תמונות בעמוד
PDF
ePub

quiet and stable residence in the United decree; the other are called Particular or Provinces of Belgium, by the favour of Calvinistic Baptists, because they agree William prince of Orange, the immortal very nearly with the Calvinists or Presby vindicator of Batavian liberty, whom they terians in their religious sentiments. This had aided with a large sum of money in latter sect reside chiefly at London and in the year 1572, when he was destitute of the the adjacent towns and villages; and they resources necessary for his vast undertak-recede so far from the opinions of their ings.1 Yet the benefits of this indulgence progenitors, that they have almost nothing reached by slow degrees to all who resided in common with the other Anabaptists, exin Holland. For opposition was made to cept that they baptize only adults, and the will of the prince both by the magis immerse totally in the water whenever they trates and by the clergy, and especially by administer the ordinance. Hence if the those of Zealand and Amsterdam, who re- government requires it, they allow a promembered the seditions raised by the Ana-fessor of religion to take an oath, to bear baptists only a short time previously. These arms, and to fill public civil offices. Their impediments [to their peace] were in a great churches are organized after the Presbyte measure removed in this century, partly by rian [or more strictly, the Independent] the perseverance and authority of William plan, and are under the direction of men and his son Maurice, and partly by the good of learning and literature." It appears behaviour of the Mennonites themselves; from the confession of these Baptists pubfor they showed great proofs of their loy-lished in 1643, that they then held the alty to the state, and became daily more same sentiments as they do at the present cautious not to afford any ground to their day." adversaries for entertaining suspicions of them. Yet full and complete peace was first given to them in the following century, A.D. 1626, after they had again purged themselves from those crimes and pernicious errors which were charged upon them, by the presentation of a confession of their faith.3

22. Those among the English who reject the baptism of infants are not called Anabaptists, but only Baptists. It is probable that these Baptists originated from the Germans and the Dutch, and that they all once held the same sentiments with the Mennonites. But they are now divided into two general classes, the one called that of the General Baptists or Remonstrants, because they believe that God has excluded no man from salvation by any sovereign

1 Brandt's Historie de Reformatie in de Nedderlande, vol. i. book x. p. 525, 526; Cérémonies et Coutumes de tous les Peuples du Monde, tome iv. p. 201. [General History of the United Netherlands, (in German), vol. iii. p. 317, &c. Wagener, in the passage here referred to, relates the matter thus. At Middleburg, because the Anabaptists would not take the citizen's oath, it was resolved to exclude them from the privileges of citizenship, or at least not to admit them fully to the rank of citizens. But the prince opposed it, and maintained very rationally that an Anabaptist's affirmation ought to be held equivalent to an oath; and that in this case no farther coercion could be used with them, unless we would justify the Catholics in compelling the Reformed by force to adopt a mode of worship from which their consciences revolted. And afterwards, when the city council demanded of them to mount guard and threatened to close their shops if they refused, the prince commanded the city council peremptorily to trouble the Anabaptists no more, for declining oaths and the bearing of arms. This took place in the year

1578.- Schl.

Brandt, ubi supra, book xi. p. 555, 586, 587, &c.

609, 610, b. xiv. p. 780, b. xvi. p. 811.

Schyn's Historia Mennonitar. plenior Deductio, cap. iv. p. 79, &c.

23. The General Baptists, or as some call them the Antipodobaptists who are dispersed in great numbers over many provinces of England, consist of illiterate persons of low condition, for like the ancient Mennonites they despise learning. Their religion is very general and indefinite, so that they tolerate persons of all sects, even Arians and Socinians, and do not reject any person, provided he professes to be a Christian and to receive the holy Scriptures as the rule of religious faith and practice. They

ii.

4 Whiston's Memoirs of his Life and Writings, vol.

p. 461.

5 Böhm's Englische Reformations-historie, p. 151. 473, 536, book viii. p. 1152, &c. [Crosby's History History of the Dissenters, vol. i. chap. i. sec. iii. p. 14. the English Baptists, vol. i.; Bogue and Bennet's &c. Dutch and German Anabaptists or Mennonites selytes there, as early as the year 1535, and thenceforappeared in England, and doubtless made some proward to the end of the century. But they were se rigorously persecuted, not only by Henry VIII. but by Edward VI. queen Mary, and queen Elizabeth, that they can hardly be said to have existed as a visible sect in England, during the sixteenth century. division into General and Particular Baptists, did not take place till the reign of James I. See Wall's Hist. of Infant Baptism, part ii. chap. vii. sec. vi. p. &c.-Mur.

