitive church (not
as the Catholic church), instructed their children in the
articles of the Christian faith, and the commandments…
* Jones's Lect., vol. ii. pp. 490-8.
…of God." Consequently the king understood
they were innocent and an inoffensive people, and that they
were persecuted in order that their enemies might possess
their property.* "The first lesson the Waldenses teach those
whom they bring over to their party," says Reiner, "is, as
to what kind of persons the disciples of Christ ought to be;
and this they do by the doctrine of the evangelists and
apostles; saying that those only are followers of the
apostles who imitate their manner of life,"† and that a man
is then first baptized (i. e. rightly baptized) when he is
received into their society.o
So effectual was their mode of instruction, that many among
them could retain in their memories most of the New
Testament writings. The celebrated president and historian
Thuanus, says, "their clothing is of the skins of sheep,
they have no linen; they inhabit (a. d. 1543—1590) seven
villages; their houses are constructed of flint stone,
having a flat roof covered with mud. In these they live with
their cattle, separated however from them by a fence.
S
They have also two caves set apart for particular purposes,
in one of which they conceal their cattle, in the other
themselves, when hunted by their enemies. They live on milk
and venison, being, through constant practice, excellent
marksmen. Poor as they are, they are content, and live in a
state of seclusion from the rest of mankind. One thing is
very remarkable, that persons, externally so savage and
rude, should have so much moral cultivation. They can all
read and write. They know French sufficiently for the
understanding of the Bible, and singing of psalms. You can…
* Mezeray's
Fr. Hist., p. 948.
† Jones's Lect., vol. ii. pp.
469-475.
o
Allix's Pied. Ch., c. 20, p. 190.
S
Very similar to the Irish peasantry of this day.
…scarcely find a boy among them who cannot
give an intelligent account of the faith which they profess.
In this, indeed, they resemble their brethren of the other
valleys. They pay tribute with good conscience, and the
obligation of this duty is particularly noted in their
confession of faith. If, by reason of the civil wars, they
are prevented from doing this, they carefully set apart the
sum, and, at the first opportunity, pay it to the king's
tax-gatherers." This great man was a candid enemy.
24. The schism which took place in the Roman
community, through the public preaching and writing of
Luther and his associates, must have been a source of
infinite satisfaction to the persecuted Waldenses. When the
barbs, or pastors of the valleys, became acquainted with the
1526
reformation m Germany, they deputed, in 1526, persons to
visit and inquire into its truth. The deputation returned
with some printed books to the brethren. "The Vaudois took
encouragement," says Mezeray, "to preach openly from
Luther's appearing in the character of a reformer, but these
zealous advocates for religion were punished by a decree
made by Anthony Chassaue, and massacred."* It was found by
the Waldenses in their communications and conferences with
Luther, that their views were not in unison with his on the
ordinances, but that they were more conformable to the
sacramentarians, or those who deny the real presence. †
Other brethren made a like visit into Germany, and conferred
with Ecolampadius, Bucer, and others, who from the statement
given, exhorted them to remedy certain evils which they
perceived to exist among them; viz.—First, In certain…
* Fr. Hist., p. 615.
† Id., p. 948.
…points of doctrine; Secondly, In church
order; and Thirdly, In irregular conduct of members, who
mingled with Catholics in worship. After these
preliminaries, the 1530
Waldenses appear, during 1530, to have been employed in
paving the way for a more unreserved intercourse between
themselves and the reformers. Their Laodician state will
easily account for their conformity, when we know their
spiritual condition occasioned Ecolampadius to say, "We
understand that the fear of persecution hath caused you to
conceal and dissemble your faith —but those who are ashamed
to confess Christ before the world shall End no acceptance
with God," &c. &c. Those who could dissemble their faith,
could as easily change it, which we find was the employment
of many of these 1532
churches in different provinces during the year 1532. After
much difficulty, many conferences, and a world of trouble,
to mould these dissidents into
1533 conformity, a
creed was made, ratified, and confirmed, in 1533, and the
Waldensian brethren were comprehended and relieved from the
ban of re-baptizing, while it was widely announced, that the
Waldensian creed had ever been, in orthodoxy, one with the
reformers’.* 1534
Calvin, who began in 1534 to preach the reforming
doctrines, was found in his views more in accordance with
the sentiments of the sacramentarians, or anabaptists, than
Luther. "His views overthrew all ceremonies," says Mezeray,
"and, consequently, the Waldenses left Luther's orthodoxy
for communion with the reformed churches under Calvin, †
Some of those churches,…
* Rob. Res., pp. 423-4. Jones's Led, vol. ii.
pp. 499, 507.
† Fr. Hist., pp. 597, 948.
…or state communities under Calvin, amounted
in a few years to ten thousand members in each, but whether
infants are included or not, is not expressed. If not, it
proves the vast numbers received into the corporations of
those persons who had for ages sustained nonconformity. From
this period, all dissenters from the Catholic church were
called Lutherans in France and other provinces, though
improperly. Some called them Sacramentares, because they
denied the real presence, but in 1560 they were called
Huguenots, because they held their assemblies at midnight,
at a gate called Hugon, or rather, because of their being in
league with each other.* The favor the Italian protestants
entertained for the reformed church, allow us to concede the
comprehension, during this and the ensuing age, of the
greater portion.†
25. One of the Waldensian bards, George
Morell, who formed part of the deputation to Germany in
1533, and who published Memoirs of the History of their
Churches, states, that at the time of his writing, there
were more than eight hundred thousand persons professing the
religion of the Waldenses. As to the extent of Puritanism
among them, it cannot be ascertained, since, from the
severity of the times, many in these valleys had
occasionally or entirely conformed. It seems difficult,
after the destruction of these people in Piedmont, to admit
Morell's statement, unless in the term Waldenses he includes
the Anabaptists, who abounded in Holland and Germany, which
shall be shown anon. Hitherto these people had been obliged
to confine themselves to manuscripts; and in…
* Mezeray's Fr. Hist. p. 667. Browning's
Hist. of the Huguenots of the 16th century.
† Jones's Ecc. Lect., No. 50.
Policy
of the Duke of Savoy
…the Waldensian tongue, they seem not to have
generally possessed an entire version of the whole Bible,
but the 1535
New Testament only, and some particular books of the old.
They now (1535), however, contracted with a printer in
Switzerland, for an entire impression of the whole Bible in
French, for the sum of fifteen hundred crowns of gold.
