<SPAN name="toc21" id="toc21"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="pdf22" id="pdf22"></SPAN>
<h2><span>Discourse IX.</span></h2>
<h2><span>Duties Of The Church Towards Knowledge.</span></h2>
<h3><span>1.</span></h3>
<p>
I have to congratulate myself, Gentlemen, that at
length I have accomplished, with whatever success,
the difficult and anxious undertaking to which I have
been immediately addressing myself. Difficult and
anxious it has been in truth, though the main subject of
University Teaching has been so often and so ably discussed
already; for I have attempted to follow out a line
of thought more familiar to Protestants just now than
to Catholics, upon Catholic grounds. I declared my
intention, when I opened the subject, of treating it as a
philosophical and practical, rather than as a theological
question, with an appeal to common sense, not to
ecclesiastical rules; and for this very reason, while my
argument has been less ambitious, it has been deprived of
the lights and supports which another mode of handling
it would have secured.</p>
<p>
No anxiety, no effort of mind is more severe than
his, who in a difficult matter has it seriously at heart
to investigate without error and to instruct without
obscurity; as to myself, if the past discussion has at any
time tried the patience of the kind persons who have
given it their attention, I can assure them that on no
one can it have inflicted so great labour and fatigue as
on myself. Happy they who are engaged in provinces
of thought, so familiarly traversed and so thoroughly
explored, that they see every where the footprints, the
paths, the landmarks, and the remains of former travellers,
and can never step wrong; but for myself,
Gentlemen, I have felt like a navigator on a strange sea,
who is out of sight of land, is surprised by night, and has
to trust mainly to the rules and instruments of his science
for reaching the port. The everlasting mountains, the
high majestic cliffs, of the opposite coast, radiant in the
sunlight, which are our ordinary guides, fail us in an
excursion such as this; the lessons of antiquity, the
determinations of authority, are here rather the needle,
chart, and plummet, than great objects, with distinct and
continuous outlines and completed details, which stand
up and confront and occupy our gaze, and relieve us
from the tension and suspense of our personal observation.
And thus, in spite of the pains we may take
to consult others and avoid mistakes, it is not till the
morning comes and the shore greets us, and we see our
vessel making straight for harbour, that we relax our
jealous watch, and consider anxiety irrational. Such in
a measure has been my feeling in the foregoing inquiry;
in which indeed I have been in want neither of authoritative
principles nor distinct precedents, but of treatises
<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">in extenso</span></span>
on the subject on which I have written,—the
finished work of writers, who, by their acknowledged
judgment and erudition, might furnish me for my private
guidance with a running instruction on each point which
successively came under review.</p>
<p>
I have spoken of the arduousness of my <span class="tei tei-q">“immediate”</span>
undertaking, because what I have been attempting has
been of a preliminary nature, not contemplating the
duties of the Church towards a University, nor the
characteristics of a University which is Catholic, but
inquiring what a University is, what is its aim, what its
nature, what its bearings. I have accordingly laid down
first, that all branches of knowledge are, at least implicitly,
the subject-matter of its teaching; that these
branches are not isolated and independent one of another,
but form together a whole or system; that they
run into each other, and complete each other, and that,
in proportion to our view of them as a whole, is the
exactness and trustworthiness of the knowledge which
they separately convey; that the process of imparting
knowledge to the intellect in this philosophical way is
its true culture; that such culture is a good in itself; that
the knowledge which is both its instrument and result is
called Liberal Knowledge; that such culture, together
with the knowledge which effects it, may fitly be sought
for its own sake; that it is, however, in addition, of great
secular utility, as constituting the best and highest formation
of the intellect for social and political life; and
lastly, that, considered in a religious aspect, it concurs
with Christianity a certain way, and then diverges from
it; and consequently proves in the event, sometimes its
serviceable ally, sometimes, from its very resemblance to
it, an insidious and dangerous foe.</p>
<p>
Though, however, these Discourses have only professed
to be preliminary, being directed to the investigation
of the object and nature of the Education which a
University professes to impart, at the same time I do not
like to conclude without making some remarks upon the
duties of the Church towards it, or rather on the ground
of those duties. If the Catholic Faith is true, a University
cannot exist externally to the Catholic pale, for it
cannot teach Universal Knowledge if it does not teach
Catholic theology. This is certain; but still, though it
had ever so many theological Chairs, that would not
suffice to make it a Catholic University; for theology
would be included in its teaching only as a branch of
knowledge, only as one out of many constituent portions,
however important a one, of what I have called Philosophy.