And their

205,

6 Bibliothèque Britannique, tome vi. p. 2. [The. Baptist Confession of 1643, was "set forth in the name of seven congregations then gathered in London." In September, 1689, elders and messengers from upward of one hundred congregations of Calvinistic Baptists in England and Wales met in London, and drew up a more full confession and substantially the same in doctrine, but expressed very much in the words of the Westminster and the Savoy Confessions, with both which it agrees in doctrine, while in discipline and worship it accords only with the latter. The Calvinis tic Baptists in England have generally been on the gationalists there; and often both sects worshipped most friendly terms with the Independents or Congre and Bennet's History of Dissenters, vol. i. p. 142, 143, together, and were under the same pastors. See Bogue vol. ii. p. 140, &c. also the Confession of the Baptist Convention of 1689 and its Preface.-Mur.

This appears from their confession (drawn up in

[ocr errors]

have this in common with the Particular Baptists that they baptize only adults, and these they immerse wholly in water; but they differ from them in this, that they rebaptize those who were either baptized only in infancy and childhood, or were not immersed, which if report may be credited the Particular Baptists will not do. There are likewise other peculiarities of this sect. (I.) Like the ancient Mennonites, they regard their own church as being the only true church of Christ, and most carefully avoid communion with all other religious societies. (II.) They immerse candidates for baptism only once, and not three times; and they esteem it unessential whether new converts be baptized in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, or only in the name of Jesus. (III.) With Menno they expect a millennial reign of Christ. (IV.) Many of them likewise adopt Menno's opinion respecting the origin of Christ's body. (V.) They consider the decree of the apostles, Acts xv. 25, respecting blood and things strangled, to be a law binding on the church universal. (VI.) They believe that the soul, between death and the resurrection at the last day, has neither pleasure nor pain, but is in a state of insensibility. (VII.) They use extreme unction. (VIII.) Some of them, in addition to Sunday or the Lord's day, keep also the Jewish Sabbath. I omit the notice of some minor points. These Baptists have bishops whom

1660 and published by Wm. Whiston, in the Memoirs of his Life, vol. ii. p. 561), which is so general that all Christian sects, with the exception of a few points, could embrace it. Whiston himself, though an Arian, joined this community of Baptists, whom he considered to bear the nearest resemblance to the most ancient Christians. Thomas Emlyn, a famous Socinian, also lived among them, according to the testimony of Whiston.

I know not on what authority Mosheim makes this distinction between the General and the Particular Baptists; and I know of no sufficient proof of its reality. Neither does it appear, as Mosheim seemed to be informed, that the General Baptists were more numerous in England than the Particular Baptists. On the contrary, I suppose the former to have always been the smaller community, and at the present day they are only about one-sixth part as numerous as the Particular Baptists. See Bogue and Bennett, ubi supra, vol. iv. p. 328.-Mur.

they call messengers (for thus they interpret the word ayyinos in the Apocalyptical epistles), and presbyters and deacons. Their bishops are often men of learning.3

24. David George [or Joris], a Hollander of Delft, gave origin and name to a singular sect. Having at last forsaken the Anabaptists, he retired to Basil in 1544, assumed a new name [John Bruck von Binningen], and there died in 1556. He was well esteemed by the people of Basil so long as he lived, for being a man of wealth he united magnificence with virtue and integrity. But after his death, his son-in-law Nicholas Blesdyck accused him before the senate of most pestilent errors, and the cause being tried, his body was committed to the common hangman to be burned. Nothing can be more impious and scandalous than his opinions, if the historians of his case and his adversaries have estimated them correctly. For he is said to have declared himself to be a third David and another son of God, the fountain of all divine wisdom; to have denied the existence of heaven and hell, both good and bad angels, and a final judgment; to have treated all the laws of modesty and decorum with contempt, and to have taught other things equally bad. But if I do not greatly mis