26. Agreeably to the advice received from the
reformers, the Waldenses opened again their places of
worship, and 1536
their ministers appeared openly as teachers of the people,
adopting every spiritual means to resuscitate their drooping
communities; but this bold and commendable position being
reported to the duke of Savoy
1540 awakened his
displeasure. It is now but too ostensible that the hitherto
tolerant dukes listened to the proposals and facinorous
measures of the court of Rome. The sovereign of Savoy raised
an army to suppress the dissenters in those places over
which his predecessors had for eight centuries extended
their protection. The army surprised the people, but,
recovering from the panic, each left his employ, and, by
means of slings and stones, they compelled the army to
retire without booty. From this defeat the duke gave them up
to all the cruelties of the inquisitors.* An Observantine
monk, preaching one day at Imola, told the people that it
behooved them to purchase heaven by the merit of their good
works. A boy who was present, exclaimed, "That's blasphemy!
for the Bible tells us that Christ purchased heaven by his
sufferings and death, and bestows it on us freely by his
mercy." A dispute of considerable length ensued between…
*Jones's Lect., vol. ii., lect. 50.
Confessions
of the Waldenses
…the youth and the preacher. Provoked at the
pertinent replies of his juvenile opponent, and at the
favorable reception which the audience gave them, "Get you
gone, you young rascal!" exclaimed the monk, "you are just
come from the cradle, and will you take it upon you to judge
of sacred things, which the most learned cannot explain?"
"Did you never read these words, 'out of the mouths of babes
and sucklings. God perfects praise?' " rejoined the youth;
upon which the preacher quitted the pulpit in wrathful
confusion, breathing out threatenings against the poor boy,
who was instantly thrown into prison, "where he still lies,"
says the writer. Dec. 31, 1544.*
1544
27. "In this year, 1554, the Waldenses put forth a
confession," says Sleidan, "expressive of their religious
views. In Art. 4th, they say, "We believe that there is one
holy church comprising the whole assembly of the elect and
faithful, that have existed from the beginning of the world,
and shall be to the end thereof." Art. 7th; "We believe in
the ordinance of baptism, the water is the visible and
external sign, which represents to us that which, by virtue
of God's invisible operation, is within us, namely, the
renovation of our minds, and the mortification of our
members through the faith of Jesus Christ; and by this
ordinance we are received into the holy congregation of
God's people, previously professing and declaring our faith
and change of life."† This creed was probably sent forth to
show the reasonableness of their views, and to moderate the
prejudices of the duke to whom they had been misrepresented.
Though many of…
* M'Crie's Italy, p. 117, &c.
† Jones's Hist. Chris. Ch., vol.
ii., ch. 5,
S
3, pp. 59-60.
Union
with Calvin
…their brethren had taken shelter in the
establishment, and consequently gave support to the
sprinkling of infants now first adopted as to healthy
children at Geneva,* yet, in this confession there is no
compromise of the subject, it is sufficiently plain that
paedobaptism had no encouragement from the persons from whom
these articles emanated.
1561 28.
In 1561, these Dissenters sustained another fierce
and formidable attack, but they again defeated their
opponents. Calvin and Beza, with a benevolence in accordance
with their eminent piety, on hearing of these good men's
distresses, obtained a liberal supply from various sources,
to meet their temporary wants. Harassed incessantly, and
always liable to the fury of the holy office, occasioned
some of the brethren to migrate, while others, influenced
perhaps from various motives, were led to unite with the
churches of France and Geneva. † Whether the Waldenses
embraced the reformed religion, from a hope of mitigating
their sufferings, or were drawn over by the kindness of
Calvin, or whether they from conviction saw differently to
their former declarations, we leave; but the change of their
belief was pleaded by the Bishop of Meux, for recalling the
edict of Nantz.o
It does not appear, that any great difference existed
between the Sacramentarians or Anabaptists, and Calvin's
doctrinal views, but the principal points of discrepancy
were on the church's constitution and discipline; but to
these things they became familiar, and with a state church,
they embraced for its defence, a state sword.
S
Such were…
*Dr. Wall's
Hist., pt. 2, c. 9, S 2, pp. 365-6.
† Mosh. Hist., vol. iv., p.
69.
o
Allix's Pied. Ch., pref.
S
The Waldenses in France and other provinces, who embraced
Calvin's views, found their enemies active and malicious.
The persons, under the names of Sacramentarians, Huguenots,
or Calvinists, devised a plan to secure their chief enemies
in France, viz., the Duke of Guise and others, 1560, by
force of arms; but the plan was discovered, and they were
defeated and hung. The violence of the Catholics drove the
1562 Reformers to arms; wherever the Huguenots were masters
they abolished the Catholic religion, and broke their
images; adopting a system of odious 1563 retaliation; for
when they met with monks or clergy, they cut off their ears
and their virilia, and did vast mischief by way of
reprisals, so that, in tormenting the monks and priests,
they rendered themselves execrable to the people. Mezeray,
pp. 665, 681, 957—959. This conduct in Aug. 22, the
Calvinists led to the Bartholomew massacre! This picture of
1572 Paedobaptists, obscures
Munster madmen: autem, comparationes odiosae sunt.
Remnant
of Waldenses
…the accessions which these churches
realized, that in 1571, the year before the general
massacre, they amounted to 2,150, and some of which
contained 10,000 members.*
29. Though the reformed churches embraced a
great portion of the Waldenses, after infinite pains had
been taken to quadrate their minds to the reformer's
sentiments, "and then," says Robinson, "equal pains were
taken to prove that they had always subsisted in the
1590 uniform
orthodoxy of the reformed church;† yet all the Vaudois did
not yield their faith to the mandate of hierarchists. There
were some remains of the Vaudois, or poor of Lyons, in the
valleys of Dauphine, who had pastors, and held their
assemblies apart; they were a little independent republic,
as well for matters of religion as for government." The pope
caused this abode of happiness to be stormed, and the
Vaudois were destroyed or driven out of those valleys,
o Others who were banished from
the soil had never heard the name of Luther,…
* Lon. Ency., vol. xviii., p. 458, Art.
Reform,
† Resear. p. 425.
o Mezeray's Fr. Hist., p. 948.
Waldenses
Scattered
…1630
*and down to 1630, some retained their puritanical views.†
But at this period those circumstances and changes did take
place among this people, that each writer admits of a
general degeneracy.
1655
30. In 1655 the Waldenses were
called to sufferings of the most serious character, which
awakened all the protestant princes of Europe; and Oliver
Cromwell, on hearing of their persecution, 'rose like a lion
from his lair,' and Sir Samuel Moreland was deputed by him
to visit the valleys, to intercede with their oppressors,
and to render such aid as would relieve their present wants.
S
By way of exhibiting the reasons of their choice
in divine things, the inoffensiveness of their lives and
doctrine, and to enlist the attention of Protestants to
their case, as well as disarm their enemies of any grounds
for misrepresentation, they published a confession of their
faith, from which the following articles are taken:
1655 Art. 25. That
the church is a company of the faithful, who, having been
elected before the foundation of the world, and called with
a holy calling, come to unite themselves to follow the word
of God, believing whatsoever he teacheth them, and living in
his fear. Art. 26. And that all the elect are upheld and
preserved by the power of God in such sort, that they all
persevere in the faith unto the
end, and remain united in the holy church, as so many living
members thereof. Art. 28. That God doth not only instruct
and teach us by his word, but has also ordained certain
sacraments to be joined with it, as means to unite us into
Christ, and to make us partakers…
* Jones's
Hist. Christian Ch., vol. ii., and Jones's Lect. vol. ii
647, note.