Hence a direct and active jurisdiction of the
Church over it and in it is necessary, lest it should become
the rival of the Church with the community at
large in those theological matters which to the Church
are exclusively committed,—acting as the representative
of the intellect, as the Church is the representative of the
religious principle. The illustration of this proposition
shall be the subject of my concluding Discourse.</p>
<h3><span>2.</span></h3>
<p>
I say then, that, even though the case could be so
that the whole system of Catholicism was recognized and
professed, without the direct presence of the Church,
still this would not at once make such a University a
Catholic Institution, nor be sufficient to secure the due
weight of religious considerations in its philosophical
studies. For it may easily happen that a particular
bias or drift may characterize an Institution, which no
rules can reach, nor officers remedy, nor professions
or promises counteract. We have an instance of such
a case in the Spanish Inquisition;—here was a purely
Catholic establishment, devoted to the maintenance, or
rather the ascendancy of Catholicism, keenly zealous for
theological truth, the stern foe of every anti-Catholic
idea, and administered by Catholic theologians; yet it
in no proper sense belonged to the Church. It was
simply and entirely a State institution, it was an expression
of that very Church-and-King spirit which has prevailed
in these islands; nay, it was an instrument of the
State, according to the confession of the acutest Protestant
historians, in its warfare against the Holy See. Considered
<span class="tei tei-q">“<em><span style="font-style: italic">materially</span></em>,”</span> it was nothing but Catholic; but
its spirit and form were earthly and secular, in spite of
whatever faith and zeal and sanctity and charity were to
be found in the individuals who from time to time had a
share in its administration. And in like manner, it is no
sufficient security for the Catholicity of a University,
even that the whole of Catholic theology should be professed
in it, unless the Church breathes her own pure and
unearthly spirit into it, and fashions and moulds its
organization, and watches over its teaching, and knits
together its pupils, and superintends its action. The
Spanish Inquisition came into collision with the supreme
Catholic authority, and that, from the fact that its immediate
end was of a secular character; and for the same
reason, whereas Academical Institutions (as I have been
so long engaged in showing) are in their very nature
directed to social, national, temporal objects in the first
instance, and since they are living and energizing bodies,
if they deserve the name of University at all, and of
necessity have some one formal and definite ethical character,
good or bad, and do of a certainty imprint that
character on the individuals who direct and who frequent
them, it cannot but be that, if left to themselves, they
will, in spite of their profession of Catholic Truth, work
out results more or less prejudicial to its interests.</p>
<p>
Nor is this all: such Institutions may become hostile
to Revealed Truth, in consequence of the circumstances
of their teaching as well as of their end. They are employed
in the pursuit of Liberal Knowledge, and Liberal
Knowledge has a special tendency, not necessary or
rightful, but a tendency in fact, when cultivated by
beings such as we are, to impress us with a mere philosophical
theory of life and conduct, in the place of
Revelation. I have said much on this subject already.
Truth has two attributes—beauty and power; and
while Useful Knowledge is the possession of truth as
powerful, Liberal Knowledge is the apprehension of it as
beautiful. Pursue it, either as beauty or as power, to its
furthest extent and its true limit, and you are led by
either road to the Eternal and Infinite, to the intimations
of conscience and the announcements of the Church.
Satisfy yourself with what is only visibly or intelligibly
excellent, as you are likely to do, and you will make
present utility and natural beauty the practical test of
truth, and the sufficient object of the intellect. It is not
that you will at once reject Catholicism, but you will
measure and proportion it by an earthly standard. You
will throw its highest and most momentous disclosures
into the background, you will deny its principles, explain
away its doctrines, re-arrange its precepts, and make
light of its practices, even while you profess it. Knowledge,
viewed as Knowledge, exerts a subtle influence in
throwing us back on ourselves, and making us our own
centre, and our minds the measure of all things. This
then is the tendency of that Liberal Education, of which
a University is the school, viz., to view Revealed Religion
from an aspect of its own,—to fuse and recast it,—to
tune it, as it were, to a different key, and to reset its
harmonies,—to circumscribe it by a circle which unwarrantably
amputates here, and unduly develops there;
and all under the notion, conscious or unconscious,
that the human intellect, self-educated and self-supported,
is more true and perfect in its ideas and judgments
than that of Prophets and Apostles, to whom the
sights and sounds of Heaven were immediately conveyed.
A sense of propriety, order, consistency, and
completeness gives birth to a rebellious stirring against
miracle and mystery, against the severe and the terrible.</p>
<p>
This Intellectualism first and chiefly comes into collision
with precept, then with doctrine, then with the very
principle of dogmatism;—a perception of the Beautiful
becomes the substitute for faith. In a country which
does not profess the faith, it at once runs, if allowed, into
scepticism or infidelity; but even within the pale of the
Church, and with the most unqualified profession of her
Creed, it acts, if left to itself, as an element of corruption
and debility. Catholicism, as it has come down to
us from the first, seems to be mean and illiberal; it is a
mere popular religion; it is the religion of illiterate ages
or servile populations or barbarian warriors; it must
be treated with discrimination and delicacy, corrected,
softened, improved, if it is to satisfy an enlightened
generation. It must be stereotyped as the patron of
arts, or the pupil of speculation, or the protégé of science;
it must play the literary academician, or the empirical
philanthropist, or the political partisan; it must keep
up with the age; some or other expedient it must devise,
in order to explain away, or to hide, tenets under which
the intellect labours and of which it is ashamed—its doctrine,
for instance, of grace, its mystery of the Godhead,
its preaching of the Cross, its devotion to the Queen of
Saints, or its loyalty to the Apostolic See. Let this
spirit be freely evolved out of that philosophical condition
of mind, which in former Discourses I have so highly,
so justly extolled, and it is impossible but, first indifference,
then laxity of belief, then even heresy will be the
successive results.</p>
<p>
Here then are two injuries which Revelation is likely
to sustain at the hands of the Masters of human reason
unless the Church, as in duty bound, protects the sacred
treasure which is in jeopardy. The first is a simple
ignoring of Theological Truth altogether, under the pretence
of not recognising differences of religious opinion;—which
will only take place in countries or under governments
which have abjured Catholicism. The second,
which is of a more subtle character, is a recognition indeed
of Catholicism, but (as if in pretended mercy to it) an
adulteration of its spirit. I will now proceed to describe
the dangers I speak of more distinctly, by a reference
to the general subject-matter of instruction which a
University undertakes.</p>
<p>
There are three great subjects on which Human Reason
employs itself:—God, Nature, and Man: and theology
being put aside in the present argument, the physical
and social worlds remain. These, when respectively subjected
to Human Reason, form two books: the book
of nature is called Science, the book of man is called
Literature. Literature and Science, thus considered,
nearly constitute the subject-matter of Liberal Education;
and, while Science is made to subserve the former
of the two injuries, which Revealed Truth sustains,—its
exclusion, Literature subserves the latter,—its corruption.