3 Whiston, Memoirs of his Life, vol. ii. p. 466, &c. tists, London, 1728, 4 vols. 8vo, which however I have There is extant, Crosby's History of the English Bap never seen. [This Crosby was himself a General Bap

tist and kept a private school, in which he taught young men mathematics and had also a small bookstore. He died in 1752. See Alberti's Letters on the most Recent State of Religion and Learning in England (in German), Preface to vol. iv. From Crosby, Alberti has translated the Confessions of both the Particular and the General Baptists into German, and subjoined them as an Appendix to his fourth volume, p. 1245, &c. and 1323, &c.—Schl. [The Rev. John Smyth is commonly represented as the father of the sect of General or Arminian Baptists in England. (See Bogue and Bennet, History of Dissenters, vol. i. p. 150.) He was fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge, a popular preacher, and a great sufferer for non-conformity. Separating from the church of England he joined the Brownists, was one of their leading men in 1592, and was imprisoned during eleven months. At length he fled with other Brownists to Holland, and in 1606 joined the English Brownist church at Amsterdam. Here he fell into Arminian and Baptist opinions, on which he had disputes with Ainsworth, Robinson, and others; and he removed with his adherents to Leyden, where he died in 1610. Soon after his death, his followers returned to England; and as is generally supposed, they were the first congregation of English General Baptists. See his life in Brook's Lives of the Puritans, vol. ii. p. 195, &c.-Mur.

2 These statements are derived from Whiston's Memoirs of his Life, vol. ii. p. 461, and from Wall's Hist. of Infant Baptism, part ii. p. 390, &c. edit. Latin. [p. 280, &c. ed. London, 1705. Wall does not represent all these as distinguishing tenets of the General Baptists. He enumerates the various peculiarities to be 4 See the Historia Davidis Georgii, by his son-in-law, found among the English Baptists of all sorts. Some Blesdyck, published by Revius; also his Life, written of the peculiarities mentioned constitute distinct sects, in German by Stolterfoth, and many others. Among as the eighth, which gives rise to the small and now the more modern writers, see Arnold, Kirchen-und almost extinct sect of Seventh-day Baptists; who how- Ketzer-historie, vol. i. book xvi. chap. xvi. sec. 44, &c ever do not keep both days, Saturday and Sunday, but and his extensive collections in vindication of the reonly the former. The second peculiarity, so far as re-putation of David George, in vol. ii p. 534. &c. spects a single application of water, is not peculiar to the Baptists; and so far as it respects baptizing in the name of Jesus only, was confined (as Wall supposed), to the General Baptists, who were early inclined to Anti-Trinitarianism, and of late in England have generally taken that ground.-Mur.

Also

p. 1185, &c. See also More's Enthusiasmus Triumphatus sect. xxxiii. &c. p. 23, &c. Add especially, the documents which are brought to light in my History of Michael Servetus, (in German), p. 425, &c. [David Joris was born at Delft in 1501. Though placed at school, he learned nothing. But his inclination led

NEW YOR

take, the barbarous and coarse style of his 25. An intimate friend of David George. compositions, for he possessed some genius but of a somewhat different turn of mind, but no learning, led his opposers often to Henry Nicolai of Westphalia, gave much put a harsh and unjust construction upon trouble to the Dutch and the English from his sentences. That he possessed more sense the year 1555, by founding and propagating and more virtue than is commonly supposed, the Family of Love as he denominated his is at least evinced not only by his books, sect. To this man nearly the same remarks of which he published a great many, but apply, which were made of his friend. He also by his disciples, who were persons by would perhaps have in great measure avoid. no means base but of great simplicity of ed the foul blots which many have fastened manners and character, and who were for- upon him, if he had possessed the genius merly numerous in Holstein, and are said and learning requisite to a correct and to be so still in Friesland and in other lucid expression of his thoughts. What countries. In the manner of the more his aims were, appears pretty clearly from moderate Anabaptists, he laboured to re- the name of the sect which he set up. For vive languishing piety among his fellow- he declared himself divinely appointed and men, and in this matter his imagination, sent to teach mankind that the whole of which was excessively warm, so deceived religion consists in the exercise of divine him that he falsely supposed he had divine love; that all other things, which are sup visions; and he placed religion in the ex-posed to belong either to religion or to the clusion of all external objects from the thoughts and the cultivation of silence, contemplation, and a peculiar and indescribable state of the soul. The Mystics therefore of the highest order and the Quakers might claim him if they would, and they might assign him no mean rank among their sort of people.

