A Letter Concerning
Toleration |
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John Locke
(1689)
Translated by William Popple |

Honoured Sir,
Since you are pleased to inquire what are my thoughts about the
mutual toleration of Christians in their different professions of
religion, I must needs answer you freely that I esteem that
toleration to be the chief characteristic mark of the true Church.
For whatsoever some people boast of the antiquity of places and
names, or of the pomp of their outward worship; others, of the
reformation of their discipline; all, of the orthodoxy of their
faith — for everyone is orthodox to himself — these things, and all
others of this nature, are much rather marks of men striving for
power and empire over one another than of the Church of Christ. Let
anyone have never so true a claim to all these things, yet if he be
destitute of charity, meekness, and good-will in general towards all
mankind, even to those that are not Christians, he is certainly yet
short of being a true Christian himself. "The kings of the Gentiles
exercise leadership over them," said our Saviour to his disciples,
"but ye shall not be so."[1] The
business of true religion is quite another thing. It is not
instituted in order to the erecting of an external pomp, nor to the
obtaining of ecclesiastical dominion, nor to the exercising of
compulsive force, but to the regulating of men's lives, according to
the rules of virtue and piety. Whosoever will list himself under the
banner of Christ, must, in the first place and above all things,
make war upon his own lusts and vices. It is in vain for any man to
unsurp the name of Christian, without holiness of life, purity of
manners, benignity and meekness of spirit. "Let everyone that nameth
the name of Christ, depart from iniquity."[2]
"Thou, when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren," said our
Lord to Peter.[3] It would, indeed, be
very hard for one that appears careless about his own salvation to
persuade me that he were extremely concerned for mine. For it is
impossible that those should sincerely and heartily apply themselves
to make other people Christians, who have not really embraced the
Christian religion in their own hearts. If the Gospel and the
apostles may be credited, no man can be a Christian without charity
and without that faith which works, not by force, but by love. Now,
I appeal to the consciences of those that persecute, torment,
destroy, and kill other men upon pretence of religion, whether they
do it out of friendship and kindness towards them or no? And I shall
then indeed, and not until then, believe they do so, when I shall
see those fiery zealots correcting, in the same manner, their
friends and familiar acquaintance for the manifest sins they commit
against the precepts of the Gospel; when I shall see them persecute
with fire and sword the members of their own communion that are
tainted with enormous vices and without amendment are in danger of
eternal perdition; and when I shall see them thus express their love
and desire of the salvation of their souls by the infliction of
torments and exercise of all manner of cruelties. For if it be out
of a principle of charity, as they pretend, and love to men's souls
that they deprive them of their estates, maim them with corporal
punishments, starve and torment them in noisome prisons, and in the
end even take away their lives — I say, if all this be done merely
to make men Christians and procure their salvation, why then do they
suffer whoredom, fraud, malice, and such-like enormities, which
(according to the apostle)[4]
manifestly relish of heathenish corruption, to predominate so much
and abound amongst their flocks and people? These, and such-like
things, are certainly more contrary to the glory of God, to the
purity of the Church, and to the salvation of souls, than any
conscientious dissent from ecclesiastical decisions, or separation
from public worship, whilst accompanied with innocence of life. Why,
then, does this burning zeal for God, for the Church, and for the
salvation of souls — burning I say, literally, with fire and faggot
— pass by those moral vices and wickednesses, without any
chastisement, which are acknowledged by all men to be diametrically
opposite to the profession of Christianity, and bend all its nerves
either to the introducing of ceremonies, or to the establishment of
opinions, which for the most part are about nice and intricate
matters, that exceed the capacity of ordinary understandings? Which
of the parties contending about these things is in the right, which
of them is guilty of schism or heresy, whether those that domineer
or those that suffer, will then at last be manifest when the causes
of their separation comes to be judged of He, certainly, that
follows Christ, embraces His doctrine, and bears His yoke, though he
forsake both father and mother, separate from the public assemblies
and ceremonies of his country, or whomsoever or whatsoever else he
relinquishes, will not then be judged a heretic.
Now, though the divisions that are amongst sects should be
allowed to be never so obstructive of the salvation of souls; yet,
nevertheless, adultery, fornication, uncleanliness, lasciviousness,
idolatry, and such-like things, cannot be denied to be works of the
flesh, concerning which the apostle has expressly declared that
"they who do them shall not inherit the kingdom of God."[5]
Whosoever, therefore, is sincerely solicitous about the kingdom of
God and thinks it his duty to endeavour the enlargement of it
amongst men, ought to apply himself with no less care and industry
to the rooting out of these immoralities than to the extirpation of
sects. But if anyone do otherwise, and whilst he is cruel and
implacable towards those that differ from him in opinion, he be
indulgent to such iniquities and immoralities as are unbecoming the
name of a Christian, let such a one talk never so much of the
Church, he plainly demonstrates by his actions that it is another
kingdom he aims at and not the advancement of the kingdom of God.
That any man should think fit to cause another man — whose
salvation he heartily desires — to expire in torments, and that even
in an unconverted state, would, I confess, seem very strange to me,
and I think, to any other also. But nobody, surely, will ever
believe that such a carriage can proceed from charity, love, or
goodwill. If anyone maintain that men ought to be compelled by fire
and sword to profess certain doctrines, and conform to this or that
exterior worship, without any regard had unto their morals; if
anyone endeavour to convert those that are erroneous unto the faith,
by forcing them to profess things that they do not believe and
allowing them to practise things that the Gospel does not permit, it
cannot be doubted indeed but such a one is desirous to have a
numerous assembly joined in the same profession with himself; but
that he principally intends by those means to compose a truly
Christian Church is altogether incredible. It is not, therefore, to
be wondered at if those who do not really contend for the
advancement of the true religion, and of the Church of Christ, make
use of arms that do not belong to the Christian warfare. If, like
the Captain of our salvation, they sincerely desired the good of
souls, they would tread in the steps and follow the perfect example
of that Prince of Peace, who sent out His soldiers to the subduing
of nations, and gathering them into His Church, not armed with the
sword, or other instruments of force, but prepared with the Gospel
of peace and with the exemplary holiness of their conversation. This
was His method. Though if infidels were to be converted by force, if
those that are either blind or obstinate were to be drawn off from
their errors by armed soldiers, we know very well that it was much
more easy for Him to do it with armies of heavenly legions than for
any son of the Church, how potent soever, with all his dragoons.
The toleration of those that differ from others in matters of
religion is so agreeable to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and to the
genuine reason of mankind, that it seems monstrous for men to be so
blind as not to perceive the necessity and advantage of it in so
clear a light. I will not here tax the pride and ambition of some,
the passion and uncharitable zeal of others. These are faults from
which human affairs can perhaps scarce ever be perfectly freed; but
yet such as nobody will bear the plain imputation of, without
covering them with some specious colour; and so pretend to
commendation, whilst they are carried away by their own irregular
passions. But, however, that some may not colour their spirit of
persecution and unchristian cruelty with a pretence of care of the
public weal and observation of the laws; and that others, under
pretence of religion, may not seek impunity for their libertinism
and licentiousness; in a word, that none may impose either upon
himself or others, by the pretences of loyalty and obedience to the
prince, or of tenderness and sincerity in the worship of God; I
esteem it above all things necessary to distinguish exactly the
business of civil government from that of religion and to settle the
just bounds that lie between the one and the other. If this be not
done, there can be no end put to the controversies that will be
always arising between those that have, or at least pretend to have,
on the one side, a concernment for the interest of men's souls, and,
on the other side, a care of the commonwealth.
The commonwealth seems to me to be a society of men constituted
only for the procuring, preserving, and advancing their own civil
interests.
Civil interests I call life, liberty, health, and indolency of
body; and the possession of outward things, such as money, lands,
houses, furniture, and the like.
It is the duty of the civil magistrate, by the impartial
execution of equal laws, to secure unto all the people in general
and to every one of his subjects in particular the just possession
of these things belonging to this life. If anyone presume to violate
the laws of public justice and equity, established for the
preservation of those things, his presumption is to be checked by
the fear of punishment, consisting of the deprivation or diminution
of those civil interests, or goods, which otherwise he might and
ought to enjoy. But seeing no man does willingly suffer himself to
be punished by the deprivation of any part of his goods, and much
less of his liberty or life, therefore, is the magistrate armed with
the force and strength of all his subjects, in order to the
punishment of those that violate any other man's rights.
Now that the whole jurisdiction of the magistrate reaches only to
these civil concernments, and that all civil power, right and
dominion, is bounded and confined to the only care of promoting
these things; and that it neither can nor ought in any manner to be
extended to the salvation of souls, these following considerations
seem unto me abundantly to demonstrate.
