that the Papacy, by her novel and ambitious pretentions,
was the cause of the schism
between the eastern and western churches.
We have shown, First, that the Bishops of
Rome did not enjoy universal authority during the first
eight centuries of the Church. Secondly, That they were not
then considered either as the centre of unity or as
the source of jurisdiction. Thirdly, That they were not
supposed to be invested of divine right with any
prerogatives whatever as successors of St. Peter.
If, after the ninth century, they put
forward in respect of these three points pretensions
contrary to the established and universal doctrine of the
first eight centuries; if they undertook to subject the
whole Church to their sovereign authority; if they assumed
to be the necessary centre of unity and the source of
jurisdiction, we must conclude that they have sought to
usurp a power to which they had no right.
If these usurpations provoked energetic
resistance on the part of the Eastern Church; if the Bishops
of Rome made the recognition of their usurped power a
condition precedent to reunion, it must follow that the
Papacy is the first and direct cause of the division. The
facts we shall allege will prove this to be so.
After the coronation of Charlemagne, there
was an interval of peace between the two churches. Leo the
Armenian renewed the heresy of the Iconoclasts and
persecuted the Catholics. Many took refuge in Rome and
Pascal I. (817) built a church for them, in which they held
services in Greek. This Pope even sent letters and legates
to Constantinople to advocate the cause of the faith, which
the majority of the bishops, with the Patriarch Nicephorus
at their head, courageously defended. Leo the Armenian,
hoping nothing from Rome, sought a support in the Church of
France. The Bishops of that church assembled at Paris and
adopted several decisions similar to those of the Council of
Frankfort of which we have spoken. Several of them were sent
to Rome to give good advice to the Pope, then Eugenius II.
This was the beginning of that traditional
opposition of the Church of France to the Papacy, in
conformity with catholic doctrine, which has been called Gallicanism.
The Bishops of the Council of Paris, like
those of Frankfort, had no precise notion of the question
discussed in the East; but we only desire to prove by them
that they believed they had the right to contest the
œcumenical character of the seventh general council, even
after the Pope had concurred in it, and that they ascribed
no dogmatic authority in the Church to the Bishop of Rome.
Several somewhat obscure Popes now succeeded
each other until 858, when Nicholas I. took the see of Rome.
The Eastern Church, persecuted by iconoclastic emperors,
defended the holy traditions of the Church with invincible
courage. She enjoyed some tranquillity at last under the
reign of Michael, (842,) after a persecution that had
continued almost without interruption for a hundred and
twenty years. Methodius, one of the most courageous
defenders of orthodoxy, became Bishop of Constantinople, and
was succeeded (847) by Ignatius son of the Emperor Michael
Rhangabe, predecessor of Leo the Armenian. This Michael had
been shut up in a monastery with his three sons, who had
been made eunuchs, in order to incapacitate them for
reigning. Ignatius passed through all the lower degrees of
the clergy, and was a priest when chosen for the Patriarchal
see. The Emperor Michael was a licentious man, who left his
uncle Bardas to govern the empire. Ignatius drew upon
himself the hatred of the Emperor by refusing, to make nuns
of the Empress dowager Theodora and her two daughters. He
made a powerful enemy of Bardas, to whom he publicly refused
the communion, because of the scandal of his private life.
Moreover, from the day of his consecration, he had also
incurred the enmity of Gregory, Bishop of Syracuse, by
humiliating him and refusing to permit him to take part in
that solemnity, on the ground that be was accused of divers
misdemeanours; which was indeed true, but he had not been
judged. Ignatius subsequently judged and condemned him; but
Rome, to which Gregory appealed, refused at first to confirm
the sentence, notwithstanding the solicitations of Ignatius,
and only consented when war was openly declared against
Photius and his adherents.
We willingly admit that Ignatius had none
but good intentions and conscientious motives in all that he
did; but it is also just to acknowledge that he imitated
neither the prudence of a Tarasius, nor the sublime
self-denial of a Chrysostom. Naturally enough, the
recollection of the imperial power, of which his father had
been deprived by violence, did not dispose him to humour
those who held that high position which he looked upon as
the birthright of his family. The imperial court accused him
of taking sides with an adventurer who fancied he had claims
on the imperial crown, and he was exiled.
Many of the bishops before him had been
equally exposed to the caprice of the court. Among his
predecessors, and even in the see of Rome, Ignatius might
have found examples of men who preferred to renounce a
dignity they could no longer exercise with profit to the
Church, rather than to excite by useless opposition
disturbances which always injure it. He did not see fit to
imitate these examples, and refused to renounce his dignity
in spite of the entreaties of several bishops.
The court could not yield. It convoked the
clergy, who chose Photius for their Patriarch.
Photius was nephew of the Patriarch
Tarasius, and belonged to the imperial family. His portrait
is thus drawn by Fleury: Fleury Hist.
Eccl. Lib. L. § 3, ann. 858.
"The genius of Photius was even above his
birth. He had a great mind carefully cultivated. His wealth
enabled him readily to find books of all descriptions; and
his desire of glory led him to pass whole nights in reading.
He thus became the most learned man not only of his own but
of preceding ages. He was versed in grammar, poetry,
rhetoric, philosophy, medicine, and all the secular
sciences; but he had not neglected ecclesiastical lore, and
when he came to office, he made himself thoroughly
acquainted with it."
In a work latterly composed by the court of
Rome, they have been obliged to say of Photius:
The Eastern Church, a book
published under the name of M. Pitzipios, Part I. chap. 4,
edition of the Roman "Progpaganda". "His vast
erudition, his insinuating temper, at once supple and firm,
and his capacity in political affairs, even his sweet
expression of face, his noble and attractive manners, made
him conspicuous among his contemporaries."
But we ought first to have traced the
character of Photius after those writers who are not
suspected of partiality to him. Truth also demands that we
should state what documents have served as the basis of all
that has since been written in the Roman Church upon the
important events in which he took part.
We will first mention the letters of
Metrophanes, metropolitan of Smyrna, of Stylien, Bishop of
Neo-Cæsarea, and of the monk Theognostus. These three men
are known as personal enemies of Photius. Anastasius the
Librarian was so contemptible a man that no importance can
be attached to his testimony. The following is an abstract
of the sentence rendered against him at Rome itself in 868:
"The whole Church of God knows what Anastasius did in the
times of the Popes our predecessors, and what Leo and
Benedict ordered in respect to him, that the one deposed,
excommunicated, and anathematized him; the other having
stripped him of his priestly vestments, admitted him to lay
communion. Subsequently, Pope Nicholas reinstated him on
condition of his remaining faithful to the Roman Church.
But after having pillaged our Patriarchal palace and carried
off the Acts of the Councils in which he had been condemned,
he has sent men out over the walls of this city to sow
discord between the princes and the Church, and caused one
Adalgrim, who had taken refuge in the Church, to lose his
eyes and tongue. Finally, as many among you have, like
myself, heard a priest, named Adon, a relative of his, say,
he has forgotten our benefits to the extent of sending a man
to Eleutherus to induce him to commit the murders you know
of. Eleutherus, son of Bishop Arsenus,
having debauched a daughter of Pope Adrian II., carried her
off and married her, though she was betrothed to another.
This Pope obtained from the Emperor Louis commissioners to
judge him according to the Roman law. Then Eleutherus became
furious, and killed Stephanie the wife of the Pope, and his
daughter, who had become his own wife. It was rumoured that
Anastasius had put up his brother Eleutherus to commit these
murders. At the commencement of his reign, about 868, Adrian
had made Anastasius librarian of the Roman Church. (V.
Annales Bertin.) Therefore we order, in conformity
with the judgments of Popes Leo and Benedict, that he be
deprived of all ecclesiastical communion, until such time as
he shall be acquitted by a council of the things whereof he
is accused; and whoever communicates with him, or even
speaks to him, incurs the same excommunication. If he remove
himself however little from Rome, or if he discharge any
ecclesiastical function, he shall suffer perpetual anathema,
both he and his accomplices."
Anastasius doubtless obtained a pardon from
Adrian as he had obtained it from Pope Nicholas. Rome had
need of him in her contentions with the East, for he spoke
Greek very well, which was then a rare accomplishment in the
West. Accordingly, in the following year (869) we find
Anastasius at Constantinople, engaged in the council against
Photius. He translated its decrees from Greek into Latin,
and added a preface, in which he describes, in his own
style, the acts attributed to Photius. Could such a man be
regarded as a credible witness against the Patriarch of
Constantinople as a wise discriminator of facts, or as an
honest narrator? May we not believe that he wished to show
himself faithful to the Roman Church according to
the condition of his first pardon granted by Nicholas?
"It is not known precisely at what time this
author died. It is certain that he was still living under
the pontificate of John VIII., who was elected in 872, and
died in 882." Feller, Dict. Biog. voc.
Anastasius.
There has indeed been an attempt to make the
world believe in a second Anastasius, the Librarian at Rome
at the same time, so as not to load the historian of the
Popes with accusations which deprive him of all credibility.
But no proof can be brought to sustain this assertion, which
must consequently be regarded as devoid of all foundation.
It is certain that Anastasius the Librarian flourished
precisely at the time we have mentioned, and that no other
Anastasius the Librarian is known beside the one implicated
in the atrocious crimes mentioned in his sentence; who was
repeatedly condemned there at Rome itself, and who only
obtained pardon upon conditions which lay him open to
suspicion, when he speaks of the enemies of the Roman
Church.
The testimony of Nicetas David, the
Paphlagonian, author of the Life of Ignatius, is
relied on against Photius. We may even say that this writer
is the great authority against him. Still, impartiality
compels us to observe, that Nicetas carried party spirit so
far against Photius as to adopt the famous addition (Filioque)
made to the creed, though not yet officially recognized as
legitimate even in the West. The whole of his recital and
that of Michael Syncellus, proves that these two writers
must be ranked among the personal enemies of Photius.
Now, when a historical personage is to be
judged, should we defer to the opinion of his enemies? The
question answers itself.
A clear and invincible argument against
these authors may be drawn from their own writings, as
compared with other historians such as George, Cedrenus,
Zonaras, and Constantine Porphyrogenitus. The former
attribute to Photius, on account of their hatred to him, the
persecutions of which Ignatius was the object, while they
are ascribed to Bardas by the latter, who are impartial.
How shall we decide between these
conflicting accounts of the historians? We will believe
neither. Photius, and the Popes with whom he quarrelled,
wrote letters in which their own thoughts are set forth.
These letters exist; they are the most credible documents.
We will hear the litigants themselves defend their own
cause. This is the best mode of arriving at the truth.