him to learn the art of painting on glass, which caused him to travel in the Netherlands, France, and England. Returning in 1524, he pursued that business in his native town. The Reformation here caused considerable commotion, and in 1530 Joris for obstructing a Catholic procession was imprisoned, whipped, and had his tongue bored. He at length turned to the Anabaptists, but being more moderate than they and opposed to their tumultuous proceedings, it was not till 1534 that he actually was rebaptized. He then joined the party them, and at length he united some contending parties of Hoffmann, but he was not well pleased with any of together, and actually established a particular sect of Anabaptists. He next began to have visions and revelations. As his adherents suffered persecution in Westphalia and Holland, he often attended them and comforted and animated them in their dying hours. He saw his own mother decapitated at Delft in 1537. A monitory letter which he sent to the senate of Holland caused the bearer to lose his head. In 1539 the land

In 1542 he published his famous Book of Wonders, in

wha

worship of God, are of no importance; and of course that it is of no consequence views any one has of the divine nature provided he burns with a flame of piety and love. To these opinions he perhaps added some other fanciful views, as is usua with men in whom the imagination predo minates; but what they were in particular. I apprehend, may be better learned from his books than from the confutations of his adversaries.3

2 See Hornbeck's Summa Controversiarum, lib. vi p. 393; Arnold's Kirchen-und Ketzerhistorie, parti book xvi. chap. xxi. sec. xxxvi. p. 746; Böhm's Eglische Reformations-historie, book iv. chap. v. ? 541, &c.

3 The last and most learned of those who attacked divine and philosopher, in his Mystery of Gothnes the Familists was Henry More, the celebrated English book vi. chaps. xii-xviii. George Fox, the father of the Quakers, severely chastised this Family of Lore because they would take an oath, dance, sing, and be cheerful; and he called them a company of fanatics See Sewel's History of the Quakers, book iii. p. 88, 9. 344, &c. [Henry Nicolai or Nicholas was born at Munster, and commenced his career about the year 1546 in the Netherlands, thence he passed over to Eng land in the latter years of Edward VI. and joined the Dutch congregation in London. But his sect did not become visible till some time in the reign of queen with a number of their books, before the parliament and prayed for toleration. In 1580, the queen and her council undertook to suppress them. They continued i in England till the middle of the following century when they became absorbed in other sects. Nic published a number of tracts and letters in Dutch for the edification of his followers, and to vindicate his principles against gainsayers. In one of his pieces and mystically styles himself: "A man whom God hat awaked from the dead, anointed and filled with the Holy elevated with Christ to an inheritance in heavenly Ghost, endowed with God in the Spirit of his love, and blessings, enlightened with the Spirit of heavenly truth, and with the true light of the all-perfect Being," &c.n his preface to one of his tracts he calls himself: "The demned. See Schroeckh's Kirchengesch, seit der His fo chosen servant of God, by whom the heavenly revelation mation, vol. v. p. 442, &c. and Von Einem's and Schle- lowers in 1575 affirmed that they neither denied that gel's notes upon this section of Mosheim.-Mur. baptism which consists in repentance and newness of See Möller's Introductio in Histor. Chersones. Cim-life, nor the holy sacrament of baptism which betokens brica, par. ii. p. 116, &c. and his Cimbria Literata, the new birth in Christ, and which is to be adminis tom. i. p. 422, &c. Itered to children; that they admitted also the perfect

grave of Hesse, to whom he applied for protection, of fered to afford it provided he would become a Lutheran. which he exposed all the fanciful opinions that floated in his imagination. He wandered in various countries till he was safe nowhere. Therefore in 1544 he retired to Basil, where he lived twelve years under the name of John von Brügge, was owner of a house in the city and an estate in the country, was a peaceable and good citizen and held communion with the Reformed Church. His son-in-law Blesdyck was a Reformed preacher in the Palatinate, and had some variance with Joris before his death. Afterwards, provoked perhaps by the disposition Joris made of his property, he brought heavy charges against him. His family and friends and acquaintances denied the truth of the charges before the court. But what they would not admit was attempted to be proved from his writings. The university and the clergy pronounced his opinions heretical, and the dead

man, who could no longer defend himself, was con

CHAPTER IV.