Let us consider the influence of each upon Religion
separately.</p>
<h3><span>3.</span></h3>
<p>
I. As to Physical Science, of course there can be no
real collision between it and Catholicism. Nature and
Grace, Reason and Revelation, come from the same
Divine Author, whose works cannot contradict each
other. Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that, in matter
of fact, there always has been a sort of jealousy and
hostility between Religion and physical philosophers.
The name of Galileo reminds us of it at once. Not content
with investigating and reasoning in his own province,
it is said, he went out of his way directly to insult the
received interpretation of Scripture; theologians repelled
an attack which was wanton and arrogant; and Science,
affronted in her minister, has taken its full revenge upon
Theology since. A vast multitude of its teachers, I fear
it must be said, have been either unbelievers or sceptics,
or at least have denied to Christianity any teaching,
distinctive or special, over the Religion of Nature. There
have indeed been most illustrious exceptions; some men
protected by their greatness of mind, some by their
religious profession, some by the fear of public opinion;
but I suppose the run of experimentalists, external to
the Catholic Church, have more or less inherited the
positive or negative unbelief of Laplace, Buffon, Franklin,
Priestley, Cuvier, and Humboldt. I do not of course
mean to say that there need be in every case a resentful
and virulent opposition made to Religion on the part of
scientific men; but their emphatic silence or phlegmatic
inadvertence as to its claims have implied, more eloquently
than any words, that in their opinion it had no
voice at all in the subject-matter, which they had appropriated
to themselves. The same antagonism shows
itself in the middle ages. Friar Bacon was popularly
regarded with suspicion as a dealer in unlawful arts;
Pope Sylvester the Second has been accused of magic
for his knowledge of natural secrets; and the geographical
ideas of St. Virgil, Bishop of Saltzburg, were regarded
with anxiety by the great St. Boniface, the glory of
England, the Martyr-Apostle of Germany. I suppose,
in matter of fact, magical superstition and physical
knowledge did commonly go together in those ages:
however, the hostility between experimental science and
theology is far older than Christianity. Lord Bacon
traces it to an era prior to Socrates; he tells us that,
among the Greeks, the atheistic was the philosophy most
favourable to physical discoveries, and he does not hesitate
to imply that the rise of the religious schools was the
ruin of science.<SPAN id="noteref_26" name="noteref_26" href="#note_26"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">26</span></span></SPAN></p>
<p>
Now, if we would investigate the reason of this opposition
between Theology and Physics, I suppose we must
first take into account Lord Bacon's own explanation of
it. It is common in judicial inquiries to caution the
parties on whom the verdict depends to put out of their
minds whatever they have heard out of court on the subject
to which their attention is to be directed. They are to
judge by the evidence; and this is a rule which holds in
other investigations as far as this, that nothing of an adventitious
nature ought to be introduced into the process.
In like manner, from religious investigations, as such,
physics must be excluded, and from physical, as such,
religion; and if we mix them, we shall spoil both. The
theologian, speaking of Divine Omnipotence, for the time
simply ignores the laws of nature as existing restraints
upon its exercise; and the physical philosopher, on the
other hand, in his experiments upon natural phenomena,
is simply ascertaining those laws, putting aside the question
of that Omnipotence. If the theologian, in tracing
the ways of Providence, were stopped with objections
grounded on the impossibility of physical miracles, he
would justly protest against the interruption; and were
the philosopher, who was determining the motion of the
heavenly bodies, to be questioned about their Final or
their First Cause, he too would suffer an illogical interruption.
The latter asks the cause of volcanoes, and is
impatient at being told it is <span class="tei tei-q">“the divine vengeance;”</span> the
former asks the cause of the overthrow of the guilty
cities, and is preposterously referred to the volcanic
action still visible in their neighbourhood. The inquiry
into final causes for the moment passes over the existence
of established laws; the inquiry into physical,
passes over for the moment the existence of God. In
other words, physical science is in a certain sense atheistic,
for the very reason it is not theology.</p>
<p>
This is Lord Bacon's justification, and an intelligible
one, for considering that the fall of atheistic philosophy
in ancient times was a blight upon the hopes of physical
science. <span class="tei tei-q">“Aristotle,”</span> he says, <span class="tei tei-q">“Galen, and others frequently
introduce such causes as these:—the hairs of
the eyelids are for a fence to the sight; the bones for
pillars whence to build the bodies of animals; the
leaves of trees are to defend the fruit from the sun and
wind; the clouds are designed for watering the earth.