Photius received the episcopal ordination on
Christmas day, 858. The following year he wrote to Nicholas
I., then Bishop of Rome:
"To the most holy, sacred, and reverend
fellow-minister, Nicholas, Pope of the old Rome: Photius,
Bishop of Constantinople, the new Rome:
"When I consider the grandeur of the
priesthood; when I think of the distance between its
perfection and the baseness of man; when I measure the
weakness of my powers, and recall the ideas I have had all
my life of the sublimity of such a dignity—thoughts which
inspired me with wonder, with stupefaction when I saw the
men of our times, not to mention those of ancient times,
accepting the dreadful yoke of the pontificate, and, though
men of flesh and blood, undertaking, at their great peril,
to fulfil the ministry of the pure-spirited cherubim; when
my mind dwells upon such thoughts, and I find myself in that
position in which I have trembled to see others, I cannot
express the pain and the grief I experience. In childhood I
took a resolution that age has only strengthened, to keep
myself aloof from business and noise, and to enjoy the
peaceful delights of private life; still (I should confess
it to your Holiness, since in writing to you I owe you the
truth) I have been obliged to accept dignities from the
imperial court, and thus break my resolutions. Yet have I
never been so bold as to aspire to the dignity of the
priesthood. It seemed to me too venerable and formidable;
above all, when I recalled the example of St. Peter, head of
the Apostles, who, after having given to our Lord and our
true God, Jesus Christ, so many evidences of his
faith, and showed how ardently he loved him, regarded the
honour of being raised by his Master to the priesthood as
the crowning glory of all his good works. I also recall the
example of that servant who had received one talent, and
who, having hid it, because his master was a hard man, that
he might not lose it, was obliged to give an account of it,
and was condemned to the fire and to Hades for having
permitted it to lie idle.
"But why should I thus write to you, and,
renew my pain and aggravate my grief, and make you the
confidant of my sorrow? The remembrance of painful things
embitters their evil without bringing any solace. That which
has happened is like a tragedy, which took place, no doubt,
in order that by your prayers we might be enabled to govern
well that flock which has been committed to us, I know not
how; that the cloud of difficulties hanging over us might be
dispelled; that the heavy atmosphere which surrounds us
might be cleared. Even as a pilot is joyful when he sees his
well-directed bark driven by a favourable wind, so a church
is the joy of a pastor, who sees it increase in piety and
virtue, dispelling the anxieties that encompass him like
clouds, and the fears inspired by his own weakness.
"A short time since,
when he who had the
episcopal office before us abandoned this honour, I
found myself attacked on all sides, under what direction I
do not know, by the clergy and the assembly of bishops and
metropolitans, and particularly by the Emperor, who is full
of love for Christ, good, just, humane, and (why shall I not
say it?) more just than those who reigned before him. Only
against me has he been inhuman, violent, and terrible.
Acting in concert with the assembly of which I have spoken,
be has given me no respite, actuated, he says, to this
insistence by the unanimous wish and desire of the clergy,
who would allow me no excuse; and asserting that in view of
such a vote he could not, however he might desire it, permit
my resistance. The assembly of the clergy was large, and my
entreaties could not be heard by many of them; those who
heard them took no heed of them; they had but one intention,
one determined resolve—that of imposing the episcopate upon
me in spite of myself." . . .
We will pause here one moment. The enemies
of Photius have maintained that in thus expressing himself
he gave evidence of his hypocrisy; that instead of refusing
the episcopacy, he had desired it. They also accuse him of
falsehood in asserting that his predecessor had abandoned
his dignity.
Are these two assertions true? We can better
know a man by his familiar correspondence than by the
gratuitous assertions of his enemies. This is certainly a
principle that no one will contest. Now the familiar letters
of Photius to his relative, the "Cæsar" Bardas, clearly
prove that he left no means untried to escape from the
dignity that it was sought to impose upon him. The honours
which he enjoyed at court were already a burden to him,
because they forced him from studies which were his only
passion; he knew, that once raised to the patriarchal chair,
he would be compelled to give up that peaceful life in which
he enjoyed the truest delights of learning; and therefore he
entreated Bardas to give another the chair.
Photi. Epist. ad Bard. What
motive could he have had to write this intimately to a man
who knew his tastes and was his friend?
Now did Photius seek to deceive the Pope by
writing to him that Ignatius had abandoned his see? It is
certain that, right or wrong, Ignatius had been condemned as
a conspirator, and as such banished by the Emperor. If,
under these circumstances, he had, as Anastasius the
Librarian asserts, laid his church under a species of
interdict, such conduct would have been criminal and opposed
to that of the greatest and most saintly bishops. We have
already seen Pope Martin condemned, persecuted, and banished
like Ignatius, yet acknowledging the legitimacy of Eugene,
elected by the Roman Church as his successor without his
ever having given his resignation. St. Chrysostom, unjustly
exiled, wrote in this noble language: "The Church did not
begin with me, nor will it end with me. The Apostles and the
Prophets have suffered far greater persecutions."
As a conclusion, he exhorted the bishops to
obey whoever should be put in his place, and only begged
them not to sign his condemnation if they did not believe
him guilty.
Photius must have considered this custom,
and looked upon his predecessor as having, fallen from his
dignity, seeing that all the clergy except five votes
Those historians who are enemies to
Photius acknowledge this. had elected him to succeed
Ignatius. But he could not write to the Pope that Ignatius
bad been deposed, since he had not been canonically
condemned.
He was therefore neither a hypocrite nor a
liar in writing to the Pope, as we have seen. He thus
continues:
"The opportunity for entreaty being taken
from me, I burst into tears. The sorrow which seemed like a
cloud within me and filled me with anxiety and darkness,
broke at once into a torrent of tears which overflowed from
my eyes. To see our words unavailing to obtain safety,
impels us naturally to prayers and tears; we hope for some
aid from them even though we can no longer expect it. Those
who thus did violence to my feelings left me no peace until
they had obtained what they desired, although against my
will. Thus here I am, exposed to storms and judgments that
only God knows of, who knows all things. But enough of this,
as the phrase is."
"Now as communion of faith is the best of
all, and as it is preëminently the source of true love, in
order to contract with your Holiness a pure and indissoluble
bond, we have resolved to briefly engrave, as upon marble,
our faith, which is yours also. By that means we shall more
promptly obtain the aid of your fervent prayers, and give
you the best evidence of our affection."
Photius then makes his profession of faith
with an exactitude and depth worthy of the greatest
theologian. He there refers the fundamental truths of
Christianity to the mysteries of the Trinity, the
Incarnation, and Redemption. He accepts the seven œcumenical
councils, and sets forth in few words, but with remarkable
accuracy, the doctrine there propounded. He adds:
"Such is the profession of my faith,
touching the things that belong to it and flow from it. In
this faith is my hope. It is not mine alone, but is shared
by all those who wish to live piously, who have in them the
love of God, who have resolved to maintain the pure and
exact Christian doctrine. In recording thus our profession
of faith in writing, and in making known to your very sacred
Holiness that which concerns us, we have as it were engraved
upon marble what we have expressed to you in words; as we
have told you, we need your prayers, that God may be good
and propitious to us in all we undertake; that He may grant
us grace to tear up every root of scandal, every stone of
stumbling from the ecclesiastical order; that we may
carefully pasture all those committed to us; that the
multitude of our sins may not retard the progress of our
flock in virtue, and thereby make our faults more numerous;
that I may at all times do and say to the faithful what is
proper; that on their side they may be always obedient and
docile in what concerns their salvation; that by the "grace
and goodness of Christ, who is the chief of all, they may
grow continually in Him, to whom be Glory and the kingdom
with the Father and Holy Spirit, the consubstantial Trinity
and principle of life, now and evermore, world without end.
Amen."
This letter savours of the taste of the age
in its affected style. But it is no less a beautiful
monument of orthodoxy, and, in all respects, worthy of a,
great writer and a great bishop.
The enemies of Photius have said that
another, claimed to be his first letter to the Pope, was a
work of hypocrisy in which he sought to win him over to his
side by unworthy means, and chiefly by affecting great zeal
against the iconoclasts. They have never been able to quote
a line of this supposed letter. Those who invented it seem
not to have remembered that the bishops could not hold the
least intercourse before the usual letters of
intercommunion. On this occasion as on many others, hatred
has made the forgers blind. The first letter of
Photius to the Pope is the one we have just translated.
It was brought to Rome with a letter from
the Emperor. Nicholas I. took this occasion to do an act of
supreme authority in the Church. This Pope is one of those
who most contributed to unfold the work of Adrian I. The
Jesuit Maimbourg, Maimb. History of the
Greek Schism. meaning to praise him, asserts that,
"during his pontificate of nine years, he raised the papal
power to a height it had never before reached, especially in
respect to emperors, kings, princes, and patriarchs, whom he
treated more roughly than any of his predecessors, whenever
he thought himself wronged in the prerogatives of his
pontifical power." This is undoubtedly true, but Father
Maimbourg did not appreciate either the historical
importance of what he established, nor the fatal
consequences of this development of papal power. Nor did he
see that this vaunted development was nothing short of a
radical change, and that, in, the ninth century, the Papacy
was no longer the Roman patriarchate of the first eight
centuries.
Nicholas did not know what had taken place
at Constantinople at the time of the deposition of Ignatius
and the election of Photius. He only knew that Photius was a
layman at the time of his election. It is true, many canons
of the West forbade hasty ordinations; but these canons did
not obtain in the East, and although usage there was in
favour of progressive ordinations, the history of the Church
proves, by numerous examples, that these canons and this
usage were occasionally passed over in favour of men of
distinguished merit and under circumstances of peculiar
gravity. We need only to recall the names of Ambrose of
Milan, Nectarius, Tarasius, and Nicephorus of
Constantinople, to prove that the ordination of Photius was
not without the most venerable precedent. But Nicholas
desired to appear in the character of supreme arbiter.
Instead of modestly putting off intercommunion with the new
Patriarch until he should be more fully informed, he
answered the letters of Photius and of the Emperor in this
style:
"The Creator of all things has established
the Princedom of the divine power
which the Creator of all things has granted to his chosen
Apostles. He has firmly established it on the firm faith of
the Prince of the Apostles, that is to say Peter, to whom he
preëminently granted the first see. For to him was said by
the voice of the Lord, 'Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I
will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not
prevail against it.' Peter, thus called because of the
solidity of the rock, which is Christ, continues to
strengthen by his prayers the unshaken edifice of the
universal Church, so that he hastens to reform, according to
the rule of true faith, the folly of those who fall into
errour, and sustains those who consolidate it lest the gates
of hell, that is to say, the suggestion of wicked spirits
and the attacks of heretics, should succeed in breaking the
unity of the Church." Nocol. Ep. 2d and
3d in Labbe's Collection of the Councils, vol. viii. Nat.
Alexand. Hist. Eccl. Dissert. iv. in Sæcul. ix.
Nicholas then pretends to be convinced that
when Michael sent to Rome, it was to fulfil the rule
established by the Fathers; that "without the consent of the
Roman see and the Roman pontiff, nothing should be decided
in controversies."