HISTORY OF THE SOCINIANS.

nature of our Saviour. But in a more limited sense those only are called Socinians who receive, either entire or in its principal parts, that system of religion which Faustus Socinus either produced himself, or set forth when produced by his uncle and recommended to the Unitarian brethren (as they choose to be called) living in Poland and Transylvania.3

3. While the Reformation was still immature, certain persons who looked upon everything the Romish church had hitherto professed as erroneous, began to undermine the doctrine of our Saviour's divinity and the truths connected with it, and proposed reducing the whole of religion to practical piety and virtue. But the vigilance both of the Lutherans and of the Reformed and Papists promptly resisted them, and prevented their organizing a sect. As early as the year 1526 divine honours were denied to Jesus Christ by Lewis Hätzer, a name famous among the vagrant Anabaptists, and who was beheaded at Constance in 1529.* Nor were there wanting other men of like sentiments among the Anabaptists, though

1. THE Socinians derived their name from the illustrious house of Sozini, which long flourished at Sienna, a noble city of Tuscany, and gave birth, it is said, to a number of distinguished men. For it was from this family were descended Lælius and Faustus Socinus, who are commonly regarded as the parents of the sect. Lælius Socinus was the son of Marianus, a celebrated lawyer; and to great learning and talents he added, as even his enemies acknowledge, a pure and blameless life. Leaving his native country from religious considerations in 1547, he travelled over various countries, France, England, Holland, Germany, and Poland; everywhere examining carefully the opinions of those who had abandoned the Romish church concerning God and divine things, for the sake of discovering and finding the truth. At length he settled down at Zurich in Switzerland, and there died in the year 1562, when he was not yet forty years old.' Being a man of a mild and gentle spirit and averse from all contention, he adopted the Helvetic Confession and wished to be thought a member of the Swiss church; yet he did not absolutely conceal his doubts on religious subjects, but proposed them in his letters to learned friends with whom he was intimate. But Faustus Socinus, his nephew and heir, is said to have drawn from the writings left by Lælius his real senti-terbach's Polnisch-Arianischen Socinianismus, Frankf ments concerning religion, and by publishing them to have gathered the sect.

2. The name Socinians is often used in two different senses a proper and an improper, or a limited and a more general. For in common speech all are denominated Socinians who teach doctrines akin to those of the Socinians; and especially those who either wholly deny or weaken and render dubious the Christian doctrine of three persons in the Godhead, and that of the divine

satisfaction made by Christ for the sins of men. They appeared always cheerful and in a happy state of mind, which offended the more gloomy Mystics and produced heavy charges against them. Yet nothing appeared in their mora. conduct to justify those criminations. Arnold, Kirchen-und Ketzerhistorie, part ii. book xvi. chap. xxi. sec. xxxvi. p. 873, ed. Schaffhausen; and Schroeckh's Kirchengesch, seit der Reformation, vol. v. p. 478, &c.-Mur.

Cloppenburg, Diss. de Origine et Progressu Socinianismi; Hornbeck, Summa Controversiarum, p. 563, &c.; Hottinger, Historia Ecclesiast. tom. ix. p. 417, &c. and others.

Zanchius, Præfatio ad Librum de tribus Elohim; Beza, Epistolæ, ep. lxxxi. p. 167. Several writings are ascribed to him (see Sand's Bibliotheca Anti-Trinitar. p. 18); but it is very doubtful whether he was the author of any of them.

