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Apostolic
Succession
Apostolicity as a note of the true Church being dealt with
elsewhere, the object of the present article is to show:
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That Apostolic succession is found in the
Catholic Church.
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That none of the separate Churches have any valid
claim to it.
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That the Anglican Church, in particular, has
broken away from Apostolic unity.
ROMAN CLAIM
The principle underlying the Roman claim is contained in the
idea of succession. "To succeed" is to be the successor of,
especially to be the heir of, or to occupy an official
position just after, as Victoria succeeded William IV. Now
the Roman Pontiffs come immediately after, occupy the
position, and perform the functions of St. Peter; they are,
therefore, his successors. We must prove
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that St. Peter came to Rome, and ended there his
pontificate;
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that the Bishops of Rome who came after him held
his official position in the Church.
As soon as the problem of St. Peter's coming to Rome passed
from theologians writing pro domo suâ into the hands
of unprejudiced historians, i.e. within the last half
century, it received a solution which no scholar now dares
to contradict; the researches of German professors like A.
Harnack and Weizsaecker, of the Anglican Bishop Lightfoot,
and those of archaeologists like De Rossi and Lanciani, of
Duchesne and Barnes, have all come to the same conclusion:
St. Peter did reside and die in Rome. Beginning with the
middle of the second century, there exists a universal
consensus as to Peter's martyrdom in Rome;
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Dionysius of Corinth speaks for Greece,
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Irenaeus for Gaul,
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Clement and Origen for Alexandria,
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Tertullian for Africa.
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In the third century the popes claim authority
from the fact that they are St. Peter's successors, and
no one objects to this claim, no one raises a
counter-claim.
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No city boasts the tomb of the Apostle but Rome.
There he died, there he left his inheritance; the fact is
never questioned in the controversies between East and West.
This argument, however, has a weak point: it leaves about
one hundred years for the formation of historical legends,
of which Peter's presence in Rome may be one just as much as
his conflict with Simon Magus. We have then to go farther
back into antiquity.
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About 150 the Roman presbyter Caius offers to
show to the heretic Procius the trophies of the
Apostles: "If you will got the Vatican, and to the Via
Ostiensis, you will find the monuments of those who have
founded this Church." Can Caius and the Romans for whom
he speaks have been in error on a point so vital to
their Church?
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Next we come to Papias (c. 138-150). From him we
only get a faint indication that he places Peter's
preaching in Rome, for he states that Mark wrote down
what Peter preached, and he makes him write in Rome.
Weizsaecker himself holds that this inference from
Papias has some weight in the cumulative argument we are
constructing.
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Earlier than Papias is
Ignatius Martyr (before 117), who, on his way to martyrdom,
writes to the Romans: "I do not command you as did Peter
and Paul; they were Apostles, I am a disciple", words
which according to Lightfoot have no sense if Ignatius
did not believe Peter and Paul to have been preaching in
Rome.
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Earlier still is
Clement of Rome writing to the Corinthians, probably in 96, certainly before the
end of the first century. He cites Peter's and Paul's
martyrdom as an example of the sad fruits of fanaticism
and envy. They have suffered "amongst us" he says, and
Weizsaecker rightly sees here another proof for our
thesis.
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The Gospel of St. John, written about the same
time as the letter Clement to the Corinthians, also
contains a clear allusion to the martyrdom by
crucifixion of St. Peter, without, however, locating it
(John 21:18, 19).
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The very oldest evidence comes from St. Peter
himself, if he be the author of the First Epistle of
Peter, of if not, from a writer nearly of his own time:
"The Church that is in Babylon saluteth you, and so doth
my son Mark" (1
Peter 5:13).
That Babylon stands for Rome, as usual amongst pious
Jews, and not for the real Babylon, then without
Christians, is admitted by common consent (cf. F.J.A. Hort, "Judaistic
Christianity", London, 1895, 155).
This chain of documentary evidence, having its first link in
Scripture itself, and broken nowhere, puts the sojourn of
St. Peter in Rome among the best-ascertained facts in
history. It is further strengthened by a similar chain of
monumental evidence, which Lanciani, the prince of Roman
topographers, sums up as follows: "For the archaeologist the
presence and execution of Sts. Peter and Paul in Rome are
facts established beyond a shadow of doubt, by purely
monumental evidence!" (Pagan and Christian Rome, 123).
