The Salvation of Dying Infants in the Early Church

The predominant belief of the Western church after Augustine is that infants who die unbaptized would be condemned to hell. However, this was not the view of the earliest Christians:

“And when a child has been born to one of them, they give thanks to God; and if moreover it happen to die in childhood, they give thanks to God the more, as for one who has passed through the world without sins. And further if they see that any one of them dies in his ungodliness or in his sins, for him they grieve bitterly, and sorrow as for one who goes to meet his doom” (Aristides, Apology, Chapter 15).

“Yet not all who rise again are to be judged: for if only a just judgment were the cause of the resurrection, it would of course follow that those who had done neither evil nor good — namely, very young children — would not rise again; but seeing that all are to rise again, those who have died in infancy as well as others” (Athenagoras, On the Resurrection of the Dead, Chapter 14).

“And they who believed from the twelfth mountain, which was white, are the following: they are as infant children, in whose hearts no evil originates; nor did they know what wickedness is, but always remained as children. Such accordingly, without doubt, dwell in the kingdom of God, because they defiled in nothing the commandments of God; but they remained like children all the days of their life in the same mind. All of you, then, who shall remain steadfast, and be as children, without doing evil, will be more honored than all who have been previously mentioned; for all infants are honorable before God, and are the first persons with Him. Blessed, then, are ye who put away wickedness from yourselves, and put on innocence. As the first of all will you live unto God” (Shepherd of Hermas, Similitude 9 29:1-3).

“He, since He was Himself an infant, so arranging it that human infants should be martyrs, slain, according to the Scriptures, for the sake of Christ, who was born in Bethlehem of Judah, in the city of David” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 3, Chapter 16, Section 4).

“And again, who are they that have been saved and received the inheritance? Those, doubtless, who do believe God, and who have continued in His love; as did Caleb [the son] of Jephunneh and Joshua [the son] of Nun, and innocent children, who have had no sense of evil” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 4, Chapter 28, Section 3).

“I must compel you to determine (what you mean by Hades), which of its two regions, the region of the good or of the bad. If you mean the bad, (all I can say is, that) even now the souls of the wicked deserve to be consigned to those abodes; if you mean the good, why should you judge to be unworthy of such a resting-place the souls of infants and of virgins, and those which, by reason of their condition in life were pure and innocent” (Tertullian, A Treatise on the Soul, Chapter 56).

“The Creator, on the contrary, let loose bears against children, in order to avenge His prophet Elisha, who had been mocked by them. This antithesis is impudent enough, since it throws together things so different as infants and children, — an age still innocent, and one already capable of discretion — able to mock, if not to blaspheme. As therefore God is a just God, He spared not impious children, exacting as He does honor for every time of life, and especially, of course, from youth. And as God is good, He so loves infants as to have blessed the midwives in Egypt, when they protected the infants of the Hebrews which were in peril from Pharaoh’s command. Christ therefore shares this kindness with the Creator” (Tertullian, Against Marcion, Book 4, Chapter 23).

“Let them become Christians when they have become able to know Christ. Why does the innocent period of life hasten to the ‘remission of sins?’” (Tertullian, On Baptism, Chapter 18).

Apostolic Succession in the Early Church Fathers

In the New Testament, the word tradition describes the teachings of the church that are to be passed down from one generation to the next (1 Cor 11:2; 2 Tim 2:2). Tradition is simply another way of describing the teachings of Scripture as rightly interpreted by the apostles and handed down to those who came after them. And throughout church history, the church has been confronted with many false teachers and heresies that have departed from the traditions of the apostles. The concept of apostolic succession was one of the ways that the church tried to demonstrate that they held to the traditions of the apostles.

The church father Irenaeus used apostolic succession as a powerful argument against the Gnostics who had no historical precedent for their beliefs. What church leader instructed by the apostles ever taught what the Gnostics did?

But the church fathers believed that the succession of right doctrine is more important than the genetic succession of one bishop to another because many bishops have taught false doctrine like Pope Honorius.

“So, preaching both in the country and in the towns, they appointed their first fruits, when they had tested them by the Spirit, to be bishops and deacons for the future believers. And this was nο new thing they did, for indeed something had been written about bishops and deacons many years ago; for somewhere thus says the scripture: ‘I will appoint their bishops in righteousness and their deacons in faith'” (1 Clement 42:4-5; Michael Holmes’ translation).

“Our apostles likewise knew, through our Lord Jesus Christ, that there would be strife over the bishop’s office. For this reason, therefore, having received complete foreknowledge, they appointed the leaders mentioned earlier and afterwards they gave the offices a permanent character; that is, if they should die, other approved men should succeed to their ministry. These, therefore, who were appointed by them or, later οn, by other reputable men with the consent of the whole church, and who have ministered to the flock of Christ blamelessly, humbly, peaceably, and unselfishly, and for a long time have been well-spoken of by all-these we consider to be unjustly removed from their ministry. For it will be nο small sin for us if we depose from the bishop’s office those who have offered the gifts blamelessly and in holiness. Blessed are those presbyters who have gone οn ahead, who took their departure at a mature and fruitful age, for they need no longer fear that someone may remove them from their established place. For we see that you have removed certain people, their good conduct notwithstanding, from the ministry that had been held in honor by them blamelessly” (1 Clement 44:1-6; Michael Holmes’ translation).

“Appoint, therefore, for yourselves, bishops and deacons worthy of the Lord, men meek, and not lovers of money, and truthful and proved; for they also render to you the service of prophets and teachers” (Didache 15:1).

“We have learned from none others the plan of our salvation, than from those through whom the Gospel has come down to us, which they did at one time proclaim in public, and, at a later period, by the will of God, handed down to us in the Scriptures, to be the ground and pillar of our faith. For it is unlawful to assert that they preached before they possessed ‘perfect knowledge,’ as some do even venture to say, boasting themselves as improvers of the apostles” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 3, Chapter 1, Section 1).

“But, again, when we refer them to that tradition which originates from the apostles, [and] which is preserved by means of the succession of presbyters in the Churches, they object to tradition, saying that they themselves are wiser not merely than the presbyters, but even than the apostles, because they have discovered the unadulterated truth. For [they maintain] that the apostles intermingled the things of the law with the words of the Savior; and that not the apostles alone, but even the Lord Himself, spoke as at one time from the Demiurge, at another from the intermediate place, and yet again from the Pleroma, but that they themselves, indubitably, unsulliedly, and purely, have knowledge of the hidden mystery: this is, indeed, to blaspheme their Creator after a most impudent manner! It comes to this, therefore, that these men do now consent neither to Scripture nor to tradition” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 3, Chapter 2, Section 2).

“It is within the power of all, therefore, in every Church, who may wish to see the truth, to contemplate clearly the tradition of the apostles manifested throughout the whole world; and we are in a position to reckon up those who were by the apostles instituted bishops in the Churches, and [to demonstrate] the succession of these men to our own times; those who neither taught nor knew of anything like what these [heretics] rave about” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 3, Chapter 3, Section 1).

“In this order, and by this succession, the ecclesiastical tradition from the apostles, and the preaching of the truth, have come down to us. And this is most abundant proof that there is one and the same vivifying faith, which has been preserved in the Church from the apostles until now, and handed down in truth” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 3, Chapter 3, Section 3).

“Wherefore it is incumbent to obey the presbyters who are in the Church, — those who, as I have shown, possess the succession from the apostles; those who, together with the succession of the episcopate, have received the certain gift of truth, according to the good pleasure of the Father. But [it is also incumbent] to hold in suspicion others who depart from the primitive succession, and assemble themselves together in any place whatsoever, [looking upon them] either as heretics of perverse minds, or as schismaries puffed up and self-pleasing, or again as hypocrites, acting thus for the sake of lucre and vainglory. For all these have fallen from the truth. And the heretics, indeed, who bring strange fire to the altar of God — namely, strange doctrines — shall be burned up by the fire from heaven, as were Nadab and Abiud” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 4, Chapter 26, Section 2).

“Where, therefore, the gifts of the Lord have been placed, there it behooves us to learn the truth, [namely,] from those who possess that succession of the Church which is from the apostles, and among whom exists that which is sound and blameless in conduct, as well as that which is unadulterated and incorrupt in speech. For these also preserve this faith of ours in one God who created all things; and they increase that love [which we have] for the Son of God, who accomplished such marvelous dispensations for our sake: and they expound the Scriptures to us without danger, neither blaspheming God, nor dishonoring the patriarchs, nor despising the prophets” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 4, Chapter 26, Section 5).

“Such being the case, it is evident, from the high antiquity and perfect truth of the Church, that these later heresies, and those yet subsequent to them in time, were new inventions falsified [from the truth]. From what has been said, then, it is my opinion that the true Church, that which is really ancient, is one, and that in it those who according to God’s purpose are just, are enrolled. For from the very reason that God is one, and the Lord one, that which is in the highest degree honorable is lauded in consequence of its singleness, being an imitation of the one first principle. In the nature of the One, then, is associated in a joint heritage the one Church, which they strive to cut asunder into many sects. Therefore in substance and idea, in origin, in pre-eminence, we say that the ancient and Catholic Church is alone, collecting as it does into the unity of the one faith — which results from the peculiar Testaments, or rather the one Testament in different times by the will of the one God, through one Lord” (Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, Book 7, Chapter 17).

“But if there be any (heresies) which are bold enough to plant themselves in the midst of the apostolic age, that they may thereby seem to have been handed down by the apostles, because they existed in the time of the apostles, we can say: Let them produce the original records of their churches; let them unfold the roll of their bishops, running down in due succession from the beginning in such a manner that [that first bishop of theirs] shall be able to show for his ordainer and predecessor some one of the apostles or of apostolic men, — a man, moreover, who continued steadfast with the apostles. For this is the manner in which the apostolic churches transmit their registers: as the church of Smyrna, which records that Polycarp was placed therein by John; as also the church of Rome, which makes Clement to have been ordained in like manner by Peter. In exactly the same way the other churches likewise exhibit (their several worthies), whom, as having been appointed to their episcopal places by apostles, they regard as transmitters of the apostolic seed. Let the heretics contrive something of the same kind. For after their blasphemy, what is there that is unlawful for them (to attempt)? But should they even effect the contrivance, they will not advance a step. For their very doctrine, after comparison with that of the apostles, will declare, by its own diversity and contrariety, that it had for its author neither an apostle nor an apostolic man; because, as the apostles would never have taught things which were self-contradictory, so the apostolic men would not have inculcated teaching different from the apostles, unless they who received their instruction from the apostles went and preached in a contrary manner. To this test, therefore will they be submitted for proof by those churches, who, although they derive not their founder from apostles or apostolic men (as being of much later date, for they are in fact being founded daily), yet, since they agree in the same faith, they are accounted as not less apostolic because they are akin in doctrine. Then let all the heresies, when challenged to these two tests by our apostolic church, offer their proof of how they deem themselves to be apostolic” (Tertullian, Prescription Against Heretics, Chapter 32).

“We do wrong in venerating the Church of God in roofs and edifices. Is it doubtful that in these Antichrist will sit? Safer to me are mountains, and woods, and lakes, amid dungeons, and whirlpools; for in these, either hidden or immersed, did prophets prophesy” (Hilary of Poitiers, Contra Arianos vel Auxentium Mediolanensem liber [PL 10.616]).

“Thus, and for these reasons, by the vote of the whole people, not in the evil fashion which has since prevailed, nor by means of bloodshed and oppression, but in an apostolic and spiritual manner, he is led up to the throne of Saint Mark, to succeed him in piety, no less than in office; in the latter indeed at a great distance from him, in the former, which is the genuine right of succession, following him closely. For unity in doctrine deserves unity in office; and a rival teacher sets up a rival throne; the one is a successor in reality, the other but in name. For it is not the intruder, but he whose rights are intruded upon, who is the successor, not the lawbreaker, but the lawfully appointed, not the man of contrary opinions, but the man of the same faith; if this is not what we mean by successor, he succeeds in the same sense as disease to health, darkness to light, storm to calm, and frenzy to sound sense” (Gregory of Nazianzus, Oration 21, Chapter 8, on Athanasius).