3 There is still wanting a full and accurate history

most active in establishing and building up this com

both of the sect which follows the Socini, and also of Lælius and Faustus Socinus, and of those next to them munity. For the curiosity of those who wish to acquire an accurate knowledge of this whole subject is awakened but not satisfied by what they find in Hornbeck's Socinianismus Confutatus, vol. I.; Calovius, Opera Anti-Sociniana; Cloppenburg's Diss. de Origine 1708, 4to); Sandius, Bibliotheca Anti-Trinitariorum; et Progressu Socinianismi (Opp. tom. ii. Lugd. Bat. Lubieniecius, Historia Reformationis Polonica: Lau1725, 8vo. And the Histoire de Socinianisme, by Lamy, Paris, 1723, 4to, is a compilation from the common

Antitrinitariorum, maxime Socinianismi et Sociniano

The

writers, and abounds not only with errors but with
various matter quite foreign from a history of the
Socinian sect and religion. The very industrious and
learned Maturin Viess la Croze promised the world a
complete history of Socinianism down to our times-see
his Dissert. Historiques, tome i. p. 142-but he did not
fulfil his promise. [Besides the above, there are Zelt-
ner's Historia Crypto-Socinianismi Altorfini quondam
Academia infesti Arcana, Lips. 1729, 4to; Toulmin's
Memoirs of the Life, Character, Sentiments and Writings
of Faustus Socinus, Lond. 1777, 8vo; Bock's Historia
rum, quorum Auctores Promotores, Cœtus, Templa
recensentur, Köningsb. 1774-84, 2 vols. 8vo.
first vol. gives account of modern Socinian authors,
and the second traces the origin of Anti-Trinitarianism.
The whole therefore is only a broad introduction to a
proper History of the Socinian community. And Ilgen,
Fita Lalii Socini, Lips. 1814, 8vo.-Mur. [Another
valuable work on this subject has recently appeared in
Germany, which supplies much additional information
respecting the lives of two of the founders of this sect,
namely, Servetus and the elder Socinus. I allude to
Trechsel's Die Protestantischen Antitrinitarier wor
Faustus Socin. Heidel. 1839-44, 2 vols. The first vol.
is entitled, Michael Servet u. seine Vorgänger; and
the second, Lelio Socini u. d. Antitrinitarier seiner
Zeit. See also a brief notice of Lelius Socinus in
M'Crie's Hist. of the Reformation in Italy, 2d edit. p.
424, &c.-R.

4 Sand's Bibliotheca Anti- Trinitarior. p. 16; Ottius, Annales Anabaptist. p. 50; Breitinger's Museum Helveticum, tom. v. p. 391, tom. vi. p. 100, 479, &c, [See above, p. 687, note 1-Mur.

4. Those who watched over the interests of the Reformed church were much more alarmed by the conduct of Michael Servede3 or Servetus, as his name is written in Latin,

that whole sect cannot be charged with this a Spanish physician, born at Villa Nueva error. Besides these, John Campanus of in Aragon, a man of no ordinary genius and Juliers, in what year is not ascertained, of extensive knowledge. He first published among other unsound doctrines which he in 1531, De Trinitatis Erroribus, libri spread at Wittemberg and elsewhere, made Septem, and the next year Dialogorum de the Son of God to be inferior to the Father; Trinitate, libri duo, in which he most vioand declared the appellation Holy Spirit to lently assailed the opinion held by the great denote not a divine person but the nature body of Christians respecting the divine both of the Father and the Son; that is, nature and the three persons in it. After he revived substantially the monstrous retiring to France and passing through errors of the Arians. In the territory of various scenes, he subsequently fixed his the Grisons in Switzerland, at Strasburg, residence at Vienne, where he was a sucand perhaps elsewhere, one Claudius, an cessful practitioner of physic; and now, by Allobrogian or Savoyard, excited much his strong power of imagination, he devised commotion about the year 1530 and on- a new and singular species of religion, which ward, by impugning the divinity of our he committed to a book that he secretly Saviour. But none of these was able to printed at Vienne in 1553, and which he establish a sect. entitled Christianismi Restitutio (a Restoration of Christianity). Many things seemed to conspire to favour his designs; genius, learning, eloquence, courage, pertinacity, a show of piety, and lastly numerous patrons and friends in France, Germany, and Italy, whom he had conciliated by his natural and acquired endowments. But all his hopes were frustrated by Calvin, who caused Servetus to be seized in 1553 at Geneva, as he was passing through Switzerland towards Italy after his escape from prison at Vienne, and to be accused of blasphemy by one of Calvin's servants. The issue of the accusation was that Servetus, as he would not renounce the opinions he had embraced, was burned alive by a decree of the judges as being a pertinacions heretic and blasphemer. For in that age, the ancient laws against heretics enacted by the emperor Frederick II. and often renewed afterwards, were in full force at Geneva. A better fate was merited by this highly gifted and very learned man; yet he laboured under no small moral defects, for he was beyond all measure arrogant, and at the same time ill-tempered, contentious, unyielding, and a semi-fanatic.