† Mosh. Hist.. vol. iii. p.
295.
o
Gilly's Nan., pp. 76, 249.
S
Jones's Lect., No. 53.
…of his benefits; and that there are only
two of them belonging in common to all the members of the
church
under the New Testament, to wit, baptism and the Lord's
Supper. Art. 29. That God hath ordained the sacrament of
baptism to be a testimony of our adoption, and of our being
cleansed from our sins by the blood of Christ, and renewed
in holiness of life.*
31. It is
pleasing to discover a remnant of the Vaudois still
witnessing, as their ancestors had done, the faith and
practice of the gospel, though it is not in our power to say
1685 to what
extent churches supporting the above views then existed. In
1685, Oct. 8, the edict of Nantz was repealed, by which act
no toleration could be allowed to Dissenters from the
Catholic church. Fifteen days were allowed to Protestant:
ministers to leave the kingdom; two millions of persons were
condemned by this instrument, and banished from their native
soil. This cruel instrument ruined the Protestant churches,
and freed France and other kingdoms from the witnesses of
the truth. If any remained, it was at the peril of life and
liberty; yet some braved the danger, and worshipped
1886 unseen and
unheard by malicious foes. "Pious females, shrouded by the
night, bent their way amidst darkness and danger towards the
spot assigned for their religious services—a dark lanthorn
guided their perilous steps; arrived at their temple, amidst
the rocks, two walking-sticks hastily struck in the ground,
and covered with a black silk apron of the female auditors,
formed what was called the pulpit of the desert. To such an
assembly how eloquent must have appeared the lessons of
that…
*
Gilly's Narr. Appen. 12.
…preacher, who braved death at every word he
uttered; how impressive that service, the attending of which
incurred the penalty of fetters for life. These were the
glorious days of Baptists in France; these were her proudest
triumphs; she could then boast of valor of which the world
was not worthy; her martyrs then bore testimony to their
faith at the fatal tree, or were chained for life to the oar
of the galleys; and women, with the same noble feelings, in
the same sacred cause, shrank not from perpetual
imprisonment in the gloomy tower that overhangs the shores
of the Mediterranean."*
1686
32. The severity of the measures used by the armies of
France and Savoy exceed this year in cruelty those of 1655.
The Swiss cantons sent deputies to the Duke of Savoy, who,
now tired with human carnage, at their entreaty set open the
prison-doors, and those who survived were ordered to leave
in peace. † The Swiss government not being able to procure
of France or Savoy any toleration for the Waldenses or
Huguenots, led 1689 Henry Arnaud and about four hundred of
these exiles, in 1689, to try to recover their native land
with sword in hand. These men did and suffered much of a
marvellous character, and after fighting and suffering, were
permitted to settle in their native soil.o
33. How far these men and their posterity can
be considered the genuine successors of the old Vaudois, we…
* Life of
Claude prefixed to his Def., p. 54. Oct. Claude's Complaints
of Protestants. Dr. Gilly's
Narrative, and Bap. Mag., vol. viii. p. 89, A.D., 1816.
† Jones's Lect., vol. ii. p.
644, Lect. 56.
oGlorious
recovery by the Vaudois, of their Valleys, &c., by H. D.
Acland, London, 1827. Authentic Details of the Waldenses in
Piedmont, &c., London, 1827. Dr. Beattie's Waldenses. &c.
Modern
Waldenses
…leave with Dr. Gilly and others. We admit,
they soon became regular in their education and ordination,
agreeably to the rubric of the state. Their frockless and
stipendless bishops, Napoleon enrolled among the Catholic
clergy.* These modem Waldenses are not Calvinists, they are
not professed Puritans, they partake of the amusements and
diversions of the world, they communicate in state order
four times a year. Dr. Gilly, who evidently felt the
tenderness of the ground he explored, says, in 1823, "they
do not object to infant baptism," but he gives no early date
to prove an early practice. Alas! how is the gold become
dim!†
* The
church, clergy, and state were brought under the Justinian
code, 533,—1260 years after, 1793, the government of France
dissolved the connexion, and the sovereign of that nation
killed the remaining witnesses in sackcloth, by
incorporating them with the Catholic clergy!
† It is remarkable that the church clergy
should claim succession to the Waldenses, and yet plead
apostolic ordination through the regular line of popes,
JOAN, Alexander, Leo, &c., in the Roman Church, when these
different interests were always religious antipodes.
APPENDIX
TO THE WALDENSIAN SECTION.
Doctrinal and Denominational Sentiments of
the Waldensian Churches.
1. SINCE the publication of Perrin's history
of these people, in 1619, many able pens have been employed
to rescue their names from reproach, while each writer has,
from the character of these Vaudois, been desirous of Ending
their religious creed in alliance with his own. Bishop
Bossuet says, "Provided any person complained of any
doctrine of the church, and especially, if he murmured
against the pope, whatever he were in other respects, or
whatever opinions he held, he is put into a catalogue of
predecessors of Protestants, and judged worthy to support
the succession of their churches. As to the Vaudois (whom
you claim) they were a species of Donatists, and worse than
the ancient Donatists of Africa." Again he says, "You call
Claude of Turin one of your apostolical church; you adopt
Henry and Peter Bruys; both of these every one knows were
Anabaptists." Rob. Res. p. 476. We shall sequently submit
the testimonies of accredited writers on these debatable
points, and prove our affinity from other assertions.
2. The following statements establish their
doctrinal views. Genebrard asserts that the Henricians,
Petrobrussians, Amauldists, Apostolicis (Fathers of the
Calvinists), with the Waldenses and the Albigenses, were
similar in doctrinal…
Appendix
…views with Luther and Calvin. Leger's Hist,
p. 155. Dr. Allix's Albig. Church, ch. 18, p. 172.
Reiner says, "the Lionists believe in the
Trinity, as the church does," Rob. Res. p. 445.
Lindanus,
a Catholic bishop asserts, Calvin inherited the doctrines of
the Waldenses. Jones's Lect., Vol. ii. p. 456.
Coulter, a monk, shows the Waldensian creed
was in accordance with the Calvinistic views. Ibid.
AEneas Sylvius, (Pope Pius II.) declares, the
doctrines taught by Calvin to be the same as those of the
Waldenses. Ibid.
Ecchius reproaches Luther with renewing the
heresies of the Albigenses and Waldenses of Wickliff and
Huss, which had been long condemned. Ibid.