First, because the care of souls is not committed to the civil
magistrate, any more than to other men. It is not committed unto
him, I say, by God; because it appears not that God has ever given
any such authority to one man over another as to compel anyone to
his religion. Nor can any such power be vested in the magistrate by
the consent of the people, because no man can so far abandon the
care of his own salvation as blindly to leave to the choice of any
other, whether prince or subject, to prescribe to him what faith or
worship he shall embrace. For no man can, if he would, conform his
faith to the dictates of another. All the life and power of true
religion consist in the inward and full persuasion of the mind; and
faith is not faith without believing. Whatever profession we make,
to whatever outward worship we conform, if we are not fully
satisfied in our own mind that the one is true and the other well
pleasing unto God, such profession and such practice, far from being
any furtherance, are indeed great obstacles to our salvation. For in
this manner, instead of expiating other sins by the exercise of
religion, I say, in offering thus unto God Almighty such a worship
as we esteem to be displeasing unto Him, we add unto the number of
our other sins those also of hypocrisy and contempt of His Divine
Majesty.
In the second place, the care of souls cannot belong to the civil
magistrate, because his power consists only in outward force; but
true and saving religion consists in the inward persuasion of the
mind, without which nothing can be acceptable to God. And such is
the nature of the understanding, that it cannot be compelled to the
belief of anything by outward force. Confiscation of estate,
imprisonment, torments, nothing of that nature can have any such
efficacy as to make men change the inward judgement that they have
framed of things.
It may indeed be alleged that the magistrate may make use of
arguments, and, thereby; draw the heterodox into the way of truth,
and procure their salvation. I grant it; but this is common to him
with other men. In teaching, instructing, and redressing the
erroneous by reason, he may certainly do what becomes any good man
to do. Magistracy does not oblige him to put off either humanity or
Christianity; but it is one thing to persuade, another to command;
one thing to press with arguments, another with penalties. This
civil power alone has a right to do; to the other, goodwill is
authority enough. Every man has commission to admonish, exhort,
convince another of error, and, by reasoning, to draw him into
truth; but to give laws, receive obedience, and compel with the
sword, belongs to none but the magistrate. And, upon this ground, I
affirm that the magistrate's power extends not to the establishing
of any articles of faith, or forms of worship, by the force of his
laws. For laws are of no force at all without penalties, and
penalties in this case are absolutely impertinent, because they are
not proper to convince the mind. Neither the profession of any
articles of faith, nor the conformity to any outward form of worship
(as has been already said), can be available to the salvation of
souls, unless the truth of the one and the acceptableness of the
other unto God be thoroughly believed by those that so profess and
practise. But penalties are no way capable to produce such belief.
It is only light and evidence that can work a change in men's
opinions; which light can in no manner proceed from corporal
sufferings, or any other outward penalties.
In the third place, the care of the salvation of men's souls
cannot belong to the magistrate; because, though the rigour of laws
and the force of penalties were capable to convince and change men's
minds, yet would not that help at all to the salvation of their
souls. For there being but one truth, one way to heaven, what hope
is there that more men would be led into it if they had no rule but
the religion of the court and were put under the necessity to quit
the light of their own reason, and oppose the dictates of their own
consciences, and blindly to resign themselves up to the will of
their governors and to the religion which either ignorance,
ambition, or superstition had chanced to establish in the countries
where they were born? In the variety and contradiction of opinions
in religion, wherein the princes of the world are as much divided as
in their secular interests, the narrow way would be much straitened;
one country alone would be in the right, and all the rest of the
world put under an obligation of following their princes in the ways
that lead to destruction; and that which heightens the absurdity,
and very ill suits the notion of a Deity, men would owe their
eternal happiness or misery to the places of their nativity.
These considerations, to omit many others that might have been
urged to the same purpose, seem unto me sufficient to conclude that
all the power of civil government relates only to men's civil
interests, is confined to the care of the things of this world, and
hath nothing to do with the world to come.
Let us now consider what a church is. A church, then, I take to
be a voluntary society of men, joining themselves together of their
own accord in order to the public worshipping of God in such manner
as they judge acceptable to Him, and effectual to the salvation of
their souls.
I say it is a free and voluntary society. Nobody is born a member
of any church; otherwise the religion of parents would descend unto
children by the same right of inheritance as their temporal estates,
and everyone would hold his faith by the same tenure he does his
lands, than which nothing can be imagined more absurd. Thus,
therefore, that matter stands. No man by nature is bound unto any
particular church or sect, but everyone joins himself voluntarily to
that society in which he believes he has found that profession and
worship which is truly acceptable to God. The hope of salvation, as
it was the only cause of his entrance into that communion, so it can
be the only reason of his stay there. For if afterwards he discover
anything either erroneous in the doctrine or incongruous in the
worship of that society to which he has joined himself, why should
it not be as free for him to go out as it was to enter? No member of
a religious society can be tied with any other bonds but what
proceed from the certain expectation of eternal life. A church,
then, is a society of members voluntarily uniting to that end.
It follows now that we consider what is the power of this church
and unto what laws it is subject.
Forasmuch as no society, how free soever, or upon whatsoever
slight occasion instituted, whether of philosophers for learning, of
merchants for commerce, or of men of leisure for mutual conversation
and discourse, no church or company, I say, can in the least subsist
and hold together, but will presently dissolve and break in pieces,
unless it be regulated by some laws, and the members all consent to
observe some order. Place and time of meeting must be agreed on;
rules for admitting and excluding members must be established;
distinction of officers, and putting things into a regular course,
and suchlike, cannot be omitted. But since the joining together of
several members into this church-society, as has already been
demonstrated, is absolutely free and spontaneous, it necessarily
follows that the right of making its laws can belong to none but the
society itself; or, at least (which is the same thing), to those
whom the society by common consent has authorised thereunto.
Some, perhaps, may object that no such society can be said to be
a true church unless it have in it a bishop or presbyter, with
ruling authority derived from the very apostles, and continued down
to the present times by an uninterrupted succession.
To these I answer: In the first place, let them show me the edict
by which Christ has imposed that law upon His Church. And let not
any man think me impertinent, if in a thing of this consequence I
require that the terms of that edict be very express and positive;
for the promise He has made us,[6] that
"wheresoever two or three are gathered together" in His name, He
will be in the midst of them, seems to imply the contrary. Whether
such an assembly want anything necessary to a true church, pray do
you consider. Certain I am that nothing can be there wanting unto
the salvation of souls, which is sufficient to our purpose.
Next, pray observe how great have always been the divisions
amongst even those who lay so much stress upon the Divine
institution and continued succession of a certain order of rulers in
the Church. Now, their very dissension unavoidably puts us upon a
necessity of deliberating and, consequently, allows a liberty of
choosing that which upon consideration we prefer.
And, in the last place, I consent that these men have a ruler in
their church, established by such a long series of succession as
they judge necessary, provided I may have liberty at the same time
to join myself to that society in which I am persuaded those things
are to be found which are necessary to the salvation of my soul. In
this manner ecclesiastical liberty will be preserved on all sides,
and no man will have a legislator imposed upon him but whom himself
has chosen.
But since men are so solicitous about the true church, I would
only ask them here, by the way, if it be not more agreeable to the
Church of Christ to make the conditions of her communion consist in
such things, and such things only, as the Holy Spirit has in the
Holy Scriptures declared, in express words, to be necessary to
salvation; I ask, I say, whether this be not more agreeable to the
Church of Christ than for men to impose their own inventions and
interpretations upon others as if they were of Divine authority, and
to establish by ecclesiastical laws, as absolutely necessary to the
profession of Christianity, such things as the Holy Scriptures do
either not mention, or at least not expressly command? Whosoever
requires those things in order to ecclesiastical communion, which
Christ does not require in order to life eternal, he may, perhaps,
indeed constitute a society accommodated to his own opinion and his
own advantage; but how that can be called the Church of Christ which
is established upon laws that are not His, and which excludes such
persons from its communion as He will one day receive into the
Kingdom of Heaven, I understand not. But this being not a proper
place to inquire into the marks of the true church, I will only mind
those that contend so earnestly for the decrees of their own
society, and that cry out continually, "The Church! the Church!"
with as much noise, and perhaps upon the same principle, as the
Ephesian silversmiths did for their Diana; this, I say, I desire to
mind them of, that the Gospel frequently declares that the true
disciples of Christ must suffer persecution; but that the Church of
Christ should persecute others, and force others by fire and sword
to embrace her faith and doctrine, I could never yet find in any of
the books of the New Testament.
The end of a religious society (as has already been said) is the
public worship of God and, by means thereof, the acquisition of
eternal life. All discipline ought, therefore, to tend to that end,
and all ecclesiastical laws to be thereunto confined. Nothing ought
nor can be transacted in this society relating to the possession of
civil and worldly goods. No force is here to be made use of upon any
occasion whatsoever. For force belongs wholly to the civil
magistrate, and the possession of all outward goods is subject to
his jurisdiction.
