The
following sermon is as relevant today as it was over 100 years
ago when it was first preached by Father Arnold Damen, S.J.
That Father Damen's message was and still is a challenge
to the many who pride themselves "Bible-and-Bible-alone
Christians" is evident from the title, "The Church or the
Bible." "One cannot have God for his Father, who will
not have the Church for his Mother," and likewise one
cannot have the Word of God for his faith who will not have
the Church for his teacher. It is the infallible teaching
authority of the Church, as promised by Christ, which alone preserves
God's Word from erroneous interpretation. This is the essence
of the zealous priest's doctrine. It is also the essence
of true Christianity, as Father Damen amply proves from Scripture
itself and from just plain common sense. Every sincere Bible
reader deserves to know the true relation God has established
between His Church and Holy Scripture. We, therefore, invite
all who love the Bible to read Father Damen's exposition with
an open mind, lest while reading the Scriptures "they
wrest them to their own destruction." (2 Peter
3:16)
I.
Dearly Beloved Christians: ---
When
our Divine Saviour sent His Apostles and His Disciples throughout
the whole universe to preach the Gospel to every creature,
He laid down the conditions of salvation thus: "He that believeth
and is baptized," said the Son of the Living God, "shall
be saved, but he that believeth not shall be condemned"
(Mark 16:16). Here, then, Our Blessed Lord laid down the
two conditions of salvation: Faith and Baptism. He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall
be condemned --- or is damned. Hence, then, two conditions of salvation:
Faith and Baptism. I will speak this evening on the condition
of Faith. We must have Faith in order to be saved, and we
must have Divine Faith, not human faith. Human faith will
not save a man, but only Divine Faith. What is Divine Faith? It is
to believe, upon the authority of God, the truths that God has
revealed; that is Divine Faith. To believe all that God has
taught upon the authority of God, and to believe without
doubting, without hesitation; for the moment you commence
to doubt or hesitate, that moment you commence to mistrust the authority
of God, and, therefore, insult God by doubting His word. Divine Faith,
therefore, is to believe without doubting, without hesitating.
Human faith is when we believe a thing upon the authority
of men --- on human authority. That is human faith. But Divine
Faith is to believe without doubting, without hesitating,
whatsoever God has revealed upon the authority of God, upon
the word of God.
Therefore,
my dear people, it is not a matter of indifference what religion
a man professes, providing he be a good man. You hear it
said nowadays in this Nineteenth Century of little faith that
it matter not what religion a man professes, providing he
be a good man. That is heresy, my dear people, and I will
prove it to you to be such. If it be a matter of indifference
what a man believes, providing he be a good man, why then
it is useless for God to make any revelation whatever. If a
man is at liberty to reject what God revealeth, what use for Christ
to send out His Apostles and disciples to teach all nations,
if those nations are at liberty to believe or reject the
teachings of the Apostles or disciples? You see at once that
this would be insulting God. If God reveals a thing or teaches
a thing, He means to be believed. He wants to be believed whenever
He teaches or reveals a thing. Man is bound to believe whatsoever
God has revealed, for, my dear people, we are bound to worship
God, both with our reason and intellect, as well as with
our heart and will. God is master of the whole man. He claims
his will, his heart, his reason, and his intellect. Where
is the man in his reason, no matter what denomination, church,
or religion he belongs to, that will deny that we are bound
to believe what God has taught? I am sure there is not a Christian
who will deny that we are bound to believe whatsoever God has revealed.
Therefore,
it is not a matter of indifference what religion a man professes.