Sieur de la Popeliniere, a French historian,
says, the principles of the Waldenses extended throughout
Europe, even unto Poland and Lithuania. These doctrines,
which may be traced from A. D., 1100, differ very little
from the Protestants of the Reformation. Danver's Hist., p.
25.
Mezeray, the historian of France, observes,
the pope, at the Council of Tours, made a decree against
heretics, i. e., a kind of Manicheans, who held almost the
same doctrines as the Calvinists, and were properly
Henricians and Vaudois. The people who could distinguish
them, called them alike names with Cathares, Paterines,
Boulgres, &c., p. 242, under 40 King. Calvin's doctrines
were more conformed to the Anabaptists in the valleys, than
Luther's, Ib. Toplady's Hist. Proof., vol. i. p. 151.
3. The subjoined extracts prove the
denominational views of these people.
The fact is,—the forming of Christian
congregations in the established church of Piedmont and
Savoy, like the gospel itself, began with baptism. Rob.
Res., p. 468, and Hist. Bap., p. 581.
250
The people of the ancestors of the Waldenses, were
termed Vaudois, (Id. Res. p. 299.) Puritans, (Mosh. Hist.,
c. 12, p. 2. c. 5,
S
4, note.) Paterines, (Allix's Ch. Pied., c. -14, p. 128.)
Lyonists, (Mosh. Hist, Id.,
S
11, Jones's Lect. 2, 238.) Petrobrussians, (Wall's History,
part 2, c. 7,
S
3, p. 220.) Arnoldists, (Facts op. to Fict., p. 46. from
Platina.) Berengarians, (Wall, ut. sup.) These, with the
Paulicians, were one and the same
650 people?
(Jones, Id., p. 276. Mosh. Hist., Id. 224.
Wall, Id., 230.) and so far as information can be
obtained, were all Anti-paedobaptists, which has been
previously proved in their respective sections.
These all agreed in one article of discipline, they
re-baptized all such as came into their communion from the
Catholic church, hence were called Anabaptists.
Jones's Lect., vol. ii. p. 410.
660
In the seventh century, we have A LITURGY of Bobbio, near
Genoa, but this directory contains no office for the baptism
of children, nor the least hint of pouring or sprinkling; on
the contrary, there is a directory for making a Christian of
a pagan, before baptism, and for washing the feet after it;
and there is the delivery of the creed in Lent, with
exhortations to competent, and suitable collects, epistles,
and gospels, as in other ordinals, preparatory to baptism,
on holy Saturday. The introductory discourse of the
presbyter before delivering the creed, runs thus, "Dear
brethren, the divine sacraments are not so properly matters
of investigation, as of faith, and not only of faith, but
also of fear, for no one can receive the discipline of
faith, unless he have for a foundation, the fear of the
Lord. * * * * You are about to hear the creed, therefore, to
day, for without that, neither can Christ be announced, nor
can you exercise faith, nor can baptism be administered." *
* * After the presbyter had repeated the creed, he expounded
it, sentence by sentence, referring to trine immersion, and
closed with repeated observations on the absolute necessity
of faith, in order to a worthy participation of baptism.
Rob. Res. pp. 473, 4.
670
The Gothic LITURGY, used in France, at this period,
(670) has the manner of baptizing stated, but Dr. Allix
could find no infant baptism in that document. Ch. of Albig.
c. 7, p. 60, &c. The same is asserted of the Roman,
Ambrosian, Milanese, Spanish, Grecian, &c.; all these show
the mode, single and trine immersion, yet nothing is said of
infant baptism, but they appear composed, like all the
Grecian, expressly for adult baptism. Rob. Res. 387.
774
During the kingdoms of the Goths and Lombards, the
Baptists, or, as they were called by Catholics, Anabaptists,
had their share of churches and baptisteries in these
provinces, though they held no communion with Rome, Milan,
Aquileia, Ravenna, or any other hierarchy.
Denominational
Sentiments
945
But the laws of emperors deprived them of these
edifices, and transferred them to the Catholic party. Rob.
Res. p. 405.
1025
When Bishop Gerard, of Arras and Cambray, charged the
Waldenses with abhorring (catholic) baptism, they said
baptism added nothing to our justification, and a strange
will, a strange faith, and a strange confession, do not seem
to belong to, or be of any advantage to a little child, who
neither wills nor runs, who knows nothing of faith, and is
altogether ignorant of his own good and salvation, in whom
there can be no desire of regeneration, and from whom no
confession of faith can be expected. Allix's Ch. Pied., c.
11, p. 95. Jortin's Rem.
on Hist.,
vol. v. p. 27.
1120 The
Waldensian confession of faith, in 1120, sets forth, "We
regard it as proper, and even necessary, that believers use
these symbols or visible forms (baptism and the Lord's
Supper) when it can be done, * * * though we maintain
believers can be saved without (Jones's Hist. of the Ch.
Church, vol. ii. c. 5,
S
5, p. 55), in case they have no place or means to use them
(Gilly's Nar., Ap. 12). But surely, there were no
difficulties in sprinkling a child, this could be done at
any time, though there might be many difficulties in the way
of immersing believers, and to those obstructions this
confession, and an ensuing one, plainly alludes.
1139
The Lateran Council of 1139 did enforce infant baptism
by severe measures, and successive councils condemned the
Waldenses for rejecting it. Wall's Hist., pt. 2, p. 242.
1140
Evervinus of Stanfield complained to Bernard, Abbot of
Clairval, that Cologne was infected with Waldensian
heretics, who denied baptism to infants. Allix's Ch. Pied,
c. 16, p. 140.
1146
Peter, Abbot or Clugny, wrote against the Waldenses, on
account of their denying infant baptism. Ivimey's Hist. of
the Eng. Bap., vol. i. p. 21.
1147
Bernard the saint, the renowned Abbot of Clairval, says,
the Albigenses and Waldenses admimstel baptism only to the
adults. They do not believe infant baptism. Facts op. to
Fict., p. 47.
1160
Ecbertus Schonaugiensis, who wrote against this people,
declares. They say that baptism does no good to infants;
therefore, such as come over to their sect, they baptize in
a private way; that is, without the pomp and public parade
of the catholics. Wall's Hist., pt. 2, p. 228.
1170
Ermengendus, a great man in the church, charges the
Waldenses with denying infant baptism. Danvers on Bap., p.
298.
1175
At a council held in Lombez, the good men of Lyons
were condemned: one charge was, that they denied infants to
be saved by baptism. Jones's Lect, vol. ii. p. 240.
1176 The Waldenses were condemned,
in conference, at Aibi; when the bishop of Lyons, to
convince them of their error, produced what were considered
proofs for infant baptism, and tried to solve their
objection from infants wanting faith, without which they
said it was impossible to please God. (Heb. xi. 6, Rom. xiv.