But, it may be asked, by what means then shall ecclesiastical
laws be established, if they must be thus destitute of all
compulsive power? I answer: They must be established by means
suitable to the nature of such things, whereof the external
profession and observation — if not proceeding from a thorough
conviction and approbation of the mind — is altogether useless and
unprofitable. The arms by which the members of this society are to
be kept within their duty are exhortations, admonitions, and
advices. If by these means the offenders will not be reclaimed, and
the erroneous convinced, there remains nothing further to be done
but that such stubborn and obstinate persons, who give no ground to
hope for their reformation, should be cast out and separated from
the society. This is the last and utmost force of ecclesiastical
authority. No other punishment can thereby be inflicted than that,
the relation ceasing between the body and the member which is cut
off. The person so condemned ceases to be a part of that church.
These things being thus determined, let us inquire, in the next
place: How far the duty of toleration extends, and what is required
from everyone by it?
And, first, I hold that no church is bound, by the duty of
toleration, to retain any such person in her bosom as, after
admonition, continues obstinately to offend against the laws of the
society. For, these being the condition of communion and the bond of
the society, if the breach of them were permitted without any
animadversion the society would immediately be thereby dissolved.
But, nevertheless, in all such cases care is to be taken that the
sentence of excommunication, and the execution thereof, carry with
it no rough usage of word or action whereby the ejected person may
any wise be damnified in body or estate. For all force (as has often
been said) belongs only to the magistrate, nor ought any private
persons at any time to use force, unless it be in self-defence
against unjust violence. Excommunication neither does, nor can,
deprive the excommunicated person of any of those civil goods that
he formerly possessed. All those things belong to the civil
government and are under the magistrate's protection. The whole
force of excommunication consists only in this: that, the resolution
of the society in that respect being declared, the union that was
between the body and some member comes thereby to be dissolved; and,
that relation ceasing, the participation of some certain things
which the society communicated to its members, and unto which no man
has any civil right, comes also to cease. For there is no civil
injury done unto the excommunicated person by the church minister's
refusing him that bread and wine, in the celebration of the Lord's
Supper, which was not bought with his but other men's money.
Secondly, no private person has any right in any manner to
prejudice another person in his civil enjoyments because he is of
another church or religion. All the rights and franchises that
belong to him as a man, or as a denizen, are inviolably to be
preserved to him. These are not the business of religion. No
violence nor injury is to be offered him, whether he be Christian or
Pagan. Nay, we must not content ourselves with the narrow measures
of bare justice; charity, bounty, and liberality must be added to
it. This the Gospel enjoins, this reason directs, and this that
natural fellowship we are born into requires of us. If any man err
from the right way, it is his own misfortune, no injury to thee; nor
therefore art thou to punish him in the things of this life because
thou supposest he will be miserable in that which is to come.
What I say concerning the mutual toleration of private persons
differing from one another in religion, I understand also of
particular churches which stand, as it were, in the same relation to
each other as private persons among themselves: nor has any one of
them any manner of jurisdiction over any other; no, not even when
the civil magistrate (as it sometimes happens) comes to be of this
or the other communion. For the civil government can give no new
right to the church, nor the church to the civil government. So
that, whether the magistrate join himself to any church, or separate
from it, the church remains always as it was before — a free and
voluntary society. It neither requires the power of the sword by the
magistrate's coming to it, nor does it lose the right of instruction
and excommunication by his going from it. This is the fundamental
and immutable right of a spontaneous society — that it has power to
remove any of its members who transgress the rules of its
institution; but it cannot, by the accession of any new members,
acquire any right of jurisdiction over those that are not joined
with it. And therefore peace, equity, and friendship are always
mutually to be observed by particular churches, in the same manner
as by private persons, without any pretence of superiority or
jurisdiction over one another.
That the thing may be made clearer by an example, let us suppose
two churches — the one of Arminians, the other of Calvinists —
residing in the city of Constantinople. Will anyone say that either
of these churches has right to deprive the members of the other of
their estates and liberty (as we see practised elsewhere) because of
their differing from it in some doctrines and ceremonies, whilst the
Turks, in the meanwhile, silently stand by and laugh to see with
what inhuman cruelty Christians thus rage against Christians? But if
one of these churches hath this power of treating the other ill, I
ask which of them it is to whom that power belongs, and by what
right? It will be answered, undoubtedly, that it is the orthodox
church which has the right of authority over the erroneous or
heretical. This is, in great and specious words, to say just nothing
at all. For every church is orthodox to itself; to others, erroneous
or heretical. For whatsoever any church believes, it believes to be
true and the contrary unto those things it pronounce; to be error.
So that the controversy between these churches about the truth of
their doctrines and the purity of their worship is on both sides
equal; nor is there any judge, either at Constantinople or elsewhere
upon earth, by whose sentence it can be determined. The decision of
that question belongs only to the Supreme judge of all men, to whom
also alone belongs the punishment of the erroneous. In the
meanwhile, let those men consider how heinously they sin, who,
adding injustice, if not to their error, yet certainly to their
pride, do rashly and arrogantly take upon them to misuse the
servants of another master, who are not at all accountable to them.
Nay, further: if it could be manifest which of these two
dissenting churches were in the right, there would not accrue
thereby unto the orthodox any right of destroying the other. For
churches have neither any jurisdiction in worldly matters, nor are
fire and sword any proper instruments wherewith to convince men's
minds of error, and inform them of the truth. Let us suppose,
nevertheless, that the civil magistrate inclined to favour one of
them and to put his sword into their hands that (by his consent)
they might chastise the dissenters as they pleased. Will any man say
that any right can be derived unto a Christian church over its
brethren from a Turkish emperor? An infidel, who has himself no
authority to punish Christians for the articles of their faith,
cannot confer such an authority upon any society of Christians, nor
give unto them a right which he has not himself. This would be the
case at Constantinople; and the reason of the thing is the same in
any Christian kingdom. The civil power is the same in every place.
Nor can that power, in the hands of a Christian prince, confer any
greater authority upon the Church than in the hands of a heathen;
which is to say, just none at all.
Nevertheless, it is worthy to be observed and lamented that the
most violent of these defenders of the truth, the opposers of
errors, the exclaimers against schism do hardly ever let loose this
their zeal for God, with which they are so warmed and inflamed,
unless where they have the civil magistrate on their side. But so
soon as ever court favour has given them the better end of the
staff, and they begin to feel themselves the stronger, then
presently peace and charity are to be laid aside. Otherwise they are
religiously to be observed. Where they have not the power to carry
on persecution and to become masters, there they desire to live upon
fair terms and preach up toleration. When they are not strengthened
with the civil power, then they can bear most patiently and
unmovedly the contagion of idolatry, superstition, and heresy in
their neighbourhood; of which on other occasions the interest of
religion makes them to be extremely apprehensive. They do not
forwardly attack those errors which are in fashion at court or are
countenanced by the government. Here they can be content to spare
their arguments; which yet (with their leave) is the only right
method of propagating truth, which has no such way of prevailing as
when strong arguments and good reason are joined with the softness
of civility and good usage.
Nobody, therefore, in fine, neither single persons nor churches,
nay, nor even commonwealths, have any just title to invade the civil
rights and worldly goods of each other upon pretence of religion.
Those that are of another opinion would do well to consider with
themselves how pernicious a seed of discord and war, how powerful a
provocation to endless hatreds, rapines, and slaughters they thereby
furnish unto mankind. No peace and security, no, not so much as
common friendship, can ever be established or preserved amongst men
so long as this opinion prevails, that dominion is founded in grace
and that religion is to be propagated by force of arms.
In the third place, let us see what the duty of toleration
requires from those who are distinguished from the rest of mankind
(from the laity, as they please to call us) by some ecclesiastical
character and office; whether they be bishops, priests, presbyters,
ministers, or however else dignified or distinguished. It is not my
business to inquire here into the original of the power or dignity
of the clergy. This only I say, that, whencesoever their authority
be sprung, since it is ecclesiastical, it ought to be confined
within the bounds of the Church, nor can it in any manner be
extended to civil affairs, because the Church itself is a thing
absolutely separate and distinct from the commonwealth. The
boundaries on both sides are fixed and immovable. He jumbles heaven
and earth together, the things most remote and opposite, who mixes
these two societies, which are in their original, end, business, and
in everything perfectly distinct and infinitely different from each
other. No man, therefore, with whatsoever ecclesiastical office he
be dignified, can deprive another man that is not of his church and
faith either of liberty or of any part of his worldly goods upon the
account of that difference between them in religion. For whatsoever
is not lawful to the whole Church cannot by any ecclesiastical right
become lawful to any of its members.