“So the faith of the church must be sought first and foremost. If Christ is to dwell in a house, it undoubtedly must be chosen. But lest an unbelieving people or a heretical teacher deface its home, the church is commanded that the fellowship of heretics be avoided and the synagogue shunned. The dust is to be shaken off your feet lest when the dryness of barren unbelief crumbles the sole of your mind it is stained as if by a dry and sandy soil. . . . Any church which rejects faith and does not possess the foundations of apostolic preaching is to be abandoned lest it be able to stain others with unbelief. The apostle also clearly affirmed this by saying ‘Reject a man that is a heretic after the first admonition’” (Ambrose, Exposition of the Holy Gospel according to Saint Luke, trans. Theodosia Tomkinson (Etna: Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, 1998), Book VI, §68, p. 216-217. On Luke 9:3-5).

“The Church does not consist in walls, but in the truths of her teachings. The Church is there where there is true faith. As a matter of fact, fifteen and twenty years ago, all the church buildings belonged to heretics [namely the Arians], for heretics twenty years ago were in possession of them; but the true Church was there where the true faith was” (Jerome, The Homilies of St. Jerome: Volume 1, On the Psalms, Homily 46, The Fathers of the Church, Volume 48, p. 344 [PL 26.1223]).

“Valens and Ursacius and others associated with them in their wickedness, eminent Christian bishops of course, began to wave their palms, and to say they had not denied that He was a creature, but that He was like other creatures. At that moment the term Usia was abolished: the Nicene Faith stood condemned by acclamation. The whole world groaned, and was astonished to find itself Arian” (Jerome, The Dialogue Against the Luciferians, Chapter 19).

“Whoever dissents from Holy Scripture concerning the head is not in the Church, even if he is found in all places in which the Church is designated. And, in return, whoever is in agreement with Holy Scripture concerning the head and is not in communion with the unity of the Church is not in the Church, since he separates himself from the witnessing of Christ himself concerning Christ’s body, which is the Church” (Augustine, On the Unity of the Church, Chapter 7).

“All such things then removed, let them demonstrate their Church, if they can, not in the speeches and murmurs of African, not in the councils of their bishops, not in the epistles of whatever debates, not in false signs and prodigies, since we are prepared and cautioned against them by the word of the Lord, but in the precept of the law, in the predictions of the prophets, in the songs of the psalms, in the utterances of the one shepherd himself, in the preaching of the evangelists, that is in all the canonical authority of the holy books, and not such that they might gather and cite things that are spoken obscurely or ambiguously or metaphorically which anyone might interpret according to his own opinion as he wishes. Such things cannot be properly understood and explained unless first those things that are said most openly are held with a strong faith” (Augustine, On the Unity of the Church, Chapter 47).

False Accusations Against the Early Christians

The earliest Christians were falsely accused of many crimes by the pagans of their day. They were accused of atheism because they denied the existence of the gods. They were accused of engaging in incest and having sexual orgies because they referred to one another as brother and sister and met in secret for fear of persecution. They were accused of killing children and then engaging in cannibalism because they spoke about eating and drinking the body and blood of Christ.

Slander against Christians is nothing new, and the words of Jesus remind us of that:

Matthew 5:11-12: “Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.”

The following quotations highlight the false accusations made against early Christians followed by some quotations from the medieval era against groups that were considered heretical then:

“And when he came near, the proconsul asked him whether he was Polycarp. On his confessing that he was, [the proconsul] sought to persuade him to deny [Christ], saying, ‘Have respect to thy old age,’ and other similar things, according to their custom, [such as], ‘Swear by the fortune of Caesar; repent, and say, Away with the Atheists.’ But Polycarp, gazing with a stern countenance on all the multitude of the wicked heathen then in the stadium, and waving his hand towards them, while with groans he looked up to heaven, said, ‘Away with the Atheists.’” (Martyrdom of Polycarp 9:2).

“Hence are we called atheists. And we confess that we are atheists, so far as gods of this sort are concerned, but not with respect to the most true God” (Justin Martyr, First Apology, Chapter 6).

“What sober-minded man, then, will not acknowledge that we are not atheists, worshipping as we do the Maker of this universe” (Justin Martyr, First Apology, Chapter 13).

“For I myself, too, when I was delighting in the doctrines of Plato, and heard the Christians slandered, and saw them fearless of death, and of all other things which are counted fearful, perceived that it was impossible that they could be living in wickedness and pleasure. For what sensual or intemperate man, or who that counts it good to feast on human flesh, could welcome death that he might be deprived of his enjoyments, and would not rather continue always the present life, and attempt to escape the observation of the rulers; and much less would he denounce himself when the consequence would be death? This also the wicked demons have now caused to be done by evil men. For having put some to death on account of the accusations falsely brought against us, they also dragged to the torture our domestics, either children or weak women, and by dreadful torments forced them to admit those fabulous actions which they themselves openly perpetrate. . . . For why did we not even publicly profess that these were the things which we esteemed good, and prove that these are the divine philosophy, saying that the mysteries of Saturn are performed when we slay a man, and that when we drink our fill of blood, as it is said we do, we are doing what you do before that idol you honor, and on which you sprinkle the blood not only of irrational animals, but also of men, making a libation of the blood of the slain by the hand of the most illustrious and noble man among you? And imitating Jupiter and the other gods in sodomy and shameless intercourse with woman, might we not bring as our apology the writings of Epicurus and the poets? But because we persuade men to avoid such instruction, and all who practice them and imitate such examples” (Justin Martyr, Second Apology, Chapter 12).

“For when the Greeks, having arrested the slaves of Christian catechumens, then used force against them, in order to learn from them some secret thing [practiced] among Christians, these slaves, having nothing to say that would meet the wishes of their tormentors, except that they had heard from their masters that the divine communion was the body and blood of Christ, and imagining that it was actually flesh and blood, gave their inquisitors answer to that effect. Then these latter, assuming such to be the case with regard to the practices of Christians, gave information regarding it to other Greeks, and sought to compel the martyrs Sanctus and Blandina to confess, under the influence of torture, [that the allegation was correct]. To these men Blandina replied very admirably in these words: “How should those persons endure such [accusations], who, for the sake of the practice [of piety], did not avail themselves even of the flesh that was permitted [them to eat]?” (Irenaeus, Fragments from the Lost Writings of Irenaeus, Fragment 13).

“Consider, therefore, whether those who teach such things can possibly live indifferently, and be commingled in unlawful intercourse, or, most impious of all, eat human flesh, especially when we are forbidden so much as to witness shows of gladiators, lest we become partakers and abettors of murders. But neither may we see the other spectacles, lest our eyes and ears be defiled, participating in the utterances there sung. For if one should speak of cannibalism, in these spectacles the children of Thyestes and Tereus are eaten; and as for adultery, both in the case of men and of gods, whom they celebrate in elegant language for honors and prizes, this is made the subject of their dramas. But far be it from Christians to conceive any such deeds; for with them temperance dwells, self-restraint is practiced, monogamy is observed” (Theophilus of Antioch, To Autolychus, Book 3, Chapter 15).

“Three things are alleged against us: atheism, Thyestean feasts, Oedipodean intercourse. But if these charges are true, spare no class: proceed at once against our crimes; destroy us root and branch, with our wives and children, if any Christian is found to live like the brutes” (Athenagoras, A Plea for the Christians, Chapter 3).

“Why, the very men who charge us with atheism for not admitting the same gods as they acknowledge, are not agreed among themselves concerning the gods” (Athenagoras, A Plea for the Christians, Chapter 14).

“What man of sound mind, therefore, will affirm, while such is our character, that we are murderers? For we cannot eat human flesh till we have killed some one. The former charge, therefore, being false, if any one should ask them in regard to the second, whether they have seen what they assert, not one of them would be so barefaced as to say that he had. And yet we have slaves, some more and some fewer, by whom we could not help being seen; but even of these, not one has been found to invent even such things against us. For when they know that we cannot endure even to see a man put to death, though justly; who of them can accuse us of murder or cannibalism? Who does not reckon among the things of greatest interest the contests of gladiators and wild beasts, especially those which are given by you? But we, deeming that to see a man put to death is much the same as killing him, have abjured such spectacles. How, then, when we do not even look on, lest we should contract guilt and pollution, can we put people to death? And when we say that those women who use drugs to bring on abortion commit murder, and will have to give an account to God for the abortion, on what principle should we commit murder? For it does not belong to the same person to regard the very fetus in the womb as a created being, and therefore an object of God’s care, and when it has passed into life, to kill it; and not to expose an infant, because those who expose them are chargeable with child-murder” (Athenagoras, A Plea for the Christians, Chapter 35).

“While in your ordinary judicial investigations, on a man’s confession of the crime of murder, or sacrilege, or incest, or treason, to take the points of which we are accused, you are not content to proceed at once to sentence, — you do not take that step till you thoroughly examine the circumstances of the confession — what is the real character of the deed, how often, where, in what way, when he has done it, who were privy to it, and who actually took part with him in it. Nothing like this is done in our case, though the falsehoods disseminated about us ought to have the same sifting, that it might be found how many murdered children each of us had tasted; how many incests each of us had shrouded in darkness” (Tertullian, Apology, Chapter 2).

“Monsters of wickedness, we are accused of observing a holy rite in which we kill a little child and then eat it; in which, after the feast, we practice incest, the dogs — our pimps, forsooth, overturning the lights and getting us the shamelessness of darkness for our impious lusts. This is what is constantly laid to our charge, and yet you take no pains to elicit the truth of what we have been so long accused. Either bring, then, the matter to the light of day if you believe it, or give it no credit as having never inquired into it” (Tertullian, Apology, Chapter 7).

“They know one another by secret marks and insignia, and they love one another almost before they know one another. Everywhere also there is mingled among them a certain religion of lust, and they call one another promiscuously brothers and sisters, that even a not unusual debauchery may by the intervention of that sacred name become incestuous: it is thus that their vain and senseless superstition glories in crimes. Nor, concerning these things, would intelligent report speak of things so great and various, and requiring to be prefaced by an apology, unless truth were at the bottom of it. I hear that they adore the head of an ass, that basest of creatures, consecrated by I know not what silly persuasion, — a worthy and appropriate religion for such manners. Some say that they worship the virilia of their pontiff and priest, and adore the nature, as it were, of their common parent. I know not whether these things are false; certainly suspicion is applicable to secret and nocturnal rites; and he who explains their ceremonies by reference to a man punished by extreme suffering for his wickedness, and to the deadly wood of the cross, appropriates fitting altars for reprobate and wicked men, that they may worship what they deserve. Now the story about the initiation of young novices is as much to be detested as it is well known. An infant covered over with meal, that it may deceive the unwary, is placed before him who is to be stained with their rites: this infant is slain by the young pupil, who has been urged on as if to harmless blows on the surface of the meal, with dark and secret wounds. Thirstily — O horror! — they lick up its blood; eagerly they divide its limbs. By this victim they are pledged together; with this consciousness of wickedness they are covenanted to mutual silence. Such sacred rites as these are more foul than any sacrileges. And of their banqueting it is well known all men speak of it everywhere; even the speech of our Cirtensian testifies to it. On a solemn day they assemble at the feast, with all their children, sisters, mothers, people of every sex and of every age. There, after much feasting, when the fellowship has grown warm, and the fervor of incestuous lust has grown hot with drunkenness, a dog that has been tied to the chandelier is provoked, by throwing a small piece of offal beyond the length of a line by which he is bound, to rush and spring; and thus the conscious light being overturned and extinguished in the shameless darkness, the connections of abominable lust involve them in the uncertainty of fate. Although not all in fact, yet in consciousness all are alike incestuous, since by the desire of all of them everything is sought for which can happen in the act of each individual” (Minucius Felix, Octavius, Chapter 9).

“I purposely pass over many things, for those that I have mentioned are already too many; and that all these, or the greater part of them, are true, the obscurity of their vile religion declares. For why do they endeavor with such pains to conceal and to cloak whatever they worship, since honorable things always rejoice in publicity, while crimes are kept secret? Why have they no altars, no temples, no acknowledged images? Why do they never speak openly, never congregate freely, unless for the reason that what they adore and conceal is either worthy of punishment, or something to be ashamed of?” (Minucius Felix, Octavius, Chapter 10).