23.) Allix's Ch. Albig., c. 15, p. 133.
1179
Alexander III., in council condemned the Waldensian or
Puritan heresy, for denying baptism to infants. Danvers on
Bap., p. 301.
1192
Alanus Magnus states, that they denied the ordinance to
children. He disputes their views, and refutes their
opinions. Allix's Ch. Albig., c. 16, p. 145.
The Waldenses admitted the catechumen to
baptism, after an exact instruction, a long fast, in which
the church united, to witness to them the concern they took
in their conversion, and a confession of sins in token of
contrition. The newly-baptized were, the same day, admitted
to the Eucharist, with all the brethren and sisters present.
Allix's Ch. Pied., c. 2. pp. 7-8.
1200
The Poor of Lyons, for denying the sacraments, and
practising otherwise in baptism than the church of Rome,
were called by Baronius, Anabaptists. Danvers on Bap. p.
303.
Mezeray says. In baptism, in the twelfth
century, they plunged the candidate in the sacred font, to
show them what operation that sacrament hath on the soul.
Hist. Of France, 12 cent., p. 288.
The Ordibarians or Waldenses, say, that
baptism does…
Denominational
Character
…no good to infants, unless they are
perfected (by instruction Erst) in that sect. Wall's Hist.,
pt. 2, p. 233.
A catechism, emanating from the Waldenses,
during the thirteenth century, has no allusion to infant
baptism. It says of the church catholic, that it is the
elect of God, from the beginning to the end, by the grace of
God, through the merit of Christ, gathered together by the
Holy Spirit, and fore-ordained to eternal life. Gilly's
Narr. App. 12.
Peter de Bruys and Henry, with other
reformers, whose religious views we have given, were, says
Mezeray, two principal doctors among these people; and yet
these are said to have re-baptized all persons before
fellowship. Fr. Hist and Wall's Hist. and Bossuet. Var.
1254
Reiner Sacco, who lived among the Waldenses seventeen years,
and then went over to the catholic party, and was raised to
the bad eminence of an inquisitor, asserts, They hold, that
none of the ordinances of the church which had been
introduced since Christ's ascension ought to be observed, as
being of no value. (Jones's Hist. Ch., vol. ii. p. 30.) And
among all the sects which ever existed, none were more
pernicious to the church than the LYONISTS, from its
duration, from its extension, from its show of devotion, as
they believe rightly concerning the creed.
(Bp. Newton's Diss., vol. ii. p. 250.) Some of them
say that baptism is of no advantage to infants, because they
cannot believe, and that a man is then first baptized, when
he is received into their communion. (Jones ut sup.) Others
were indifferent to the ordinances, whom we should class
with Quakers.
We may observe, with Dr. Wall, that no man
knew the Waldenses better than Reiner; yet we see the
difference between the two parties is not on doctrines, but
the ceremonies and pretensions of the Roman church. The
sacraments in Piedmont and England were the apple of strife.
In those bulls of popes and decrees of councils, year after
year for centuries, we see the charge maintained against
them, of neglecting infant baptism, without the shadow of
evidence that this charge was improperly made against any
portion of this people. Nor is there any document or
testimony, quoted by Paedobaptists of this period, showing
that the Waldenses as a body were wrongly charged in this
affair. In all Dr. Wall's research, he found no document but
what involved the Pasdobaptists in reproach, pt. 2, P. 221,
S
3.
1480
Claudius Seisselius says, the Waldenses receive only
what is written in the Old and New Testaments. * * * They
deny holy water, because neither Christ nor his apostles
made it or commanded it: as if we ought to say or do nothing
but what we read was done by them. Jones's Hist. of Ch. Ch.,
vol. ii. pp. 47-52.
1521
Montanus, in his Impress the second, says, that the
Waldenses, in the public declaration of their faith to the
French king, in the year 1521, assert in the strongest terms
the baptizing of believers, and denying that of infants.
Iwisk's ChronoL, p. 930, also Meringus's Hist. of
Baptism, p. 739.
The Waldenses in Italy held the unity of the
Godhead, the baptism of only believers, and the right of
private judgment, in which last two all agreed; but these
the Lutherans and Calvinists abhorred. This is fully
described by Reiner Sacco, being discussed freely, and the
fraud of their claim to them admirably cleared by Father
Gretzer. Robins. Res., p. 445, &c.
1544
In their confession of faith, dated by Sleiden, 1544,
are the following sentiments:— Art. 7. We believe that in
the ordinance of baptism, the water is the visible and
external sign, which represents to us that which, by virtue
of God's invisible operation, is within us; namely, the
renovation of our minds, and the mortification of our
members, through [the faith of] Jesus Christ. And by this
ordinance, we are received into the holy congregation of
God's people, previously processing and declaring our faith
and change of life. Evan. Mag. for 1819, p. 505. Jones's Ch.
Hist., vol. ii. c. 5,
S
3, pp. 59, &c.
1560
Cardinal Hossius, who presided at the council of Trent,
and wrote a history of the heresy of his own times, says,
the Waldenses rejected infant baptism, and re-baptized all
who embraced their sentiments. In his letters, apud. opera,
pp. 112—213. Bap. Mag., vol. xiv. p. 53.
1590
Bellarmine, a catholic writer of repute, acknowledged the
Waldenses to have held, that only adults ought to be
baptized. Facts op. to Fict., p. 42.
Father Gretzer, who edited Reiner Sacco's
works, after…
Testimonies
of Writers
…Reiner's account of the Waldenses, and their
manner of teaching, added, This is a true picture of the
heretics of our age, particularly the Anabaptists. Rob.
Res., p. 315.
1635
The Waldensian confession of faith dated in Gilly, 1635,
contains the following views:—
Art. 28. That God does not only instruct and
teach us by his word, but has also ordained certain
sacraments to be joined with it, as a means to unite us unto
Christ, and to make us partakers of his benefits; and that
there are only two of them belonging in common to all the
members of the church under the New Testament; to wit,
baptism and the Lord's Supper.
Art. 29. That God has ordained the sacrament
of baptism to be a testimonial of our adoption, and of our
being cleansed from our sins by the blood of Jesus Christ,
and renewed in holiness of life. Gilly's Narr. app. 12. This
confession is altered by the present Protestant of the
Valleys, which may be seen by comparing the above with a
confession in Peyrin's Historical Defence, ed. by Rev. T.
Sims, 1826, S 27, p. 463.
1670
Limborch, professor of divinity in the university of
Amsterdam, and who wrote a history of the inquisition, in
comparing the Waldenses with the Christians of his own
times, says, To speak honestly what I think, of all the
modern sects of Christians, the Dutch Baptists most resemble
both the Albigenses and the Waldenses, but particularly the
latter. Robins. Res., p. 311.