All which are properly alleged in metaphysics; but in
physics, are impertinent, and as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">remoras</span></span> to the ship, that
hinder the sciences from holding on their course of
improvement, and as introducing a neglect of searching
after physical causes.”</span><SPAN id="noteref_27" name="noteref_27" href="#note_27"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">27</span></span></SPAN>
Here then is one reason for the
prejudice of physical philosophers against Theology:—on
the one hand, their deep satisfaction in the laws of
nature indisposes them towards the thought of a Moral
Governor, and makes them sceptical of His interposition;
on the other hand, the occasional interference of
religious criticism in a province not religious, has made
them sore, suspicious, and resentful.</p>
<h3><span>4.</span></h3>
<p>
Another reason of a kindred nature is to be found
in the difference of method by which truths are gained
in theology and in physical science. Induction is the
instrument of Physics, and deduction only is the instrument
of Theology. There the simple question is, What
is revealed? all doctrinal knowledge flows from one
fountain head. If we are able to enlarge our view and
multiply our propositions, it must be merely by the
comparison and adjustment of the original truths; if we
would solve new questions, it must be by consulting old
answers. The notion of doctrinal knowledge absolutely
novel, and of simple addition from without, is intolerable
to Catholic ears, and never was entertained by
any one who was even approaching to an understanding
of our creed. Revelation is all in all in doctrine;
the Apostles its sole depository, the inferential method
its sole instrument, and ecclesiastical authority its sole
sanction. The Divine Voice has spoken once for all,
and the only question is about its meaning. Now
this process, as far as it was reasoning, was the very
mode of reasoning which, as regards physical knowledge,
the school of Bacon has superseded by the inductive
method:—no wonder, then, that that school
should be irritated and indignant to find that a subject-matter
remains still, in which their favourite instrument
has no office; no wonder that they rise up against this
memorial of an antiquated system, as an eyesore and an
insult; and no wonder that the very force and dazzling
success of their own method in its own departments
should sway or bias unduly the religious sentiments of
any persons who come under its influence. They assert
that no new truth can be gained by deduction; Catholics
assent, but add that, as regards religious truth, they
have not to seek at all, for they have it already. Christian
Truth is purely of revelation; that revelation we can
but explain, we cannot increase, except relatively to our
own apprehensions; without it we should have known
nothing of its contents, with it we know just as much as its
contents, and nothing more. And, as it was given by a
divine act independent of man, so will it remain in spite
of man. Niebuhr may revolutionize history, Lavoisier
chemistry, Newton astronomy; but God Himself is the
author as well as the subject of theology. When Truth
can change, its Revelation can change; when human
reason can outreason the Omniscient, then may it supersede
His work.</p>
<p>
Avowals such as these fall strange upon the ear of
men whose first principle is the search after truth, and
whose starting-points of search are things material and
sensible. They scorn any process of inquiry not founded
on experiment; the Mathematics indeed they endure,
because that science deals with ideas, not with facts, and
leads to conclusions hypothetical rather than real;
<span class="tei tei-q">“Metaphysics”</span> they even use as a by-word of reproach;
and Ethics they admit only on condition that it gives up
conscience as its scientific ground, and bases itself on
tangible utility: but as to Theology, they cannot deal
with it, they cannot master it, and so they simply outlaw
it and ignore it. Catholicism, forsooth, <span class="tei tei-q">“confines the
intellect,”</span> because it holds that God's intellect is greater
than theirs, and that what He has done, man cannot
improve. And what in some sort justifies them to themselves
in this extravagance is the circumstance that
there is a religion close at their doors which, discarding
so severe a tone, has actually adopted their own
principle of inquiry. Protestantism treats Scripture just
as they deal with Nature; it takes the sacred text as a
large collection of phenomena, from which, by an inductive
process, each individual Christian may arrive at
just those religious conclusions which approve themselves
to his own judgment. It considers faith a mere
modification of reason, as being an acquiescence in
certain probable conclusions till better are found.
Sympathy, then, if no other reason, throws experimental
philosophers into alliance with the enemies of Catholicism.</p>
<h3><span>5.</span></h3>
<p>
I have another consideration to add, not less important
than any I have hitherto adduced. The physical
sciences, Astronomy, Chemistry, and the rest, are
doubtless engaged upon divine works, and cannot issue
in untrue religious conclusions. But at the same time it
must be recollected that Revelation has reference to
circumstances which did not arise till after the heavens
and the earth were made. They were made before the
introduction of moral evil into the world: whereas the
Catholic Church is the instrument of a remedial dispensation
to meet that introduction. No wonder then that
her teaching is simply distinct, though not divergent,
from the theology which Physical Science suggests to its
followers. She sets before us a number of attributes
and acts on the part of the Divine Being, for which the
material and animal creation gives no scope; power,
wisdom, goodness are the burden of the physical world,
but it does not and could not speak of mercy, long-suffering,
and the economy of human redemption, and
but partially of the moral law and moral goodness.
