Institutes of the Christian Religion (Vol. 2 of 2)
CHAPTER IV.01
The State Of The Ancient Church, And The Mode Of Government Practised Before The Papacy - Reading 01
CHAPTER IV.
THE STATE OF THE ANCIENT CHURCH, AND THE MODE OF GOVERNMENT PRACTISED BEFORE THE PAPACY.
Hitherto we have treated of the mode of government in the Church, as it has been delivered to us by the pure word of God, and of the offices in it, as they were instituted by Christ. Now, that all these things may be more clearly and familiarly displayed, and more deeply impressed upon our minds, it will be useful to examine what was the form of the ancient Church, in these particulars. It will place before our eyes an actual exemplification of the Divine institution. For though the bishops of those times published many canons, in which they seemed to express more than had been expressed in the Holy Scriptures, yet they were so cautious in framing their whole economy according to the sole standard of the word of God, that in this respect scarcely any thing can be detected among them inconsistent with that word. But though there might be something to be regretted in their regulations, yet because they directed their sincere and zealous efforts to preserve the institution of God, without deviating from it to any considerable extent, it will be highly useful in this place to give a brief sketch of what their practice was. As we have stated that there are three kinds of ministers recommended to us in the Scripture, so the ancient Church divided all the ministers it had into three orders. For from the order of presbyters, they chose some for pastors and teachers; the others presided over the discipline and corrections. To the deacons was committed the care of the poor and the distribution of the alms. Readers and Acolytes were not names of certain offices, but young men, to whom they also gave the name of clergy, whom they accustomed from their youth to certain exercises in the service of the Church, that they might better understand to what they were destined, and might enter upon their office better prepared for it in due time; as I shall soon show more at large. Therefore Jerome, after having mentioned five orders of the Church, enumerates bishops, presbyters, deacons, the faithful, or believers at large, and catechumens, or persons who had not yet been baptized, but had applied for instruction in the Christian faith. Thus he assigns no particular place to the rest of the clergy and the monks.
II. All those to whom the office of teaching was assigned,
were denominated presbyters. To guard against dissension, the
general consequence of equality, the presbyters in each city
chose one of their own number, whom they distinguished by
the title of bishop. The bishop, however, was not so superior
to the rest in honour and dignity, as to have any dominion over
his colleagues; but the functions performed by a consul in the
senate, such as, to propose things for consideration, to collect
the votes, to preside over the rest in the exercise of advice,
admonition, and exhortation, to regulate all the proceedings by
his authority, and to carry into execution whatever had been
decreed by the general voice;—such were the functions exercised
by the bishop in the assembly of the presbyters. And
that this arrangement was introduced by human agreement, on
account of the necessity of the times, is acknowledged by the
ancient writers themselves. Thus Jerome, on the Epistle to
Titus, says, “A presbyter is the same as a bishop. And before
dissensions in religion were produced by the instigation of the
devil, and one said, I am of Paul, and another, I am of Cephas,
the Churches were governed by a common council of presbyters.
Afterwards, in order to destroy the seeds of dissensions, the whole
charge was committed to one. Therefore, as the presbyters
know that according to the custom of the Church they are
subject to the bishop who presides over them, so let the
bishops know that their superiority to the presbyters is more from
custom than from the appointment of the Lord, and they ought
to unite together in the government of the Church.” In another
place, he shows the antiquity of this institution; for he says,
that at Alexandria, even from Mark the Evangelist to Heraclas
and Dionysius, the presbyters always chose one of their body
to preside over them, whom they called their bishop. Every
city, therefore, had its college of presbyters, who were pastors
and teachers. For they all executed the duties of teaching,
exhorting, and correcting, among the people, as Paul enjoins
bishops to do; [848]
III. But with respect to the office of which we are now
treating, the bishops and presbyters were equally required to
employ themselves in the dispensation of the word and sacraments.
For at Alexandria only, because Arius had disturbed
the Church there, it was ordained that no presbyter should
preach to the people; as is asserted by Socrates in the ninth
book of his Tripartite History, with which Jerome hesitates
not to express his dissatisfaction. It would certainly have
been regarded as a prodigy, if any man had claimed the character
of a bishop, who had not shown himself really such in
his conduct. Such was the strictness of those times, that all
ministers were constrained to discharge the duties which the
Lord requires of them. I refer not to the custom of one age
only; for even in the time of Gregory, when the Church was
almost extinct, or at least had considerably degenerated from
its ancient purity, it would not have been permitted for any
bishop to abstain from preaching. Gregory somewhere says,
“A priest dies, if his sound be not heard; [849] [850]
IV. The establishment of one archbishop over all the bishops of each province, and the appointment of patriarchs at the Council of Nice, with rank and dignity superior to the archbishops, were regulations for the preservation of discipline. In this disquisition, however, what was of the least frequent use cannot be wholly omitted. The principal reason, therefore, for the institution of these orders was, that if any thing should take place in any Church which could not be settled by a few persons, it might be referred to a provincial synod. If the magnitude or difficulty of the case required a further discussion, the patriarchs were called to unite with the synods; and from them there could be no appeal but to a general council. This constitution of government some called a hierarchy—a name, in my opinion, improper, and certainly not used in the Scriptures. For it has been the design of the Holy Spirit, in every thing relating to the government of the Church, to guard against any dreams of principality or dominion. But if we look at the thing, without regarding the term, we shall find that the ancient bishops had no intention of contriving a form of government for the Church, different from that which God has prescribed in his word.