“But how unjust it is, to form a judgment on things unknown and unexamined, as you do! Believe us ourselves when penitent, for we also were the same as you, and formerly, while yet blind and obtuse, thought the same things as you; to wit, that the Christians worshipped monsters, devoured infants, mingled in incestuous banquets. And we did not perceive that such fables as these were always set afloat by those (newsmongers), and were never either inquired into nor proved; and that in so long a time no one had appeared to betray (their doings), to obtain not only pardon for their crime, but also favor for its discovery: moreover, that it was to this extent not evil, that a Christian, when accused, neither blushed nor feared, and that he only repented that he had not been one before. We, however, when we undertook to defend and protect some sacrilegious and incestuous persons, and even parricides, did not think that these (Christians) were to be heard at all. Sometimes even, when we affected to pity them, we were more cruelly violent against them, so as to torture them when they confessed, that they might deny, to wit, that they might not perish; making use of a perverse inquisition against them, not to elicit the truth, but to compel a falsehood. And if any one, by reason of greater weakness, overcome with suffering, and conquered, should deny that he was a Christian, we showed favor to him, as if by forswearing that name he had at once atoned for all his deeds by that simple denial. Do not you acknowledge that we felt and did the same as you feel and do? when, if reason and not the instigation of a demon were to judge, they should rather have been pressed not to disavow themselves Christians, but to confess themselves guilty of incests, of abominations, of sacred rites polluted, of infants immolated. For with these and such as these stories, did those same demons fill up the ears of the ignorant against us, to the horror of their execration. Nor yet was it wonderful, since the common report of men, which is, always fed by the scattering of falsehoods, is wasted away when the truth is brought to light. Thus this is the business of demons, for by them false rumors are both sown and cherished. Thence arises what you say that you hear, that an ass’s head is esteemed among us a divine thing. Who is such a fool as to worship this? Who is so much more foolish as to believe that it is an object of worship? unless that you even consecrate whole asses in your stables, together with your Epona, and religiously devours those same asses with Isis. Also you offer up and worship the heads of oxen and of wethers, and you dedicate gods mingled also of a goat and a man, and gods with the faces of dogs and lions. Do you not adore and feed Apis the ox, with the Egyptians? And you do not condemn their sacred rites instituted in honor of serpents, and crocodiles, and other beasts, and birds, and fishes, of which if any one were to kill one of these gods, he is even punished with death. These same Egyptians, together with very many of you, are not more afraid of Isis than they are of the pungency of onions, nor of Serapis more than they tremble at the basest noises produced by the foulness of their bodies. He also who fables against us about our adoration of the members of the priest, tries to confer upon us what belongs really to himself” (Minucius Felix, Octavius, Chapter 28).

“And now I should wish to meet him who says or believes that we are initiated by the slaughter and blood of an infant. Think you that it can be possible for so tender, so little a body to receive those fatal wounds; for any one to shed, pour forth, and drain that new blood of a youngling, and of a man scarcely come into existence? No one can believe this, except one who can dare to do it. And I see that you at one time expose your begotten children to wild beasts and to birds; at another, that you crush them when strangled with a miserable kind of death. There are some women who, by drinking medical preparations, extinguish the source of the future man in their very bowels, and thus commit a parricide before they bring forth. And these things assuredly come down from the teaching of your gods” (Minucius Felix, Octavius, Chapter 30).

“Thus you continue the story of incest, even although you have no consciousness of your crime. But we maintain our modesty not in appearance, but in our heart we gladly abide by the bond of a single marriage; in the desire of procreating, we know either one wife, or none at all. We practice sharing in banquets, which are not only modest, but also sober: for we do not indulge in entertainments nor prolong our feasts with wine; but we temper our joyousness with gravity, with chaste discourse, and with body even more chaste (divers of us unviolated) enjoy rather than make a boast of a perpetual virginity of a body. So far, in fact, are they from indulging in incestuous desire, that with some even the (idea of a) modest intercourse of the sexes causes a blush. Neither do we at once stand on the level of the lowest of the people, if we refuse your honors and purple robes; and we are not fastidious, if we all have a discernment of one good, but are assembled together with the same quietness with which we live as individuals; and we are not garrulous in corners, although you either blush or are afraid to hear us in public. And that day by day the number of us is increased, is not a ground for a charge of error, but is a testimony which claims praise; for, in a fair mode of life, our actual number both continues and abides undiminished, and strangers increase it. Thus, in short, we do not distinguish our people by some small bodily mark, as you suppose, but easily enough by the sign of innocency and modesty. Thus we love one another, to your regret, with a mutual love, because we do not know how to hate. Thus we call one another, to your envy, brethren: as being men born of one God and Parent, and companions in faith, and as fellow-heirs in hope. You, however, do not recognize one another, and you are cruel in your mutual hatreds; nor do you acknowledge one another as brethren, unless indeed for the purpose of fratricide” (Minucius Felix, Octavius, Chapter 31).

“While these things were taking place, another military commander, whom the Romans call Dux, seized some infamous women in the market-place at Damascus in Phoenicia, and by threatening to inflict tortures upon them compelled them to make a written declaration that they had once been Christians and that they were acquainted with their impious deeds, — that in their very churches they committed licentious acts; and they uttered as many other slanders against our religion as he wished them to. Having taken down their words in writing, he communicated them to the emperor, who commanded that these documents also should be published in every place and city” (Eusebius, Church History, Book 9, Chapter 5).

It is a bit ironic that these same ridiculous accusations were used by the Catholics against certain Cathars who were said to believe in the heresy of docetism:

“They gathered, indeed, on certain nights in a designated house, everyone carrying a light in his hands, and like merry-makers they chanted the names of demons until suddenly they saw descend among them a demon in the likeness of some sort of little beast. As soon as the apparition was visible to everyone, all the lights were forthwith extinguished and each, with the least possible delay, seized the woman who first came to hand, to abuse her, without thought of sin. Whether it were mother, sister, or nun whom they embraced, they deemed it an act of sanctity and piety to lie with her. When a child was born of this most filthy union, on the eighth day thereafter a great fire was lighted and the child was purified by fire in the manner of the old pagans, and so was cremated. Its ashes were collected and preserved with as great veneration as Christian reverence is wont to guard the body of Christ, being given to the sick as a viaticum at the moment of their departing this world” (The Narrative of Paul, A Monk of Chartres in 1022. As cited by Walter L. Wakefield and Austin P. Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages, p. 78-79).

The same accusations are made against another group described as docetists:

“They hold meetings in cellars and secret places, the sexes mingling freely. When (qui) candles have been lighted, in the sight of all, light women with bare buttocks (it is said) offer themselves to a certain one lying behind them. Directly the candles are extinguished, they all cry out together ‘Chaos!’ and each one lies with her who first comes to hand. Now if it so happens that a woman has there been gotten with child, as soon as the offspring is delivered, it is brought back to the same place. A great fire is lit, and the child is thrown from hand to hand through the flames by those sitting around the fire until it is dead. It is then reduced to ashes; from the ashes bread is made, of which a morsel is given to each as a sacrament. Once that has been eaten, it is very rarely that one is brought back to his senses from that heresy” (Guibert of Nogent on the Cathars in 1114. As cited by Walter L. Wakefield and Austin P. Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages, p. 103).

Bernard of Clairvaux describes the Henricians this way in his crusade against Henry of Lausanne and other heretics:

“I believe, rather, that, conscious of the shameful nature of their mystery, they blush to make it known. For they are reported to engage secretly in abominable and obscene practices, just as the hinder parts of foxes have an evil odor” (A Sermon by Bernard of Clairvaux Against Heresy in 1144. As cited by Walter L. Wakefield and Austin P. Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages, p. 134).

Walter Map describes a Cathar-like sect that rejected transubstantiation:

“Many, however, have recovered their senses and have returned to the faith. These have told how, about the first watch of the night, when gates, doors, and windows have been closed, the groups sit waiting in silence in their respective synagogues, and a black cat of marvelous size climbs down a rope which hangs in their midst. On seeing it, they put out the lights. They do not sing hymns or repeat them distinctly, but hum through clenched teeth and pantingly feel their way toward the place where they saw their lord. When they have found him they kiss him, each the more humbly as he is the more inflamed with frenzy – some the feet, more under the tail, most the private parts. And, as if drawing license for lasciviousness from the place of foulness, each seizes the man or woman next to him and they commingle as long as each is able to prolong the wantonness” (Walter Map on A Victory of Faith Over ‘Heretical Magic’ in 1182. As cited by Walter L. Wakefield and Austin P. Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages, p. 254-255).

Bernard Gui slanders the Waldensians by accusing them of immorality:

“Among these are the celebration of Mass on Holy Thursday, as we have said above; the detestable intercourse of any man with any woman, which is indiscriminately practiced in darkness; the apparition of a cat and sprinkling with the tail; and various other practices which are discussed in more detail in little tracts dealing with the subject” (Bernard Gui on the Waldensians. As cited by Walter L. Wakefield and Austin P. Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages, p. 392).

Were the Paulicians Christians?

I have written before about the Albigensians and explored the question of whether they were true Christians or not. Now, I would like to focus on another group in the “trail of blood” called the Paulicians who thrived in modern-day Armenia from the seventh to the tenth centuries. According to Photius, the name Paulician comes from their claim that they followed the teachings of the Apostle Paul.

Unlike the Albigensians, when it comes to discerning what the Paulicians really believed, none of their own writings have survived. So, we are dependent on those who wrote about them to discern what they believed and all of the authors who wrote about the Paulicians agree that they held to beliefs that were similar to the heresy of Marcionism.

The historian Philip Schaff summarizes the beliefs of the Paulicians based on the writings of these authors:

“(1) Dualism was their fundamental principle. The good God created the spiritual world; the bad God or demiurge created the sensual world. The former is worshipped by the Paulicians, i.e. the true Christians, the latter by the ‘Romans’ or Catholics. (2) Contempt of matter. The body is the seat of evil desire, and is itself impure. It holds the divine soul as in a prison. (3) Docetism. Christ descended from heaven in an ethereal body, passed through the womb of Mary as through a channel, suffered in appearance, but not in reality, and began the process of redemption of the spirit from the chains of matter. (4) The Virgin Mary was not ‘the mother of God,’ and has a purely external connection with Jesus. Peter the Sicilian says, that they did not even allow her a place among the good and virtuous women. The true theotokos is the heavenly Jerusalem, from which Christ came out and to which he returned. (5) They rejected the Old Testament as the work of the Demiurge, and the Epistles of Peter. They regarded Peter as a false apostle, because he denied his master, preached Judaism rather than Christianity, was the enemy of Paul (Gal. 2:11) and the pillar of the Catholic hierarchy. They accepted the four Gospels, the Acts, fourteen Epistles of Paul, and the Epistles of James, John and Jude. At a later period, however, they seem to have confined themselves, like Marcion, to the writings of Paul and Luke, adding to them probably the Gospel of John. They claimed also to possess an Epistle to the Laodiceans; but this was probably identical with the Epistle to the Ephesians. Their method of exposition was allegorical. (6) They rejected the priesthood, the sacraments, the worship of saints and relics, the sign of the cross (except in cases of serious illness), and all externals in religion. Baptism means only the baptism of the Spirit; the communion with the body and blood of Christ is only a communion with his word and doctrine. In the place of priests the Paulicians had teachers and pastors, companions or itinerant missionaries, and scribes. In the place of churches they had meeting-houses called ‘oratories’; but the founders and leaders were esteemed as ‘apostles’ and ‘prophets.’ There is no trace of the Manichaean distinction between two classes of the electi and credentes. (7) Their morals were ascetic. They aimed to emancipate the spirit from the power of the material body, without, however, condemning marriage and the eating of flesh; but the Baanites ran into the opposite extreme of an antinomian abuse of the flesh, and reveled in licentiousness, even incest. In both extremes they resembled the Gnostic sects. According to Photius, the Paulicians were also utterly deficient in veracity, and denied their faith without scruple on the principle that falsehood is justifiable for a good end” (History of the Christian Church, Book 4, Section 131).

In his paper “The Key of Truth: A Monument of Armenian Unitarianism,” Sean Finnegan outlines what the Paulicians believed according to their critics:

1. Dualism: an evil God made our world while the good God has power only over the world to come (PS 36, 38; PH 9; AFA 1; AFB 4, 8, 13; AFC 1, 6, 8; EZ b)

2. Rejection of the Old Testament as scripture (PS 42, 81; PH 14; AFA 7)

3. Rejection of 1-2 Peter as scripture (PS 44; PH 14)

4. Rejection of baptism, allegorizing it as Christ’s words (PH 16; AFB 5; AFC 19)

5. Rejection of communion, allegorizing it as Christ’s words (PS 40; PH 12; AFB 5, 14)

6. Rejection of Mary as the mother of Jesus, interpreting her as heavenly Jerusalem (PS 39, 117; PH 11; AFB 5; EZ e)

7. Docetism: the heavenly Christ brought his body from heaven and did not take flesh from Mary (PS 39; PH 11; AFA 4, AFB 12, AFC 2, EZ e).