<span class="tei tei-q">“Sacred Theology,”</span> says Lord Bacon, <span class="tei tei-q">“must be drawn
from the words and the oracles of God: not from the
light of nature or the dictates of reason. It is written,
that <span class="tei tei-q">‘the Heavens declare the glory of God;’</span> but we nowhere
find it that the Heavens declare the will of God;
which is pronounced a law and a testimony, that men
should do according to it. Nor does this hold only in
the great mysteries of the Godhead, of the creation,
of the redemption.… We cannot doubt that a large
part of the moral law is too sublime to be attained by
the light of nature; though it is still certain that men,
even with the light and law of nature, have some notions
of virtue, vice, justice, wrong, good, and evil.”</span><SPAN id="noteref_28" name="noteref_28" href="#note_28"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">28</span></span></SPAN> That
the new and further manifestations of the Almighty,
made by Revelation, are in perfect harmony with the
teaching of the natural world, forms indeed one subject
of the profound work of the Anglican Bishop Butler;
but they cannot in any sense be gathered from nature,
and the silence of nature concerning them may easily
seduce the imagination, though it has no force to persuade
the reason, to revolt from doctrines which have
not been authenticated by facts, but are enforced by
authority. In a scientific age, then, there will naturally
be a parade of what is called Natural Theology, a wide-spread
profession of the Unitarian creed, an impatience
of mystery, and a scepticism about miracles.</p>
<p>
And to all this must be added the ample opportunity
which physical science gives to the indulgence of those
sentiments of beauty, order, and congruity, of which I
have said so much as the ensigns and colours (as they
may be called) of a civilized age in its warfare against
Catholicism.</p>
<p>
It being considered, then, that Catholicism differs from
physical science, in drift, in method of proof, and in subject-matter,
how can it fail to meet with unfair usage
from the philosophers of any Institution in which there
is no one to take its part? That Physical Science itself
will be ultimately the loser by such ill treatment of Theology,
I have insisted on at great length in some preceding
Discourses; for to depress unduly, to encroach
upon any science, and much more on an important one,
is to do an injury to all. However, this is not the concern
of the Church; the Church has no call to watch
over and protect Science: but towards Theology she has
a distinct duty: it is one of the special trusts committed
to her keeping. Where Theology is, there she must be;
and if a University cannot fulfil its name and office without
the recognition of Revealed Truth, she must be there
to see that it is a <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">bonâ fide</span></span> recognition, sincerely made
and consistently acted on.</p>
<h3><span>6.</span></h3>
<p>
II. And if the interposition of the Church is necessary
in the Schools of Science, still more imperatively is it
demanded in the other main constituent portion of
the subject-matter of Liberal Education,—Literature.
Literature stands related to Man as Science stands to
Nature; it is his history. Man is composed of body
and soul; he thinks and he acts; he has appetites,
passions, affections, motives, designs; he has within him
the lifelong struggle of duty with inclination; he has an
intellect fertile and capacious; he is formed for society,
and society multiplies and diversifies in endless combinations
his personal characteristics, moral and intellectual.
All this constitutes his life; of all this Literature is the
expression; so that Literature is to man in some sort what
autobiography is to the individual; it is his Life and Remains.
Moreover, he is this sentient, intelligent, creative,
and operative being, quite independent of any extraordinary
aid from Heaven, or any definite religious belief;
and <em><span style="font-style: italic">as such</span></em>, as he is in himself, does Literature represent
him; it is the Life and Remains of the <em><span style="font-style: italic">natural</span></em> man,
innocent or guilty. I do not mean to say that it is
impossible in its very notion that Literature should be
tinctured by a religious spirit; Hebrew Literature, as far
as it can be called Literature, certainly is simply theological,
and has a character imprinted on it which is
above nature; but I am speaking of what is to be expected
without any extraordinary dispensation; and I
say that, in matter of fact, as Science is the reflection of
Nature, so is Literature also—the one, of Nature physical,
the other, of Nature moral and social. Circumstances,
such as locality, period, language, seem to make little or
no difference in the character of Literature, as such;
on the whole, all Literatures are one; they are the
voices of the natural man.</p>
<p>
I wish this were all that had to be said to the disadvantage
of Literature; but while Nature physical remains
fixed in its laws, Nature moral and social has a will of
its own, is self-governed, and never remains any long
while in that state from which it started into action.
Man will never continue in a mere state of innocence; he
is sure to sin, and his literature will be the expression of
his sin, and this whether he be heathen or Christian.
Christianity has thrown gleams of light on him and his
literature; but as it has not converted him, but only
certain choice specimens of him, so it has not changed
the characters of his mind or of his history; his literature
is either what it was, or worse than what it was, in proportion
as there has been an abuse of knowledge granted
and a rejection of truth. On the whole, then, I think it
will be found, and ever found, as a matter of course, that
Literature, as such, no matter of what nation, is the
science or history, partly and at best of the natural man,
partly of man in rebellion.</p>
<h3><span>7.</span></h3>
<p>
Here then, I say, you are involved in a difficulty
greater than that which besets the cultivation of Science;
for, if Physical Science be dangerous, as I have said, it is
dangerous, because it necessarily ignores the idea of
moral evil; but Literature is open to the more grievous
imputation of recognizing and understanding it too well.