1 See Schelhorn's very learned Dissertation De Joh. Campano Anti-Trinitario, in his Amanitates Literar. tom. xi. p. 1–92. [He was a native of Maseyk in the territory of Liege, and came to Wittemberg in 1528; but so concealed his opinions that they first became known after he had retired to Marpurg, where he wished to take part in the public dispute and to debate with Luther on the subject of the Lord's Supper, but was refused. He repeated the same at Torgau, where he likewise sought in vain to dispute with Luther. This filled him with resentment against Luther and his associates, and induced him to quit Wittemberg (to which he had returned) and go to Niemek, the pastor of which, Wicelius, fell under suspicion of Anti-Trinitarianism in consequence of his harbouring Campanus, and soon after went over to the Catholics. Campanus went from Saxony to the duchy of Juliers; and both orally and in writing declared himself opposed to the Reformers, and sought in an underhand manner to disseminate his Arian doctrines. But he was committed to prison by the Catholics at Cleves, and continued in confinement twenty-six years. Whether he made his escape from prison or was set at liberty is not known. All we know is that he lived to a great age. The substance of his doctrine may be learned from the very scarce book entitled, The Divine and Holy Scripture, many years since Obscured and Darkened by Unwholesome Doctrine and Teachers (by God's permission), now Restored and Amended, by the very learned John Campanus, 1532, 8vo (in German).-Schl. [Respecting Hetzer and Campanus, with their other associates, Denk, Hoff

mann, Joris, &c. additional information may be obtained in Trechsel's Michael Servet u. seine l'orgäng. p. 18, &c. 26, &c.-R.

See Schelhorn's Dissertation, De Mino Celso Senens, Claudio item Allobroge, homine Fanatico et SS. Trinitatis hoste, Ulm, 1748, 8vo; Breitinger's Museum Helveticum, tom. vii. p. 667; Haller's letter in Fuslin's Centuriai. Epistolar. Reform. &c. p 140, &c. [He first held Christ to be a mere man; but the Swiss divines brought him to admit that he was the natural Son of God, though he would not allow his eternal existence, and he positively denied three persons in the Godhead. He also maintained that the beginning of John's Gospel had been falsified. He was imprisoned at Strasburg and then banished. Schroeckh, Kirchengesch. seit der Reformation, vol. v. p. 491.-Mur.

3 By rejecting the last syllable of the name, which is a common Spanish termination, there remains the name Serve; and the letters of this name, a little transposed, produce Reves, which is the name Servetus assumed in the titlepages of his books. Omitting also his family name altogether, he called himself from his tombirthplace, Michael Villanovanus, or simply Villano

[ocr errors]

nus.

The full title of this now exceedingly rare work is, Christianismi Restitutio, Totius ecclesiae Apostolice est ad sua limina vocatio, in integrum restituia cognitione Dei, fidei Christi, justificationis nostræ, regenerationis baptismi, et cœnæ Domini manducationis. Restitute denique nobis regno cœlesti, Babylonis impie captitate soluta, et anti-Christo cum suis penitus destructo, copied from an accurate reprint now before me, which is also scarce. It is anonymous, but on the last page (p. 734) there are the initials, M. S. V. (Michael Servetus Villsnovanus) and the year, 1553. An analysis of the contents of this celebrated work may be seen in the notes to the article on Servetus, in Chauffepié, Nouveau Dictionnaire Hist. et Crit. tome iv. See also the Appendix to Henry's Das Leben Calvins, vol. iii. p. 81, &c.-R.

5 I have composed in the German language a copious history of this man who was so unlike everybody but himself, which was published at Helmstadt, 1748, 4to. and again, with large additions, Helmst. 1749, 4to. [Maclaine recommends to those who cannot read the German to peruse a juvenile production of one of Mosheim's pupils composed twenty years earlier, entitled, Historia Mich. Serveti, quam Præside J. Laur.

« הקודםהמשך »