The abbreviations for the sources that he references are: PS = Peter of Sicily, PH = Peter the Higoumenos, AFA = Abjuration Formula A, AFB = Abjuration Formula B, AFC = Abjuration Formula C, EZ = Euthymius Zigabenus.

Peter of Sicily claimed that the Paulicians were Manichaeans who borrowed their doctrine from Manichaeism:

“There are not two separate groups, but the Paulicians are also Manichaeans, who have added the foul heresy they discovered to the heresy of their predecessors and have sunk in the same gulf of perdition” (As cited in Christian Dualist Heresies in the Byzantine World c. 650 – c. 1450, ed. Janet Hamilton and Bernard Hamilton, p. 7).

He said that they rejected the Old Testament just as Marcion did in the second century:

“Fifth, they do not accept any book of the Old Testament, calling the prophets cheats and brigands, as will be shown at more length later, in its proper place. They accept only the four holy gospels and the fourteen epistles of St Paul, the catholic epistle of James, the three epistles of St John, that of St Jude and the Acts of the Apostles, using the same text as we do” (As cited in Christian Dualist Heresies in the Byzantine World c. 650 – c. 1450, ed. Janet Hamilton and Bernard Hamilton, p. 73).

According to him, the Paulicians believed that the one who created the world was different from the God whom Jesus represented:

“Paulicians say that this is what divides us, that they say that the maker of the cosmos is one god, and that another god, whom they call the heavenly father, has no power in this cosmos but does in the age to come, whereas we confess that there is one same God, creator of all, Lord of all, all-powerful. They say to us, ‘You believe in the maker of the cosmos, we believe in him of whom the Lord speaks in the gospels (John 5.37), saying, ‘You have not heard his voice nor seen his face’” (As cited in Christian Dualist Heresies in the Byzantine World c. 650 – c. 1450, ed. Janet Hamilton and Bernard Hamilton, p. 72).

Euthymius Zigabenus wrote that the Paulicians claimed that another creator or Satan himself is the creator of our world rather than God:

“Some of them say that the Good God is the creator only of the heaven, and introduce some other maker of the earth and what lies between. Some of them (for the error takes many forms) have the audacity to say that the very heavens and all that lies between them and the earth are the creation of the evil one” (As cited in Christian Dualist Heresies in the Byzantine World c. 650 – c. 1450, ed. Janet Hamilton and Bernard Hamilton, p. 172).

I believe that the authors of the information that we have about the Paulicians are trying to accurately depict what they believed so that others could identify the teachings of their movement and recognize it as heresy. If they were intentionally distorting or slandering their beliefs, that would make it more difficult for others to recognize their movement. And they are in agreement when it comes to their beliefs giving us multiple confirming testimonies.

While we do not have primary source material from the Paulicians like we have with the Albigensians, there is one scholar who has argued that we do have a document from them called The Key of Truth.

This manuscript was discovered by Frederick Conybeare in the nineteenth century and he translated it from Armenian and added his own lengthy introduction to it claiming that it was written by the Paulicians. The Key of Truth presents an adoptionist or unitarian view of Jesus rather than a Marcionite one. Conybeare was an adoptionist himself and believed that adoptionism was the primitive teaching of Christianity.

Conybeare believed that the Key of Truth was originally written between the years 800-1200 AD (The Key of Truth, p. xxxii). But the document itself says that it was written in 1782 (The Key of Truth, p. 71) which Conybeare interpreted to mean that it was only copied in 1782 but written before then. However, most modern scholars, such as Anna Ohanjanyan, believe that The Key of Truth was written in the eighteenth century based on this statement and the modern style of the Armenian language that it uses. The document also uses our modern system of verse numbering when it quotes the Bible and these verse numbers were not put into the New Testament until 1555 by the Greek scholar Robert Estienne, also known as Stephanus.

After reading The Key of Truth, it is evident that the author was not a Marcionite. He wrote that the true God created all things:

“First, the heavenly Father, the true God, fashioned (or created) the heavens with all that belongs thereto, and the earth with all its kinds” (The Key of Truth, p. 114).

What makes interpreting The Key of Truth challenging is that a later editor, who did not believe in adoptionism or unitarianism, erased many of the references to Jesus being created from the document. However, the original reading is still barely visible and was placed in brackets by Conybeare in his translation.

The author believed that Jesus was created by the Father:

“And so it was that it pleased the heavenly Father in pity [to create] the new Adam out of the same deceitful blood. But [the created] man Jesus knew his Father, and by inspiration of the Holy Spirit came to St. John in all gentleness and humility to be baptised by him” (The Key of Truth, p. 79).

“Forasmuch as the [created] man Jesus became very faithful to his Father, for this reason, the Father bestowed on him a name of praise which is above every name” (The Key of Truth, p. 80).

“And when his [maker] took away the feasting and the fellow-converse from him, then he hungered” (The Key of Truth, p. 81).

The author believed that we should address prayer to Jesus even though he was made by his Father:

“And here must we say this prayer before Christ. ‘O sweet Lord of mine, Jesus Christ, we worship, we pray, we entreat and beseech thine all-powerful Lordship, who art at the right hand of thy Father [and maker], mediate and intercede for us sinners now and in the hour of our death. Amen’” (The Key of Truth, p. 84).

But the editor did not always erase the references to Jesus being created:

“Yet nevertheless out of thy divine compassion thou didst create the new man Jesus, as the holy Paul saith: ‘By man came death and by man salvation’” (The Key of Truth, p. 108).

“Thus, previously to Mary’s bearing the new-created Adam, Gabriel the archangel pronounces her a virgin and greets her” (The Key of Truth, p. 114).

The editor did not erase the reference to the Holy Spirit being made:

“Blessed art thou, Spirit of the Heavenly Father, forasmuch as thou wast made by the Father, and coming, didst give unto our Lord Jesus Christ authority over all flesh” (The Key of Truth, p. 100).

The author uses the adjective “increate” to describe the Father as uncreated in contrast to the Son who is created:

“When therefore he had pleased his increate and loved Father, at once the Spirit led him on to the mountain of temptation” (The Key of Truth, p. 80).

“Cleanse their spirits and minds, and make them a temple and dwelling-place of the Father increate, of the Son our intercessor, now and ever and unto eternity of eternities” (The Key of Truth, p. 100).

A humorous line in the document states that you can’t be a pastor if you are too short or too tall!

“Let him not be tall to excess above all men, nor let him be shorter than all men” (The Key of Truth, p. 95).

Conybeare’s work is the reason why so many people are confused about what the Paulicians really believed. Were they Marcionites or were they adoptionists as Conybeare believed? After comparing what the original critics of Paulicianism said about them with the teachings of The Key of Truth, it seems obvious that these are two different religious movements with contradictory beliefs that existed at two different times in history. And neither of them were Christian or Baptist.

Conybeare’s conclusions about Paulicianism is not the first time that he has been wrong about something. He also infamously argued that the triune baptismal formula of Matthew 28:19 was a later addition to the Gospel of Matthew even though every Greek manuscript of Matthew 28 that we have has this baptismal formula in it. Conybeare’s arguments were refuted by F. H. Chase in his article “The Lord’s Command to Baptize” and then by Bernard Cuneo in his dissertation by the same title. Conybeare’s beliefs about the Paulicians and Matthew 28:19 were motivated by his rejection of the Trinity rather than the evidence.

Reformers before Martin Luther: Girolamo Savonarola

A controversial figure on the eve of the Reformation was Girolamo Savonarola who preached against the immorality and corruption of the church during the reign of Pope Alexander VI. Even though Savonarola had been ordered to cease preaching, he would not keep quiet, and as a result, he was excommunicated from the church. And in 1498, he and two other friars were hanged and burned to death.

Savonarola said this about the sad state of the clergy of his day:

“In these days, prelates and preachers are chained to the earth by the love of earthly things. The care of souls is no longer their concern. They are content with the receipt of revenue. The preachers preach to please princes and to be praised by them. They have done worse. They have not only destroyed the Church of God. They have built up a new Church after their own pattern. Go to Rome and see! In the mansions of the great prelates there is no concern save for poetry and the oratorical art. Go thither and see! Thou shalt find them all with the books of the humanities in their hands and telling one another that they can guide mens’ souls by means of Virgil, Horace and Cicero. . . . The prelates of former days had fewer gold mitres and chalices and what few they possessed were broken up and given to relieve the needs of the poor. But our prelates, for the sake of obtaining chalices, will rob the poor of their sole means of support. Dost thou not know what I would tell thee! What doest thou, O Lord! Arise, and come to deliver thy Church from the hands of devils, from the hands of tyrants, from the hands of iniquitous prelates” (As cited by Philip Schaff, History of the Christian Church, Book 6, Section 76).

The historian Philip Schaff summarizes the content of his preaching against the sins of the church:

“His denunciations of the corruption prevailing in the Church became more bold. The tonsure, he cried, is the seat of all iniquity. It begins in Rome where the clergy make mock of Christ and the saints; yea, are worse than Turks and worse than Moors. They traffic in the sacraments. They sell benefices to the highest bidder. Have not the priests in Rome courtesans and grooms and horses and dogs? Have they not palaces full of tapestries and silks, of perfumes and lackeys? Seemeth it, that this is the Church of God? Every Roman priest, he said, had his concubine. No longer do they speak of nephews but of their sons and daughters. Savonarola even sought to prove from the pulpit that the papal brief of excommunication proceeded from the devil, inasmuch as it was hostile to godly living” (History of the Christian Church, Book 6, Section 76).

Savonarola rejected the authority of Pope Alexander VI because of his sinful lifestyle. While Alexander claimed to be the pope, he was not a true pope in God’s sight, a position similar to that of sedevacantism today:

“The Church is teeming with abominations from the crown of her head to the soles of her feet. Yet, not only do you apply no remedy, but you do homage to the cause of the woes by which she is defiled. . . . Now I testify, God being my witness, that this Alexander is no pope, nor can he be held as one. Leaving aside the mortal sin of simony by which he obtained the papal chair and daily sells the benefices of the Church to the highest bidder, and also leaving aside his other evident vices, I declare solemnly that he is no Christian and believes in no God. Infidelity can go no further” (As cited by Pierre Van Paassen, A Crown of Fire: The Life and Times of Girolamo Savonarola, p. 267).

Savonarola taught that the Bible is self-attesting to its own authority and must be the basis for Christian preaching:

“Fra Girolamo wants to make it very clear that God’s Word has authority by virtue of the fact that it is God’s Word. He says to his congregation, if you ask me about the authority of my preaching, I would say this: what I say that comes from Scripture, what I say that is Gospel, has authority; when what I say comes from elsewhere, then you are not bound to believe it” (As cited by Hughes Oliphant Old, The Reading and Preaching of the Scriptures in the Worship of the Christian Church, vol. 3, p. 581).

His doctrine of salvation was influenced by Augustine’s theology of grace. Our salvation and good works are the result of God’s predestination of us and not the other way around:

“The Scriptures are very plain. They tell us, not in one place, but in many, that not only the end of our well-doing, but likewise its beginning, cometh to us from God. In all our good works it is God who works through us. It is therefore untrue that the grace of God is obtained by pre-existing works and merits, that through them we are predestined to everlasting life, as though works and merits were the cause of predestination. It is all the contrary, for works and merits are the effect of predestination, and the divine will the cause of predestination, as we have said before” (As cited by Jim Vineyard, Great Preachers and Their Preaching: Savonarola, Revealing God’s Righteousness, p. 38).

Martin Luther was fourteen years old when Savonarola was put to death and he would continue the reformation so many others had begun.

Reformers before Martin Luther: Wessel Gansfort

The German theologian Wessel Gansfort believed in many of the same doctrines that Martin Luther would later argue for such as sola Scriptura. The historian Philip Schaff summarizes his doctrine:

“Wessel enjoyed a reputation for great learning. He escaped arraignment at the hands of the Inquisition, but was violently attacked after his death in a tract on indulgences, by Jacob Hoeck, Dean of Naaldwyk. None of Wessel’s writings were published till after the outbreak of the Reformation. Although he did not reach the doctrine of justification by faith, he declared that pope and councils may err and he defined the Church to be the communion of the saints. The unity of the Church does not lie in the pope — unitas ecclesiae sub uno papa tantum accidentalis est, adeo ut non sit necessaria. He laid stress upon the faith of the believer in partaking of the eucharist or, rather, upon his hunger and thirst after the sacrament. But he did not deny the sacrifice of the mass or the validity of the communion under one kind. He gave up the judicial element in priestly absolution. There is no such thing as works of supererogation, for each is under obligation to do all he can and to do less is to sin. The prerogative of the keys belongs to all believers. Plenary indulgences are a detestable invention of the papacy to fill its treasury” (History of the Christian Church, Book 6, Section 75).