1685
Bossuer, bishop of Meaux, says, the sect of the
Waldenses is a kind of Donatistism, (Rob. Res., p. 476,
Allix's Ch. Pied., c. 20, p. 184,) and their re-baptizing
was an open declaration, that in the opinion of the
brethren, the Catholic church had lost baptism. Robin's
Bap., p. 463.
1692
Their views of baptism, says Dr. Allix, were that it
added nothing to justification, and afforded no benefit to
children. Ch. Pied., c. 11, p. 95, and Ch. Albig., c. 18, p.
160.
1750 Moslems,
chancellor of the university of Gottingen, and author of the
History of the Church, concurs with Limborch in the family
likeness of the Waldenses with the Dutch Baptists, which
shall be given in a future section. Ch. Hist., vol. ii. p.
323, and vol. iii. p. 320.
1790
The ancient Vaudois, says Robinson, are distinguished
from the later inhabitants and the reformed churches, but
not using any liturgy, by not compelling faith, by
condemning parochial churches, by not taking oaths, by
allowing every person, even women, to teach, by not
practising infant baptism, by not admitting godfathers, by
rejecting all sacerdotal habits, by denying all
ecclesiastical orders of priesthood, papal and episcopal by
not bearing arms, and by their abhorrence of every species
of persecution. This statement, he says, was made soon after
the Waldenses united with Calvin. Eccles. Research., p. 461.
If the modem papers (of Perrin Moreland,
Leger, &c.) describe the Vaudois' ancient customs, they
baptized no infants. Id. p. 471.
Amidst all the productions of early writers,
friends and foes, confessors of the whole truth and opposers
of it, annalists, historians, recorders, inquisitors, and
others, with the labored researches of Usher, Newton, Allix,
Collier, Wall, Perrin, Leger, Moreland, Mosheim, Macleane,
Gilly, Sims, and others, all of the Paedobaptist persuasion,
with every advantage of learning on their side, who collated
councils, canons, synods, conferences, chronicles, decrees,
bulls, sermons, homilies, confessions, creeds, liturgies,
&c., from the private creed of Irenaeus, down to the rules
of Ausbergh; who examined documents at home, and explored
the territories abroad,— their united labors could never
produce a single dated document or testimony of Paedobaptism
among the Vaudois, separate from the Romish community, from
Novatian's rupture to the death of the execrable monster,
Alexander VI., 1503.
1826
The Waldenses brought up their children in the nurture and
admonition of the Lord; but they neither sprinkled nor
immersed them, under the notion of administering Christian
baptism. They were, in a word, so many distinct churches of
ANTIPAEDOBAPTISTS. Jones's Hist. of Christ. Ch., pref. to
fifth ed., 1826, p. xxvi.
We here accommodate Dr. Allix's words to this
subject: "It is very remarkable that Egbert, Alanus,
Giraldus, and others, should accuse them of one custom for
ages, as belonging to all, if a distinction could have been…
Paedobaptism
Among the Waldenses
…made." (Ch. Pied., c. 17, p. 155.) At the
same time, all their dated documents and confessions justify
the charge of neglecting the infant rite, while no testimony
is produced to prove the accusation unfounded, among this
numerous body, until the confession dated 1508, which states
the writers to be falsely called Waldenses. See Bohomenian
sect.
3. Are we to conclude from these consecutive
documents, that no persons bearing the name of Waldenses,
saw and practised infant baptism with the Catholics? By no
means. There were in those days, as in the present, persons
who were found in every degree of distance from the
established church. "It would be difficult to trace,” says
Dr. Allix, "the extent of those persons who held the truth
unsophisticated." We should, from all that is written of
them, divide the community into three sections. The
Baptists, whose history is given; the Anti-baptismists, or
Quakers; and the occasional conformists, or Pasdobaptists.
We shall state facts, in order that the misstatements of our
opponents may be seen in their proper light.
The earliest claims which Pasdobaptists can
establish to any section of these dissidents as a distinct
body from Rome, is from a document dated 1508. This
instrument is easily explained. During the ministry of Huss
and Jerome, many persons were brought into their
congregations who could not forego the Roman ceremonies.
After Huss's death, a great many found in Zisca's army
(1433), were called Calixtines: i. e., persons who wished
the cup in the eucharist restored to the laity; but in every
other respect were Catholics. Another part was made up of
those…
Examination
of Psedobaptists
…persons who were zealous for reform in
church and state: while a third part was called Waldenses,
or Picards, who interfered not in political affairs.
(Rob. Res., pp. 48S-92.) Osiander says. These people
were a mixed society; some had lately separated from the
church in the business of the cup, and were called
Calixtines, Hussites, and Tharabites. (Allix's Ch. Pied.,
ch. 22, p. 214; and ch. 14, p. 241. Mosh. Hist. cent. 15, p.
2, ch. 3, S 5.)
That many of the brethren, or Picards, opposed the baptism
of infants. (Danvers Hist., p. 328.) But the Hussites, or
Picards, in Bohemia, being inflamed with a divine zeal, took
courage, says Allix, and separated themselves from the
Calixtines, or pretended Hussites, setting up a distinct
meeting in 1457, in several places, supported only by divine
assistance. (Allix, ib.) Such was the unsettled state of the
rest and remainder of this body, that they published nine
creeds, or confessions of faith, or rather one creed amended
and improved each time. (Robins. Res., p. 312.) The fourth,
with the fifth edition improved, was presented, it is said,
in 1508, to king Uladislaus, while he was in Hungary. The
confession presented to the king, says in the preface, that
the petitioning party were not Waldenses, though they were
persecuted under that name. Here we leave these Calixtine
Pasdobaptists (Rob. ib.); and if in its mixture and
unsettled condition, and without unity of spirit, it may be
termed a church, it is the first church admitting of open
communion which is found on record, and is certainly a model
for all kindred communities.
The next document referred by Paedobaptists
to prove infant baptism among the Waldenses, is the
Spiritual Almanac. This instrument of information is without
date;…
Perrin
and Wall's Account of Paedobaptism
…though, for party purposes, it is supposed
to be very ancient. This is a glorious document to every
tyro in school. This almanac is not referred to by any early
writer: Dr. Allix does not mention it; Milner barely refers
to it, but says nothing of its age or date. This spiritual
almanac was written, as supposed, says Danvers, by George
Moril, about 1530 (Hist. p. 328): but to this work we shall
allude again.