But this is not all. It is not enough that ecclesiastical men
abstain from violence and rapine and all manner of persecution. He
that pretends to be a successor of the apostles, and takes upon him
the office of teaching, is obliged also to admonish his hearers of
the duties of peace and goodwill towards all men, as well towards
the erroneous as the orthodox; towards those that differ from them
in faith and worship as well as towards those that agree with them
therein. And he ought industriously to exhort all men, whether
private persons or magistrates (if any such there be in his church),
to charity, meekness, and toleration, and diligently endeavour to
ally and temper all that heat and unreasonable averseness of mind
which either any man's fiery zeal for his own sect or the craft of
others has kindled against dissenters. I will not undertake to
represent how happy and how great would be the fruit, both in Church
and State, if the pulpits everywhere sounded with this doctrine of
peace and toleration, lest I should seem to reflect too severely
upon those men whose dignity I desire not to detract from, nor would
have it diminished either by others or themselves. But this I say,
that thus it ought to be. And if anyone that professes himself to be
a minister of the Word of God, a preacher of the gospel of peace,
teach otherwise, he either understands not or neglects the business
of his calling and shall one day give account thereof unto the
Prince of Peace. If Christians are to be admonished that they
abstain from all manner of revenge, even after repeated provocations
and multiplied injuries, how much more ought they who suffer
nothing, who have had no harm done them, forbear violence and
abstain from all manner of ill-usage towards those from whom they
have received none! This caution and temper they ought certainly to
use towards those. who mind only their own business and are
solicitous for nothing but that (whatever men think of them) they
may worship God in that manner which they are persuaded is
acceptable to Him and in which they have the strongest hopes of
eternal salvation. In private domestic affairs, in the management of
estates, in the conservation of bodily health, every man may
consider what suits his own convenience and follow what course he
likes best. No man complains of the ill-management of his
neighbour's affairs. No man is angry with another for an error
committed in sowing his land or in marrying his daughter. Nobody
corrects a spendthrift for consuming his substance in taverns. Let
any man pull down, or build, or make whatsoever expenses he pleases,
nobody murmurs, nobody controls him; he has his liberty. But if any
man do not frequent the church, if he do not there conform his
behaviour exactly to the accustomed ceremonies, or if he brings not
his children to be initiated in the sacred mysteries of this or the
other congregation, this immediately causes an uproar. The
neighbourhood is filled with noise and clamour. Everyone is ready to
be the avenger of so great a crime, and the zealots hardly have the
patience to refrain from violence and rapine so long till the cause
be heard and the poor man be, according to form, condemned to the
loss of liberty, goods, or life. Oh, that our ecclesiastical orators
of every sect would apply themselves with all the strength of
arguments that they are able to the confounding of men's errors! But
let them spare their persons. Let them not supply their want of
reasons with the instruments of force, which belong to another
jurisdiction and do ill become a Churchman's hands. Let them not
call in the magistrate's authority to the aid of their eloquence or
learning, lest perhaps, whilst they pretend only love for the truth,
this their intemperate zeal, breathing nothing but fire and sword,
betray their ambition and show that what they desire is temporal
dominion. For it will be very difficult to persuade men of sense
that he who with dry eyes and satisfaction of mind can deliver his
brother to the executioner to be burnt alive, does sincerely and
heartily concern himself to save that brother from the flames of
hell in the world to come.
In the last place, let us now consider what is the magistrate's
duty in the business of toleration, which certainly is very
considerable.
We have already proved that the care of souls does not belong to
the magistrate. Not a magisterial care, I mean (if I may so call
it), which consists in prescribing by laws and compelling by
punishments. But a charitable care, which consists in teaching,
admonishing, and persuading, cannot be denied unto any man. The
care, therefore, of every man's soul belongs unto himself and is to
be left unto himself. But what if he neglect the care of his soul? I
answer: What if he neglect the care of his health or of his estate,
which things are nearlier related to the government of the
magistrate than the other? Will the magistrate provide by an express
law that such a one shall not become poor or sick? Laws provide, as
much as is possible, that the goods and health of subjects be not
injured by the fraud and violence of others; they do not guard them
from the negligence or ill-husbandry of the possessors themselves.
No man can be forced to be rich or healthful whether he will or no.
Nay, God Himself will not save men against their wills. Let us
suppose, however, that some prince were desirous to force his
subjects to accumulate riches, or to preserve the health and
strength of their bodies. Shall it be provided by law that they must
consult none but Roman physicians, and shall everyone be bound to
live according to their prescriptions? What, shall no potion, no
broth, be taken, but what is prepared either in the Vatican,
suppose, or in a Geneva shop? Or, to make these subjects rich, shall
they all be obliged by law to become merchants or musicians? Or,
shall everyone turn victualler, or smith, because there are some
that maintain their families plentifully and grow rich in those
professions? But, it may be said, there are a thousand ways to
wealth, but one only way to heaven. It is well said, indeed,
especially by those that plead for compelling men into this or the
other way. For if there were several ways that led thither, there
would not be so much as a pretence left for compulsion. But now, if
I be marching on with my utmost vigour in that way which, according
to the sacred geography, leads straight to Jerusalem, why am I
beaten and ill-used by others because, perhaps, I wear not buskins;
because my hair is not of the right cut; because, perhaps, I have
not been dipped in the right fashion; because I eat flesh upon the
road, or some other food which agrees with my stomach; because I
avoid certain by-ways, which seem unto me to lead into briars or
precipices; because, amongst the several paths that are in the same
road, I choose that to walk in which seems to be the straightest and
cleanest; because I avoid to keep company with some travellers that
are less grave and others that are more sour than they ought to be;
or, in fine, because I follow a guide that either is, or is not,
clothed in white, or crowned with a mitre? Certainly, if we consider
right, we shall find that, for the most part, they are such
frivolous things as these that (without any prejudice to religion or
the salvation of souls, if not accompanied with superstition or
hypocrisy) might either be observed or omitted. I say they are
such-like things as these which breed implacable enmities amongst
Christian brethren, who are all agreed in the substantial and truly
fundamental part of religion.
But let us grant unto these zealots, who condemn all things that
are not of their mode, that from these circumstances are different
ends. What shall we conclude from thence? There is only one of these
which is the true way to eternal happiness: but in this great
variety of ways that men follow, it is still doubted which is the
right one. Now, neither the care of the commonwealth, nor the right
enacting of laws, does discover this way that leads to heaven more
certainly to the magistrate than every private man's search and
study discovers it unto himself. I have a weak body, sunk under a
languishing disease, for which (I suppose) there is one only remedy,
but that unknown. Does it therefore belong unto the magistrate to
prescribe me a remedy, because there is but one, and because it is
unknown? Because there is but one way for me to escape death, will
it therefore be safe for me to do whatsoever the magistrate ordains?
Those things that every man ought sincerely to inquire into himself,
and by meditation, study, search, and his own endeavours, attain the
knowledge of, cannot be looked upon as the peculiar possession of
any sort of men. Princes, indeed, are born superior unto other men
in power, but in nature equal. Neither the right nor the art of
ruling does necessarily carry along with it the certain knowledge of
other things, and least of all of true religion. For if it were so,
how could it come to pass that the lords of the earth should differ
so vastly as they do in religious matters? But let us grant that it
is probable the way to eternal life may be better known by a prince
than by his subjects, or at least that in this incertitude of things
the safest and most commodious way for private persons is to follow
his dictates. You will say: "What then?" If he should bid you follow
merchandise for your livelihood, would you decline that course for
fear it should not succeed? I answer: I would turn merchant upon the
prince's command, because, in case I should have ill-success in
trade, he is abundantly able to make up my loss some other way. If
it be true, as he pretends, that he desires I should thrive and grow
rich, he can set me up again when unsuccessful voyages have broken
me. But this is not the case in the things that regard the life to
come; if there I take a wrong course, if in that respect I am once
undone, it is not in the magistrate's power to repair my loss, to
ease my suffering, nor to restore me in any measure, much less
entirely, to a good estate. What security can be given for the
Kingdom of Heaven?
Perhaps some will say that they do not suppose this infallible
judgement, that all men are bound to follow in the affairs of
religion, to be in the civil magistrate, but in the Church. What the
Church has determined, that the civil magistrate orders to be
observed; and he provides by his authority that nobody shall either
act or believe in the business of religion otherwise than the Church
teaches. So that the judgement of those things is in the Church; the
magistrate himself yields obedience thereunto and requires the like
obedience from others. I answer: Who sees not how frequently the
name of the Church, which was venerable in time of the apostles, has
been made use of to throw dust in the people's eyes in the following
ages? But, however, in the present case it helps us not. The one
only narrow way which leads to heaven is not better known to the
magistrate than to private persons, and therefore I cannot safely
take him for my guide, who may probably be as ignorant of the way as
myself, and who certainly is less concerned for my salvation than I
myself am. Amongst so many kings of the Jews, how many of them were
there whom any Israelite, thus blindly following, had not fallen
into idolatry and thereby into destruction? Yet, nevertheless, you
bid me be of good courage and tell me that all is now safe and
secure, because the magistrate does not now enjoin the observance of
his own decrees in matters of religion, but only the decrees of the
Church. Of what Church, I beseech you? of that, certainly, which
likes him best. As if he that compels me by laws and penalties to
enter into this or the other Church, did not interpose his own
judgement in the matter. What difference is there whether he lead me
himself, or deliver me over to be led by others? I depend both ways
upon his will, and it is he that determines both ways of my eternal
state. Would an Israelite that had worshipped Baal upon the command
of his king have been in any better condition because somebody had
told him that the king ordered nothing in religion upon his own
head, nor commanded anything to be done by his subjects in divine
worship but what was approved by the counsel of priests, and
declared to be of divine right by the doctors of their Church? If
the religion of any Church become, therefore, true and saving,
because the head of that sect, the prelates and priests, and those
of that tribe, do all of them, with all their might, extol and
praise it, what religion can ever be accounted erroneous, false, and
destructive? I am doubtful concerning the doctrine of the Socinians,
I am suspicious of the way of worship practised by the Papists, or
Lutherans; will it be ever a jot safer for me to join either unto
the one or the other of those Churches, upon the magistrate's
command, because he commands nothing in religion but by the
authority and counsel of the doctors of that Church?
But, to speak the truth, we must acknowledge that the Church (if
a convention of clergymen, making canons, must be called by that
name) is for the most part more apt to be influenced by the Court
than the Court by the Church. How the Church was under the
vicissitude of orthodox and Arian emperors is very well known. Or if
those things be too remote, our modern English history affords us
fresh examples in the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary, and
Elizabeth, how easily and smoothly the clergy changed their decrees,
their articles of faith, their form of worship, everything according
to the inclination of those kings and queens. Yet were those kings
and queens of such different minds in point of religion, and
enjoined thereupon such different things, that no man in his wits (I
had almost said none but an atheist) will presume to say that any
sincere and upright worshipper of God could, with a safe conscience,
obey their several decrees. To conclude, it is the same thing
whether a king that prescribes laws to another man's religion
pretend to do it by his own judgement, or by the ecclesiastical
authority and advice of others. The decisions of churchmen, whose
differences and disputes are sufficiently known, cannot be any
sounder or safer than his; nor can all their suffrages joined
together add a new strength to the civil power. Though this also
must be taken notice of — that princes seldom have any regard to the
suffrages of ecclesiastics that are not favourers of their own faith
and way of worship.
But, after all, the principal consideration, and which absolutely
determines this controversy, is this: Although the magistrate's
opinion in religion be sound, and the way that he appoints be truly
Evangelical, yet, if I be not thoroughly persuaded thereof in my own
mind, there will be no safety for me in following it. No way
whatsoever that I shall walk in against the dictates of my
conscience will ever bring me to the mansions of the blessed. I may
grow rich by an art that I take not delight in; I may be cured of
some disease by remedies that I have not faith in; but I cannot be
saved by a religion that I distrust and by a worship that I abhor.
It is in vain for an unbeliever to take up the outward show of
another man's profession. Faith only and inward sincerity are the
things that procure acceptance with God. The most likely and most
approved remedy can have no effect upon the patient, if his stomach
reject it as soon as taken; and you will in vain cram a medicine
down a sick man's throat, which his particular constitution will be
sure to turn into poison. In a word, whatsoever may be doubtful in
religion, yet this at least is certain, that no religion which I
believe not to be true can be either true or profitable unto me. In
vain, therefore, do princes compel their subjects to come into their
Church communion, under pretence of saving their souls. If they
believe, they will come of their own accord, if they believe not,
their coming will nothing avail them. How great soever, in fine, may
be the pretence of good-will and charity, and concern for the
salvation of men's souls, men cannot be forced to be saved whether
they will or no. And therefore, when all is done, they must be left
to their own consciences.
Having thus at length freed men from all dominion over one
another in matters of religion, let us now consider what they are to
do. All men know and acknowledge that God ought to be publicly
worshipped; why otherwise do they compel one another unto the public
assemblies? Men, therefore, constituted in this liberty are to enter
into some religious society, that they meet together, not only for
mutual edification, but to own to the world that they worship God
and offer unto His Divine Majesty such service as they themselves
are not ashamed of and such as they think not unworthy of Him, nor
unacceptable to Him; and, finally, that by the purity of doctrine,
holiness of life, and decent form of worship, they may draw others
unto the love of the true religion, and perform such other things in
religion as cannot be done by each private man apart.
These religious societies I call Churches; and these, I say, the
magistrate ought to tolerate, for the business of these assemblies
of the people is nothing but what is lawful for every man in
particular to take care of — I mean the salvation of their souls;
nor in this case is there any difference between the National Church
and other separated congregations.
But as in every Church there are two things especially to be
considered — the outward form and rites of worship, and the
doctrines and articles of things must be handled each distinctly
that so the whole matter of toleration may the more clearly be
understood.
Concerning outward worship, I say, in the first place, that the
magistrate has no power to enforce by law, either in his own Church,
or much less in another, the use of any rites or ceremonies
whatsoever in the worship of God. And this, not only because these
Churches are free societies, but because whatsoever is practised in
the worship of God is only so far justifiable as it is believed by
those that practise it to be acceptable unto Him. Whatsoever is not
done with that assurance of faith is neither well in itself, nor can
it be acceptable to God. To impose such things, therefore, upon any
people, contrary to their own judgment, is in effect to command them
to offend God, which, considering that the end of all religion is to
please Him, and that liberty is essentially necessary to that end,
appears to be absurd beyond expression.
But perhaps it may be concluded from hence that I deny unto the
magistrate all manner of power about indifferent things, which, if
it be not granted, the whole subject-matter of law-making is taken
away. No, I readily grant that indifferent things, and perhaps none
but such, are subjected to the legislative power. But it does not
therefore follow that the magistrate may ordain whatsoever he
pleases concerning anything that is indifferent. The public good is
the rule and measure of all law-making. If a thing be not useful to
the commonwealth, though it be never so indifferent, it may not
presently be established by law.
And further, things never so indifferent in their own nature,
when they are brought into the Church and worship of God, are
removed out of the reach of the magistrate's jurisdiction, because
in that use they have no connection at all with civil affairs. The
only business of the Church is the salvation of souls, and it no way
concerns the commonwealth, or any member of it, that this or the
other ceremony be there made use of. Neither the use nor the
omission of any ceremonies in those religious assemblies does either
advantage or prejudice the life, liberty, or estate of any man. For
example, let it be granted that the washing of an infant with water
is in itself an indifferent thing, let it be granted also that the
magistrate understand such washing to be profitable to the curing or
preventing of any disease the children are subject unto, and esteem
the matter weighty enough to be taken care of by a law. In that case
he may order it to be done. But will any one therefore say that a
magistrate has the same right to ordain by law that all children
shall be baptised by priests in the sacred font in order to the
purification of their souls? The extreme difference of these two
cases is visible to every one at first sight. Or let us apply the
last case to the child of a Jew, and the thing speaks itself. For
what hinders but a Christian magistrate may have subjects that are
Jews? Now, if we acknowledge that such an injury may not be done
unto a Jew as to compel him, against his own opinion, to practise in
his religion a thing that is in its nature indifferent, how can we
maintain that anything of this kind may be done to a Christian?
Again, things in their own nature indifferent cannot, by any
human authority, be made any part of the worship of God — for this
very reason: because they are indifferent. For, since indifferent
things are not capable, by any virtue of their own, to propitiate
the Deity, no human power or authority can confer on them so much
dignity and excellency as to enable them to do it. In the common
affairs of life that use of indifferent things which God has not
forbidden is free and lawful, and therefore in those things human
authority has place. But it is not so in matters of religion. Things
indifferent are not otherwise lawful in the worship of God than as
they are instituted by God Himself and as He, by some positive
command, has ordained them to be made a part of that worship which
He will vouchsafe to accept at the hands of poor sinful men. Nor,
when an incensed Deity shall ask us, "Who has required these, or
such-like things at your hands?" will it be enough to answer Him
that the magistrate commanded them. If civil jurisdiction extend
thus far, what might not lawfully be introduced into religion? What
hodgepodge of ceremonies, what superstitious inventions, built upon
the magistrate's authority, might not (against conscience) be
imposed upon the worshippers of God? For the greatest part of these
ceremonies and superstitions consists in the religious use of such
things as are in their own nature indifferent; nor are they sinful
upon any other account than because God is not the author of them.
The sprinkling of water and the use of bread and wine are both in
their own nature and in the ordinary occasions of life altogether
indifferent. Will any man, therefore, say that these things could
have been introduced into religion and made a part of divine worship
if not by divine institution? If any human authority or civil power
could have done this, why might it not also enjoin the eating of
fish and drinking of ale in the holy banquet as a part of divine
worship? Why not the sprinkling of the blood of beasts in churches,
and expiations by water or fire, and abundance more of this kind?
But these things, how indifferent soever they be in common uses,
when they come to be annexed unto divine worship, without divine
authority, they are as abominable to God as the sacrifice of a dog.
And why is a dog so abominable? What difference is there between a
dog and a goat, in respect of the divine nature, equally and
infinitely distant from all affinity with matter, unless it be that
God required the use of one in His worship and not of the other? We
see, therefore, that indifferent things, how much soever they be
under the power of the civil magistrate, yet cannot, upon that
pretence, be introduced into religion and imposed upon religious
assemblies, because, in the worship of God, they wholly cease to be
indifferent. He that worships God does it with design to please Him
and procure His favour. But that cannot be done by him who, upon the
command of another, offers unto God that which he knows will be
displeasing to Him, because not commanded by Himself. This is not to
please God, or appease his wrath, but willingly and knowingly to
provoke Him by a manifest contempt, which is a thing absolutely
repugnant to the nature and end of worship.
But it will be here asked: "If nothing belonging to divine
worship be left to human discretion, how is it then that Churches
themselves have the power of ordering anything about the time and
place of worship and the like?" To this I answer that in religious
worship we must distinguish between what is part of the worship
itself and what is but a circumstance. That is a part of the worship
which is believed to be appointed by God and to be well-pleasing to
Him, and therefore that is necessary. Circumstances are such things
which, though in general they cannot be separated from worship, yet
the particular instances or modifications of them are not
determined, and therefore they are indifferent. Of this sort are the
time and place of worship, habit and posture of him that worships.
These are circumstances, and perfectly indifferent, where God has
not given any express command about them. For example: amongst the
Jews the time and place of their worship and the habits of those
that officiated in it were not mere circumstances, but a part of the
worship itself, in which, if anything were defective, or different
from the institution, they could not hope that it would be accepted
by God. But these, to Christians under the liberty of the Gospel,
are mere circumstances of worship, which the prudence of every
Church may bring into such use as shall be judged most subservient
to the end of order, decency, and edification. But, even under the
Gospel, those who believe the first or the seventh day to be set
apart by God, and consecrated still to His worship, to them that
portion of time is not a simple circumstance, but a real part of
Divine worship, which can neither be changed nor neglected.
In the next place: As the magistrate has no power to impose by
his laws the use of any rites and ceremonies in any Church, so
neither has he any power to forbid the use of such rites and
ceremonies as are already received, approved, and practised by any
Church; because, if he did so, he would destroy the Church itself:
the end of whose institution is only to worship God with freedom
after its own manner.
You will say, by this rule, if some congregations should have a
mind to sacrifice infants, or (as the primitive Christians were
falsely accused) lustfully pollute themselves in promiscuous
uncleanness, or practise any other such heinous enormities, is the
magistrate obliged to tolerate them, because they are committed in a
religious assembly? I answer: No. These things are not lawful in the
ordinary course of life, nor in any private house; and therefore
neither are they so in the worship of God, or in any religious
meeting. But, indeed, if any people congregated upon account of
religion should be desirous to sacrifice a calf, I deny that that
ought to be prohibited by a law. Meliboeus, whose calf it is, may
lawfully kill his calf at home, and burn any part of it that he
thinks fit. For no injury is thereby done to any one, no prejudice
to another man's goods. And for the same reason he may kill his calf
also in a religious meeting. Whether the doing so be well-pleasing
to God or no, it is their part to consider that do it. The part of
the magistrate is only to take care that the commonwealth receive no
prejudice, and that there be no injury done to any man, either in
life or estate. And thus what may be spent on a feast may be spent
on a sacrifice. But if peradventure such were the state of things
that the interest of the commonwealth required all slaughter of
beasts should be forborne for some while, in order to the increasing
of the stock of cattle that had been destroyed by some extraordinary
murrain, who sees not that the magistrate, in such a case, may
forbid all his subjects to kill any calves for any use whatsoever?
Only it is to be observed that, in this case, the law is not made
about a religious, but a political matter; nor is the sacrifice, but
the slaughter of calves, thereby prohibited.
By this we see what difference there is between the Church and
the Commonwealth. Whatsoever is lawful in the Commonwealth cannot be
prohibited by the magistrate in the Church. Whatsoever is permitted
unto any of his subjects for their ordinary use, neither can nor
ought to be forbidden by him to any sect of people for their
religious uses. If any man may lawfully take bread or wine, either
sitting or kneeling in his own house, the law ought not to abridge
him of the same liberty in his religious worship; though in the
Church the use of bread and wine be very different and be there
applied to the mysteries of faith and rites of Divine worship. But
those things that are prejudicial to the commonweal of a people in
their ordinary use and are, therefore, forbidden by laws, those
things ought not to be permitted to Churches in their sacred rites.
Only the magistrate ought always to be very careful that he do not
misuse his authority to the oppression of any Church, under pretence
of public good.
It may be said: "What if a Church be idolatrous, is that also to
be tolerated by the magistrate?" I answer: What power can be given
to the magistrate for the suppression of an idolatrous Church, which
may not in time and place be made use of to the ruin of an orthodox
one? For it must be remembered that the civil power is the same
everywhere, and the religion of every prince is orthodox to himself.
If, therefore, such a power be granted unto the civil magistrate in
spirituals as that at Geneva, for example, he may extirpate, by
violence and blood, the religion which is there reputed idolatrous,
by the same rule another magistrate, in some neighbouring country,
may oppress the reformed religion and, in India, the Christian. The
civil power can either change everything in religion, according to
the prince's pleasure, or it can change nothing. If it be once
permitted to introduce anything into religion by the means of laws
and penalties, there can be no bounds put to it; but it will in the
same manner be lawful to alter everything, according to that rule of
truth which the magistrate has framed unto himself. No man
whatsoever ought, therefore, to be deprived of his terrestrial
enjoyments upon account of his religion. Not even Americans,
subjected unto a Christian prince, are to be punished either in body
or goods for not embracing our faith and worship. If they are
persuaded that they please God in observing the rites of their own
country and that they shall obtain happiness by that means, they are
to be left unto God and themselves. Let us trace this matter to the
bottom. Thus it is: An inconsiderable and weak number of Christians,
destitute of everything, arrive in a Pagan country; these foreigners
beseech the inhabitants, by the bowels of humanity, that they would
succour them with the necessaries of life; those necessaries are
given them, habitations are granted, and they all join together, and
grow up into one body of people. The Christian religion by this
means takes root in that country and spreads itself, but does not
suddenly grow the strongest. While things are in this condition
peace, friendship, faith, and equal justice are preserved amongst
them. At length the magistrate becomes a Christian, and by that
means their party becomes the most powerful. Then immediately all
compacts are to be broken, all civil rights to be violated, that
idolatry may be extirpated; and unless these innocent Pagans, strict
observers of the rules of equity and the law of Nature and no ways
offending against the laws of the society, I say, unless they will
forsake their ancient religion and embrace a new and strange one,
they are to be turned out of the lands and possessions of their
forefathers and perhaps deprived of life itself. Then, at last, it
appears what zeal for the Church, joined with the desire of
dominion, is capable to produce, and how easily the pretence of
religion, and of the care of souls, serves for a cloak to
covetousness, rapine, and ambition.
Now whosoever maintains that idolatry is to be rooted out of any
place by laws, punishments, fire, and sword, may apply this story to
himself. For the reason of the thing is equal, both in America and
Europe. And neither Pagans there, nor any dissenting Christians
here, can, with any right, be deprived of their worldly goods by the
predominating faction of a court-church; nor are any civil rights to
be either changed or violated upon account of religion in one place
more than another.
But idolatry, say some, is a sin and therefore not to be
tolerated. If they said it were therefore to be avoided, the
inference were good. But it does not follow that because it is a sin
it ought therefore to be punished by the magistrate. For it does not
belong unto the magistrate to make use of his sword in punishing
everything, indifferently, that he takes to be a sin against God.
Covetousness, uncharitableness, idleness, and many other things are
sins by the consent of men, which yet no man ever said were to be
punished by the magistrate. The reason is because they are not
prejudicial to other men's rights, nor do they break the public
peace of societies. Nay, even the sins of lying and perjury are
nowhere punishable by laws; unless, in certain cases, in which the
real turpitude of the thing and the offence against God are not
considered, but only the injury done unto men's neighbours and to
the commonwealth. And what if in another country, to a Mahometan or
a Pagan prince, the Christian religion seem false and offensive to
God; may not the Christians for the same reason, and after the same
manner, be extirpated there?
But it may be urged farther that, by the law of Moses, idolaters
were to be rooted out. True, indeed, by the law of Moses; but that
is not obligatory to us Christians. Nobody pretends that everything
generally enjoined by the law of Moses ought to be practised by
Christians; but there is nothing more frivolous than that common
distinction of moral, judicial, and ceremonial law, which men
ordinarily make use of. For no positive law whatsoever can oblige
any people but those to whom it is given. "Hear, O Israel,"
sufficiently restrains the obligations of the law of Moses only to
that people. And this consideration alone is answer enough unto
those that urge the authority of the law of Moses for the inflicting
of capital punishment upon idolaters. But, however, I will examine
this argument a little more particularly.
The case of idolaters, in respect of the Jewish commonwealth,
falls under a double consideration. The first is of those who, being
initiated in the Mosaical rites, and made citizens of that
commonwealth, did afterwards apostatise from the worship of the God
of Israel. These were proceeded against as traitors and rebels,
guilty of no less than high treason. For the commonwealth of the
Jews, different in that from all others, was an absolute theocracy;
nor was there, or could there be, any difference between that
commonwealth and the Church. The laws established there concerning
the worship of One Invisible Deity were the civil laws of that
people and a part of their political government, in which God
Himself was the legislator. Now, if any one can shew me where there
is a commonwealth at this time, constituted upon that foundation, I
will acknowledge that the ecclesiastical laws do there unavoidably
become a part of the civil, and that the subjects of that government
both may and ought to be kept in strict conformity with that Church
by the civil power. But there is absolutely no such thing under the
Gospel as a Christian commonwealth. There are, indeed, many cities
and kingdoms that have embraced the faith of Christ, but they have
retained their ancient form of government, with which the law of
Christ hath not at all meddled. He, indeed, hath taught men how, by
faith and good works, they may obtain eternal life; but He
instituted no commonwealth. He prescribed unto His followers no new
and peculiar form of government, nor put He the sword into any
magistrate's hand, with commission to make use of it in forcing men
to forsake their former religion and receive His.
Secondly, foreigners and such as were strangers to the
commonwealth of Israel were not compelled by force to observe the
rites of the Mosaical law; but, on the contrary, in the very same
place where it is ordered that an Israelite that was an idolater
should be put to death,[7] there it is
provided that strangers should not be vexed nor oppressed. I confess
that the seven nations that possessed the land which was promised to
the Israelites were utterly to be cut off; but this was not singly
because they were idolaters. For if that had been the reason, why
were the Moabites and other nations to be spared? No: the reason is
this. God being in a peculiar manner the King of the Jews, He could
not suffer the adoration of any other deity (which was properly an
act of high treason against Himself) in the land of Canaan, which
was His kingdom. For such a manifest revolt could no ways consist
with His dominion, which was perfectly political in that country.
All idolatry was, therefore, to be rooted out of the bounds of His
kingdom because it was an acknowledgment of another god, that is
say, another king, against the laws of Empire. The inhabitants were
also to be driven out, that the entire possession of the land might
be given to the Israelites. And for the like reason the Emims and
the Horims were driven out of their countries by the children of
Esau and Lot; and their lands, upon the same grounds, given by God
to the invaders.[8] But, though all
idolatry was thus rooted out of the land of Canaan, yet every
idolater was not brought to execution. The whole family of Rahab,
the whole nation of the Gibeonites, articled with Joshua, and were
allowed by treaty; and there were many captives amongst the Jews who
were idolaters. David and Solomon subdued many countries without the
confines of the Land of Promise and carried their conquests as far
as Euphrates. Amongst so many captives taken, so many nations
reduced under their obedience, we find not one man forced into the
Jewish religion and the worship of the true God and punished for
idolatry, though all of them were certainly guilty of it. If any
one, indeed, becoming a proselyte, desired to be made a denizen of
their commonwealth, he was obliged to submit to their laws; that is,
to embrace their religion. But this he did willingly, on his own
accord, not by constraint. He did not unwillingly submit, to show
his obedience, but he sought and solicited for it as a privilege.
And, as soon as he was admitted, he became subject to the laws of
the commonwealth, by which all idolatry was forbidden within the
borders of the land of Canaan. But that law (as I have said) did not
reach to any of those regions, however subjected unto the Jews, that
were situated without those bounds.
Thus far concerning outward worship. Let us now consider articles
of faith.
The articles of religion are some of them practical and some
speculative. Now, though both sorts consist in the knowledge of
truth, yet these terminate simply in the understanding, those
influence the will and manners. Speculative opinions, therefore, and
articles of faith (as they are called) which are required only to be
believed, cannot be imposed on any Church by the law of the land.
For it is absurd that things should be enjoined by laws which are
not in men's power to perform. And to believe this or that to be
true does not depend upon our will. But of this enough has been said
already. "But." will some say; "let men at least profess that they
believe." A sweet religion, indeed, that obliges men to dissemble
and tell lies, both to God and man, for the salvation of their
souls! If the magistrate thinks to save men thus, he seems to
understand little of the way of salvation. And if he does it not in
order to save them, why is he so solicitous about the articles of
faith as to enact them by a law?
Further, the magistrate ought not to forbid the preaching or
professing of any speculative opinions in any Church because they
have no manner of relation to the civil rights of the subjects. If a
Roman Catholic believe that to be really the body of Christ which
another man calls bread, he does no injury thereby to his neighbour.
If a Jew do not believe the New Testament to be the Word of God, he
does not thereby alter anything in men's civil rights. If a heathen
doubt of both Testaments, he is not therefore to be punished as a
pernicious citizen. The power of the magistrate and the estates of
the people may be equally secure whether any man believe these
things or no. I readily grant that these opinions are false and
absurd. But the business of laws is not to provide for the truth of
opinions, but for the safety and security of the commonwealth and of
every particular man's goods and person. And so it ought to be. For
the truth certainly would do well enough if she were once left to
shift for herself. She seldom has received and, I fear, never will
receive much assistance from the power of great men, to whom she is
but rarely known and more rarely welcome. She is not taught by laws,
nor has she any need of force to procure her entrance into the minds
of men. Errors, indeed, prevail by the assistance of foreign and
borrowed succours. But if Truth makes not her way into the
understanding by her own light, she will be but the weaker for any
borrowed force violence can add to her. Thus much for speculative
opinions. Let us now proceed to practical ones.
A good life, in which consist not the least part of religion and
true piety, concerns also the civil government; and in it lies the
safety both of men's souls and of the commonwealth. Moral actions
belong, therefore, to the jurisdiction both of the outward and
inward court; both of the civil and domestic governor; I mean both
of the magistrate and conscience. Here, therefore, is great danger,
lest one of these jurisdictions intrench upon the other, and discord
arise between the keeper of the public peace and the overseers of
souls. But if what has been already said concerning the limits of
both these governments be rightly considered, it will easily remove
all difficulty in this matter.
Every man has an immortal soul, capable of eternal happiness or
misery; whose happiness depending upon his believing and doing those
things in this life which are necessary to the obtaining of God's
favour, and are prescribed by God to that end. It follows from
thence, first, that the observance of these things is the highest
obligation that lies upon mankind and that our utmost care,
application, and diligence ought to be exercised in the search and
performance of them; because there is nothing in this world that is
of any consideration in comparison with eternity. Secondly, that
seeing one man does not violate the right of another by his
erroneous opinions and undue manner of worship, nor is his perdition
any prejudice to another man's affairs, therefore, the care of each
man's salvation belongs only to himself. But I would not have this
understood as if I meant hereby to condemn all charitable
admonitions and affectionate endeavours to reduce men from errors,
which are indeed the greatest duty of a Christian. Any one may
employ as many exhortations and arguments as he pleases, towards the
promoting of another man's salvation. But all force and compulsion
are to be forborne. Nothing is to be done imperiously. Nobody is
obliged in that matter to yield obedience unto the admonitions or
injunctions of another, further than he himself is persuaded. Every
man in that has the supreme and absolute authority of judging for
himself. And the reason is because nobody else is concerned in it,
nor can receive any prejudice from his conduct therein.
But besides their souls, which are immortal, men have also their
temporal lives here upon earth; the state whereof being frail and
fleeting, and the duration uncertain, they have need of several
outward conveniences to the support thereof, which are to be
procured or preserved by pains and industry. For those things that
are necessary to the comfortable support of our lives are not the
spontaneous products of nature, nor do offer themselves fit and
prepared for our use. This part, therefore, draws on another care
and necessarily gives another employment. But the pravity of mankind
being such that they had rather injuriously prey upon the fruits of
other men's labours than take pains to provide for themselves, the
necessity of preserving men in the possession of what honest
industry has already acquired and also of preserving their liberty
and strength, whereby they may acquire what they farther want,
obliges men to enter into society with one another, that by mutual
assistance and joint force they may secure unto each other their
properties, in the things that contribute to the comfort and
happiness of this life, leaving in the meanwhile to every man the
care of his own eternal happiness, the attainment whereof can
neither be facilitated by another man's industry, nor can the loss
of it turn to another man's prejudice, nor the hope of it be forced
from him by any external violence. But, forasmuch as men thus
entering into societies, grounded upon their mutual compacts of
assistance for the defence of their temporal goods, may,
nevertheless, be deprived of them, either by the rapine and fraud of
their fellow citizens, or by the hostile violence of foreigners, the
remedy of this evil consists in arms, riches, and multitude of
citizens; the remedy of the other in laws; and the care of all
things relating both to one and the other is committed by the
society to the civil magistrate. This is the original, this is the
use, and these are the bounds of the legislative (which is the
supreme) power in every commonwealth. I mean that provision may be
made for the security of each man's private possessions; for the
peace, riches, and public commodities of the whole people; and, as
much as possible, for the increase of their inward strength against
foreign invasions.