Gansfort asserted the supreme authority of Scripture over the novelty of the church’s teaching about indulgences:

“Therefore, at that time not everyone believed in indulgences nor were those who sought after the truth with genuine concern heretical. It certainly seemed to me that for not inconsiderable reasons they dissociated themselves from the unproven position of the popes on the grounds of compelling loyalty to the undoubtable authority of Scripture. Let me speak more openly: as long as it seems to me that the pope or theologians or any school assert a position contradicting the truth of Scripture, my concern for scriptural truth obliges me to give it first place. . . . But in every case I owe more respect to canonical Scripture than to human assertions, regardless of who holds them. It is not necessary to recall how great are the errors concerning indulgences which the Roman curia has conjured up and propagated like a plague” (From the Letter in Reply to Hoeck by Wessel Gansfort, as cited by Heiko Oberman, Forerunners of the Reformation, p. 99-100).

Like Jan Hus, Gansfort criticized the authority of the pope which had overstepped the boundaries of Scripture:

“Did the theological faculty pay more heed to the authority of Clement, where it conflicted with reason, when they criticized and rebuked him, first for his presumption in teaching the angels in heaven; second for his granting to crusaders the right to designate four to be released out of purgatory; and for his published indulgences cancelling both punishment and guilt? Nevertheless, officially sealed bulls containing such errors are still found today. You warn me that in these matters the authority of the pope should not merely take the place of reason but should be above it. But what is that ‘reason’ of mine, if not Scripture? The will of the pope and the authority of Scripture have not been established on an equal footing so that the will of the pope is to be measured by the truth of Scripture” (From the Letter in Reply to Hoeck by Wessel Gansfort, as cited by Heiko Oberman, Forerunners of the Reformation, p. 109).

Other German reformers who lived before Luther include Johann Ruchrat von Wesel and Johannes von Goch. Schaff tells us about von Wesel:

“John Ruchrath von Wesel, d. 1481, attacked the hierarchy and indulgences and was charged on his trial with calling in question almost all the distinctive Roman Catholic tenets. He was born in Oberwesel on the Rhine between Mainz and Coblentz. He taught at the University of Erfurt and, in 1458, was chosen its vice-rector. Luther bore testimony to his influence when he said, ‘I remember how Master John Wesalia ruled the University of Erfurt by his writings through the study of which I also became a master.’ Leaving Erfurt, he was successively professor in Basel and cathedral preacher in Mainz and Worms. In 1479, Wesel was arraigned for heresy before the Inquisition at Mainz. Among the charges were that the Scriptures are alone a trustworthy source of authority; the names of the predestinate are written in the book of life and cannot be erased by a priestly ban; indulgences do not profit; Christ is not pleased with festivals of fasting, pilgrimages or priestly celibacy; Christ’s body can be in the bread without any change of the bread’s substance: pope and councils are not to be obeyed if they are out of accord with the Scriptures; he whom God chooses will be saved irrespective of pope and priests, and all who have faith will enjoy as much blessedness as prelates. Wesel also made the distinction between the visible and the invisible Church and defined the Church as the aggregation of all the faithful who are bound together by love — collectio omnium fidelium caritate copulatorum. In his trial, he was accused of having had communication with the Hussites. In matters of historical criticism, he was also in advance of his age, casting doubt upon some of the statements of the Athanasian Creed, abandoning the application of the term Catholic to the Apostles’ Creed and pronouncing the addition of the filioque clause—and from the Son—unwarranted. The doctrines of indulgences and the fund of merit he pronounced unscriptural and pious frauds. The elect are saved wholly through the grace of God” (History of the Christian Church, Book 6, Section 75).

Concerning John of Goch, he says this:

“His writings were not published till after the beginning of the Reformation. He anticipated that movement in asserting the supreme authority of the Bible. The Fathers are to be accepted only so far as they follow the canonical Scriptures. In contrast to the works of the philosophers and the Schoolmen, the Bible is a book of life; theirs, books of death. He also called in question the merit of monastic vows and the validity of the distinction between the higher and lower morality upon which monasticism laid stress. What is included under the higher morality is within the reach of all Christians and not the property of monks only. He renounced the Catholic view of justification without stating with clearness the evangelical theory” (History of the Christian Church, Book 6, Section 75).

Reformers before Martin Luther: Girolamo Savonarola

Reformers before Martin Luther: Jan Hus and the Hussites

The reformer Jan Hus was burned to death at the Council of Constance in 1415 for protesting against the false teachings of the Roman Catholic Church of his day. His fellow preacher Jerome of Prague was burned at the stake a year later in 1416 by the same council. His followers were known as Hussites and they continued his reforms until the Protestant Reformation that would begin a hundred years later.

Hus was influenced by the writings of John Wycliffe and shared many of the same beliefs as him. One of his most important works was On the Church where Hus argued against the supremacy of the pope over the whole church. David S. Schaff summarizes his arguments:

“In the course of his discussion on the papal office, Hus presents the following views: The rock upon which the church is built, Matt. 16:18, is Christ and not Peter. The Apostles called Christ the foundation. To Christ, not to Peter, did the patriarchs look forward; and the early Christians did not base their faith on the Apostle. The Roman pontiff shares authority with other bishops of the church, as Peter shared authority with the other Apostles. Christ did not give the care of all the sheep to Peter even as he did not exclusively give him the power to preach and administer the sacraments. The word pope is not a Scriptural word and in the early history of the church there were a number of popes. Originally all bishops were called popes, and these were equally the immediate vicars of Christ. The pope is not infallible. In matters of faith popes may err and have erred—falli et fallere possunt. They may be led astray by avarice or be deceived by ignorance. The pope may also be a heretic and, as a matter of fact, before the fifteenth century there had been both wicked men and heretics on the papal chair. Here Hus drew for historical data upon the Chronicles of Ranulph Higden, Martinus Polonus, and Rudolph Glaber” (On the Church, translated by David S. Schaff, p. xv).

Hus argues in his work that the popes had usurped the authority of Christ. He references the papal bull Unam sanctam by Pope Boniface VIII in 1302 where he declared that submission to the pope was necessary for salvation: “Furthermore, we declare, we proclaim, we define that it is absolutely necessary for salvation that every human creature be subject to the Roman Pontiff.” And he references the bull of Clement V which implied that the pope had authority over angels. Hus writes:

“To this the conclusion follows, namely: ‘To be subject to the Roman pontiff is necessary for salvation for every human being.’ But there is no other such pontiff except the Lord Jesus Christ himself, our pontiff. This is so because the humanity of Christ is not subject to any other pontiff as of necessity to salvation, inasmuch as God hath exalted him and given him a name which is to be the most worthy above every other name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow and every power bend in obedience to him ‘of things in heaven,’ that is, the angels; ‘things on the earth,’ that is, all men; and ‘of things in hell,’ that is, the devils. And it is also so because Christ’s mother was a human being; John the Baptist also, Peter the apostle, and other saints now in heaven, and for none of these was it necessary for salvation to be subject to any other Roman pontiff besides Christ, seeing that they are already saved, persons whom no Roman pontiff can loose or bind. Therefore, Pope Clement extended his authority all too far when in his bull The Angels of Paradise, he commanded the angels to lead into the everlasting joys the soul of one who had died on a journey to Rome to secure indulgence, and who had been absolved from purgatory. For this pope wished that at his command the heavenly angels should bow their knees” (On the Church, translated by David S. Schaff, p. 121).

Therefore, he concluded:

“In view of these things it is to be held that to rebel against an erring pope is to obey Christ the Lord” (On the Church, translated by David S. Schaff, p. 211)

While the doctrine of papal infallibility was still in its early stages, Hus argued that those who championed the idea were motivated by greed and pride:

“Therefore, I call the world to witness that the papal distribution of benefices sows in the church hirelings all too widely. On the part of the popes, it gives them occasion to exalt their vicarial power, to put an excessive value on the world’s dignity and to make an extravagant show of a fantastic sanctity. But these doctors, who are looking for temporal remuneration from the pope or servilely fear his power, and also are saying that he has mysterious power and is impeccable and inerrant and that he may do lawfully whatsoever pleases him—these doctors are pseudoprophets and pseudo-apostles of antichrist” (On the Church, translated by David S. Schaff, p. 211).

Hus cited Augustine to support his belief that the Bible alone was infallible and without error. The Bible is inerrant or without error because it comes from God:

“Therefore, it follows that these doctors are themselves anathema, and it is clear that religious faith is not held by them so far as these points are concerned unless they prove them plainly or show them to be founded in sacred Scripture or in clear reasoning, for Augustine says, Ep. ad Hieron., Decretum, Dist. 9:5 [Friedberg, 1:17]: ‘I have learned to give only to those writers, who are now called canonical, honor and regard, so that I would not dare to believe that any of them erred in writing’” (On the Church, translated by David S. Schaff, p. 132).

He used the logic of sola Scriptura, the belief that the Bible is the sole infallible authority for the church, to argue that the pope and his decisions are not infallible as Scripture is:

“And, in this way, every Christian is expected to believe explicitly and implicitly all the truth which the Holy Spirit has put in Scripture, and in this way a man is not bound to believe the sayings of the saints which are apart from Scripture, nor should he believe papal bulls, except in so far as they speak out of Scripture, or in so far as what they say is founded in Scripture simply. But a man may believe bulls as probable, for both the pope and his curia make mistakes from ignorance of the truth. And, with reference to this ignorance, it can be substantiated that the pope makes mistakes and may be deceived. . . . Of one kind is the faith placed in holy Scripture; and another, faith in a bull thought out in a human way. For to holy Scripture exception may not be taken, nor may it be gainsaid; but it is proper at times to take exception to bulls and gainsay them when they either commend the unworthy or put them in authority, or savor of avarice, or honor the unrighteous or oppress the innocent, or implicitly contradict the commands or counsels of God” (On the Church, translated by David S. Schaff, p. 71-72).

We should only believe in the teachings of men insofar as their words reflect the truth of Scripture:

“Nor ought such to be believed except as their words are founded in Scripture. For thus the great doctor, Augustine, often asserted of himself that he ought to be believed only so far as he had grounded himself in Scripture” (On the Church, translated by David S. Schaff, p. 154).

Hus wrote many letters throughout his life seeking to persuade others to join his cause. In a letter to Master Christian of Prachaticz, Rector of the University of Prague, Hus defended himself:

“Suppose that Satan incarnate, together with twelve of his proudest devils, were to sit in Peter’s place, and suppose that his rule and first principle were that whatever he and his monstrous body laid down must be held as the faith! For this was how the devil tempted Christ, declaring that he had power to grant to Him all the kingdoms of the world, if He would fall down and worship him. It is passing strange, moreover, that the disciples of Antichrist now wish to lay down a ruling in the matter of the sacraments. Hath not the Church existed for 1413 years without this ruling which is now to be? I am aware that they wrote to the Curia about the judgment of the doctors and the prelates. They reserve these matters for Antichrist’s assent, in order to lead us astray. They admit him to be the more important, that they may reach this conclusion: ‘You are a heretic! For it follows that whatever the Holy Roman Church rules (that is, the Pope along with the cardinals) must be held as the faith; but the Pope, along with his associates, rules that indulgences ‘by pocket and purse’ are Catholic: therefore this must be held as the faith. But you, Hus, have preached the opposite. Abjure, therefore, your heresy, or be burned.’ Item, whatever the Pope rules, etc. But he rules that Hus is an obstinate fellow under ban of excommunication, and thus is a heretic. Therefore he must be condemned. Item, whatever the Pope rules, etc. But the Pope rules that the decision of the doctors, alias the enemies of the truth, arrived at in the court, is just and holy. Therefore it must hold good. Item, whatever the Pope rules must hold good. But the Pope rules that all who have Wyclif’s books should give them up to be burnt, and must abjure. Therefore this also we must hold. Item, whatever the Pope rules, etc. But the Pope rules by an edict that preaching is not to take place in any chapel. Therefore, etc. Item, whatever the Pope rules must hold good. But Boniface with the cardinals solemnly decreed that Wenzel, King of Bohemia, is not King of the Romans, nor Sigismund of the Hungarians. Therefore we must hold this. And which of us can search out the number of decisions that Antichrist might aim at us at his own sweet will?” (The Letters of John Hus, edited and translated by Herbert B. Workman and R. Martin Pope, p. 123-125).

Hus was granted safe conduct by Emperor Sigismund to attend the Council of Constance to defend himself against the charges of heresy that were made against him. But Hus was arrested anyway and put on trial. At the trial, many false accusations were made against him, including that he declared himself to be the fourth person of the Trinity. Hus replied to this charge by saying:

“Be it far from me, a miserable wretch, that I should want to name myself the fourth person of the Godhead, for that has never entered my heart; but I unswervingly assert that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are one God, one essence, and a trinity of persons” (As cited by Peter of Mladonovic, End of the Saintly and Reverend Master John Hus, p. 12).

Knowing that the end of his life was near, Hus expresses his heart to his supporters in the second to last letter before his death,

“My excellent benefactors, I exhort you, by the bowels of Jesus Christ, you who defend the truth, to renounce the vanities of the age, and to combat for our eternal King, Jesus Christ. Put not your trust in princes, nor in the children of men; for the children of men are false and full of lies. To-day they live, and to-morrow they are no more: God alone is eternal. He has servants, not for his own wants, but for the advantage even of his servants, on whom he bestows the riches he has promised them; for he has said — ‘Where I am, there also shall be my servant.’ The Lord renders his servants masters of all he possesses, giving himself up to them, and giving all with himself, in order that they may, without weariness, and without anxiety, possess all things and rejoice with all the saints in eternal happiness. Blessed is the servant who watches when his Lord cometh. Fortunate is the servant who shall joyfully repose on the bosom of the King of Glory! Serve, then, this King with fear, you who love him with all your heart. He will conduct you in safety to Bohemia in his grace, and afterwards, I trust, into eternal glory. Adieu; for I believe this letter may be the last that I shall write to you; to-morrow I shall be cleansed from my sins by a cruel death, in the hope of Christ. I cannot write what has occurred to me this night. Sigismund has done all with trick and cunning; may God forgive him!” (Letters of John Huss Written During His Exile and Imprisonment, translated by Campbell MacKenzie, p. 190-191).

Before he was executed, Hus defended himself one last time by declaring:

“Behold, these bishops exhort me to recant and abjure. But I fear to do so, lest I be a liar in the sight of the Lord, and also lest I offend my own conscience and the truth of God. For I have never held these articles that are falsely witnessed against me, but rather have written, taught, and preached their opposite; and also lest I offend the multitude to whom I have preached and others who faithfully preach the Word of God” (As cited by Peter of Mladonovic, End of the Saintly and Reverend Master John Hus, p. 13).

Reformers before Martin Luther: Wessel Gansfort

Reformers before Martin Luther: John Wycliffe and the Lollards

The first person to translate the New Testament into English was John Wycliffe at the end of the fourteenth century. His followers were known as Lollards who continued his reforms and preaching of the Bible until the Protestant Reformation. As a scholar of the Bible at Oxford University, Wycliffe understood the importance of getting the Word of God into the hearts and minds of the people.

In his preface to an English translation of a harmony of the gospels, he defends the need for all Christians to read the Bible. But the Bible must first be translated into the language of the people in order for them to understand it:

“‘Blessed are they who hear the Word of God and keep it;’ and he draws from it in particular the conclusion that ‘Christians ought to travail day and night upon the text of Holy Writ, especially upon the Gospel in their mother tongue.’ ‘And yet,’ he remarks, ‘men will not suffer it that the laity should know the Gospel, and read it in their common life in humility and love.’ Hereupon he continues as follows: ‘But covetous clerks of this world reply and say that laymen may soon err, and therefore they should not dispute of Christian faith. Alas! alas! what cruelty is this, to rob a whole realm of bodily food because a few fools may be gluttons, and do harm to themselves and others by their food taken immoderately. As easily may a proud worldly priest err against the Gospel written in Latin, as a simple layman err against the Gospel written in English. . . . What reason is this, if a child fail in his lesson at the first day, to suffer never children to come to lessons for this default? Who would ever become a scholar by this process? What Antichrist is this who, to the shame of Christian men, dares to hinder the laity from learning this holy lesson which is so hard (strongly) commanded by God? Each man is bound to do so, that he be saved, but each layman who shall be saved is a real priest made of God, and each man is bound to be a very priest. But worldly clerks cry, that Holy Writ in English will set Christians in debate, and subjects to rebel against their sovereigns; and therefore it shall not be suffered among laymen. Alas! how may they more openly slander God, the Author of peace, and His holy law, fully teaching meekness, patience, and charity? . . . Thus the false Jews, namely, high priests, scribes and Pharisees, cried on Christ that He made dissension among the people. O Jesus Christ! Thou that didst die to confirm Thy law, and for ransom of Christian souls, stop these blasphemies of Antichrist and worldly clerks, and make Thy holy Gospel known and kept of Thy simple brethren, and increase them in faith, hope, and charity, and meekness, and patience, to suffer death joyfully for Thee and Thy law. Amen, Jesu, for Thy mercy!” (As cited by Gotthard Lechler, John Wycliffe and His English Precursors, p. 213-214).

He condemned the leaders of the church who withheld the Bible from the people:

“They (the worldly clergy) are Antichrists, forbidding Christian men to know their belief, and to speak of Holy Writ. For they say openly that secular men should not intermeddle themselves with the Gospel to read it in the mother tongue, but attend to a holy father’s preaching, and do after such in all things. But this is expressly against God’s teaching. For God commandeth generally to each layman, that he should have God’s commandments before him, and teach them to his children” (Tracts and Treatises of John De Wycliffe, p. 27).

Wycliffe wrote many books and tracts against the unbiblical practices of the Roman Catholic Church of his day such as simony which is the buying of church offices for money. In the medieval church, several popes had bought the papacy such as Gregory VI which was scandalous. Wycliffe went so far as to call the pope the Antichrist because he was attempting to usurp the authority of Christ:

“That there is nothing lawful among Christian men without leave of the bishop of Rome, though he be Antichrist, full of simony and heresy. For commonly, of all priests he is the most contrary to Christ, both in life and teaching; and he maintaineth more sin, by privileges, excommunications, and long pleas; and he is most proud against Christ’s meekness, and most covetous of worldly goods and lordships” (Tracts and Treatises of John De Wycliffe, p. 20).

Like Martin Luther, who would be born a hundred years later, Wycliffe opposed the sale of indulgences:

“I confess that the indulgences of the pope, if they are what they are said to be, are a manifest blasphemy, inasmuch as he claims a power to save men almost without limit, and not only to mitigate the penalties of those who have sinned, by granting them the aid of absolutions and indulgences, that they may never come to purgatory, but to give command to the holy angels, that when the soul is separated from the body, they may carry it without delay to its everlasting rest. . . . Moreover, it appears that this doctrine is a manifold blasphemy against Christ, inasmuch as the pope is extolled above his humanity and deity, and so above all that is called God, – pretensions which, according to the declarations of the apostle, agree with the character of Antichrist; for he possesses Caesarean power above Christ, who had not where to lay his head. In regard to spiritual power, so far as the humanity of Christ is concerned, it would seem that the pope is superior to our Lord Jesus Christ; for it behoved Christ to suffer the most bitter passion for the salvation of man; and we believe, that on the ground of the Divine justice, men attain to whatever happiness may be theirs, by virtue of Christ’s passion. But this renegade says, that it is allowable, that he should live as luxuriously as he may choose, and that, by the bare writing of one of his scribes, he can introduce wonders, without limit, into the church militant! Who, then, can deny his being extolled above the Lord Jesus Christ, in whose life we read not that Christ, or any one of his apostles, granted such absolutions or indulgences? Yet had such power been at their command, it is on many grounds probable that they would not have been absolutely idle in the use of it, especially when Christ condemns the slothful servant, for not trafficing with the talent entrusted to him; and he requires at the hand of the prelate the souls committed to his care, and lost through his negligence, as appears from the third chapter of Ezekiel. Which alternative, then, should we maintain, – that Christ and his apostles possessed no such power, or that they were culpable in hoarding such treasure, in place of bringing it forth for the good of the church? But what greater insanity than to adopt such a conclusion!” (Tracts and Treatises of John De Wycliffe, p. 196-197).

The practice of indulgences turned God’s grace into something that could be bought with money:

“As though grace were to be bought or sold like an ox or an ass, and thus make merchandise in the buying of pardons, and the taking away sins, the devil having availed himself of an error in the schools to introduce these heresies in morals” (Tracts and Treatises of John De Wycliffe, p. 121).

Wycliffe taught that the Bible is sufficient to guide the church and is superior to all of the traditions of men:

“Prelates say, that Holy Writ is not sufficient to rule holy church, and that the teachers thereof are not profitable to the people. . . . It is the pride of Lucifer and even greater pride than his, to say that the teachers of man’s traditions, made of sinful fools, are more profitable and needful to Christian people than the preachers of the Gospel . . . leaving Holy Writ and reason, for feigned dreams and miracles – and sinful man’s traditions full of error” (Tracts and Treatises of John De Wycliffe, p. 21)

His understanding of salvation was influenced by Thomas Bradwardine who defended the Augustinian view. Wycliffe said that true saints are predestined by God and therefore will persevere until the end:

“It appears to me, that grace, which is called the grace of predestination, or of final perseverance, cannot fall away from any one; for if so, it could not be that grace” (Tracts and Treatises of John De Wycliffe, p. 121).

The writings of Wycliffe would go on to influence the reformer Jan Hus who would die a martyr’s death for his faith at the Council of Constance in 1415. As a result of this council, Wycliffe was declared a heretic and his remains were dug up, burned, and thrown into the River Swift.

Reformers before Martin Luther: Jan Hus

Reformers before Martin Luther: Thomas Bradwardine

The Oxford scholar Thomas Bradwardine, together with Gregory of Rimini, helped to retrieve Augustine’s theology of grace in the fourteenth century against what they perceived to be a resurgence of Pelagianism in the church of their day. Bradwardine wrote The Cause of God Against Pelagius where he defended his Augustinian understanding of salvation. Bradwardine’s book against Pelagianism would go on to influence John Wycliffe who in turn would write many books that would inspire Jan Hus in his reformation.

Bradwardine wrote about his own experience of coming to understand God’s free grace:

“Idle and a fool in God’s wisdom, I was misled by an unorthodox error at a time when I was still pursuing philosophical studies. Sometimes I went to listen to the theologians discussing this matter [of grace and free will], and the school of Pelagius seemed to me nearest the truth. . . . In the philosophical faculty I seldom heard a reference to grace, except for some ambiguous remarks. What I heard day in and day out was that we are masters of our own free acts, that ours is the choice to act well or badly, to have virtues or sins and much more along this line. . . . Every time I listened to the Epistle reading in church and heard how Paul magnified grace and belittled free will – as is the case in Romans 9, ‘It is obviously not a question of human will and effort, but of divine mercy,’ and its many parallels – grace displeased me, ungrateful as I was. . . . However, even before I transferred to the faculty of theology, the text mentioned came to me as a beam of grace and, captured by a vision of the truth, it seemed I saw from afar how the grace of God precedes all good works with a temporal priority [God as Savior through predestination] and natural precedence [God continues to provide for His creation as ‘first mover’]. . . . That is why I express my gratitude to Him who has given me this grace as a free gift” (As cited by Heiko Oberman, Forerunners of the Reformation, p. 135).

Gotthard Lechler, in his work on John Wycliffe, explains the purpose behind Bradwardine’s book against Pelagianism:

“Bradwardine’s theological views are exhibited in a systematic form in the work already named. It bears the title Of the Cause of God, for the author has the consciousness of appearing like an advocate in defence of God’s honour, in standing forward to oppose Pelagianism, and to exalt the agency of God’s free and unmerited grace in the conversion and salvation of man. He by no means conceals from himself that in so doing he is swimming against the current of prevailing opinion, for it is his own remark that the doctrine is held by many either that the free will of man is of itself sufficient for the obtaining of salvation; or if they confess the need of grace, that still grace may be merited by the power of the free will, so that grace no longer appears to be something undeserved by men, but something meritoriously acquired. ‘Almost the whole world,’ he says, ‘has run after Pelagius and fallen into error’” (John Wycliffe and His English Precursors, p. 67).