Sir Samuel Moreland was sent by Oliver
Cromwell, in 1655, into the valleys of Piedmont, with
pecuniary aid, to the distressed inhabitants. His inquiries
among these people led to the possession of some MSS.;
extracts from which. Sir Samuel entitled, "The ancient
discipline of evangelical churches, extracted out of divers
MSS., written in their own language several hundred years
before Luther" (Evan. Mag. 1819, p. 408.) Those MSS. require
a very close investigation; since Allix detected two to be
falsely chronicled (Ch. Pied., ch. 18, p. 169); and the
bishop of Meaux doubts the date of Perrin's document. (Id.
ch. 20, p. 197.) But since there were divers of these
MSS.—and Moreland found it easy to age them by centuries—we
will try and quadrate their early claims with other
discoveries. Every one interested in the merits of this
discussion must be acquainted with the labors of William
Wall, vicar of Shoreham, Kent, on the subject of infant
baptism: for which history he obtained the honorary
distinction of D.D. This man of research was very anxious to
exhibit proofs of the uninterrupted practice of the infant
rite from apostolic days. He has aided, in some measure, the
anti-pasdobaptist side of the question, without proving his
own thesis. He conceded the absence of example in apostolic
days; and in the middle ages, among the Albigenses and
Waldenses,* his best efforts prove a paucity of materials on
his side of the question: and much which he has said has
been demonstrated by Gale to be postulatory, with inferences
falsely deduced. Yet his history is allowed to be the best
in the infant question. After failing in his hands, it is
not surprising to find the Peedobaptist historians of our
day acknowledge the rite to be an "inextricable maze!"
Wall's solicitude to find his views supported by a
corresponding practice in the churches in the valleys, is
very evident. After grappling with the subject, and
belaboring through the leaden age of awful ignorance, cruel
calumnies, and odious barbarities, aided by the historians
of the valleys, Perrin and Leger, with Moreland's account
fresh from the press—all advocates and coadjutors in the
same cause—yet the only statement, the best account Dr. Wall
could exhibit as demonstrative of the practice of
Psedobaptism among the Waldenses, is the following, from
Perrin; taken from the Spiritual Almanac. Wall quotes the
Waldenses as saying—"That their ancestors being constrained
for some hundred years to suffer their children to be
baptized by the priests of the church of Rome, they deferred
the doing thereof as long as they could, because they had in
detestation those human inventions that were added to the
sacrament, which they held to be the pollution thereof. And
forasmuch as their own pastors were many times abroad,…
* Psedobaptists having in the
seventeenth century used the Waldensian name as supporting
their rite, H. Danvers, Esq., challenged Baxter to proof,
and to produce one single testimony of its existence among
those churches. Baxter, in his "More Proofs," quoted Usher;
but, says Dr. Wall, on examining Hovenden, the writer quoted
by Usher, Danvers' cause was victorious;—Hist., pt. 2, ch.
7, S 3, P- 223. Dr. Wall has, by his concession, allowed
that no proof exists of its practice in those churches.
Who
Practised Paedobaptism
…employed in the service of the churches,
they could not have baptism administered to their infants by
their own ministers. For this cause they kept them long from
baptism; which the priests perceiving, and taking notice of,
charged them with this slanderi Hist. of Inf. Bap., pt. 2,
ch. 7, S 3, p.
221.
Now this is the best proof of Paedobaptism in
the valleys, even after an examination of Moreland's divers
MSS. of evangelical churches, several hundred years before
Luther; and the Spiritual Almanac is often referred to as
the strong fort. We ask, is this a true picture of those
people whose names we revere, and whose creed we are anxious
should be allied to our own, and which people we are trying
to claim as our puritan predecessors? Then we yield them to
Paedobaptists, and repudiate them from our pages as a people
we cannot respect. Did Dr. Wall give this quotation confer
credit, or to burlesque the people? Does this statement
reflect honor or disgrace, and which preponderates? The
popish priests, perceiving the neglect and the slander
incurred, are given as the reasons for complying with things
they had in detestation. What particular mark did the water
leave, so as to enable the priests to discriminate and
reproach—save the pastoral visits of such priests to such
occasional conformists, led to the inquiry and disclosure of
facts? What class of dissenters would at this day, from the
slander of priests, attend a ceremony they detested, and who
would claim a sodality with them whose ancestors had
sustained the same compromising character for centuries? And
how amazingly punctilious in mental sagacity were such
Paedobaptists in distinguishing between the authority for a
traditional rite, and those human inventions added; when the
Church of Rome owns the…
Character
of Early Paedobaptists
…traditional character of the infant rite
altogether, with hundreds of the literati, who confess its
absence in the primitive church, while the practitioners of
the present day are divided on the grounds as well as the
extent of its practice!
But we observe, the Waldensian churches had
regular and settled pastors. "A stated ministry was always
considered as a matter of great importance among the
Waldensian churches." (Jones's Led, vol. ii. p. 459. Allix's
Pied., ch. 24, p. 245.) "Those barbs, or pastors, who
remained at home in the valleys, besides preaching, took
upon them the disciplining and instructing of the young,"
&c.(Danvers, p. 30, from Moreland.) And Reiner charges them
with communicating every (Lord's) day, which would require a
stated and settled ministry. Were these Paedobaptists, as
given by Perrin and Wall, real Waldenses? I trow not.
That the Pasdobaptists in Perrin, should
succeed each other, for several hundred years, and that
successive generations should suffer themselves to be
constrained into a religious service, and for them to be for
centuries without ministers, satisfactorily demonstrate
their interests to have been very low, not 800,000, as
recorded, but distinct from the Waldensian churches, and
even through centuries not a thriving denomination. Indeed
we shall make it appear, that these were not a separate
people, but occasional conformists to the Roman church.
The
Catholics baptized children, with the first advocates,
solely on the grounds of original sin, and its accompanying
salvation. Augustin had never heard of a man (practicing it)
who had not that view; and Dr. Wall quotes early writers
largely in point, and asserts, this sense was disturbed by
Calvin. (Hist. pt. 2, pp. 66, 451.) Now, in Perrin's
account, given by Wall, those Psedobaptists make no
objection to the Catholic doctrinal views accompanying the
rite, and consequently could not be considered true
dissidents from that body.
But truth is always consistent; and here we
give the key to this class of professors. "The believers of
Lombardy, in the time of Gregory I.," says Allix, "who were
deprived of their ministers by persecutions of Arians,
carried their children to the Arian priests to have them
baptized." (Ch. Pied., ch. 24, p. 242.) This conformity was
the condition of peace; the place was the established
church; the creed was the Arian, and by one immersion; the
cause was the absence of their own minister. Again, when
inquisitors were commissioned by the pope, in 1176, to visit
the heretics in Languedoc, and by any and every means to
bring them over to the Catholic church: they took a creed
with them, to which they required the Vaudois fully to
consent as the terms of peace and paradise. This creed
contained the following objectionable clause: "We believe
that none are saved, excepting they are baptized; and that
children are saved by baptism; and that baptism is to be
performed by a priest (not in a river, but) in a church."
(Danvers, p. 300.)
In the thirteenth century, when the preaching
monks went through the length and breadth of the land,
Collier, with others, says, that, on these occasions, with
the above creed, multitudes repaired to the Catholic
churches, and compromised their principles. (Gr. Hist. Diet.