Some one will say to me perhaps: <span class="tei tei-q">“Our youth shall
not be corrupted. We will dispense with all general or
national Literature whatever, if it be so exceptionable;
we will have a Christian Literature of our own, as pure,
as true, as the Jewish.”</span> You cannot have it:—I do not
say you cannot form a select literature for the young, nay,
even for the middle or lower classes; this is another
matter altogether: I am speaking of University Education,
which implies an extended range of reading, which
has to deal with standard works of genius, or what are
called the <em><span style="font-style: italic">classics</span></em> of a language: and I say, from the
nature of the case, if Literature is to be made a study of
human nature, you cannot have a Christian Literature.
It is a contradiction in terms to attempt a sinless Literature
of sinful man. You may gather together something
very great and high, something higher than any Literature
ever was; and when you have done so, you will find that
it is not Literature at all. You will have simply left the
delineation of man, as such, and have substituted for it,
as far as you have had any thing to substitute, that of
man, as he is or might be, under certain special advantages.
Give up the study of man, as such, if so it must
be; but say you do so. Do not say you are studying
him, his history, his mind and his heart, when you are
studying something else. Man is a being of genius,
passion, intellect, conscience, power. He exercises these
various gifts in various ways, in great deeds, in great
thoughts, in heroic acts, in hateful crimes. He founds
states, he fights battles, he builds cities, he ploughs the
forest, he subdues the elements, he rules his kind. He
creates vast ideas, and influences many generations.
He takes a thousand shapes, and undergoes a thousand
fortunes. Literature records them all to the life,</p>
<br/>Quicquid agunt homines, votum, timor, ira, voluptas,
<br/>Gaudia, discursus.
<p>
He pours out his fervid soul in poetry; he sways to and
fro, he soars, he dives, in his restless speculations; his
lips drop eloquence; he touches the canvas, and it
glows with beauty; he sweeps the strings, and they
thrill with an ecstatic meaning. He looks back into
himself, and he reads his own thoughts, and notes them
down; he looks out into the universe, and tells over and
celebrates the elements and principles of which it is the
product.</p>
<p>
Such is man: put him aside, keep him before you;
but, whatever you do, do not take him for what he is
not, for something more divine and sacred, for man regenerate.
Nay, beware of showing God's grace and its
work at such disadvantage as to make the few whom it
has thoroughly influenced compete in intellect with the
vast multitude who either have it not, or use it ill. The
elect are few to choose out of, and the world is inexhaustible.
From the first, Jabel and Tubalcain, Nimrod
<span class="tei tei-q">“the stout hunter,”</span> the learning of the Pharaohs, and
the wisdom of the East country, are of the world. Every
now and then they are rivalled by a Solomon or a Beseleel,
but the <em><span style="font-style: italic">habitat</span></em> of natural gifts is the natural man.
The Church may use them, she cannot at her will originate
them. Not till the whole human race is made new
will its literature be pure and true. Possible of course
it is in idea, for nature, inspired by heavenly grace, to
exhibit itself on a large scale, in an originality of thought
or action, even far beyond what the world's literature
has recorded or exemplified; but, if you would in fact
have a literature of saints, first of all have a nation of
them.</p>
<p>
What is a clearer proof of the truth of all this than
the structure of the Inspired Word itself? It is undeniably
<em><span style="font-style: italic">not</span></em> the reflection or picture of the many, but
of the few; it is no picture of life, but an anticipation of
death and judgment. Human literature is about all
things, grave or gay, painful or pleasant; but the
Inspired Word views them only in one aspect, and as
they tend to one scope. It gives us little insight into
the fertile developments of mind; it has no terms in its
vocabulary to express with exactness the intellect and
its separate faculties: it knows nothing of genius, fancy,
wit, invention, presence of mind, resource. It does not
discourse of empire, commerce, enterprise, learning,
philosophy, or the fine arts. Slightly too does it touch
on the more simple and innocent courses of nature and
their reward. Little does it say<SPAN id="noteref_29" name="noteref_29" href="#note_29"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">29</span></span></SPAN> of those temporal
blessings which rest upon our worldly occupations, and
make them easy, of the blessings which we derive from
the sunshine day and the serene night, from the succession
of the seasons, and the produce of the earth. Little
about our recreations and our daily domestic comforts;
little about the ordinary occasions of festivity and mirth,
which sweeten human life; and nothing at all about
various pursuits or amusements, which it would be going
too much into detail to mention. We read indeed of the
feast when Isaac was weaned, and of Jacob's courtship,
and of the religious merry-makings of holy Job; but
exceptions, such as these, do but remind us what might
be in Scripture, and is not. If then by Literature is
meant the manifestation of human nature in human language,
you will seek for it in vain except in the world.
Put up with it, as it is, or do not pretend to cultivate it;
take things as they are, not as you could wish them.</p>
<h3><span>8.</span></h3>
<p>
Nay, I am obliged to go further still; even if we could,
still we should be shrinking from our plain duty, Gentlemen,
did we leave out Literature from Education. For
why do we educate, except to prepare for the world?
Why do we cultivate the intellect of the many beyond
the first elements of knowledge, except for this world?