ST. PETER'S SUCCESSORS IN OFFICE
St. Peter's successors carried on his office, the importance
of which grew with the growth of the Church. In 97 serious
dissensions troubled the Church of Corinth. The Roman
Bishop, Clement, unbidden, wrote an authoritative letter to
restore peace. St. John was still living at Ephesus, yet
neither he nor his interfered with Corinth. Before 117 St.
Ignatius of Antioch addresses the Roman Church as the one
which "presides over charity . . . which has never deceived
any one, which has taught others." St. Irenaeus (180-200)
states the theory and practice of doctrinal unity as
follows:
With this Church [of Rome] because of its more powerful
principality, every Church must agree, that is the faithful
everywhere, in this [i. e. in communion with the Roman
Church] the tradition of the Apostles has ever been
preserved by those on every side. (Adv. Haereses, III)
The heretic Marcion, the Montanists from Phrygia, Praxeas
from Asia, come to Rome to gain the countenance of its
bishops; St. Victor, Bishop of Rome, threatens to
excommunicate
the Asian Churches; St. Stephen refuses to receive
St. Cyprian's
deputation, and separates himself from various Churches of
the East; Fortunatus and Felix, deposed by
Cyprian,
have recourse to Rome; Basilides, deposed in Spain, betakes
himself to Rome; the presbyters of Dionysius, Bishop of
Alexandria, complain of his doctrine to Dionysius, Bishop of
Rome; the latter expostulates with him, and he explains. The
fact is indisputable: the Bishops of Rome took over Peter's
Chair and Peter's office of continuing the work of Christ
[Duchesne, "The Roman Church before Constantine", Catholic
Univ. Bulletin (October, 1904) X, 429-450]. To be in
continuity with the Church founded by Christ affiliation to
the See of Peter is necessary, for, as a matter of history,
there is no other Church linked to any other Apostle by an
unbroken chain of successors. Antioch, once the see and
centre of St. Peter's labours, fell into the hands of
Monophysite patriarchs under the Emperors Zeno and
Anastasius at the end of the fifth century. The Church of
Alexandria in Egypt was founded by St. Mark the Evangelist,
the mandatory of St. Peter. It flourished exceedingly until
the Arian and Monophysite heresies took root among its
people and gradually led to its extinction. The
shortest-lived Apostolic Church is that of Jerusalem. In 130
the Holy City was destroyed by Hadrian, and a new town, Ælia
Capitolina, erected on its site. The new Church of Ælia
Capitolina was subjected to Caesarea; the very name of
Jerusalem fell out of use till after the Council of Nice
(325). The Greek Schism now claims its allegiance. Whatever
of Apostolicity remains in these Churches founded by the
Apostles is owing to the fact that Rome picked up the broken
succession and linked anew to the See of Peter. The Greek
Church, embracing all the Eastern Churches involved in the
schism of Photius and Michael Caerularius, and the Russian
Church can lay no claim to Apostolic succession either
direct or indirect, i.e. through Rome, because they are, by
their own fact and will, separated from the Roman Communion.
During the four hundred and sixty-four between the accession
of Constantine (323) and the Seventh General Council (787),
the whole or part of the Eastern episcopate lived in schism
for no less than two hundred and three years: namely from
the Council of Sardica (343) to
St. John
Chrysostom
(389), 55 years; owing to
Chrysostom's
condemnation (404-415), 11 years; owing to Acadius and the
Henoticon
edict
(484-519), 35 years; total, 203 years (Duchesne). They do,
however, claim doctrinal connection with the Apostles,
sufficient to their mind to stamp them with the mark of
Apostolicity.
THE ANGLICAN CONTINUITY CLAIM
The continuity claim is brought forward by all sects, a fact
showing how essential a note of the true Church Apostolicity
is. The Anglican High-Church party asserts its continuity with the pre-Reformation
Church in England, and through it with the Catholic Church
of Christ. "At the Reformation we but washed our face" is a
favourite
Anglican saying; we have to show that in reality they washed off their
head, and have been a truncated Church ever since.
Etymologically, "to continue" means "to hold together".