Albig.) Multitudes must have previously neglected their
infant seed! A succession of such accommodating persons is
plain, since Reiner says, The Waldenses pursued the…
Grounds
of Paedobaptism
…same dissembling course; they frequent our
churches, are present at divine worship, offer at the altar,
receive the sacrament, confess to the priests, &c. &c.,
though they scoff at our institutions." (Jones's Christian
Ch., vol. ii. p. 34); or, as the confession of Perrin, "they
held them in detestation." These compromising Vaudois, with
their remote ancestors and progeny, form evidently the class
of evangelicals, whose conduct is an exact key to Perrin's
account. This is supported by their state in 1530; when the
churches connected with George Moril, to save themselves
from Catholic rage, did go to mass in Provence, and pleaded
it was no great harm, provided their hearts were kept right
with God. For which prevarication and hypocrisy, the
reformer (Ecolampadius rebukes them, and condemns the
practice. (Perrin's Hist.) Such were not witnesses of the
truth.
The Waldenses took the Scriptures alone for
their guidance, and carefully avoided all human impositions
in religious duties. The Catholics, with the Vaudois,
allowed infant baptism no higher authority than the
"tradition of the Fathers," and "the custom of the church."
(Milner's End of all Controv., Lect. 30. Easky discussion,
p. 79.) We are sure, a people who were guided in all
religious duties by a literal interpretation, as of Christ's
sermon on the mount, would never adopt in their churches a
human rite. The real Waldenses looked upon infant baptism to
be one feature of Antichrist, since it borrowed the form of
sound words to support a lie, and conferred a spiritual
figure upon an alien to spiritual blessings.
The Vaudois did not practise Paedobaptism,
nor receive the sign of the cross; this they called the mark
of the beast. This is evident from the, laws enacted to
regulate…
On Open Communion
…commercial affairs, and which excluded those
from any advantages in trade, who refused this shibboleth.
The cross running through the whole of that system is
certainly the mark of the beast. (Bp. Newton, Diss. 2, pp.
195, 289.) It was the ground model of their sanctuaries, the
ornament within and without; it was placed on the forehead
in baptism, and, by various digitary motions, conferred on
every part of the body; it was worn on the clothes, or
carried in the hand; it was the ensign of peace, or the
signal of war; it was the emblazonry of the field, and the
escutcheon of the mansion; it was the pope's signet, and the
peasant's security; it was the talisman in private, and the
Palladium of the public interest; the pontiff's tiara, the
church's confidence, the community's glory and dread. This
mark the Waldenses did not receive, and there was no baptism
conferred on infants without it. Had they received the mark
of the beast, they could not be considered free of the
threatened indignation. Rev. xiv. 9. Whether infant baptism
was limited, or extensively practiced in the valleys, one
conclusion will force itself on every impartial inquirer,
that those who administered, and those who received the
rite, would in every age be viewed by Catholics in a more
favorable light, than those who denied infant baptism;
consequently, those who agreed in so essential a point of
salvation, would find no great barrier to communion in times
of persecution, compared with those who, like the real
Waldenses, abhorred every vestige of the man of sin. This is
made plain by facts; for so soon as the Waldenses embraced
Pasdobaptism, so far they were incorporated into national
churches in 1532-5. (Dr. Allix's
Ch. Pied., ch. 20, p. 184. See German Section.)
Open
Communion and Socinianism
4. Bogue and Bennet, in their History of
Dissenters, felt convincingly the difficulty of establishing
a community of Pasdobaptists in the valleys separate from
the Church of Rome; and when called on to explain some harsh
expressions about our denomination, gave a postulatory
statement, that the dissenting interests were formed of
mixed materials, and in justification said, "That no
evidence has been adduced to make it evident that they (the
Baptists) were a distinct body, which excluded others from
their communion."
Any person, with Mosheim in his hand, might
controvert this gratuitous assertion! We observe;
First. The church of Jerusalem is
satisfactory to negative this statement; Acts ii. 41; with
the first account of church discipline extant, which says,
"This food we call the eucharist, of which none are allowed
to be partakers, but such only as are true believers, and
have been baptised in the laver of regeneration for the
remission of sins, and live according to Christ's precepts."
(Justin Martyr's Apol., Reeve's Trans., vol. i.
S 86, p. 120.)
Dr. Wall asserts, that "no church ever gave the
communion to any person before they were baptized." (Hist.,
pt. 2, p. 441.)
Secondly. We have already proved in the
previous sections, and shall confirm the same statements in
future pages, that the terms of communion, in the churches
of Novatian, Donatus, Constantine Sylvanus, with the
Paterines in Italy, the followers of Peter de Bruys, who was
a doctor among the Albigenses, were, a profession of faith
and baptism: the latter held, "that persons baptized in
infancy are to be baptized after they believe, which is not
to be esteemed re-baptization, but right baptism." (Osiander
Cent. 12, L. 3, p. 262.) "The Waldenses admitted the
catechumen to baptism, after an exact instruction, a long
fast, &c., and then were admitted to the eucharist after
baptism." Allix's Ch. Pied. ch. 7, pp. 7, 8.
Thirdly. Robinson's works on baptism might be
considered a kind of literary excursion to decry
intolerance. His zeal for mental freedom led him to examine
minutely every early record on the terms of communion; and
his history of the controversy on this subject makes no
mention of the practice in any early church. (Works, vol.
iii. p. 141.) His earliest discovery bears date 1577. The
Baptist churches in Poland originated in some of Waldo's
disciples leaving France in the twelfth century. These, with
all our churches, were established on the terms of strict
communion. (Rob. Res., p. 600.) At this period, 1577,
Faustus Socinus reached Cracow, and essayed to join the
Baptists, but was refused without baptism. He blamed the
churches for their strictness, and showed them by argument
the innocency of mental error. (Others, perhaps, would class
Antinomianism, Sabellianism, and Socinianism, in the
catalogue of mental errors: but mental error sanctioned and
is virtually the grounds of the mixed sys- tem.) Being a
great and learned man, he brought many to see with himself.
He soon stood a member of the church; and by zeal and
charity, effected a radical change in the Baptist creed and
churches. (Rob. Res., p. 607.) He is now acknowledged as the
honorable head of the Socinian Baptist churches in Poland,
though himself was never baptized. Our views will be again
exhibited on the churches' constitution, so as to prove the
Baptists to be a distinct body, from the great Catholic
community of Psedobaptists. As great names are apt to
dazzle, and even set aside facts, reason, and revelation, we
caution all our readers against receiving great sounding
assertions in the room of facts. There can be no proof of
Pasdobaptism, as practiced before the sixteenth century, but
among persons of the Catholic and Grecian persuasion. Prove
our assertion to be wrong, and you shall have our thanks for
your friendship. "Open communion arises from a new state of
things."-R. Hall.