The historian Reinhold Seeburg summarizes Bradwardine’s theology:

“The sum of his teaching is as follows: God is complete perfection and goodness, is good action itself, free from the potentiality of imperfection. He is not limited by mentality. He is the first cause, the absolute principle of being and motion. Therefore, no one can act nor can anything ‘happen’; God works or orders events. Divine foreknowledge is will exercised long before, or predestination of [man’s] will. God’s will, moreover, is unchanging. Everything takes place by virtue of the immutable antecedent necessity caused by the divine volition. . . . The effects of predestination are the gift of grace in the present, justification from sin, award of merit, perseverance to the end, and unending bliss in the world to come. The result of this line of thought is, of course, determinism of a Thomistic type. In spite of this theory, Bradwardine, like Augustine, asserted the reality of free will. His historical importance consists in the fact that he was one of the most powerful champions of the Augustinian movement which took place toward the end of the Middle Ages. This movement contributed to the dissolution of scholasticism and to a new understanding of Christian doctrine from the point of view of personal faith” (“Bradwardine, Thomas.” In The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge).

Reformers before Martin Luther: John Wycliffe

Reformers before Martin Luther: Peter Waldo and the Waldensians

The Waldensians are better known than the Henricians and other early reformation movements, but they shared in common a rejection of the authority of the Roman Catholic Church. The name Waldensian comes from its founder Waldes, later called Peter Waldo, who was a wealthy merchant in Lyon, France. Around the year 1170, Waldo paid for the translation of the Bible into the vernacular so that he and others could study it in their own language, and in the process, he became convinced that he should give away his wealth and dedicate his life to preaching the Bible.

As with many of these early reform movements, most of the information that we have about them come from those who opposed them. One of the difficulties of discerning what the Waldensians believed is that several medieval authors who wrote against the Albigensians (such as Ermengardus and Ebrardus) referred to them as Waldenses, and as a result, lumped both movements together.

But Reinerius Saccho was a Dominican inquisitor who was involved in the interrogation of both Albigensians and Waldensians so he understood the differences that existed between these two movements and was able to distinguish them from each other. He wrote at length about the beliefs of the Waldensians whom he referred to as Leonists since they were from Lyon:

“Among all these Sects, which still are, or have been, none is more pernicious to the Church than that of the Leonists; and this for three reasons. The first is, because it is older; for some say that it has existed from the time of Sylvester, some from the time of the Apostles. The second, because it is more general; for there is scarcely any country in which this Sect is not. The third, because, while all other Sects excite the abhorrence of their hearers by the outrageousness of their blasphemies against God, this (namely of the Leonists) has a great appearance of piety; and they believe all things concerning God, and which are contained in the Creed, rightly—only they blaspheme the Romish Church; which blasphemy a great multitude of the Laity are easily induced to believe” (As cited by S. R. Maitland, Facts and Documents Illustrative of the History, Doctrine, and Rites of the Ancient Albigenses and Waldenses, p. 405-406).

The following is a lengthy selection from him about their beliefs in his work Of the Sects of the Modern Heretics written in 1254:

“Observe, that the sect of Poor Men of Lyons, who are also called Leonists, arose in the following manner—once when the principal citizens were assembled in Lyons, it happened that one of them died suddenly, in the presence of the company; whereby one of them was so much alarmed, that he immediately distributed a large property to the poor. And from this cause a great multitude flocked to him, whom he instructed to embrace voluntary poverty, and to be imitators of Christ, and the Apostles. And as he had some little learning he taught them the text of the New Testament, in the vulgar tongue; and when he was reproved for this rashness, he derided it, and began to urge his doctrine, telling his disciples that the clergy, who were immoral persons, envied their holy life, and doctrine. When the Pope excommunicated them, they persevered in contempt of it, and so, to this day their rancorous doctrine flourishes everywhere. Observe three things—First, concerning the blasphemies wherewith they blaspheme the Romish Church, and its statutes, and all the clergy—in the second part their errors respecting the Sacraments of the Church and the saints are stated—in the Third part, observe the abomination in which they hold the decent, and approved, customs of the Church. First, They say that the Romish Church, is not the Church of Jesus Christ, but a church of malignants and that it apostatized under Sylvester, when the poison of temporalities was infused into the church. And they say, that they are the church of Christ, because they observe both in word, and deed, the doctrine of Christ, of the Gospel, and of the Apostles. 2. Their second error is that all vices and sins are in the church, and that they alone live righteously. 3. That scarcely anyone in the church, but themselves, preserves the evangelical doctrine. 4. That they are the true poor in spirit, and suffer persecution for righteousness and faith. 5. That they are the Church of Jesus Christ. 6. That the Church of Rome is the Harlot in the Apocalypse, on account of its superfluous decoration which the Eastern Church does not regard. 7. That they despise all the statutes of the Church, because they are heavy and numerous. 8. That the Pope is the head of all errors. 9. That the Prelates are Scribes; and the Monks, Pharisees. 10. That the Pope and all Bishops are homicides on account of wars. 11. That we are not to obey Prelates; but only God. 12. That no one is greater than another in the church. Matt. 23. ‘All of you are brethren.’ 13. That no one ought to bow the knee before a priest. Rev. ii. where the Angel says to John ‘See thou do it not.’ 14. That tithes are not to be given, because first fruits were not given to the church. 15. That the clergy ought not to have possessions. Deut. xviii. ‘The Priests and all the tribe of Levi, shall not have part and inheritance with the people of Israel, because they eat the sacrifices, and they shall receive nothing else.’ 16. That the clergy, and monks, ought not to have Prebends. 17. That the Bishops and Abbots ought not to have royal rights. 18. That the land, and the people, are not to be divided into parts. 19. That it is a bad thing to found and endow churches and monasteries. 20. That wills are not to be made in favour of Churches—also, that no one ought to be a tenant of the church—also, they condemn all the clergy for idleness, saying that they ought to work with their hands as the Apostles did—also, they reprobate titles of dignity such as Pope, Bishops, &c.—also, that no one is to be forced into belief—also, that they make no account of all ecclesiastical offices—also, that they care nothing for ecclesiastical privileges—also, they despise the immunity of the Church and of ecclesiastical persons and things—also, they contemn Councils, Synods, and Assemblies—also, they say that all parochial rights are inventions—also, they say that monastic rules are the traditions of the Pharisees. Secondly, they condemn all the Sacraments of the Church; in the first place, as to baptism, they say that the Catechism is nothing—also, that the ablution which is given to infants profits nothing—also, that the Sponsors do not understand what they answer to the priest. . . . Also, they reprobate all exorcisms, and benedictions of baptism—also, they reprobate the sacrament of confirmation and wonder why Bishops only are allowed to confirm—also, concerning the Sacrament of the Eucharist, they say that Priests in mortal sin cannot consecrate—also, they say that transubstantiation does not take place in the hand of him who unworthily consecrates, but in the mouth of him who worthily receives; and that consecration may be made at a common table, Malachi, ‘In every place there shall be offered to my name a pure offering’—also, they reprobate this, that the faithful communicate once in a year, because they communicate every day—also, they say that transubstatiation may take place by words in the vulgar tongue—also, they say that the mass is nothing, because the Apostles had it not, and that it is done for the sake of gain—also, they do not receive the canon of the mass, except only the words of Christ in the vulgar tongue—also, they call the singing in the Church an infernal clamour—also, they reprobate the canonical hours—also, they say that the offering which is made by priests in the mass is nothing, and does not profit—also, they reprobate the kiss of peace, and of the altar. Concerning the sacrament of Penance, they say, that no one can be absolved by a bad priest—also, that a good layman has the power of absolving—also, that they can remit sins by the imposition of hands, and give the Holy Spirit—also, that it is better to confess to a good layman, than to a bad priest—also, that such penance as is not heavy is to be enjoined; by the example of Christ, ‘Go and sin no more’—also, they reprobate the public penances, as chains, especially in the case of women—also, that a general confession is not to be made every year. Also, they condemn the sacrament of Marriage, saying that married persons sin mortally if they come together without the hope of offspring—also, they disregard compaternity—also, they despise the degrees of affinity, carnal and spiritual, and the impediments of Orders, and of public decency, and of ecclesiastical prohibitions—also, they say that a woman after child-bearing does not require benediction, or introduction—also, they say that the church has erred in prohibiting the marriage of the Clergy, while even those of the East marry—also, they say that the continent do not sin in kisses and embraces. The sacrament of Unction, they reprobate, because it is only given to the rich; and because several priests are required for it—also, they say that the sacrament of Orders is nothing—also, they say that every good layman is a priest, as the Apostles were laymen—also, that the prayer of an evil priest does not profit—also, they deride the clerical tonsure—also, that Latin prayer does not profit the vulgar—also, they make it a matter of ridicule that illegitimate persons and wicked sinners are raised to eminence in the church—also, they say that every layman, and even woman ought to preach, I. Cor. xiv. ‘I would that ye spake in tongues, that the church might receive edification’ —also, whatever is preached which cannot be proved by the text of Scripture they consider as fabulous—also, they say that the Holy Scripture has the same effect in the vulgar tongue, as in Latin; wherefore they consecrate in the vulgar tongue and give the sacraments—also, they know by heart the text of the New Testament, and a great part of the Old—also, they reject the Decretals and Decrees, and sayings and expositions of the fathers, and adhere only to the text—also, they despise excommunication, and care nothing for absolution—also, they reject the indulgences of the church, deride its dispensations, and have no notion of irregularity—also, they believe none to be a saint but the Apostles, and none to be holy but God alone—also, they despise canonizations, translations and the vigils of the Saints—also, they deride those laymen who chose saints by lot at the altar—also, they never read the litany and laugh at the legends of the saints—also, they despise the relics of the saints—also, they consider the cross as mere wood—also, they abhor the sign of the cross on account of the passion of Christ; nor do they ever sign themselves—also, they say that the doctrine of Christ and the Apostles is sufficient for salvation without the statutes of the church—that the tradition of the church is the tradition of the Pharisees; and that there is more made of the transgression of a human tradition than of a divine law. Matt. xv. ‘Why do ye transgress the commands of God by reason of your traditions?’ Also, they reject the mystical sense in the holy Scriptures, principally as it regards the sayings and doings delivered in the Church by tradition; as that the cock upon the steeple signifies a doctor. As to the third point, observe, that with respect to the customs of the Church, they hold these errors. All the approved customs of the Church of which they do not read in the Gospel, they despise; as Candlemas, Palm Sunday, the reconciliation of penitents, the adoration of the cross on Good Friday, the festival of Easter—they despise the feasts of Christ and of the saints, because of the great number of them, and say that one day is like another; and therefore they privately work on the festivals—also, they do not keep the fasts of the church; Isaiah, Iviii. ‘Is this the fast as I have chosen?’—also, all dedications, benedictions and consecrations of candles, of meats, of palms, of chrism, of fire, of wax, of the agnus Dei, of women after childbirth, of pilgrims, of holy places, of holy persons, garments, salt, and water—they deride the church built with walls and look upon it as a barn, and call it commonly Stainhauf [a heap of stones] and say that God does not dwell there. Acts, xvii. ‘God dwelieth not in temples made with hands,’ and that prayers made there are of no more avail than those made in a chamber. Matt. vi. ‘Thou when thou prayest enter into thy closet,’ &c.—also, they care nothing about the dedication of the church or of the altar—also, they say that the decoration of the church is a sin and that it would be better to clothe the poor than to ornament walls—also, of the altar they say that it is a pity that the cloth should rot upon the stone, and that Christ did not give his disciples stoles, nor scarves, nor surplices—also, they consecrate in a common drinking vessel instead of a chalice—also, they say that the cloth which covers the host is no more than the cloth of their breeches—also, as to lights they say, that God, who is true light, does not need light, and that the only use of them in the churches is that the priests may not break their shins—also, they reprobate censing—they say that holy water is like common water—images, and pictures, they call idolatrous—also, they scoff at the singing in the church, and say that there is no meaning in the music, but only in the words—also, they deride the noise made by the laity—also, they reject the festive processions, as of Easter, and the mournful ones, as of the Rogation days, and at funerals—they say, also, that the chanting by day and night, which the church had not had before, was instituted by Gregory—also, they find fault that a priest is allowed to say many masses in one day—also, they rejoice during an interdict because at that time they seduce many—also, they say that men are compelled to go to church for the sake of lucre; and they also go in a hypocritical manner, offer, confess, communicate, but all hypocritically—also, they make pilgrimages, and so going to Lombardy, visit their Bishops—also, they despise the sepulchre of Christ and the sepulchres of the saints—also, they reprobate the ecclesiastical burial, Matt, xxiii. ‘Woe unto you that build sepulchres;’ they would even prefer being buried in a field, to being buried in a church-yard, if they were not afraid of the church—also, they say that the offices for the dead, the mass for the defunct, oblations of funerals, testaments, legacies, visitation of sepulchres, reading vigils, anniversarius, tricesimus, septimus, and other suffrages do not profit the souls [of the dead]—also, they discourage those associations of the laity and clergy which are called Zeche, and say that all these things are done for the sake of gain. All these errors they hold because they deny Purgatory, saying that there are only two ways—namely, one of the elect to heaven, the other, of the damned to hell. ‘Where the tree falls, there it shall be.’ For if he is good he wants no suffrage—if not, it will be of no service to him—also, they say that every sin is mortal, and none venial—also, they say that one Pater noster is more efficacious than the sound of ten bells, and more than the mass” (As cited by S. R. Maitland, Facts and Documents Illustrative of the History, Doctrine, and Rites of the Ancient Albigenses and Waldenses, p. 407-415).

From this description, we are able to summarize their doctrinal beliefs. They believed in the freedom of religion and freedom from religious persecution since “no one is to be forced into belief.” Christian worship and Bible reading should be done in the language of the people so that they can understand what they are being taught. People need to hear “the words of Christ in the vulgar tongue” and read the Bible in their language since “the Holy Scripture has the same efiect in the vulgar tongue, as in Latin; wherefore they consecrate in the vulgar tongue and give the sacraments.” They rejected the sacrifice of the mass for the forgiveness of sins since “the offering which is made by priests in the mass is nothing.” The clergy should be given the freedom to marry because “the church has erred in prohibiting the marriage of the Clergy.” They affirmed the priesthood of every believer so that there was no need for a special order of priests since “they say that every good layman is a priest.”

They taught the doctrine of sola Scriptura since “whatever is preached which cannot be proved by the text of Scripture they consider as fabulous” and “all the approved customs of the Church of which they do not read in the Gospel, they despise.” The ultimate authority for Christian doctrine is the Bible alone since “they reject the Decretals and Decrees, and sayings and expositions of the fathers, and adhere only to the text.” The teachings of the Bible are sufficient to save us since “the doctrine of Christ and the Apostles is sufficient for salvation without the statutes of the church.” They dedicated themselves to the study of Scripture so that “they know by heart the text of the New Testament, and a great part of the Old.” And they sought to interpret the Bible literally rather than allegorically since “they reject the mystical sense in the holy Scriptures.”

As Martin Luther later did, “they reject the indulgences of the church.” They also “despise the relics of the saints” as well as the veneration of icons since “images, and pictures, they call idolatrous.” They believed that “suffrages do not profit the souls of the dead” because “they deny purgatory.” From these statements, we can see that the Waldensians were twelfth-century Protestants who lived before the sixteenth-century Reformation.

But did the Waldensians reject the practice of infant baptism like the Petrobrusians and the Henricians? The scholarly consensus is that they did not reject infant baptism. Michael Svigel and John Adair express this belief in their book on church history:

“The movement eventually developed an antagonistic relationship with the Roman Catholic Church, criticizing abuses in the clergy and the Catholic dogma of the Lord’s Supper, transubstantiation. However, once again, no evidence exists that this group practiced believer’s baptism” (Urban Legends of Church History: 40 Common Misconceptions, p. 109).

But Svigel and Adair have overlooked this testimony of Reinerius Saccho about them who has given us evidence that some of the Waldensians rejected infant baptism. In his description of “the sect of Poor Men of Lyons” that was quoted above, he said:

“Secondly, they condemn all the Sacraments of the Church; in the first place, as to baptism, they say that the Catechism is nothing—also, that the ablution which is given to infants profits nothing” [Quod ablutlo quae datur infantibus nihil prosit] (As cited by S. R. Maitland, Facts and Documents Illustrative of the History, Doctrine, and Rites of the Ancient Albigenses and Waldenses, p. 410).

The Reformed historian Pierre Allix mistranslates this phrase from Saccho as “the absolution pronounced over infants avails them nothing” (Some Remarks Upon the Ecclesiastical History of the Ancient Church of Piedmont, p. 234) as if Saccho is saying that they did baptize infants but did not believe that it brought absolution or forgiveness of sins as the Reformed Church believes.

But the Latin word that Saccho uses is “ablutlo” which means “washing” or “ablution” to describe the act of washing them with water which profits them nothing. And if this washing profits them nothing, why would they practice it? On the other hand, the Latin word for absolution is “absolutio.”

There is also the testimony of Bernard Gui, a ruthless Dominican inquisitor who had a great deal of experience interrogating Waldensians before handing them over to the secular authorities to be punished. He wrote a manual for his fellow inquisitors where he described the errors of the Waldnesians in this way:

“The sect and heresy of the Waldenses or Poor of Lyons began about the year of our Lord 1170. Its moving spirit and founder was a certain citizen of Lyons named Waldes, or Waldens, from whom his followers received their name. He was a rich man who, having given up all his property, resolved to devote himself to poverty and to evangelical perfection, just as the apostles had done. He had procured for himself translations of the Gospels and some other books of the Bible in vernacular French, also some texts from St. Augustine, St. Jerome, St. Ambrose, and St. Gregory, arranged topically, which he and his adherents called ‘sentences.’ On frequently reading these over among themselves, although very seldom understanding them aright, they were carried away by their emotions and, although they had but little learning, they usurped the function of the apostles by daring to preach ‘in the streets and the broad ways.’ This Waldes, or Waldens, won over to a like presumption many people of both sexes, made men and women his accomplices, and sent them out to preach as his disciples. They, men and women alike, although they were stupid and uneducated, wandered through villages, entered homes, preached in the squares and even in churches, the men especially, and spread many errors everywhere. . . . The foolish followers and impious teachers of this sect hold and teach that they are not subject to our lord pope, the Roman pontiff, or to other prelates of the Roman Church, for they declare that the Roman Church persecutes and censures them unjustly and unduly. . . . Also, this sect and heresy ridicules the indulgences which are published and granted by prelates of the Church, asserting that they are of no value whatever. . . . Also, these Waldensians deny that there is a purgatory for souls after this life and, in consequence, declare that prayers, alms, celebration of masses, and other pious services done by the faithful on behalf of the dead are of no avail. . . . Also, they say and affirm in private that the saints in heaven hearken not to the prayers of the faithful nor do they heed the acts of veneration whereby we on earth honor them. They say that the saints do not pray for us and so it is useless for us to seek their help. . . . Also, they preach to their believers from the Gospels, the Epistles, and from other Holy Scriptures, which they corrupt as they expound them, like masters of error who do not know how to be disciples of truth, notwithstanding the fact that preaching is wholly forbidden to laymen. . . . They have no use for the salutation to the Blessed Mary, the Hail Mary, or for the Apostles’ Creed, ‘I believe in God,’ because, they say, these were provided and composed by the Roman Church, not by Christ, However, they do recite and teach seven articles of faith on divinity, seven on humanity, the ten commandments of the Decalogue, and seven from works of mercy” (Bernard Gui, Practica inquisitionis heretice pravitatis. As cited by Walter L. Wakefield and Austin P. Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages, p. 386-392, 394).

In addition to the testimony of those who opposed his Waldensian followers, we have the confession of faith of Waldo himself written in 1180 or 1181 which he submitted to the Catholic Church in order to demonstrate that his beliefs were orthodox and not heretical. Though some of his later followers said that the baptism of infants profits them nothing, Waldo affirmed that it is profitable for them because it washes away sin. His confession of faith is in agreement with much of Catholic theology and proves that he was a trinitarian and not a Cathar heretic:

“In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and of the Most Blessed Mary, ever virgin. Let it be known to all the faithful that I, Waldes, and all my brethren, with the Holy Gospels placed before us, believe in heart, perceive through faith, confess in speech, and in unequivocal words affirm that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are three persons, one God, the whole Trinity of Godhead coessential, consubstantial, coeternal, and co-omnipotent; and that each Person of the Trinity is fully God, all three persons one God, as is contained in the creeds, the Apostles’ Creed, the Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed. We believe in heart and confess in words that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, the one God to whom we testify is creator, maker, governor, and, in due time and place, disposer of all things visible and invisible, all things of the heavens, in the air, and in the waters, and upon the earth. We believe that the author of the New and Old Testaments, that is, of the Law of Moses and of the prophets and of the apostles, is one and the same God who, existing in the Trinity as we have said, created all things; John the Baptist, holy and righteous, was sent by Him and was filled with the Holy Spirit in his mother’s womb. We believe in heart and confess in words that the incarnation of divinity came to pass, not in the Father or in the Holy Spirit, but only in the Son, so that He who in divinity was the Son of God the Father, true God from the Father, was true man from His mother, having true flesh from the womb of His mother and a rational human soul, of both natures at one and the same time; that is, He was both God and man, one Person, one Son, one Christ, one God with the Father and the Holy Spirit, ruler and author of all, born of the Virgin Mary by true birth of the flesh. We believe in heart and confess in words that He ate, drank, slept, and rested when weary from travel; He suffered with true passion of His flesh, died in a true death of his body, rose again with true resurrection of His flesh and true restoration of His soul; in that flesh He afterward ate and drank, ascended into heaven, sits at the right hand of the Father, and in it shall come to judge the quick and the dead. We believe in one Church, Catholic, holy, apostolic, and immaculate, outside of which no one can be saved. We do not in any way reject the sacraments which are celebrated in it with the aid of the inestimable and invisible power of the Holy Spirit, even though they be ministered by a sinful priest, as long as the Church accepts him; nor do we disparage the ecclesiastical offices or the blessings celebrated by such a one, but with devout mind we embrace them as if performed by the most righteous. We approve, therefore, of the baptism of infants for we confess and believe that they are saved if they shall die after baptism before they commit sin. We believe, indeed, that in baptism all sins are remitted as well that original inherited sin as those which are committed voluntarily. We hold that confirmation performed by a bishop, that is, by the imposition of hand, is holy and worthy of reverent acceptance. We firmly believe and absolutely accept that the Eucharist, that is, the bread and wine after consecration, is the body and blood of Jesus Christ and in this nothing more is accomplished by a good priest, nothing less by an evil one. We acknowledge that God grants forgiveness to sinners truly penitent in heart, who confess in words and do works of satisfaction in accordance with the Scriptures, and most willingly will we consort with them. We venerate the anointing of the sick with consecrated oil. We do not deny that carnal marriage may be contracted, as the Apostle says; we utterly forbid that those united in lawful fashion may separate; also, we do not condemn a second marriage. We humbly praise and faithfully venerate the ecclesiastical orders, the is, the episcopate and the priesthood and the others of higher and lower degree, and all that is in good order appointed to be read and sung in the Church. We believe that the devil was made evil not by nature but by his will. We put no reproach at all upon the eating of meat. We believe in heart and confess in words the resurrection of the flesh which we bear and no other. We firmly believe and affirm that judgment is still to come and that each person will receive either reward or punishment for those things committed in the flesh. We do not doubt that alms, and the Mass, and other good works can be of benefit to the faithful who have died. And since, according to James the Apostle, ‘faith without works is dead,’ we have renounced the world; whatever we had we have given to the poor, as the Lord advised, and we have resolved to be poor in such fashion that we shall take no thought for the morrow, nor shall we accept gold or silver, or anything of that sort from anyone beyond food and clothing sufficient for the day. Our resolve is to follow the precepts of the Gospel as commands. We wholeheartedly confess and believe that persons remaining in the world, owning their own goods, giving alms and doing other good works out of their own, and observing the commandments of the Lord, may be saved. Wherefore, we earnestly assure Your Grace that if any shall chance to come to your vicinity, declaring that they come from us but having not this faith, you may know with certainty that they come not from us” (As cited by Walter L. Wakefield and Austin P. Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages p. 206-208).

In spite of this confession, Waldo was later condemned as a heretic at the Synod of Verona in 1184 and Waldensian doctrine was condemned as heresy at the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215. The Waldensians who survived until the sixteenth-century were integrated into the Protestant Church during the Reformation.

There is a confession of faith that has been called The Waldensian Confession of 1120. This document can be found on pages 30-34 of Samuel Morland’s The History of the Evangelical Churches of the Valleys of Piemont. Of course, 1120 is before the time of the Waldensians so it could not have been written by them. The document was most likely written around the time of the Protestant Reformation. If it was written in 1120, why was it not referenced by any of the Reformers as evidence for the antiquity of their movement?

Reformers before Martin Luther: Thomas Bradwardine