Continuity, therefore, denotes a successive existence
without constitutional change, an advance in time of a thing
in itself steady. Steady, not stationary, for the nature of
a thing may be to grow, to develop on constitutional lines,
thus constantly changing yet always the selfsame. This
applies to all organisms starting from a germ, to all
organizations starting from a few constitutional principles;
it also applies to religious belief, which as Newman says,
changes in order to remain the same. On the other hand, we
speak of a "breach of continuity" whenever a constitutional
change takes place. A Church enjoys continuity when it
develops along the lines of its original constitution; it
changes when it alters its constitution either social or
doctrinal. But what is the constitution of the Church of
Christ? The answer is as varied as the sects calling
themselves
Christian. Being persuaded that continuity with Christ is essential to their
legitimate status, they have devised theories of the
essentials of
Christianity, and of a
Christian Church, exactly suiting their own denomination. Most of
the repudiatae Apostolic succession as a mark of the true
Church; they glory in their separation. Our present
controversy is not with such, but with the
Anglicans who do pretend to continuity. We have
points of contact only with the High-Churchmen, whose
leanings toward antiquity and Catholicism place them midway
between the Catholic and the
Protestant pure and simple.
ENGLAND AND ROME
Of all the Churches now separated from Rome, none has a more
distinctly Roman origin than the
Church of England. It has often been claimed that St. Paul, or
some other Apostle, evangelized the Britons. It is certain,
however, that whenever Welsh annals mention the introduction
of Christianity into the island, invariably they conduct the reader to Rome.
In the "Liber
Pontificalis"
(ed. Duchesne, I, 136) we read that "Pope
Eleutherius received a letter from Lucius, King of
Britain, that he might be made a
Christian by his orders." The incident is told
again and again by the
Venerable Bede; it is found in the Book of Llandaff,
as well as in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; it is accepted by
French, Swiss, German chroniclers, together with the home
authorities Fabius, Henry of Huntingdon, William of
Malmesbury, and Giraldus Cambrensis.
The Saxon invasion swept the British Church out of existence
wherever it penetrated, and drove the British
Christians to the western borders of the island, or
across the sea into Armorica, now French Brittany. No
attempt at converting their conquerors was ever made by the
conquered. Rome once more stepped in. The missionaries sent
by
Gregory the Great converted and baptized King
Ethelbert of Kent, with thousands of his subjects. In 597
Augustine was made Primate over all England, and his
successors, down to the Reformation, have ever received from
Rome the
pallium, the symbol of super-episcopal authority. The
Anglo-Saxon hierarchy was thoroughly Roman in its origin, in
its faith and practice, in its obedience and affection;
witness every page in Bede's "Ecclesiastical History". A
like Roman spirit animated the nation. Among the saints
recognized by the Church are twenty-three kings and sixty
queens, princes, or princesses of the different Anglo-Saxon
dynasties, reckoned from the seventh to the eleventh
century. Ten of the Saxon kings made the journey to the
tomb
of St. Peter, and his successor, in Rome. Anglo-Saxon
pilgrims formed quite a colony in proximity to the Vatican,
where the local topography (Borgo, Sassia, Vicus Saxonum)
still recalls their memory. There was an English school in
Rome, founded by King Ine of Wessex and
Pope
Gregory II (715-731), and supported by the
Romescot, or
Peter's-pence, paid yearly by every Wessex family.
The
Romescot was made obligatory by
Edward
the Confessor, on every monastery and household in
possession of land or cattle to the yearly value of thirty
pence.
The Norman Conquest (1066) wrought no change in the religion
of England. St. Anselm of Canterbury (1093-1109) testified
to the supremacy of the Roman Pontiff in his writings (in
Matthew 16) and by his acts. When pressed to surrender his
right of appeal to Rome, he answered the king in court:
You wish me to swear never, on any account, to appeal in
England to Blessed Peter or his Vicar; this, I say, ought
not to be commanded by you, who are a
Christian, for to swear this is to abjure Blessed
Peter; he who abjures Blessed Peter undoubtedly abjures
Christ, who made him Prince over his Church.
St.
Thomas Becket shed his blood in defence of the
liberties of the Church against the encroachments of the
Norman king (1170).