Will it be much matter in the world to come whether
our bodily health or whether our intellectual strength
was more or less, except of course as this world is in
all its circumstances a trial for the next? If then a
University is a direct preparation for this world, let it
be what it professes. It is not a Convent, it is not a
Seminary; it is a place to fit men of the world for the
world. We cannot possibly keep them from plunging
into the world, with all its ways and principles and
maxims, when their time comes; but we can prepare
them against what is inevitable; and it is not the way
to learn to swim in troubled waters, never to have
gone into them. Proscribe (I do not merely say particular
authors, particular works, particular passages) but
Secular Literature as such; cut out from your class
books all broad manifestations of the natural man; and
those manifestations are waiting for your pupil's benefit
at the very doors of your lecture room in living and
breathing substance. They will meet him there in all
the charm of novelty, and all the fascination of genius
or of amiableness. To-day a pupil, to-morrow a member
of the great world: to-day confined to the Lives
of the Saints, to-morrow thrown upon Babel;—thrown
on Babel, without the honest indulgence of wit and
humour and imagination having ever been permitted to
him, without any fastidiousness of taste wrought into
him, without any rule given him for discriminating <span class="tei tei-q">“the
precious from the vile,”</span> beauty from sin, the truth from
the sophistry of nature, what is innocent from what is
poison. You have refused him the masters of human
thought, who would in some sense have educated him,
because of their incidental corruption: you have shut
up from him those whose thoughts strike home to our
hearts, whose words are proverbs, whose names are indigenous
to all the world, who are the standard of their
mother tongue, and the pride and boast of their countrymen,
Homer, Ariosto, Cervantes, Shakespeare, because
the old Adam smelt rank in them; and for what have
you reserved him? You have given him <span class="tei tei-q">“a liberty
unto”</span> the multitudinous blasphemy of his day; you
have made him free of its newspapers, its reviews, its
magazines, its novels, its controversial pamphlets, of its
Parliamentary debates, its law proceedings, its platform
speeches, its songs, its drama, its theatre, of its enveloping,
stifling atmosphere of death. You have succeeded
but in this,—in making the world his University.</p>
<p>
Difficult then as the question may be, and much as it
may try the judgments and even divide the opinions of
zealous and religious Catholics, I cannot feel any doubt
myself, Gentlemen, that the Church's true policy is not
to aim at the exclusion of Literature from Secular
Schools, but at her own admission into them. Let her do
for Literature in one way what she does for Science in
another; each has its imperfection, and she has her remedy
for each. She fears no knowledge, but she purifies all;
she represses no element of our nature, but cultivates
the whole. Science is grave, methodical, logical; with
Science then she argues, and opposes reason to reason.
Literature does not argue, but declaims and insinuates;
it is multiform and versatile: it persuades instead of
convincing, it seduces, it carries captive; it appeals to the
sense of honour, or to the imagination, or to the stimulus
of curiosity; it makes its way by means of gaiety,
satire, romance, the beautiful, the pleasurable. Is it
wonderful that with an agent like this the Church should
claim to deal with a vigour corresponding to its restlessness,
to interfere in its proceedings with a higher hand,
and to wield an authority in the choice of its studies and
of its books which would be tyrannical, if reason and
fact were the only instruments of its conclusions? But,
any how, her principle is one and the same throughout:
not to prohibit truth of any kind, but to see that no doctrines
pass under the name of Truth but those which
claim it rightfully.</p>
<h3><span>9.</span></h3>
<p>
Such at least is the lesson which I am taught by all
the thought which I have been able to bestow upon the
subject; such is the lesson which I have gained from the
history of my own special Father and Patron, St. Philip
Neri. He lived in an age as traitorous to the interests
of Catholicism as any that preceded it, or can follow it.
He lived at a time when pride mounted high, and the
senses held rule; a time when kings and nobles never
had more of state and homage, and never less of personal
responsibility and peril; when medieval winter was
receding, and the summer sun of civilization was bringing
into leaf and flower a thousand forms of luxurious
enjoyment; when a new world of thought and beauty
had opened upon the human mind, in the discovery of
the treasures of classic literature and art. He saw the
great and the gifted, dazzled by the Enchantress, and
drinking in the magic of her song; he saw the high and
the wise, the student and the artist, painting, and poetry
and sculpture, and music, and architecture, drawn within
her range, and circling round the abyss: he saw heathen
forms mounting thence, and forming in the thick air:—all
this he saw, and he perceived that the mischief was to
be met, not with argument, not with science, not with
protests and warnings, not by the recluse or the preacher,
but by means of the great counter-fascination of purity
and truth. He was raised up to do a work almost peculiar
in the Church,—not to be a Jerome Savonarola,
though Philip had a true devotion towards him and a
tender memory of his Florentine house; not to be a
St. Charles, though in his beaming countenance Philip
had recognized the aureol of a saint; not to be a St.