This principle was admitted in this sense,
that no question of faith could be passed upon without the
concurrence of the Western churches, which was commonly
transmitted through the chief see of those countries; but
not in this sense, that the consent of the individual See of
Rome or of its bishop was absolutely necessary. Nicholas
thus relied upon an errour, and improperly treated it as
admitted by the Emperor of the East. Upon this latter point,
at least, he knew what the truth was. He next attacks the
election of Photius, relying on the canons of the Council of
Sardica, and the Decretals of the Popes Celestine,
Leo, and Gelasius, whom he calls doctors of the catholic
faith. He might have considered that the faith
was not in question, but only a mere matter of discipline,
and that the East had not, and was entitled not to have,
upon this point, the same discipline as the West. Adrian I.
had forbidden in future to raise a layman to the episcopate.
Nicholas relies on this as a precedent. But he does not
consider whether Adrian had any better right than himself to
make this prohibition. "It is our will,"
he adds, "that Ignatius should appear before our envoys,
that he may declare why he has abandoned his people without
regarding the rules of our predecessors Leo and Benedict.
. . . . All the proceedings will then be transmitted to our
superior authority, that we may judge by Apostolic authority
what is to be done, in order that your church, which is now
so shaken, may be firm and peaceful for the future."
Following a practice which was already
established in the Roman Church, Nicholas did not permit his
duties as supreme pontiff to divert his mind from the
material interests of his see; accordingly, he writes to the
Emperor: "Give back to us the patrimony of Calabria and that
of Sicily and all the property of our church, whereof it
held possession, and which it was accustomed to manage by
its own attorneys; for it is unreasonable that an
ecclesiastical possession, destined for the light and the
service of the Church of God, should be taken from us by an
earthly power."
Behold now the temporalities already
invested with religious consecration!
"It is our will,"
adds Nicholas, (these words flow naturally from his pen upon
all occasions,) "It is our will
that consecration be given by our see to the Archbishop of
Syracuse, that the tradition established by the Apostles may
not be violated in our time. "This motive is truly strange,
to say no more of it. Sicily was made subject to the Roman
Patriarchate in the fourth century. After the fall of the
empire, that region bad remained within the dominions of the
Emperor of Constantinople. Now, according to the rule
admitted time out of mind in the Church, the ecclesiastical
divisions should follow every change in the civil divisions.
By that rule, Syracuse properly depended upon
Constantinople, and not Rome. Nicholas willed
it otherwise, but the law willed it
thus, and the Apostles to whom he appealed had certainly
never made the see of Syracuse subject to that of Rome. The
letter to Photius is but an abridgment of that to the
Emperor, with this difference, that Nicholas avoids the use
of the ambitious expressions we have quoted. He addressed
Photius as a simple layman, without giving him any episcopal
title, though he knew him to have been lawfully consecrated.
This affectation was big with this idea: that no bishop
could bear the character of his order, except by the consent
of the Roman Pontiff.
The earlier popes had never used such
language either to the emperors or to their brethren the
bishops. In cases where they were obliged to interfere for
the defence of faith or of discipline, they did not assume
the character of sovereign umpires, and claimed no supreme
authority; they appealed to tradition, to the canons; they
did nothing without a council, and did not mix things
temporal with things spiritual. We have noticed the first
steps of the Papacy in its new ways and its attempts to
abolish the ancient canon law. Nicholas I. thought himself
prepared to treat these new pretensions as ancient and
incontestable prerogatives. He thus deserves a place between
Adrian I., the true founder of the modern Papacy, and
Gregory VII., who raised it to its highest. But the False Decretals were unknown in the East. Nicholas I.,
instead of invoking the general principles of the œcumenical
councils, quoted the Decretals of his predecessors,
as if it were possible for those Bishops of Rome to
establish universal laws. Photius, in his second letter,
reminded him of the true principles with as much accuracy as
moderation.
The legates of Nicholas having arrived at
Constantinople, a council was assembled in that city, in
which three hundred and eighteen bishops took part, and
which the legates attended. Ignatius appeared before that
assembly, and was solemnly deposed. Every one admits this.
But the enemies of Photius represent these three hundred and
eighteen bishops, who held their sessions publicly and
before large crowds, as so many traitors sold to the crown.
We find it difficult to believe that so many bishops can
have prostituted their consciences unchecked, to a man, by
any remorse, and that the people did not protest against
such infamy. It is difficult to believe in this connivance
of three hundred and eighteen bishops, surrounded by a crowd
of clergy and people. It seems to us more probable that, in
spite of his virtues, Ignatius had been raised to the
Patriarchate less by election than by a powerful influence,
and because of his noble blood, whereof he was indeed
reproached, and that he was implicated, involuntarily, no
doubt, in certain political intrigues. We see no reason to
doubt the purity of his intentions; but may he not have been
the tool of ambitious men? was it not owing to their baneful
influence that he did not imitate the magnanimity and the
truly bishop-like self-sacrifice of a Chrysostom?
Ignatius was a second time deposed by the
Council of Constantinople in 861. He appealed to the Pope;
but his petition was signed by only six metropolitans and
fifteen bishops.
The legates returned to Rome. Shortly after
their arrival, an imperial ambassador brought the
transactions of the council and a letter from Photius, thus
conceived:
"To the very holy among all and most sacred
brother and co-minister, Nicholas, Pope of ancient Rome,
Photius, Bishop of Constantinople, the new Rome.
"Nothing is more honourable and precious
than charity; this is the general opinion confirmed by Holy
Scriptures. By her that which is separated becomes united;
contentions are ended; that which is already united and
closely tied, becomes united more closely still; she closes
all doors to seditions and intestine quarrels; for 'charity
thinketh no evil, suffereth long, hopeth all things,
endureth all things, and,' according to the blessed Paul,
'never faileth.' She reconcileth guilty servants with their
masters, insisting, in mitigation of the fault, upon their
similar natures; she teaches servants to bear meekly the
anger of their masters, and consoles them for the inequality
of their state by the example of those who suffered the like
with them. She softens the anger of parents against their
children, and against their murmurs; she makes parental love
a powerful weapon, which comes to their aid and prevents in
families those strifes from which nature shrinks. She easily
checks dissensions between friends, and persuades them to
kindly and friendly intercourse. As for those who have the
same thoughts concerning God and divine things, although
distance separate them, and they never behold each other,
she unites them and identifies them in thought, and makes
true friends of them, and if perchance one of them should
too inconsiderately raise accusations against the other, she
cures the evil, sets an things to right, and rivets the bond
of union."
This picture of the benefits of charity was
intended for Nicholas who had not practised it toward
Photius, but had shown an excessive eagerness to rebuke him.
The Patriarch of 'Constantinople continues:
"It is this charity that has made me bear
without difficulty the reproaches that your paternal
Holiness has hurled at me like darts; that has forbidden me
to consider your words as the results of anger or of a soul
greedy of insults and enmities; that on the contrary has
made me regard them as the proof of an affection which
cannot dissimulate, and of a scrupulous zeal for
ecclesiastical discipline, a zeal that would have every
thing perfect. For if charity will not permit us even to
consider evil as wrong, how shall she permit us to call any
thing wrong? Such is the nature of true charity, that she
will even regard as an intended benefit that which causes us
pain. But since there is no reason why truth should not be
spoken between brothers or fathers and sons, (for what is
there more friendly than truth?) let me speak and write to
you with perfect freedom, not from a desire to contradict
you, but with intent to defend myself.
"Perfect as you are, you should have
considered at the outset that it was quite against our will
that we were placed under this yoke, and therefore have had
pity upon us instead of rebuking us; you should not have
despised us, but have had compassion on our grief Indeed, we
owe pity and kindness and not insult and contempt to those
who have suffered violence. But we have suffered violence,
how great, God alone, who knows the most secret things, can
know; we have been detained against our wishes, we have been
watched narrowly, surrounded with spies like a culprit; we
have received votes against our will, we have been created a
bishop in spite of our tears, our complaints our affliction,
our despair. Every one knows it; for these things were not
done in secret, and the exceeding violence to which I have
been subjected was so public as to be known of all. What!
should not those who have endured such violence be pitied
and consoled as much as possible, rather than be attacked,
evil-entreated, and laden with insults? I have lost a sweet
and tranquil life; I have lost my glory, (since there be who
love earthly glory;) I have lost my precious leisure, my
intercourse so pure and delightful with my friends, that
intercourse whence grief, double-dealing, and recrimination
were excluded. No one hated me then; and I. . . . I accused,
I hated no one, neither at home nor abroad. I had nothing
against those who had the least intercourse with me, and
nothing à fortiori against my friends. I have never
caused such pain to any one as that I should reap an outrage
from it, save in those dangers to which I have been exposed
for the cause of religion. Photius here
alludes to the resistance he had made to the inconoclastic
emperors and their partisans. Nor has any one so
seriously offended me as to drive me to insult him. All were
good to me. As for my conduct, I must be silent on that
point; but every one proclaims what that has been. My
friends loved me better than their parents; as for my
parents, they loved me more than the other members of the
family, and knew it was I who loved them best."
The enemies of Photius themselves are forced
to admit that his life was that of a man devoted to study;
that as first secretary of state he possessed the greatest
honours to which he could have aspired. How shall such
admissions be reconciled with that immoderate lust after the
episcopate which they attribute to him? We are nearer the
truth in accepting his letters as the actual expression of
his sentiments. He resisted as best he could his promotion,
and it was only the will of the Emperor and that of Bardas
that forced him to accept a see which no one could fill
better than himself.
Photius having drawn a comparison, as true
as it is eloquent between his former scholar's life and the
new life that bad been imposed upon him, thus continues:
"But why repeat what I have already written?
If I was believed, then I was wronged in not being pitied;
if I was not believed, I was no less wronged in that my
words were not believed when I spoke the truth. Upon either
side, then, I am unfortunate. I am reproached where I expect
consolation and encouragement; grief is thus added to grief
I hear said to me, 'Men ought not to have wronged you.' Then
say so to those who have wronged me, 'They ought
not to have done you violence.' The maxim is excellent; but
who deserves your reproaches if not those who did me
violence? Who should be pitied if not those to whom violence
has been done? If any one left in peace those who did
violence in order to attack those who suffered it, I might
have hoped from your justice that you would condemn him. The
canons of the Church, it is said, have been violated because
you are raised from the rank of a layman to the highest
office of the ministry. But who has violated them? He who
has done violence, or he who has been compelled by force and
against his will? But you should have resisted! How far? I
did resist even more than necessary. If I had not feared to
excite still greater storms, I would have resisted even unto
death. But what are these canons that are said to have been
violated? Canons never to this day received by the Church of
Constantinople. Canons can only be transgressed when they
ought to be observed; but when they have not been handed
down to us there can be no sin in not observing them. I have
said enough—even more than was expedient—for I wish neither
to defend nor justify myself. How should I wish to defend
myself, when the only thing I desire is to be delivered from
the tempest, and to be relieved of the burden that bears me
down? It is to this degree that I have coveted this see, and
only to this degree do I desire to retain it. But if the
episcopal chair is a burden to you to-day, it was not thus
at the commencement. I took it against my will, and against
my will do I remain in it. The proof is that violence was
done to me from the first; that from the first I desired as
I do this day to leave it. But though some polite things had
to be written to me, it was impossible to write to me with
kindness and to praise me. We have received all that has
been said to us with joy, and with thanks to God who governs
the Church. It has been said to me, 'You have been taken
from the laity; that is not a laudable act; therefore are we
undecided and have deferred our consent until after the
return of our apocrisiaries. The Abbé
Jager in his History of Photius, Book III. page 64,
ed. 1854, has taken this analysis of Nicholas's letter as an
assertion of Photius. He therefore adds in a note, A new
falsehood! Upon the same page he had just before
written, An impudent falsehood! This is a new lie! to
characterize the affirmations of Photius, saying that he
remained in the bishopric against his will, and that his
only ambition was to quit it. These notes are unworthy of a
writer who respects himself. Moreover, before reproaching
Photius for a third lie, that writer should have taken a
little trouble to understand his language; he then would not
have taken for a personal assertion of Photius, the analysis
of the Pope's letter, who had indeed said he would postpone
his consent until the return of his envoys. It had
been better to say, We will not consent at all; we do not
approve; we do not accept, and never will. The man who
offered himself for this see, who has bought the episcopate,
who never received an honest vote, is a bad man in all
respects. Leave the episcopate and the office of pastor. One
who should have written me thus, would have written
agreeably, however falsely. But was it necessary that one
who had suffered so much on entering the episcopate, should
suffer again in leaving it? That he who had been pushed
violently into that office, should be pushed from it with
still greater violence? One who has such sentiments, such
thoughts, must care very little to repel calumny intended to
deprive him of the episcopal chair. But enough upon this
subject."
In the remainder of his letter Photius
explains at great length that one Church should not condemn
the usages of another, provided they are not contrary either
to the faith or to the canons of the general councils. He
justifies his ordination by this rule, and by the example of
his holy predecessors, Nectarius, Tarasius, Nicephorus; and
also that of St. Ambrose, St. Gregory, father of the
theologian, and Thalassius of Cæsarea. He shows to Nicholas
that in the last council held in presence of his legates,
several disciplinary rules suggested by him were adopted
because they appeared useful. He praises the Pope for his
love of the maintenance of the canons, and congratulates him
for it the more that, having the primacy, his
example was the more powerful. He takes occasion, from this
to inform him, in conclusion, that a large number of
criminals escape to Rome, under pretext of making a
pilgrimage, to hide there their crimes under a false
appearance of piety. He begs him, therefore, to observe upon
this point the canons which prescribe to each bishop that he
shall receive to communion only those who can show letters
of recommendation from their own bishop.
In all ages Rome has been thus reproached
for serving as a refuge for hypocritical criminals. The
Church of France wrote frequently to the Popes in the same
strain as Photius did upon this occasion.
This letter of the Patriarch could not be
palatable to Nicholas, for under cover of polished and
elegant phrases it carried very just lessons. Photius does
not use one harsh word. He does not even adopt his honorary
title of œcumenical Patriarch; he recognizes
the primacy of the see of Rome; but he does not flatter
the ambition of the new Papacy, he does not bow before it,
and his gentleness does not exclude firmness. Such an
adversary was more dangerous to Nicholas than a violent and
ambitious man. Instead of disputing with him the rights he
claimed over certain churches of the Patriarchate of
Constantinople, he says to him: "We would have yielded them
to you if it had depended upon us; but as it is a question
of countries and boundaries, it concerns the state. For my
part, I should like not only to render to others what
belongs to them, but even to yield a part of the ancient
dependencies of this see. I should be greatly obliged to any
one who would relieve me of a portion of my burden."
No better reply than this could have been
made to a Pope who only thought of extending his power by
every means. But Nicholas did not profit by this lesson,
which was as just as it was moderate. He would believe
neither his legates nor the acts of the council which were
presented to him. He even declared to the ambassador Leo,
who had been sent to him, that he had not sent his legates
to depose Ignatius, or to concur in the promotion of
Photius; that he had not consented, and never would consent
to either.
Nicholas pretended thus to judge of the
legitimacy of bishops, forgetting that the canons only gave
him the choice to enter into communion with the one or the
other. It was well understood that before entering into
relations with Photius, he must have positive information as
to the legitimacy of his election; but, according to the
laws of the Church, that legitimacy did not depend upon the
Papal will, but upon the judgement pronounced upon Ignatius,
and the regularity of the election of Photius. A council of
three hundred and eighteen bishops had publicly approved
that election, and the deposition of Ignatius. The legates
had witnessed the proceedings; they gave evidence to what
they had seen and heard; it was certainly enough, it should
seem, to decide Nicholas to grant his communion to one whose
learning and honourable character made him well worthy of
the episcopate. But in taking sides with Ignatius, Nicholas
was doing an act of sovereign authority. This prospect
flattered his tendencies too much to permit him to eschew
it. He therefore assembled the clergy of Rome to solemnly
disown his legates. He subsequently wrote to the Emperor, to
Photius, and to the whole Eastern Church, letters which are
monuments of his pride. We must give them, that the doctrine
they contain may be compared with that of the first eight
centuries, and that a conviction may thus be arrived at,
that the Papacy had abandoned the latter, in order to
substitute for it an autocratic system which the Eastern
Church could not accept. Nichol. Epist.
5 and 6. At the beginning of his letter to the
Emperor Michael, he takes it for granted that this prince
has addressed himself "to the holy, Catholic, and Apostolic
Roman Church, chief (head) of all the churches, which
follows in all its acts the pure authority of the Holy
Fathers," for the purpose of being informed what he should
think in ecclesiastical matters.
Nicholas neglected no occasion of repeating
these high-sounding phrases, which disprove themselves, for
the Fathers were completely ignorant of them. Coming to the
cause of Ignatius, he complains "that contrary to his
orders a sentence had been pronounced against Ignatius;
not only had they omitted to do what he had prescribed,
but had done just the opposite. Therefore, he adds, since
you sustain Photius, and reject Ignatius, without the
judgment of our Apostolate, we would have you to
know that we do not receive Photius, nor condemn the
patriarch Ignatius."
This is certainly talking like a master. He
then is at pains to find differences of detail between the
promotion of Nectarius and Ambrose, and that of Photius. But
these differences, even supposing they were such as he makes
them, were not of a nature to override a positive enactment,
had it been considered absolute and susceptible of no
exceptions.
His letter to the very wise man Photius
commences in this solemn manner:
"After our Lord and Redeemer Jesus Christ,
who was very God before all ages, had condescended to be
born of the Virgin for our redemption, and to appear as very
man in the world, he committed to the blessed Peter, prince
of the Apostles, the power to bind and loose in heaven and
upon earth, and the right to open the gates of the kingdom
of heaven; he condescended to establish his holy Church upon
the solidity of that Apostle's faith, according to this
faithful saying, 'Verily, I say unto thee, thou art Peter,
and upon this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of
hell shall not prevail against it: and I will give unto thee
the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt
bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatsoever thou
shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.'"
Such is the great argument on which the
modern Papacy has always relied. It openly rejects the
catholic and traditional interpretation of these divine
words; it makes of rights granted to all the Apostles in
common an exclusive and personal right in favour of Saint
Peter; it takes its stand, contrary to all ecclesiastical
law, and in virtue of a gratuitous sacrilege, as sole
inheritor of chimerical prerogatives, and pretends upon
these lying and fragile bases to establish the fabric of its
universal autocracy. Such was the claim that Nicholas
opposed to Photius; and it is now said that this Patriarch,
who was perfectly acquainted with ecclesiastical antiquity,
ought to have submitted to such authority! His duty was to
protest as he did; and would to God that all the Bishops of
the Catholic Church had imitated his courage, as firm as it
was pure and moderate!
This is Nicholas's commentary upon the words
of the Gospel he had quoted: "According to this promise, by
the cement of the holy Apostolic institution, the
foundations of the edifice, composed of precious stones,
began to arise; and, thanks to Divine clemency, and by the
zeal of the builders, and the solicitude of the Apostolic
authority, to arise to the summit, to endure forever, having
nothing to fear from the violence of the winds. The blessed
Peter, prince of the Apostles, and doorkeeper of the
celestial kingdom, merited the primacy in that
edifice, as all who are orthodox know, and as we have just
declared." No one, in fact, among those who are orthodox
denies the primacy of St. Peter; but did that primacy give
him supreme authority? No, replies Catholic tradition. Yes,
answers Nicholas, who thus continues: "After him (St. Peter)
his vicars, serving God with sincerity, and
delivered from the shadow of darkness that hinders from
walking in the right way, have received in a higher sense
the care of pasturing the sheep of the Lord, and have
carefully accomplished this duty. Among them the mercy of
God Almighty has condescended to include our littleness; but
we tremble at the thought that we shall answer, first of
all, and for all, to Jesus Christ, when he shall call
each one to account for his works.
"Now, as all believers come for their
doctrine to this holy Roman Church, which is the chief
(head) of all the churches; as they ask of her what is the
purity of the faith; as those who are worthy, and who are
ransomed by the grace of God, ask of her absolution for
their crimes; it is our duty, who have received the charge
of her, to be attentive, to keep constant watch over the
flock of the Lord, the more that there are those who are
ever eager to tear it with cruel fangs. . . . It is apparent
that the holy Roman Church, through the blessed Apostle
Peter, prince of the Apostles, who was thought worthy to
receive from the mouth of the Lord the primacy of the
churches, is the chief (head) of all the churches; that
it is to her that all must apply to know the just course,
and the order to be followed in all useful things, and in
the ecclesiastical institutions, which she maintains in an
inviolable and incontestable manner, according to the
canonical and synodical laws of the holy Fathers. Hence it
follows that whatsoever is rejected by the rectors of this
see—by their full authority—should be rejected, any
particular custom notwithstanding; and that whatsoever is
ordered by them should be accepted firmly and without
hesitation."
Thus Nicholas opposed his sovereign
authority to the laws, followed from all antiquity by the
Church, which Photius had rehearsed to him. He next
endeavours to find differences of detail in the elections of
Nectarius, Ambrose, Tarasius, and that of Photius. He
succeeds no better upon this point than in his letter to the
Emperor Michael, and he silently passes over the other
examples mentioned by Photius.
In his letters to the Patriarchs and to the
faithful of the East, Nichol. Epist. 1
and 4. Nicholas sets forth like views upon his
autocracy. He commands the Patriarchs of
Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem to make known to their
faithful the decisions of the Apostolic see.
Ignatius, by his appeal to Nicholas from the
judgement passed upon him, had too much flattered the pride
of the Pope. To prove this it will be sufficient to quote
the superscription of his appeal papers.
"Ignatius, oppressed by tyranny, etc., to
our most holy Lord, and most blessed President, Patriarch of
all sees, successor of St. Peter, Prince of the Apostles,
Nicholas, œcumenical Pope, and to his most holy bishops; and
to the most wise, universal, Roman Church."
See Libel. Ignat. in Labbe's Collection,
vol. viii. Many scholars doubt the authenticity of this
document. Notwithstanding his friendly relations with Rome,
we can scarcely believe that Ignatius could have addressed
the Pope in the form above quoted.
St. Gregory the Great would have rejected
such titles as diabolical inventions, as we have
already seen by his letters to John the Faster; but the
Papacy of St. Gregory the Great was no more; it had given
place to a politico-ecclesiastical institution, with only
power for its aim. Ignatius, so long as he
flattered the ambition of Nicholas, could not but be right
in his eyes. Photius, who held to the ancient doctrine, and
looked upon the Bishop of Rome simply as first bishop,
without granting him any personal authority, could not but
be wrong. Accordingly, without further question, Nicholas
pronounced anathema against him, in a council which he held
at Rome at the commencement of the year 863. "We declare
him," he says, deprived of all sacerdotal honour and of
every clerical function by the authority of God Almighty, of
the Apostles St. Peter and St. Paul, of all the saints, of
the six general councils, and by the judgment which the
Holy Spirit has pronounced by us."
Labbe's Collection of Councils, vol. viii. He
ventured in the sentence to accuse Photius himself of the
persecutions that Ignatius had endured. This was a calumny
drawn from the denunciations of the enemies of Photius, and
since repeated by all the Romish writers who have spoken of
the discussion between this Patriarch and Nicholas.
We have not noticed all that to related
by the enemies of Photius, In respect to sufferings of
Ignatius. First. Because these details have nothing to do
with the principal question. Secondly. Because these
recitals are evidently exaggerated. Thirdly, Because history
does not hold Photius responsible for them. Did not Ignatius
draw upon himself the hatred of the Emperor and Bardas by
his imprudent zeal by his proceedings respecting Gregory of
Syracuse, and by his sentiments hostile to the government?
These are questions upon which even the recitals of his
partisans could not establish his innocence. We may even say
that these intemperate recitals injure him by their very
exaggeration. His refusal to resign provoked the violence of
the court. We do not deny it, although the details of this
violence are very difficult to be admitted completely. But
was Photius an accomplice in this violence? We reply no,
first, because impartial historians in no manner attribute
it to him, and because he himself protested, In his letters
to Bardas, against the violence with which his adversaries
were treated. These letters, well worthy of a great and holy
bishop, may be found among his correspondence. Shall it be
only in the case of Photius that familiar letters are
incompetent evidence? Romish historians pretend that his
letters to Bardas were written hypocritically. But the
impartial and independent writers who confirm the evidence
of those letters, were they too hypocrites? Is it credible
that only the enemies of Photius had the privilege of
telling the truth when speaking of him? If men were to be
judged by the evidence of their enemies only, who then would
ever be innocent? By this system one might easily prove that
Christ himself was worthy of death. It is apparent,
moreover, from all the Pope did, that he had predetermind to
bear nothing in favour of Photius, in the way of proof or
argument. To him a few monks, partisans of Ignatius, who had
come to Rome, were better authority than a council of three
hundred and eighteen bishops, beside a large number of
ecclesiastics and monks, which held its sessions in presence
of an immense concourse of people. It must indeed be
admitted that the conduct of Nicholas must have had an
altogether, different motive than the defence of Ignatius or
the justice of his cause. He believed himself the depositary of divine authority, and the organ of the Holy
Spirit.
It was in this character that he claimed all
his rights. But the general councils to which he appealed to
support his condemnation had ordained that a bishop should
only be tried and condemned by his brethren of the same
province, and they had not granted any more authority to the
Bishop of Rome than to the others. As for the pretensions of
Nicholas to divine authority, we know what they amount to;
and his reasoning is worthy of the thesis he would prove.
The Emperor Michael, when he learned the
decision of the Council of Rome, wrote to Nicholas a letter
filled with threats and contumely, (a.d.
864,) which, of course, the enemies of Photius attribute to
him, alleging that the Emperor only thought of his
pleasures. This is to them a conclusive argument. Nicholas
replied to the Emperor in a very long letter full of
apocryphal statements, false logic, and the grossest
historical mistakes. We learn from this letter that the
Emperor had met the Papal pretensions with a host of facts,
which reduced the primacy of the Bishop of Rome to its just
proportions. Nicholas discusses them superficially; his
reasonings are false, and he confounds some incidental
proceedings with the recognition of the absolute authority
which be claimed. To give an instance of his sophistry:
"Observe," he writes, "that neither the Council of Nicea nor
any other council, granted any privilege to the Roman
Church, which knew that in the person of Peter she was
entitled thoroughly to the rights of all power, and that she
had received the government of all the sheep of Christ."
Quæ in Petro noverat eam totius jura
potestatis pleniter meruisse et cunctarum Christi ovium
regimen accepisse. He rests that doctrine upon the
evidence of Pope Boniface. "If," he continues, "the decrees
of the Council of Nicea be carefully examined, it will
certainly appear that this council granted no enlargement to
the Roman Church, but rather took example from her, in what
it granted to the Church of Alexandria." Nicholas does not
add that the council had looked upon the authority of the
Roman see over the suburbican churches as resting only
on usage, and not on divine right; nor that if
a similar authority to that of Rome was given to the
Alexandrian Church, it followed that there was nothing divine in that authority, since a council could not
give by divine authority.
It is with like force of reasoning that
Nicholas endeavours to answer all the objections of his
adversary against the Papal autocracy.
He concludes with a distinction between the
two domains in which the priesthood and the empire should
respectively act. If Michael needed to be taught that he had
no right over ecclesiastical things, should not the Papacy
have understood in like manner that it had no right over
temporal things?
The Eastern Church was in duty bound to
protest against the attempts of Nicholas. They were contrary
to the ancient law. The Ultramontanes are obliged to admit
this, though indirectly. A writer, Jager, Hist. de Photius, liv. iv. p. 114, edit 1854.
who professes to write the history of Photius, but only
accepts as true the assertions of the declared enemies of
this Patriarch, has been forced, by the weight of evidence,
to speak as follows:
"Schism has thrown a clear light upon the
doctrines respecting the primacy of the holy see. Never
were its prerogatives better established than in the
struggle of Pope Nicholas. . . against the Photian
schismatics." Is it credible that before the ninth century
no occasion had presented to call forth these prerogatives,
if they had in fact belonged to the Roman see? The facts we
have already related sufficiently answer that question.
Questions of far greater moment than the deposition of a
bishop had certainly been discussed between the East and
West since the origin of the Church, and these questions,
instead of bringing out Papal authority in relief, had
reduced it to its strict limits. But in the ninth century
circumstances were changed; the Papacy had sacrificed the
ancient Catholic doctrine to its own ambitious dreams, and
now availed itself of every circumstance to establish a
spiritual autocracy as contrary to Scripture as it was to
the teachings of the Fathers and the councils.
Strong in the ancient canons, Photius looked
upon the excommunications of Nicholas as null, and continued
to discharge his episcopal duties with a zeal and devotion
that his enemies distort with remarkable dishonesty. They
will only see in him a beast of prey, combining the
most consummate hypocrisy with cruelty carried to
extravagance, and do not even take the trouble to reconcile
two such characters in one and the same man, and with facts
which completely contradict them.
But Nicholas could not bear this contempt of
his sovereign authority, and he availed himself of
the conversion of the Bulgarians to renew the war against
Photius. At this time (866) the Emperor
caused Bardas to be put to death, and placed Basil, who had
served him in this matter, at the head of affairs. The
correspondence of Photius shows that the Patriarch had
strongly reproached Bardas for his violence against Ignatius
and his followers. When Bardas was dead, Photius wrote to
the Emperor, congratulating him on having escaped the
intrigues of Bardas. By collating these letters, we see that
Photius was not on such familiar terms with Bardas, that the
cruelties of the Cæsar could be attributed to the Patriarch.
But this conclusion does not suit the enemies of Photius,
who would make him answerable for every act of violence.
They therefore assert that Photius was coward enough to
accuse Bardas after his death, whom he had meanly flattered
during his life, and had used as the instrument of his own
revenge. Enemies and fanatics may thus write history, but
such a course can only excite disgust In honest consciences.
The first seeds of Christianity had been
cast among the Bulgarians about the year 845. In 864 Photius
contributed powerfully to the, conversion of the King
Bogoris, See Photius, Epist. Book I.
letter viii. which was followed by that of all his
people. He even addressed to this king a beautiful treatise
upon the duties of princes. Bogoris, at war with the Germans
and their Emperor Louis, thought he might appease him by
asking for some Latin priests to instruct his people. He
sent ambassadors to Rome in 866, shortly after the unlawful
excommunication pronounced against Photius. Nicholas could
not hesitate to avail himself of so rare an opportunity to
extend his power in the East. He therefore sent legates to
the King of the Bulgarians with a long "opinion" on the
cases submitted by the latter, without stopping to ask if
the statements of fact set forth in those cases were true.
He did not forget See these answers in
Labbe's Collection of Councils, vol. viii. in his
"opinion" to exalt beyond measure the Roman see, and to
disparage that of Constantinople. According to him, the see
of Rome Resp. lxxiii. is, through
St. Peter, the source of the episcopate and the Apostolate; therefore the Bulgarians must accept no
bishop save from Rome. It is from Rome also they must
receive the doctrine. "St. Peter,"
Resp.
cvi. he says, "yet lives and presides upon his seat,
he reveals the truth of the faith to those who seek it; for
the holy Roman Church has always been without spot or
wrinkle; it was her founder whose confession of faith was
expressly approved."
The Pope added to his legates to Bulgaria
three more legates for Constantinople, giving to the latter
eight letters dated on the thirteenth of November, 866; they
are monuments of vainglory. Labbe's
Collection, vol. viii. Epist. Nichol. ix. et seq. He
threatens to have Michael's letter against the Roman
prerogatives ignominiously burned unless he will disavow it.
He writes to the clergy of Constantinople that he deposes
all those who adhere to Photius and reëstablishes the
partisans of Ignatius. He complains to Bardas, that Bardas
has disappointed him in all that he had hoped from his
piety; he notifies Ignatius that he has reëstablished him in
his see, and anathematized Photius and his adherents; he
flatters Theodora, the Empress dowager, and
congratulates himself upon having taken the part of Ignatius
whom she herself supported; he implores the Empress Eudoxia
to take the part of Ignatius before the Emperor, and urges
upon all the senators of Constantinople that they separate
themselves from the communion of Photius and declare
themselves for Ignatius.
His letter to Photius, the third of the
series, deserves a special mention; he gives him simply the
title of man Nicolas, etc., Viro Photio. He accuses him of having, "impudently
violated the venerable canons, the decisions of the Fathers,
and the divine precepts." He calls him thief—adulterer;
asserts that he has failed in his own obligations, corrupted
the legates, banished those bishops who refused to enter
into communion with him; adding that he might justly call
him a homicide, a viper, a modern Ham, and a Jew. He falls
back upon the canons of Sardica, and the Decretals of his
predecessors, and concludes by threatening such an
excommunication as should last him during his whole life.
So pathetic a letter could produce
but one result, that of exciting Photius to condemn the
Pope.
The legates having reached Bulgaria, all the
Greek priests were driven from the country, and the
confirmation which they had administered was pronounced
invalid. This was to insult the Eastern Church in the
grossest manner, and to trample under foot the first
principles of Christian theology. Photius could endure
neither this insult added to errour, nor the enterprises of
Nicholas. In 867 he convoked a council at Constantinople,
and invited the Patriarchs and bishops of the East and also
three bishops of the West, who had appealed to him against
the despotism of Nicholas. We shall have
occasion to mention his circular letter. These were
the Bishop and Exarch of Ravenna, and the Archbishops of
Trèves and Cologne. Nicholas was
accustomed to depose bishops, even from the greatest sees,
by his own authority and in violation of the canons,
according to which they could only be judged by their
fellow-bishops in their own province. The most of them took
no notice of these condemnations. The Archbishops of Trèves
and of Cologne met the sentence of Nicholas by a protest,
wherein, amongst other things, they say: "Without a council,
without canonical inquiry, without accuser, without
witnesses, without convicting us by arguments or
authorities, without our consent, in the absence of the
metropolitans and of our suffragan bishops, you have chosen
to condemn us, of your own caprice, with tyrannical fury;
but we do not accept your accursed sentence, so repugnant to
it, father's or a brother's love ; we despise it as mere
insulting language; we expel you yourself from our
communion, since you commune with the excommunicate;
we are satisfied with the communion of the whole Church
and with the society of our brethren whom you despise and of
whom you make yourself unworthy by your pride and arrogance.
You condemn yourself when you condemn those who do not
observe the apostolic precepts which you yourself the first
violate, annulling as far as in you lies the divine laws
and the sacred canons, and not
following in the footsteps of the Popes your predecessors."
Photius did not write to Nicholas with the rude energy of
these Western bishops. The legates of the three
Patriarchal sees of the East, with a host of bishops,
priests, and monks, the two Emperors, and the senate, took
part in that assembly. The acts of this
council were reversed by another, which was held shortly
after the purpose of reïnstating Ignatius. This fact,
admitted by the Western writers, has not prevented certain
of their number from expressing the absurd opinion that this
council never was held, and that Photius invented both the
council and its acts. Mr. Jager has adopted this idea In his
heavy pamphlet against Photius Book IV., p. 146.
The letters of Nicholas were there read, and
by a unanimous vote he was held unworthy of the episcopate,
and excommunication and anathema were pronounced against
him. This decision was forwarded to Nicholas by Zacharias,
Metropolitan of Chalcedon, and Theodore of Cyzicus.
Anastasius the Librarian declares that but twenty-one among
upward of a thousand signatures with which this document was
covered, were authentic. We know what this man's testimony
is worth. Certain it is that the document was well known in
the East, and that the Council of Constantinople, which
afterward annulled it, did not consider the signatures as
forged. This fact speaks louder than any one mendacious
writer. The sentence of the council against Nicholas was
more canonical than that pronounced by Nicholas against
Photius, for it was only an excommunication and not a deposition; now any church has a right to separate
itself from the communion of those she esteems guilty, and
no longer consider them as bishops.
The same year that Nicholas was
excommunicated, a revolution took place at Constantinople
that was to be fatal to Photius in its results. Michael was
killed by Basil, whom he had associated with himself in the
empire. The murderer of Bardas and Michael necessarily
distrusted Photius. The enemies of this
Patriarch, who often contradict themselves in their
statements, do not agree upon the time or the circumstances
of his exile. Anastasius pretends that Basil knew nothing of
the dispute between Ignatius and Photius until after the
death of Michael; that he informed himself of the matter as
soon as he was left sole emperor, and sent two deputies to
Rome, one chosen by Ignatius and the other by Photius, to
plead their several cause before the Pope: that one of the
deputies, the one who represented Photius, was drowned on
the voyage; that the other, upon his arrival at Rome, found
Nicholas dead. Nicetas, on the contrary, tells us that the
day after the death of the Emperor Michael, Basil caused
Photius to be imprisoned in a monastery, in order to
reïnstate the legitimate Patriarch. Some Western writers
have hastily accepted the account of Nicetas for the sake of
denying the truth of the story that Photius incurred the
hatred of Basil by refusing him the communion on account of
the murder he had committed. Of course these writers say
that such an act of pastoral courage was incompatible with
the character of Photius. This would be quite true if the
great and learned Bishop had been such an one as they paint
him. But, as the character they attribute to him is
diametrically opposite to his real character, as it shines
forth in his authentic acts and his writings, they are only,
in fact, giving one more proof of their partiality.
Moreover, Photius refused to admit the
murderer to the communion. He was, therefore, shut up in a
monastery. Basil reëstablished Ignatius and sent ambassadors
to Rome bearing the Acts of the council that had
excommunicated Nicholas. This Pope had died and had been
succeeded by Adrian II.; who, in 868, assembled a council at
Rome to condemn Photius anew. The envoy of the Emperor, in
its presence, flung to the ground the Acts of the Council of
Constantinople, struck them with his sword, and trampled
them under foot. After this extravagant conduct he asserted
that the signature of his master upon the document was
forged; that the council had only been composed of some
bishops who happened to be in Constantinople,
If this were true, it would follow that
the rest of the signatures must have been collected outside
of the council and by way of concurrence. They would then
gain in weight, for the signers, in that case, must have
acted with the more freedom. that the other
signatures, one thousand in number, were false. The
sincerity of this fanatic may well be doubted. If the
signatures were false, this ought to have been proved in the
East and not in the West. Instead of verifying a fact which
could be so easily ascertained, the Council of Rome decided
that the acts should be burnt.
Such a proceeding naturally suggests that it
seemed easier to burn the Acts than to prove their falsity.
Adrian II. did not fail upon that occasion
to exalt the authority of the Bishop of Rome. "The Pope," he
said in his council, "judges all the bishops, but we do not
read that any have judged him." Labbe's
Collection of Councils, vol. viii. He mentions,
indeed, the condemnation of Honorius, but he pretends that
the anathema which fell on him was legitimate only because
it was previously pronounced on him by the see of Rome
itself. This assertion is false, as we have already seen.
Instead of condemning Honorius, the see of Rome had
endeavoured to defend him. It did not mention him at first
among those to be condemned, and it was only after the
condemnation by the council that Rome also decided to
pronounce anathema against him.
Before separating, the members of the
Council of Rome trampled under foot the acts which
anathematized Nicholas, and then threw them into a great
fire.
After this expedition Basil's ambassadors
returned to Constantinople accompanied by three legates of
Pope Adrian, bearing two letters, one addressed to the
Emperor, the other to Ignatius. "It is
our will," he writes to the Emperor, "that you should
assemble a numerous council, at which our legates shall
preside, and in which persons shall be judged according to
their faults; and that in this council shall be publicly
burnt all the copies of the acts
The historians inimical to Photius
nevertheless relate that but one copy existed,
carefully hidden by Photius, who, they say, had invented the
Acts, which copy was seized, carried to Rome, and burnt at
the council held in that city. of the false council
held against the Holy See, and that it be forbidden to
preserve any of them under pain of anathema." Adrian then
demanded the Roman priests who had gone to Constantinople to
complain to Photius of Pope Nicholas. The letter to Ignatius
is an instruction as to the treatment of those ecclesiastics
who had declared for Photius, but were now willing to
abandon his cause. Adrian added to these letters a formula
to be signed by the members of the council, in which they
agreed to recognize him as Sovereign Pontiff and
Universal Pope.
The council was opened at Constantinople, in
the Church of Saint Sophia, on the 5th of October, 869.
There were present the three Papal legates, Ignatius,
Thomas, Bishop of Tyre, self-styled representative of the
Patriarch of Antioch, and the priest Elias, calling himself
the representative of the Bishop of Jerusalem.
The bishops who declared against Photius
were brought in. They were twelve in number. They
were permitted to take seats, and formed the whole council
at the first session. At the second, ten bishops
who had adhered to Photius entered to crave pardon for their
fault. It was readily granted, and they took their places
with the others. Eleven priests, nine
deacons, and seven sub-deacons imitated the ten
bishops, and were pardoned in the same manner.
Two new bishops arrived at the third
session, so that the assembly was composed of twenty-four
bishops, without counting the presidents. At the fourth
session two bishops, ordained by the former Patriarch,
Methodius, asked leave to defend the Patriarch Photius, with
whom they declared they remained in communion. The council
refused to hear them. The patrician Bahaner opposed this
decision in the name of the Senate of Constantinople. The
legates of the Pope upheld it on the ground that the Pope
had pronounced in the last resort, and it was not lawful to
examine the cause of Photius any further. But being obliged
to yield, they added: "Let them enter and hear the synodical
decision and judgment of Pope Nicholas. They are seeking
excuses, and only wish to avoid a trial." "But," said the
Senate, "if they wished to avoid it, they would not cry out,
Let us be judged—they would retire." "Let them
enter," said the legates, "but let them remain in the lowest
places." The Senate asked that three or four more bishops of
the party of Photius should be admitted. "We consent to it,"
said the legates, "but on condition that they shall declare
that they represent all the rest, and they shall only come
in to hear the letter of Nicholas."
It was evident, therefore, that Rome had
only caused this council to be called in order to consecrate
her assumed sovereign and universal authority.
The bishops who sided with Photius, seeing
that the council would not hear them, had retired. Only the
first two remained, offering to prove, if the Emperor would
give safe-conduct to their witnesses, that Nicholas had
communed with them when Photius sent them to Rome as his
deputies.
The safe-conducts were not granted.
At the fifth session, Photius was forcibly
brought in. He only answered, in a few words full of
dignity, that he excepted to the council, and would not
plead to the accusations brought against him. In his eyes
thirty-three bishops, assembled by the order of the Emperor,
his enemy, should not presume to reverse the sentence of the
three hundred and eighteen bishops who had proclaimed him
legitimate Patriarch.
In the sixth session, the adjunct Elias
attempted to prove that the resignation tendered by Ignatius
was null and void. This fact is important, for it confirms
what Photius had written to Nicholas, that "his
predecessor had abandoned his office." At the same time
it proves that Ignatius had understood his duty in the
difficult position in which he was placed; that he had at
first imitated the great bishops who have always preferred
to resign an office which was snatched, however unjustly,
from them, rather than to trouble their Church. Left to
himself, Ignatius was too virtuous not to imitate such
conduct; but, in consequence of the weakness of his
character, he became the tool of a few intriguers and of the
ambitious projects of the Popes, who disguised their own bad
designs under his virtue.
Some bishops, partisans of Photius, were
introduced at the sixth session, at which the Emperor was
also present. After the speeches that were made against them
and their Patriarch, the Emperor said to them, "What do
you think of it?" "We will answer you," they replied,
and one of them, Anthymius, of Cæsarea, in Cappadocia,
added, "My lord, we know your goodness and justice; give us
in writing a guarantee of safety if we speak forth freely
our justification, and we shall hope to show that these
accusations are but idle words." This humble language only
irritated the Emperor, who would not give the asked for
assurance. The Pope's legates, as well as the Emperor,
refused to hear any justification. They considered Photius
and his adherents as irrevocably condemned by Nicholas,
although the sentence of that Pope was anti-canonical and
arbitrary. The legates constantly repeated, in tones of
anger, "That it was superfluous to hear condemned persons;
that they should be expelled from the assembly, since they
had not come there to confess their fault and ask pardon."
The supporters of Ignatius also suffered from the bitter
language of the legates when they refused to sign the famous
formula brought from Rome.
Photius and Gregory of Syracuse were brought
in at the seventh session. An officer of the court having
asked them, in the name of the legates, if they would sign;
"If they had heard what we have already said," replied
Photius, "they would not ask this question. Let them do
penance themselves for the sin they have committed." This
answer exasperated the legates, who overwhelmed Photius with
gross language, after their wont. The same officer then
asked Photius what he had to reply. "I have no answer to
calumnies," he said. The bishops who sided with Photius were
again solicted, but in vain, to separate from him. The
Bishop of Heracleia even replied, pointing to Photius,
"Anathema upon him who anathematized that bishop!" The
others displayed equal energy. They insisted on their former
demand of perfect liberty to defend themselves. The Emperor
interposed a demurrer, saying that the council represented
the Church since the live Patriarchs were represented.
The Patriarchs of Antioch and Jerusealem
had only false representatives. The Patriarch of
Alexandria was only represented at the ninth session. In his
letter to the Emperor he declares that he knows nothing of
the discussions, and that he relies on the Emperor and his
bishops and clergy. His envoy was afterward disavowed.
He would not see that one bishop, one monk, and a priest,
assuming to represent the three Patriarchs of Alexandria,
Antioch, and Jerusalem, gave no guarantee, without the
presence of any other bishop of these Patriarchates, and
without an opportunity of communicating with the Patriarchs
themselves! The friends of Photius replied that the canons,
since the Apostles, proved just the opposite; that the
pretended representatives of the five Patriarchates did not
constitute the Church, which, on the contrary, spoke by
means of the canons, followed since the Apostles.
This session terminated in anathemas against
Photius and his partisans. In the following session, every
paper which could implicate those of this council who had
taken the part of Photius against Ignatius was burned before
the whole council. Finally the council ended with some
canons and a profession of faith. The acts were signed by
one hundred and two bishops. This was but few when we
reflect that the Patriarchate of Constantinople alone
numbered at that time more than six hundred, and that the
Emperor Basil had used all his influence to collect a
numerous council. An immense majority of the bishops took no
part in what took place at Constantinople. Some zealous
friends of Photius were the only ones who would make up
their minds to appear before the assembly, and protest
against that which was done there, and put the Emperor in
the wrong by asking him to guarantee to them full liberty
for their defence.
A fact worthy of remark, and of the greatest
significance, is that Ignatius, who presided side by side
with the legates of Rome, kept the most profound silence
during the whole council. A great number of questions were
discussed before him, upon which he alone could give
positive information—such as that of his resignation and the
attendant circumstances, the conduct of Photius toward him,
and many others. Ignatius allowed them to be discussed pro and
contra, without saying one word to
throw light upon the debates. Must it not be inferred from
such silence that he did not know what side to take in view
of the facts as he knew they had happened, and of the
plausible reasons under which the Roman legates and certain
intriguers covered their, lying recitals?
Whatever we may choose to infer from this
silence, we think that it can only be construed in favour of
Photius, and of his version of all that had occurred.
It must be observed that the Acts of
this council of Constantinople, considered by Rome
œcumenical, are only known to Anastasius the Librarian. The
authentic acts were taken from the legates by the
Sclavonians, who robbed them on their return from
Constantinople. Anastasius pretended that he had an exact
copy of the acts, which he translated into Latin at Rome. It
is therefore to the evidence of this man that we have to
refer for all that relates to this council. If the acts,
such as he has given them, are so favourable to Photius, is
it not reasonable to think that they would be more so if
they were trustworthy? We naturally ask why Ignatius
did not deny that he had abdicated or assert that it had
been extorted from him by violence, since this was the gist
of the whole question. We may therefore conclude that he
really resigned his see, freely and conscientiously; but
that Nicholas being unwilling, as he himself said, to accept
that resignation, some ambitious men, personal enemies of
Photius, prevailed upon Ignatius to reconsider his
determination, suggesting to him as a legitimate motive the
protest of the Patriarch of Rome against it.
But while he followed the impulsion of Rome
in what concerned his reinstalment in his see, Ignatius did
not allow himself disposed to submit to all its
requirements, as in the matter of signing the Roman formula,
and in the conference, which took place after the council,
concerning the Church of Bulgaria.
Several members of the council, from hatred
to Photius rather than from conviction, had already signed
the formula which enslaved the whole Church to the Roman
see. They had submitted to this demand in order that the
council, from which, they expected results satisfactory to
their own secret desires, should not remain an
impossibility. After it was over, they sent complaints to
the Emperor and to Ignatius regarding their signatures, and
asked that they should not be sent to Rome. They protested,
moreover, against the qualified form in which the legates
had signed, reserving the approbation of the Pope, for
thereby the Bishop of Rome reserved the right to approve or
to cancel, at his will, what had been done.
It was too late to remedy this; but the
Emperor, to ease his mind in regard to the formula, caused
all the signatures that could be found in the house of the
legates to be taken away during their absence. The legates
protested; but in vain. Ignatius did not censure this act of
the Emperor, and proved, in the conference about Bulgaria,
that he was not a partisan of the doctrine of the formula.
The Bulgarians learning that a council was
sitting at Constantinople, sent deputies there to know
whether their church should depend from Rome or
Constantinople. See Vit. Pap. Hadr. et
Epist. Hadr. in Labbe's Collection, vol. viii.
The Emperor convoked the legates of Rome and
the East to answer this question in presence of Ignatius,
"As we have newly received the grace of baptism, we fear
lest we make a mistake; we therefore ask you, who represent
the Patriarchs, to what church we should be subject."
Pope Nicholas had replied to the question,
but his decision was only regarded as that of a single
Patriarch. The legates of Rome maintained that his decision
was supreme, and must not be departed from. The Eastern
legates were not of this opinion. The Romans protested that
they had received no power to examine the question raised by
the Bulgarians. In spite of this special pleading, the
Eastern legates judged it proper to be decided. "From whom
have you conquered the provinces where you dwell?" they
asked of the Bulgarians; "and what church was established
there then?"
"We wrested them from the Greeks," they
replied; "and the Greek clergy were established there."
"In that case," said the legates, "your
church depends from the Greeks; that is, from the
Patriarchate of Constantinople."
"But, for the last
three years,"
said the papal legates, "Rome has sent Latin priests there."
This prescription of three years did not suffice, in the
eyes of the other legates, to prevail over the ancient
possession and they declared that the Bulgarian church
should be under the jurisdiction of the Patriarchate of
Constantinople. Ignatius was of the same opinion; but the
Roman legates said that the holy see of Rome had not chosen
them for judges. "He, only," they added,
"has
the right to judge the whole Church. He despises your
opinion as readily as you give it lightly." As long as the
condemnation of Photius was the question, that opinion had
been of far greater value in their eyes. They annulled the
judgment that had been rendered, and begged Ignatius not to
despise the rights of the holy see, which had restored
him to his. The Emperor was angry at the pretensions of
the legates. They soon left, and were robbed on the way by
the Sclavonians, who took from them the authentic acts of
the council.
In consequence of the decision of the
Eastern legates, the Bulgarians dismissed the bishop and
priests who had been sent by Rome to them, and received a
Greek bishop and priests. Adrian learning this, wrote to the
Emperor of the East, threatening Ignatius and the bishops he
had sent to Bulgaria with excommunication.
There is extant only a fragment of a letter
from Adrian II. to Ignatius. He speaks to him as a superior
to an inferior; accuses him of violating the canons as they
obtained at Rome; and tells him, in threatening language,
that a similar course had occasioned the fall of Photius.
Such letters make it very evident that Rome
had pursued the reïnstalment of Ignatius, not for the sake
of justice, but to find occasion to do an act of sovereignty
in the East. A careful reading of these documents leaves no
doubt in this respect. Ignatius, in the eyes of the Pope,
was as guilty as Photius, the moment he refused to submit to
this sovereignty.
Adrian II. died in the month of November,
872, and was succeeded by John VIII. This Pope took greatly
to heart this affair of Bulgaria. He wrote twice to Ignatius
to demand that he should renounce all jurisdiction over that
church. The Emperor Basil (878) having asked him for legates
to labour for the pacification of the religious troubles
which had been rife in the East since the reëstablisbment of
Ignatius, the Pope availed himself of this occasion to write
to that Patriarch a third letter, in which he thus expressed
himself: Joann. Pap. VIII. Ep., Labbe's
Collection, vol. ix. "We give you this third canonical monition (he should have said
anti-canonical) by our legates and letters; thereby we
command you to send without delay to Bulgaria active men,
who shall go through the whole country, and take away all
those whom they may there find who have been ordained by you
or by those of your dependence, so that in one month there
shall remain neither bishops nor clergy of your ordination;
for we cannot consent that they should infect with their
errour this new church which we have formed. If you do
not withdraw them within the time mentioned, and if you do
not renounce all jurisdiction over Bulgaria, you are hereby
deprived of the communion of the body and blood of the Lord
until you obey. A delay of two months from the
reception of this letter is granted to you. If you remain
obstinate in your violation of discipline and your
usurpation, you are hereby, by the judgment of Almighty God,
and by the authority of the blessed Apostle Princes, and by
the sentence of Our Mediocrity, deprived of and
deposed from the dignity of the Patriarchate which you have
received through our favour."
Thus, to usurp jurisdiction over the Church
of Bulgaria, the Pope does not hesitate to strike, ipso
facto, a Patriarch with excommunication and deposition,
if he does not obey his orders! Have we observed
any similar conduct on the part of the Popes of the first
eight centuries?
But the bishops of the East were neither
disposed to recognize the Papal authority nor to obey his
anti-canonical orders. Those who supported Ignatius were as
much opposed to this as the partisans of Photius.
John VIII. wrote to the Greek bishops and
clergy in Bulgaria a letter still more severe than that
addressed to the Patriarch Ignatius. It began thus: "To all
the bishops and other Greek clergy, invaders of the diocese
of Bulgaria, and excommunicate by these presents." He gave
them thirty days to obey his orders, and promised the
bishops to give them other sees on condition of leaving
those they then occupied.
This was certainly acting, as absolute
sovereign. John wrote to the Bulgarian King and to Count
Peter, who had been envoy to Rome in the time of Pope
Nicholas. The substance of these letters is, that nothing
should be received save from the Roman Church, inasmuch as
she is the source of all true doctrine. All these missives
were sent by the legates Paul and Eugene. When these envoys
reached Constantinople, Ignatius was dead, and Ignatius was
again Patriarch, (878.) It is not our
business to relate the doings of Photius during his exile.
We therefore only refer to his letter those who wish for
cumulative proof of the gentleness, charity, and ability
whereby he regained the good graces of the Emperor Basil.
These documents more than sufficiently answer the hateful
statements of his enemies, in which absurdity vies with
atrocity, and which, to every impartial man, only prove the
blind hatred of those who composed them.
After some difficulties, the legates
recognized Photius as Patriarch, and even said that Pope
John had sent them to Constantinople to anathematize
Ignatius and reïnstate Photius. Photius and the Emperor
Basil sent letters and ambassadors to the Pope.
Among these letters there was one in
which Ignatius, near unto death, begged the Pope to
recognize Photius as lawful Patriarch. Naturally enough, the
enemies of Photius maintain that this letter is a forgery,
but without proof. John was apprised of this, and
seemed disposed to pacify the Church of Constantinople and
to receive favourably the letters and envoys;
Letters of Pope John VIII. in Labbe's
Collection. which he really did, and sent them back
with letters for the Emperor and Photius. These letters of
John VIII. contain the most distinct answer to all the
calumnies of the enemies of Photius. "In consideration," he
said to the Emperor, "of the unanimity with which all the
Patriarchs, even those who had been ordained by Ignatius,
had acquiesced in the election of Photius, he consented to
recognize him as Patriarch."
But as Photius had not waited for the
recognition of Rome to reäscend his episcopal chair, and
regarded as null the council assembled against him, the Pope
enlarged extensively upon this consideration: that necessity
frequently exempts from the observance of rules. He
therefore passes over these formal difficulties the more
readily as the legates of his predecessor had signed the
acts of the council conditionally and saving the approbation
of the Pope; he gives in detail the conditions upon which he
recognizes Photius; he must assemble a council and ask
pardon for having reäscended his seat without a sentence of
absolution; he must renounce all jurisdiction over Bulgaria,
and must receive into his communion all the bishops ordained
by Ignatius. As to those of the latter who should refuse to
enter in communion with Photius, he threatens them with
excommunication.
These latter bishops were very few in
number. The Pope wrote to the principal ones, Metrophanes,
Stylienus, and John, threatening them with excommunication;
and he charged the legates, whom he intrusted with his
letters, to excommunicate all those who should refuse to
recognize Photius as legitimate Patriarch, forbidding all,
whoever they might be, to give credit to the calumnies
circulated against this Patriarch.
It is, doubtless, out of respect for these
commands of the Pope, that the Romish writers have vied
repeating these calumnies of such as Metrophanes, Stylienus,
Nicetas, and other inveterate enemies of Photius, and have
refused to see any thing save knavery and hypocrisy in the
familiar correspondence of this great man. They have left no
means untried to disguise the importance of these letters of
John VIII. Cardinal Baronius, in his Annals, goes so far as
to maintain that the feminine weakness displayed by
John in this matter, gave rise to the fable of a female
pope Joan. Every one knows that John VIII., far from
being weak in character, was energetic even to roughness;
but Romish writers stick at nothing when they wish to rid
themselves of facts, or even of Popes whose acts do not
neatly fit into their systematic histories.
The legates with the Pope's letters having
reached Constantinople, a council was called and attended by
three hundred and eighty-three bishops, with Elias, who
represented the Patriarch of Jerusalem. Collection of Councils by Father Hardouin, vol. vi.
John's letters are full of the new teachings
of the Papacy. He claims that he has, by divine right, the
care of all the churches, and occupies the place of St.
Peter, to whom Christ said, "Feed my sheep." He
pretends that he has been entreated to admit Photius to the
dignity of the Patriarchate, and even to ecclesiastical
orders; he now admits him, although he has usurped the
episcopate without the consent of the holy see, but on
condition that he shall ask pardon in full council; he gives
him absolution by virtue of the power he has received from
Jesus Christ through St. Peter, to bind and loose all
things without exception. He commands Photius
to resign all jurisdiction over Bulgaria, and forbids
him to ordain any there. In all his letters he gives commands and claims to exercise an absolute sovereignty
of divine origin.
Such pretensions were not recognized in the
East, which held to the doctrines of the first eight
centuries on the subject of the Papacy. It was clear that if
such letters as these were read in the council, all hope of
peace was at an end. Hence only the substance of these
letters was retained; every expression that could wound, or
give reason to believe that the Pope wished to be Sovereign
of the Church, was weeded out. Expressions of encomium in
use in the East were added. These letters, as Fleury tells
us, were thus modified, "apparently in concert with the
legates, who heard them read without complaint." The
first of these legates, Cardinal Peter, having asked, "Do
you receive the Pope's letter?" the council replied, "We
receive all that relates to the union with Photius and the
interests of the Church, but not what concerns the Emperor
and his provinces." By this, the Council rejected the
pretensions of the Pope to Bulgaria. From such a unanimous
disposition of nearly four hundred Eastern bishops, we may
judge what protests the Pope's letters would have excited if
the legates had not had the prudence to modify them in
concert with Photius. The Abbé Jager, in
his indigestible pamphlet against Photius, claims that the
Pope's letters were altered by Photius alone. Would
not the legates have protested against that fraud, since
they heard them read in the council in their modified shape?
Instead of complaining of these letters, they publicly
sought to ascertain that every one was satisfied with them.
Moreover, they carried them back to Rome with the acts of
the council. The Pope did not protest, and it is in Rome
ltself that they were afterward found. The East had
always preserved this maxim, followed by all the œcumenical
councils, that ecclesiastical divisions must follow those of
the empire. Bulgaria, having been anciently a Greek
province, depended from the Greek Patriarch and not the
Latin.
Cardinal Peter having asked that the
adversaries of Photius who had been excluded might be
recalled, Photius replied, " The Emperor has only exiled
two of them, and that for causes not ecclesiastical; we
pray him to recall them."
"How did the Patriarch Photius reäscend his
throne?" asked Peter.
The council replied, "By the consent of the
three Patriarchs, at the request of the Emperor; or rather
yielding to the violence done to him, and to the prayers of
the whole Church of Constantinople."
"What!" asked Peter, "has there been no
violence on the part of Photius? Has he not acted
tyrannically?"
"On the contrary," replied the council, "all
took place with gentleness and tranquillity."
"Thank God!" exclaimed the Cardinal.
Thus, nearly four hundred bishops, in
presence of the Pope's envoys, and in public, confound the
rare calumniators of Photius, and yet these calumniators are
accepted in the West as writers worthy of faith, even while
their histories give numberless proofs of a hatred akin to
madness and absurdity!
When Cardinal Peter had finished his
questions, Photius spoke as follows: "I tell you, before
God, that I never desired this see; the majority of those
here present know this well. The first time I took it
against my will, shedding many tears, after resisting it for
a long time, and in consequence of the insurmountable
violence of the emperor who then reigned, but with the
consent of the bishops and clergy, who had given their
signatures without my knowledge. They gave me guards" . . .
He was interrupted by the exclamations of
the council, "We know it all, either of our own knowledge or
by the evidence of others who have told us."
"God permitted me to be driven away,"
continued Photius. "I did not seek to return. I never
excited seditions. I remained at rest, thanking God, and
bending before his judgments, without importuning the
Emperor, without hope or desire to be reïnstated. God, who
works miracles, has touched the Emperor's heart,
His enemies have said that he resorted
to magic to dispose Basil in his favour and some serious
historians have accepted this ridiculous accusation.
not for my sake but for the sake of his people: he has
recalled me from my exile. But, so long as Ignatius of
blessed memory lived, I could not bring myself to resume my
place, in spite of the exhortations and entreaties that were
made by many upon this subject."
The council said, "It is the truth."
"I meant," continued Photius, "to make my
peace with Ignatius firm in every way. We saw each other in
the palace; we fell at each others feet, and mutually
forgave each other. When he fell ill he sent for me; I
visited him several times, and gave him every consolation in
my power. He recommended to me those who were most dear to
him, and I have taken care of them. After his death the
Emperor entreated me publicly and privately; he came himself
to see me, to urge me to yield to the wishes of the bishops
and clergy. I have yielded to so miraculous a change that I
might not resist God."
The council said, "It is thus."
Are not such words worth more, pronounced
publicly as they were, and their truth attested by four
hundred bishops, than all the diatribes of passionate
enemies?
In the following sessions, the legates of
the Patriarchal sees of Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem
gave unquestionable proofs that their Patriarchs had always
been in communion with Photius; that the pretended legates
who were present at the council of 869, under Adrian, and
who had concurred in the condemnation of Photius, were only
envoys of the Saracens, as Photius himself had written in
his protest against that assembly.
In consequence, that council was
anathematized by the legates of Rome, by those of the other
Patriarchal sees of the East, and by all the bishops
present. Nevertheless, the Romanists
call that council of 869 the eighth œcumenical.
The acts of the council of 879 are as full
of dignity and as high-toned as those of the council of 869
were passionate and unworthy of true bishops. Adrian's
legates were more like men possessed than like judges, if we
may judge from the acts preserved by Anastasius the
Librarian, while the legates of John, on the contrary,
displayed in all things as much wisdom as moderation.
The acts of the council of 879 have been
found In the original at Rome itself with all the authentic
signatures, including those of the legates of Rome; and yet
the ecclesiastical historians of the West insinuate that
they may have been altered. On the other hand, the acts of
the council of 869 were lost by the Roman legates, and are
only known through Anastasius the Librarian, who pretended
to have a copy; and the Western historians will not allow of
a doubt as to their genuineness. Is this impartial? If the
acts of the council of 879 had come from the East to the
West, there might be some grounds for contesting their
genuineness; but they were found at Rome, and were taken
from the archives of Rome to give them to the public.
During their sojourn at Constantinople they repeatedly saw
Metrophanes, one of the worst enemies of Photius, and one of
the writers who serve as guides to the Romish writers in
their accounts. They requested him to furnish proofs against
Photius, but could draw from him nothing but idle words.
They summoned him to the council, but he refused to appear,
under the false pretext of illness. "He is not so ill," said
the legates, " that be cannot talk a great deal, and yet say
very little." Upon his refusal to appear he was
anathematized.