Grosseteste, in the thirteenth century, writes more
forcibly on the Pope's authority over the whole Church than
any other ancient English bishop, although he resisted an
ill-advised appointment to a canonry made by the Pope. In
the fourteen century
Duns
Scotus teaches at Oxford "that they are
excommunicated as heretics who teach or hold anything
different from what the Roman Church holds or teaches." In
1411 the English bishops at the Synod of London condemn
Wycliffe's proposition "that it is not of necessity
to salvation to hold that the Roman Church is supreme among
the Churches." In 1535
Blessed John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, is put to
death for upholding against
Henry
VIII the Pope's supremacy over the English Church.
The most striking piece of evidence is the working of the
oath taken by
archbishops before entering into office: "I, Robert,
Archbishop of Canterbury, from this hour forward,
will be faithful and obedient to St. Peter, to the Holy
Apostolic Roman Church, to my Lord Pope Celestine, and his
successors canonically succeeding...I will, saving my order,
give aid to defend and to maintain against every man the
primacy of the Roman Church and the royalty of St. Peter. I
will visit the threshold of the Apostles every three years,
either in person or by my deputy, unless I be absolved by
apostolic dispensation...So help me
God
and these holy Gospels." (Wilkins, Concilia Angliae, II,
199).
Chief Justice Bracton (1260) lays down the civil law of this
country thus: "It is to be noted concerning the jurisdiction
of superior and inferior courts, that in the first place as
the Lord Pope has ordinary jurisdiction over all in
spirituals, so the king has, in the realm, in temporals."
The line of demarcation between things spiritual and
temporal is in many cases blurred and uncertain; the two
powers often overlap, and conflicts are unavoidable. During
five hundred years such conflicts were frequent. Their very
recurrence, however, proves that England acknowledged the
papal supremacy, for it requires two to make a quarrel. The
complaint of one side was always that the other encroached
upon its rights.
Henry
VIII himself, in 1533, still pleaded in the Roman
Courts for a divorce. Had he succeeded, the supremacy of the
Pope would not have found a more strenuous defender. It was
only after his failure that he questioned the authority of
the tribunal to which he had himself appealed. In 1534 he
was, by Act of Parliament, made the Supreme Head of the
English Church. The bishops, instead of swearing allegiance
to the Pope, now swore allegiance to the King, without any
saving clause. Blessed John Fisher was the only bishop who
refused to take the new oath; his martyrdom is the first
witness to the breach of continuity between the old English
and the new
Anglican Church. Heresy stepped in to widen the
breach.
The Thirty-nine Articles teach the
Lutheran doctrine of justification by faith alone,
deny
purgatory, reduce the seven sacraments to two, insist
on the fallibility of the Church, establish the king's
supremacy, and deny the pope's jurisdiction in England. Mass
was abolished, and the
Real
Presence; the form of ordination was so altered to
suit the new views on the priesthood that it became
ineffective, and the succession of priests failed as well as
the succession of bishops. (See
ANGLICAN ORDERS.) Is it possible to imagine that the
framers of such vital alternations thought of "continuing"
the existing Church? When the hierarchical framework is
destroyed, when the doctrinal foundation is removed, when
every stone of the edifice is freely rearranged to suit
individual tastes, then there is no continuity, but
collapse. The old façade of Battle Abbey still stands, also
parts of the outer wall, and one faces a stately, newish,
comfortable mansion; green lawns and shrubs hide old
foundations of church and cloisters; the monks' scriptorium
and storerooms still stand to sadden the visitor's mood. Of
the abbey of 1538, the abbey of 1906 only keeps the mask,
the diminished sculptures and the stones--a fitting image of
the old Church and the new.
PRESENT STAGE
Dr. James Gairdner, whose "History of the English Church in
the 16th Century" lays bare the essentially
Protestant spirit of the English Reformation, in a
letter on "Continuity" (reproduced in the Tablet, 20
January, 1906), shifts the controversy from historical to
doctrinal ground. "If the country," he says, "still
contained a community of
Christians--that is to say, of real believers in the
great gospel of salvation, men who still accepted the old
creeds, and had no doubt
Christ
died to save them--then the
Church
of England remained the same as before. The old
system was preserved, in fact all that was really essential
to it, and as regards doctrine nothing was taken away except
some doubtful scholastic propositions."
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