Ignatius, wrestling with the foe, though Philip was termed
the Society's bell of call, so many subjects did he send
to it; not to be a St. Francis Xavier, though Philip
had longed to shed his blood for Christ in India with him;
not to be a St. Caietan, or hunter of souls, for Philip
preferred, as he expressed it, tranquilly to cast in his
net to gain them; he preferred to yield to the stream,
and direct the current, which he could not stop, of
science, literature, art, and fashion, and to sweeten and
to sanctify what God had made very good and man had
spoilt.</p>
<p>
And so he contemplated as the idea of his mission,
not the propagation of the faith, nor the exposition of
doctrine, nor the catechetical schools; whatever was exact
and systematic pleased him not; he put from him monastic
rule and authoritative speech, as David refused the
armour of his king. No; he would be but an ordinary
individual priest as others: and his weapons should be but
unaffected humility and unpretending love. All he did
was to be done by the light, and fervour, and convincing
eloquence of his personal character and his easy conversation.
He came to the Eternal City and he sat himself
down there, and his home and his family gradually grew
up around him, by the spontaneous accession of materials
from without. He did not so much seek his own as
draw them to him. He sat in his small room, and they
in their gay worldly dresses, the rich and the wellborn,
as well as the simple and the illiterate, crowded into it.
In the mid-heats of summer, in the frosts of winter, still
was he in that low and narrow cell at San Girolamo,
reading the hearts of those who came to him, and curing
their souls' maladies by the very touch of his hand. It
was a vision of the Magi worshipping the infant Saviour,
so pure and innocent, so sweet and beautiful was he;
and so loyal and so dear to the gracious Virgin Mother.
And they who came remained gazing and listening, till
at length, first one and then another threw off their
bravery, and took his poor cassock and girdle instead:
or, if they kept it, it was to put haircloth under it, or to
take on them a rule of life, while to the world they looked
as before.</p>
<p>
In the words of his biographer, <span class="tei tei-q">“he was all things to
all men. He suited himself to noble and ignoble, young
and old, subjects and prelates, learned and ignorant;
and received those who were strangers to him with
singular benignity, and embraced them with as much
love and charity as if he had been a long while expecting
them. When he was called upon to be merry he
was so; if there was a demand upon his sympathy he
was equally ready. He gave the same welcome to all:
caressing the poor equally with the rich, and wearying
himself to assist all to the utmost limits of his power.
In consequence of his being so accessible and willing to
receive all comers, many went to him every day, and
some continued for the space of thirty, nay forty years,
to visit him very often both morning and evening, so
that his room went by the agreeable nickname of the
Home of Christian mirth. Nay, people came to him,
not only from all parts of Italy, but from France, Spain,
Germany, and all Christendom; and even the infidels
and Jews, who had ever any communication with him,
revered him as a holy man.”</span><SPAN id="noteref_30" name="noteref_30" href="#note_30"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">30</span></span></SPAN> The first families of
Rome, the Massimi, the Aldobrandini, the Colonnas, the
Altieri, the Vitelleschi, were his friends and his penitents.
Nobles of Poland, Grandees of Spain, Knights of Malta,
could not leave Rome without coming to him. Cardinals,
Archbishops, and Bishops were his intimates;
Federigo Borromeo haunted his room and got the name
of <span class="tei tei-q">“Father Philip's soul.”</span> The Cardinal-Archbishops of
Verona and Bologna wrote books in his honour. Pope
Pius the Fourth died in his arms. Lawyers, painters,
musicians, physicians, it was the same too with them.
Baronius, Zazzara, and Ricci, left the law at his bidding,
and joined his congregation, to do its work, to
write the annals of the Church, and to die in the odour
of sanctity. Palestrina had Father Philip's ministrations
in his last moments. Animuccia hung about him
during life, sent him a message after death, and was
conducted by him through Purgatory to Heaven. And
who was he, I say, all the while, but an humble priest,
a stranger in Rome, with no distinction of family or
letters, no claim of station or of office, great simply in
the attraction with which a Divine Power had gifted
him? and yet thus humble, thus unennobled, thus empty-handed,
he has achieved the glorious title of Apostle of
Rome.</p>
<h3><span>10.</span></h3>
<p>
Well were it for his clients and children, Gentlemen, if
they could promise themselves the very shadow of his
special power, or could hope to do a miserable fraction
of the sort of work in which he was pre-eminently
skilled. But so far at least they may attempt,—to take
his position, and to use his method, and to cultivate the
arts of which he was so bright a pattern. For me, if it be
God's blessed will that in the years now coming I am to
have a share in the great undertaking, which has been
the occasion and the subject of these Discourses, so far
I can say for certain that, whether or not I can do any
thing at all in St. Philip's way, at least I can do nothing
in any other. Neither by my habits of life, nor by
vigour of age, am I fitted for the task of authority, or
of rule, or of initiation. I do but aspire, if strength is
given me, to be your minister in a work which must employ
younger minds and stronger lives than mine. I am
but fit to bear my witness, to proffer my suggestions, to
express my sentiments, as has in fact been my occupation
in these discussions; to throw such light upon
general questions, upon the choice of objects, upon the
import of principles, upon the tendency of measures, as
past reflection and experience enable me to contribute.
I shall have to make appeals to your consideration, your
friendliness, your confidence, of which I have had so
many instances, on which I so tranquilly repose; and
after all, neither you nor I must ever be surprised, should
it so happen that the Hand of Him, with whom are the
springs of life and death, weighs heavy on me, and
makes me unequal to anticipations in which you have
been too kind, and to hopes in which I may have been
too sanguine.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />