登陆注册
4706000000008

第8章

27 Presbyterianism, with its popular principle of the power of the congregation in the management of their own affairs was extruded from the Church of England, and men like Travers can no longer appear in her pulpits. Perhaps if a government like that of Elizabeth, with secular statesmen like the Cecils, and ecclesiastical statesmen like Whitgift, could have been prolonged, Presbyterianism might, by a wise mixture of concession and firmness, have been absorbed in the Establishment. Lord Bolingbroke, on a matter of this kind a very clear-judging and impartial witness, says, in a work far too little read, his Remarks on English History :--'The measures pursued and the temper observed in Queen Elizabeth's time tended to diminish the religious opposition by a slow, a gentle, and for that very reason an effectual progression. There was even room to hope that when the first fire of the Dissenters' zeal was passed, reasonable terms of union with the Established Church might be accepted by such of them as were not intoxicated with fanaticism. These were friends to order, though they disputed about it. If these friends of Calvin's discipline had been once incorporated with the Established Church, the remaining sectaries would have been of little moment, either for numbers or reputation; and the very means which were proper to gain these friends were likewise the most effectual to hinder the increase of them, and of the other sectaries in the meantime.' The temper and ill judgment of the Stuarts made shipwreck of all policy of this kind. Yet speaking even of the time of the Stuarts, but their early time, Clarendon says that if Bishop Andrewes had succeeded Bancroft at Canterbury, the disaffection of separatists might have been stayed and healed. This, however, was not to be; and Presbyterianism, after exercising for some years the law of the strongest, itself in Charles the Second's reign suffered under this law, and was finally cast out from the Church of England.

28 Now the points of church-discipline at issue between Presbyterianism and Episcopalianism are, as has been said, not essential. They might probably once have been settled in a sense altogether favourable to Episcopalianism. Hooker may have been right in thinking that there were in his time circumstances which made it essential that they should be settled in this sense, though the points in themselves were not essential. But by the very fact of the settlement not having then been effected, of the breach having gone on and widened, of the Nonconformists not having been amicably incorporated with the Establishment but violently cast out from it, the circumstances are now altogether altered. Isaac Walton, a fervent Churchman, complains that 'the principles of the Nonconformists grew at last to such a height and were vented so daringly, that, beside the loss of life and limbs, the Church and State were both forced to use such other severities as will not admit of an excuse, if it had not been to prevent confusion and the perilous consequences of it.' But those very severities have of themselves made union on an Episcopalian footing impossible.

Besides, Presbyterianism, the popular authority of elders, the power of the congregation in the management of their own affairs, has that warrant given to it by Scripture and by the proceedings of the early Christian Churches, it is so consonant with the spirit of Protestantism which made the Reformation and which has great strength in this country, it is so predominant in the practice of other Reformed Churches, it was so strong in the original Reformed Church of England, that one cannot help doubting whether any settlement which suppressed it could have been really permanent, and whether it would not have kept appearing again and again, and causing dissension.

29 Well, then, if culture is the disinterested endeavour after man's perfection, will it not make us wish to cure the provincialism of the Nonconformists, not by rendering Churchmen provincial along with them, but by letting their popular Church-discipline, formerly present in the national Church and still present in the affections and practice of a Good part of the nation, appear in the national Church once more; and thus to bring Nonconformists into contact again, as their greater fathers were, with the main stream of national life? Why should not a Presbyterian Church, based on this considerable and important though not essential principle, of the congregational share in the church-management, be established,--with equal rank for its chiefs with the chiefs of Episcopacy, and with admissibility of its ministers, under a revised system of patronage and preferment to benefices,--side by side with the Episcopal Church, as the Calvinist and Lutheran Churches are established side by side in France and Germany? Such a Presbyterian Church would unite the main bodies of Protestants who are now separatists; and separation would cease to be the law of their religious order. And thus,--through this concession on a really considerable point of difference,--that endless splitting into hole-and-corner churches on quite inconsiderable points of difference, which must prevail so long as separatism is the first law of a Nonconformist's religious existence, would be checked. Culture would then find a place among English followers of the popular authority of Elders, as it has long found it among the followers of Episcopal jurisdiction. And this we should gain by merely recognising, regularizing, and restoring an element which appeared once in the reformed national Church, and which is considerable and national enough to have a sound claim to appear there still.

同类推荐
  • 懒真子

    懒真子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 丛林校定清规总要

    丛林校定清规总要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Mad King

    The Mad King

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 天请问经疏

    天请问经疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洪承畴章奏文册汇辑

    洪承畴章奏文册汇辑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 快穿系统,撩人技能百分百

    快穿系统,撩人技能百分百

    话说自从江落被车撞死以后,她就莫名其妙的来到了一个自称是系统的东西身边。在她的记忆里,……
  • 权少的新妻

    权少的新妻

    这是一部关于男人追女人、男人宠女人的现代爱情故事。这是一个有家世有背景、有能力有手腕男人的商界风云录。这是一个普通小白领的职场奋斗励志史。当一本正经遇到玩世不恭,是谁笑了?当一招一式遇上不择手段,是谁赢了?当爱情至上遇上道德道义,是谁让步了?当恩怨情仇遇上生死考验,是谁退缩了?**********记得那天他说:等我,你的未来我接手。而这一等,就是五年。而五年之后的再遇:他是高高在上的大总裁、她是崭露头角的小策划,两人在Y视的竟标会上争了个你死我活。而他与她的纠葛,自然远不止此……***********本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合。
  • 七十二症辨治方法

    七十二症辨治方法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 草原斗士

    草原斗士

    战争并非人间才有,动物界也充满了斗争与厮杀。在《草原斗士》中,看狼族斗士如何集群狩猎,看“短跑健将”猎豹如何短距离捕捉猎物,看与狮争锋的斑鬣狗如何对抗狮群……《草原斗士》生动揭示动物界鲜为人知的战斗场景,告诉小读者一个真实的大自然,并以高清晰图片从多个角度展现所选动物的风采,努力为孩子们奉献一道视觉上的美味大餐。
  • 安魂者

    安魂者

    怀抱骨灰往返于台湾与大陆之间的高秉涵,终将成为现代中国的独特风景。肝肠寸断的骨肉别离,孤老终身的爱情坚守,一对对亲人在骨灰中相认,浓郁的菏泽乡情勾起百年风云的悲怆记忆,更蕴含对两岸骨肉亲情团聚的强烈期盼。伟大的老头、伟大的老太,这些平凡命运远比虚构更加震撼动人。没有一条回家的路,比这条更艰难:不仅要跨越地理意义上的海峡,还要跨越现实政治的鸿沟;不仅要缩短千山万水的时空,还要弥合心灵情感的裂痕;不仅要承受自然界的凄风苦雨,还要摆渡人性的激流险滩。
  • 道友请留步

    道友请留步

    现代青年穿成申公豹。除了实力还有法宝,最大的凭借就是对于封神一劫的熟知,相信自己谋划一番,必定不会再当什么分水将军,被拿去填北海之眼了。
  • 另一扇门

    另一扇门

    蒋黎坐在候机室里,正在读一篇写在练习本上的小说,小说的名字叫《另一扇门》。他坐在第三级楼梯上,两脚埋进沙子里。他正对的大海是暹罗湾,海水由绿渐蓝,铺展开去,绕过左前方的小岛,化为蓝黑色。从小岛起计,再出去五十海里,就是太平洋了,他去过那里,不止一次,只要有条快艇,就可以做到。“Hello”,住在旁边的泰国姑娘在同他打招呼,她蹲在一个铁架旁引炭生火,准备BBQ。与她同居的德国老男人也走下了楼梯,一脚高,一脚低的,老男人右手抱着一只脸盆,扬起左手挥了挥,又对他说了句什么,但他没听懂。
  • 九一八

    九一八

    这是每一个中国人都不会陌生的话题,但我们还是想探究隐于事变背后的某种玄机。为此,《细节见证历史·抗日战争》之《九一八》撷取了事变发生前后21天的历史,通过38个细节性的事件和话题,力图多层面,全方位地展示事变背后的政治角力。你会看到,虽然占领中国东北是日本的既定国策,但事变的爆发也是日本国内各种政治努力复杂博奕的结果;虽然国民政府的不抵抗政策早已臭名昭著,但也脱不开当时的国情和中日双方的力量对比;虽然中日双方是事变冲突的主角,但当时国际社会与国际列强的姿态,从定意义上讲也极大地影响了事态进程与结束。
  • 炽焰豪门:boss老公诱妻成瘾

    炽焰豪门:boss老公诱妻成瘾

    “女人,你只需要对我绝对服从,你要的东西我自然会给你。”他勾起她的下颚,冷傲不可一世的警告道。“包括你的命吗?”一纸交易为目的婚约。一个由柔弱性格逐渐露出利爪的女人,每每挑战他极限的瞬间,都让他露出猎捕的冲动。殊不知,她只是一个长着和他妻子相同面孔的女人,伊雪同父异母的妹妹伊薇,她最大的愿望就是看着姐姐找到幸福,让她措手比较的是,伊雪却在两个月之后流产离世,种种事件都透着诡异的阴谋,为了查清凶手,她顶替伊雪呆在安墨寒的身边,和他斗智斗勇。是谁对姐姐下的堕胎药?安墨寒?还是另有他人?姐姐肚子里的孩子不是安墨寒的?那……是谁的崽?在家防暗箭,在外防情敌,睡觉防‘老公’。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 青春恋爱纪实

    青春恋爱纪实

    大学毕业三年的青年作家与小小奋斗女青年之间的爱情纠葛,期间穿插了四段感人且温馨的爱情故事。爱情来得突然,也褪去的迅速,怎么样才能留住,那得看你迈出的脚步……