He must profess that true religion if he would be saved. But what is
the true religion? To believe all that God has taught. I
am sure that even my Protestant friends will admit this is right;
for, if they do not, I would say they are no Christians at
all. "But what is the true Faith?" "The true
Faith," say Protestant friends, "is to believe in the Lord
Jesus." Agreed, Catholics believe in that. Tell me what you
mean by believing in the Lord Jesus? "Why," says
my Protestant friend, "you must believe that He is the
Son of the Living God." Agreed again. Thanks be to God,
we can agree on something. We believe that Jesus Christ is the
Son of the Living God, that He is God. To this we all agree,
excepting the Unitarians and Socinians, but we will leave
them alone tonight. If Christ be God, then we must believe
all He teaches. Is this not so, my dearly beloved Protestant
brethren and sisters? And that's the right Faith, isn't it? "Well,
yes," says my Protestant friend, "I guess that is the
right Faith. To believe that Jesus is the Son of the Living
God we must believe all that Christ has taught." We
Catholics say the same, and here we agree again. Christ,
then, we must believe, and that is the true Faith. We must believe all
that Christ has taught --- that God has revealed --- and, without
that Faith there is no salvation; without that Faith there
is no hope of Heaven; without that Faith there is eternal
damnation! We have the words of Christ for it: "He that
believeth not shall be condemned," says Christ.
II.
But if Christ, my dearly beloved people commands me under pain
of eternal damnation to believe all that He has taught, He
must give me the means to know what He has taught. If, therefore,
Christ commands me upon pain of eternal damnation, He is
bound to give me the means of knowing what He has taught.
And the means Christ gives us of knowing this must have been at
all times within the reach of all people. Secondly, the means
that God gives us to know what He has taught must be a means
adapted to the capacities of all intellects --- even the dullest.
For even those of the dullest of understandings have a right
to salvation, and consequently they have a right to the means
whereby they shall learn the truths that God has taught,
that they may believe them and be saved.
The means
that God give us to know what he has taught must be an infallible means.
For if it be a means that can lead us astray, it can be no means
at all. It must be an infallible means, so that if a man
makes use of that means, he will infallibly, without fear
of mistake or error, be brought to a knowledge of all the
truths that God has taught. I don't think there can be anyone
present here --- I care not what he is, a Christian or an unbeliever ---
who can object to my premises. And these premises are the groundwork
of my discourse and of all my reasoning, and, therefore,
I want you to bear them in mind. I will repeat them,
for on these premises rests all the strength of my discourse
and reasoning. If God commands me under pain of eternal damnation to
believe all that He has taught, He is bound to give my the means
to know what He has taught. And the means that God gives
me must have been at all times within the reach of all people
--- must be adapted to the capacities of all intellects,
must be an infallible means to us, so that if a man makes use
of it he will be brought to a knowledge of all the truths that
God has taught.
III.
Has God given us such means? "Yes," say my Protestant
friends, "He has." And so says the Catholic: God
has given us such means. What is the means God has given
us whereby we shall learn the truth that God has revealed?
"The Bible," say my Protestant friends, "the Bible,
the whole of the Bible, and nothing but the Bible."
But we Catholics say, "No; not the Bible and its private
interpretation, but the Church of the Living God." I will
prove the facts, and I defy all my separated brethren --- and
all the preachers in the bargain --- to disprove what I will
say tonight.
I
say, then, it is not the private interpretation of the Bible that
has been appointed by God to be the teacher of man, but the
Church of the Living God. For, my dear people, if God has
intended that man should learn His religion from a book ---
the Bible --- surely God would have given that book to man; Christ
would have given that book to man. Did He do it? He did not. Christ sent
His Apostles throughout the whole universe and said: "Go
ye, therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost;
teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded
you." Christ did not say, "Sit down and write Bibles
and scatter them over the earth, and let every man read his
Bible and judge for himself." If Christ had said that,
there would never have been a Christianity on the earth at all,
but a Babylon and confusion instead, and never one Church, the
union of one body. Hence, Christ never said to His Apostles,
"Go and write Bibles and distribute them, and let everyone
judge for himself." That injunction was reserved for
the Sixteenth Century, and we have seen the result of it. Ever since
the Sixteenth Century there have been springing up religion upon religion,
and churches upon churches, all fighting and quarreling with one another.
And all because of the private interpretation of the Bible.
Christ sent
His Apostles with authority to teach all nations, and never gave
them any command of writing the Bible. And the Apostles went
forth and preached everywhere, and planted the Church of
God throughout the earth, but never thought of writing. The
first word written was by Saint Matthew, and he wrote for the
benefit of a few individuals. He wrote the Gospel about seven
years after Christ left this earth, so that the Church of
God, established by Christ, existed seven years before a
line was written of the New Testament. Saint Mark wrote about ten
years after Christ left this earth; Saint Luke about twenty-five
years, and Saint John about sixty-three years after Christ
had established the Church of God. Saint John wrote the last
portion of the Bible --- the Book of Revelation --- about
sixty-five years after Christ had left this earth and the
Church of God had been established. The Catholic religion had existed
sixty-five years before the Bible was completed, before it was written. Now,
I ask you, my dearly beloved separated brethren, were these Christian people,
who lived during the period between the establishment of the Church of
Jesus and the finishing of the Bible, were they really Christians,
good Christians, enlightened Christians? Did they know the
religion of Jesus? Where is the man that will dare to say
that those who lived from the time that Christ went up to
Heaven to the time that the Bible was completed were not
Christians? It is admitted on all sides, by all denominations,
that they were the very best of Christians, the first fruit
of the Blood of Jesus Christ. But how did they know what
they had to do to save their souls? Was it from the Bible
that they learned it? No, because the Bible was not written.
And would our Divine Saviour have left His Church for sixty-five years
without a teacher, if the Bible is the teacher of man? Most assuredly not.
Were
the Apostles Christians, I ask you, my dear Protestant friends? You
say, "Yes, sir; they were the very founders of Christianity." Now,
my dear friends, none of the Apostles ever read the Bible; not
one of them except perhaps, Saint John. For all of then had
died martyrs for the Faith of Jesus Christ and never saw
the cover of a Bible. Every one of them died martyrs and
heroes for the Church of Jesus before the Bible was completed.
How, then, did those Christians that lived in the first sixty-five
years after Christ ascended --- how did they know what they had to
do to save their souls? They knew it precisely in the same way
that you know it, my dear Catholic friends. You know it from
the teachings of the Church of God, and so did the primitive
Christians know it.
IV.
Not only sixty-five years did Christ leave the Church He
had established without a Bible, but over three hundred years.
The Church of God was established and went on spreading itself
over the whole globe without the Bible for more than three
hundred years. In all that time the people did not know what
constituted the Bible. In the days of the Apostles there
were many false gospels. There was the Gospel of Simon, the
Gospel of Nicodemus, of Mary, of Barnabas, and the Gospel
of the Infancy of Jesus. All of these gospels were spread among
the people, and the people did not know which of these were
inspired and which were false and spurious. Even the learned
themselves were disputing whether preference should be given
to the Gospel of Simon or that of Matthew --- to the Gospel
of Nicodemus or the Gospel of Mark, the Gospel of Mary or that
of Luke, the Gospel of the Infancy of Jesus or the Gospel
of Saint John the Evangelist. And so it was in regard
to the epistles: Many spurious epistles were written, and
the people were at a loss for over three hundred years to know which
was false or spurious, or which inspired. And, therefore, they
did not know what constituted the books of the Bible.
It was not
until the Fourth Century that the Pope of Rome, the Head
of the Church, the successor of Saint Peter, assembled together
the Bishops of the world in a council (Council of Rome, 382 A.D.).
And there in that council it was decided that the Bible,
as we Catholics have it now, is the Word of God, and that
the Gospels of Simon, Nicodemus, Mary, the Infancy of Jesus,
and Barnabas, and all those other epistles were spurious or,
at least, unauthentic; at least, that there was no evidence of
their inspiration, and that the Gospels of Saints Luke, Matthew,
Mark and John, and the Book of Revelation, were inspired
by the Holy Ghost. Up to that time the whole world for three
hundred years did not know what the Bible was; hence, they
could not take the Bible for their guide, for they did not
know what constituted the Bible. Would our Divine Saviour, if He
intended man to learn his religion from a book, have left the
Christian world for three hundred years without that book?
Most assuredly not.
V.
Not only for three hundred years was the world left without the
Bible, but for one thousand four hundred years the Christian
world was left without the Sacred Book. Before the art of
printing was invented, Bibles were rare things; Bibles were
costly things. Now, you must all be aware, if you have read
history at all, that the art of printing was invented only a little more
than four hundred years ago --- about the middle of the Fifteenth Century
--- and about one hundred years before there was a Protestant
in the world. As I have said, before printing was invented
books were rare and costly things.
Historians
tell us that in the Eleventh Century --- eight hundred years ago ---
Bibles were so rare and costly that it took a fortune, a considerable fortune,
to buy oneself a copy of the Bible! Before the art of printing, everything
had to be done with the pen upon parchment or sheepskin. It was, therefore,
a tedious and slow operation --- a costly operation. Now, in order
to arrive at the probable cost of a Bible at that time, let us
suppose that a man should work ten years to make a copy of
the Bible and earn a dollar a day. Well, then, the cost of
that Bible would be $3,650. Now, let us suppose that a man
should work at the copying of the Bible for twenty years,
as historians say it would have taken him at that time, not having the
conveniences and improvements to aid him that we have now. Then,
at a dollar a day, for twenty years, the cost of a Bible
would be nearly $8,000!
Suppose
I came and said to you, "My dear people, save your soul,
for if you lose your soul all is lost." You would ask,
"What are we to do to save our souls?" The Protestant
preacher would say to you, "You must get a Bible; you can
get one at such-and-such a shop." You would ask the cost
and be told it was $8,000. You would exclaim: "The Lord
save us! And can we not go to Heaven without that book?"
The answer would be: "No; you must have the Bible and
read it." You murmur at the price, but are asked, "Is
not your soul worth $8,000?" Yes, of course it is, but
you say you do not have the money, and if you cannot get
a Bible, and your salvation depends upon it, evidently you
would have to remain outside the Kingdom of Heaven. This would
be a hopeless condition, indeed. For fourteen hundred
years the world was left without a Bible --- not one in ten
thousand, not one in twenty thousand, before the art of printing
was invented, had the Bible. And would our Divine Lord have
left the world without that book if it was necessary to man's
salvation? Most assuredly not.
VI.
But let us suppose for a moment that all had Bibles, that Bibles
were written from the beginning, and that every man, woman,
and child had a copy. What good would that book be to people
who did not know how to read it? It is a blind thing to such
persons. Even now one-half the inhabitants of the earth cannot
read. Moreover, as the Bible was written in Greek and Hebrew, it
would be necessary to know these languages in order to be able
to read it. But it is said that we have it translated
now in French, English, and other languages of the day. Yes,
but are you sure you have a faithful translation? If not,
you have not the Word of God. If you have a false translation,
it is the work of man. How shall you ascertain that? How
shall you find out if you have a faithful translation from
the Greek and Hebrew? "I do not know Greek or Hebrew,"
says my separated friend; "for my translation I must depend
upon the opinion of the learned."
Well, then,
my dear friends, suppose the learned should be divided in
their opinions, and some of them should say it is good, and
some false? Then your faith is gone; you must commence doubting and
hesitating, because you do not know if the translation is good. Now
with regard to the Protestant translation of the Bible, allow
me to tell you that the most learned among Protestants tell
you that your translation --- the King James edition ---
is a very faulty translation and is full of errors. Your
own learned divines, preachers, and bishops have written whole volumes
to point out all the errors that are there in the King James translation,
and Protestants of various denominations acknowledge it.
Some years
ago, when I lived in St. Louis, there was held in that city a convention
of ministers. All denominations were invited, the object being
to arrange for a new translation of the Bible, and give it
to the world. The proceedings of the convention were published
daily in the Missouri Republican. A very learned Presbyterian,
I think it was, stood up, and, urging the necessity of giving
a new translation of the Bible, said that in the present
Protestant translation of the Bible there were no less than thirty
thousand errors. And you say, my dear Protestant friends, that
the Bible is your guide and teacher. What a teacher, with
thirty thousand errors! The Lord save us from such a teacher!
One error is bad enough, but thirty thousand is a little
too much. Another preacher stood up in the convention ---
I think he was a Baptist --- and, urging the necessity of
giving a new translation of the Bible, said for thirty years
past the world was without the Word of God, for the Bible we have
is not the Word of God at all. Here are your own preachers for
you. You all read the newspapers, no doubt, my friends, and
must know what happened in England a few years ago. A petition
was sent to Parliament for an allowance of a few thousand
pounds sterling for the purpose of getting up a new translation
of the Bible. And that movement was headed and carried on by Protestant
bishops and clergymen.
VII.
But, my dear people, how can you be sure of your faith?
You say the Bible is your guide, but you do not know if you
have it. Let us suppose for a moment that all should have
a Bible. Should all read it and have a faithful translation,
even then it cannot be the guide of man, because the private
interpretation of the Bible is not infallible, but, on the contrary, most
fallible. It is the source and fountain of all kinds of errors
and heresies, and all kinds of blasphemous doctrines. Do
not be shocked, my dear friends; just be calm and listen
to my arguments. There are now throughout the world three
hundred and fifty different denominations or churches, and
all of them say the Bible is their guide and teacher. And
I suppose they are all sincere. Are all of them true churches? This
is an impossibility.
Truth
is one as God is one, and there can be no contradiction.
Every man in his senses sees that every one of them cannot be true,
for they differ and contradict one another, and cannot, therefore,
be all true. The Protestants say the man that reads the Bible
right and prayerfully has truth, and they all say that they
read it right.
Let
us suppose that here is an Episcopal minister. He is a sincere,
an honest, a well-meaning and prayerful man. He reads his
Bible in a prayerful spirit, and from the word of the Bible,
he says it is clear that there must be bishops. For without
bishops there can be no priests, without priests no Sacraments,
and without Sacraments no Church. The Presbyterian is a sincere and
well-meaning man. He reads the Bible also, and deduces that there
should be no bishops, but only presbyters. "Here is
the Bible," says the Episcopalian; and "here is
the Bible to give you the lie," says the Presbyterian.
Yet both of them are prayerful and well-meaning men. Then
the Baptist comes in. He is a well-meaning, honest man, and prayerful also.
"Well," says the Baptist, "have you ever been baptized?"
"I was," says the Episcopalian, "when I was
a baby." "And so was I," says the Presbyterian,
"when I was a baby." "But," says the Baptist,
"you are going to Hell as sure as you live."
Next
comes the Unitarian, well-meaning, honest, and sincere. "Well,"
says the Unitarian, "allow me to tell you that you are
a pack of idolaters. You worship a man for a God who is no God
at all." And he gives several texts from the Bible to
prove it, while the others are stopping their ears that they
may not hear the blasphemies of the Unitarian. And they all
contend that they have the true meaning of the Bible. Next
comes the Methodist, and he says, "My friends, have you got
any religion at all?" "Of course we have,"
they say. "Did you ever feel religion," says the
Methodist, "the spirit of God moving within you?" "Nonsense,"
says the Presbyterian, "we are guided by our reason and judgment."
"Well," says the Methodist, "if you never felt
religion, you never had it, and will go to Hell for eternity." The
Universalist next comes in, and hears them threatening one another
with eternal hellfire. "Why," says he, "you
are a strange set of people. Do you not understand the Word
of God? There is no Hell at all. That idea is good enough
to scare old women and children," and he proves it from the
Bible. Now comes in the Quaker. He urges them not to quarrel,
and advises that they do not baptize at all. He is the sincerest
of men, and gives the Bible for his faith.
Another
comes in and says: "Baptize the men and let the women alone.
For the Bible says, unless a man be born again of water and the
Holy Ghost, he cannot enter the Kingdom of Heaven. "So,"
says he, "the women are all right, but baptize the men." Next
comes in the Shaker, and says he: "You are a presumptuous
people. Do you not know that the Bible tells you that you
must work out your salvation in fear and trembling, and you
do not tremble at all. My brethren, if you want to go to
Heaven shake, my brethren, shake!"
VIII.
I have here brought together seven or eight denominations, differing one
from another, or understanding the Bible in different ways, illustrative of
the fruits of private interpretation. What, then, if I brought
together the three hundred and fifty different denominations,
all taking the Bible for their guide and teaching, and all
differing from one another? Are they all right? One says
there is a Hell, and another says there is not Hell. Are both
right? One says Christ is God; another says He is not. One says
they are unessential. One says Baptism is a requisite, and
another says it is not. Are both true? This is an impossibility,
my friends; all cannot be true. Who, then, is true? He
that has the true meaning of the Bible, you say. But the Bible
does not tell us who that is --- the Bible never settles
the quarrel. It is not the teacher.
The
Bible, my dear people, is a good book. We Catholics allow that the
Bible is the Word of God, the language of inspiration, and every Catholic
is exhorted to read the Bible. But good as it is, the Bible, my dear
friends, does not explain itself. It is a good book, the Word
of God, the language of inspiration, but your explanation
of the Bible is not the language of inspiration. Your understanding
of the Bible is not inspired --- for surely you do not pretend
to be inspired!
It is with
the Bible as it is with the Constitution of the United States. When
Washington and his associates established the Constitution and
the Supreme Law of the United States, they did not say to
the people of the States: "Let every man read the Constitution
and make a government unto himself; let every man make his
own explanation of the Constitution." If Washington
had done that, there never would have been a United States. The people
would all have been divided among themselves, and the country
would have been cut up into a thousand different divisions
or governments. What did Washington do? He gave the people
the Constitution and the Supreme Law, and appointed his Supreme
Court and Supreme Judge of the Constitution. And these are
to give the true explanation of the Constitution to all the American
citizens --- all without exception, from the President to the beggar. All
are bound to go by the decisions of the Supreme Court, and it
is this and this alone that can keep the people together
and preserve the Union of the United States. The moment the
people take the interpretation of the Constitution into their
own hands, that moment there is an end of union. Ad so it
is in every government --- so it is here and everywhere. There
is a Constitution, a Supreme Court or Law, a Supreme Judge
of that Constitution, and that Supreme Court is to give us
the meaning of the Constitution and the Law. In every well-ruled
country there must be such a thing as this --- a Supreme
Law, Supreme Court, Supreme Judge, that all the people abide by.
There
is in every country a Supreme Law, Supreme Court, Supreme Judge;
and all are bound by decisions, and without that no government
could stand. Even among the Indian tribes such a condition
of affairs exists. How are they kept together? By their chief,
who is their dictator. So our Divine Savior also has established
His Supreme Court --- His Supreme Judge --- to give us the
true meaning of the Scriptures, and to give us the true revelation
and doctrines of the Word of Jesus. The Son of the Living God
has pledged His Word that this Supreme Court is infallible, and therefore,
the true Catholic never doubts. "I believe," says the
Catholic, "because the Church teaches me so. I believe
the Church because God has commanded me to believer her.
He said: 'Hear the Church, and he that does not hear the
Church let him be to thee as a heathen and a publican.' 'He that
believeth you believeth Me.' said Christ, 'and he that despiseth
you despiseth Me.'" Therefore, the Catholic believes
because God has spoken, and upon the authority of God. But
our Protestant friends say, "We believe in the Bible."
Very well; how do you understand the Bible? "Well,"
says the Protestant, "to the best of my opinion and
judgment this is the meaning of the text." He is not
sure of it, but to the best of his opinion and judgment. This,
my friends, is only the testimony of a man --- it is only human
faith, not Divine Faith.
It
is Divine Faith alone by which we give honor and glory to
God, by which we adore His infinite wisdom and veracity, and that adoration
and worship is necessary for salvation. I have now proved to you that
private interpretation of the Scripture cannot be the guide or
teacher of man. In another lecture I shall prove that the
Catholic Church is the only true Church of God, and that
there is no other.