These things being thus explained, it is easy to understand to
what end the legislative power ought to be directed and by what
measures regulated; and that is the temporal good and outward
prosperity of the society; which is the sole reason of men's
entering into society, and the only thing they seek and aim at in
it. And it is also evident what liberty remains to men in reference
to their eternal salvation, and that is that every one should do
what he in his conscience is persuaded to be acceptable to the
Almighty, on whose good pleasure and acceptance depends their
eternal happiness. For obedience is due, in the first place, to God
and, afterwards to the laws.
But some may ask: "What if the magistrate should enjoin anything
by his authority that appears unlawful to the conscience of a
private person?" I answer that, if government be faithfully
administered and the counsels of the magistrates be indeed directed
to the public good, this will seldom happen. But if, perhaps, it do
so fall out, I say, that such a private person is to abstain from
the action that he judges unlawful, and he is to undergo the
punishment which it is not unlawful for him to bear. For the private
judgement of any person concerning a law enacted in political
matters, for the public good, does not take away the obligation of
that law, nor deserve a dispensation. But if the law, indeed, be
concerning things that lie not within the verge of the magistrate's
authority (as, for example, that the people, or any party amongst
them, should be compelled to embrace a strange religion, and join in
the worship and ceremonies of another Church), men are not in these
cases obliged by that law, against their consciences. For the
political society is instituted for no other end, but only to secure
every man's possession of the things of this life. The care of each
man's soul and of the things of heaven, which neither does belong to
the commonwealth nor can be subjected to it, is left entirely to
every man's self. Thus the safeguard of men's lives and of the
things that belong unto this life is the business of the
commonwealth; and the preserving of those things unto their owners
is the duty of the magistrate. And therefore the magistrate cannot
take away these worldly things from this man or party and give them
to that; nor change propriety amongst fellow subjects (no not even
by a law), for a cause that has no relation to the end of civil
government, I mean for their religion, which whether it be true or
false does no prejudice to the worldly concerns of their fellow
subjects, which are the things that only belong unto the care of the
commonwealth.
But what if the magistrate believe such a law as this to be for
the public good? I answer: As the private judgement of any
particular person, if erroneous, does not exempt him from the
obligation of law, so the private judgement (as I may call it) of
the magistrate does not give him any new right of imposing laws upon
his subjects, which neither was in the constitution of the
government granted him, nor ever was in the power of the people to
grant, much less if he make it his business to enrich and advance
his followers and fellow-sectaries with the spoils of others. But
what if the magistrate believe that he has a right to make such laws
and that they are for the public good, and his subjects believe the
contrary? Who shall be judge between them? I answer: God alone. For
there is no judge upon earth between the supreme magistrate and the
people. God, I say, is the only judge in this case, who will
retribute unto every one at the last day according to his deserts;
that is, according to his sincerity and uprightness in endeavouring
to promote piety, and the public weal, and peace of mankind. But
What shall be done in the meanwhile? I answer: The principal and
chief care of every one ought to be of his own soul first, and, in
the next place, of the public peace; though yet there are very few
will think it is peace there, where they see all laid waste.
There are two sorts of contests amongst men, the one managed by
law, the other by force; and these are of that nature that where the
one ends, the other always begins. But it is not my business to
inquire into the power of the magistrate in the different
constitutions of nations. I only know what usually happens where
controversies arise without a judge to determine them. You will say,
then, the magistrate being the stronger will have his will and carry
his point. Without doubt; but the question is not here concerning
the doubtfulness of the event, but the rule of right.
But to come to particulars. I say, first, no opinions contrary to
human society, or to those moral rules which are necessary to the
preservation of civil society, are to be tolerated by the
magistrate. But of these, indeed, examples in any Church are rare.
For no sect can easily arrive to such a degree of madness as that it
should think fit to teach, for doctrines of religion, such things as
manifestly undermine the foundations of society and are, therefore,
condemned by the judgement of all mankind; because their own
interest, peace, reputation, everything would be thereby endangered.
Another more secret evil, but more dangerous to the commonwealth,
is when men arrogate to themselves, and to those of their own sect,
some peculiar prerogative covered over with a specious show of
deceitful words, but in effect opposite to the civil right of the
community. For example: we cannot find any sect that teaches,
expressly and openly, that men are not obliged to keep their
promise; that princes may be dethroned by those that differ from
them in religion; or that the dominion of all things belongs only to
themselves. For these things, proposed thus nakedly and plainly,
would soon draw on them the eye and hand of the magistrate and
awaken all the care of the commonwealth to a watchfulness against
the spreading of so dangerous an evil. But, nevertheless, we find
those that say the same things in other words. What else do they
mean who teach that faith is not to be kept with heretics? Their
meaning, forsooth, is that the privilege of breaking faith belongs
unto themselves; for they declare all that are not of their
communion to be heretics, or at least may declare them so whensoever
they think fit. What can be the meaning of their asserting that
kings excommunicated forfeit their crowns and kingdoms? It is
evident that they thereby arrogate unto themselves the power of
deposing kings, because they challenge the power of excommunication,
as the peculiar right of their hierarchy. That dominion is founded
in grace is also an assertion by which those that maintain it do
plainly lay claim to the possession of all things. For they are not
so wanting to themselves as not to believe, or at least as not to
profess themselves to be the truly pious and faithful. These,
therefore, and the like, who attribute unto the faithful, religious,
and orthodox, that is, in plain terms, unto themselves, any peculiar
privilege or power above other mortals, in civil concernments; or
who upon pretence of religion do challenge any manner of authority
over such as are not associated with them in their ecclesiastical
communion, I say these have no right to be tolerated by the
magistrate; as neither those that will not own and teach the duty of
tolerating all men in matters of mere religion. For what do all
these and the like doctrines signify, but that they may and are
ready upon any occasion to seize the Government and possess
themselves of the estates and fortunes of their fellow subjects; and
that they only ask leave to be tolerated by the magistrate so long
until they find themselves strong enough to effect it?
Again: That Church can have no right to be tolerated by the
magistrate which is constituted upon such a bottom that all those
who enter into it do thereby ipso facto deliver themselves up to the
protection and service of another prince. For by this means the
magistrate would give way to the settling of a foreign jurisdiction
in his own country and suffer his own people to be listed, as it
were, for soldiers against his own Government. Nor does the
frivolous and fallacious distinction between the Court and the
Church afford any remedy to this inconvenience; especially when both
the one and the other are equally subject to the absolute authority
of the same person, who has not only power to persuade the members
of his Church to whatsoever he lists, either as purely religious, or
in order thereunto, but can also enjoin it them on pain of eternal
fire. It is ridiculous for any one to profess himself to be a
Mahometan only in his religion, but in everything else a faithful
subject to a Christian magistrate, whilst at the same time he
acknowledges himself bound to yield blind obedience to the Mufti of
Constantinople, who himself is entirely obedient to the Ottoman
Emperor and frames the feigned oracles of that religion according to
his pleasure. But this Mahometan living amongst Christians would yet
more apparently renounce their government if he acknowledged the
same person to be head of his Church who is the supreme magistrate
in the state.
Lastly, those are not at all to be tolerated who deny the being
of a God. Promises, covenants, and oaths, which are the bonds of
human society, can have no hold upon an atheist. The taking away of
God, though but even in thought, dissolves all; besides also, those
that by their atheism undermine and destroy all religion, can have
no pretence of religion whereupon to challenge the privilege of a
toleration. As for other practical opinions, though not absolutely
free from all error, if they do not tend to establish domination
over others, or civil impunity to the Church in which they are
taught, there can be no reason why they should not be tolerated.
It remains that I say something concerning those assemblies
which, being vulgarly called and perhaps having sometimes been
conventicles and nurseries of factions and seditions, are thought to
afford against this doctrine of toleration. But this has not
happened by anything peculiar unto the genius of such assemblies,
but by the unhappy circumstances of an oppressed or ill-settled
liberty. These accusations would soon cease if the law of toleration
were once so settled that all Churches were obliged to lay down
toleration as the foundation of their own liberty, and teach that
liberty of conscience is every man's natural right, equally
belonging to dissenters as to themselves; and that nobody ought to
be compelled in matters of religion either by law or force. The
establishment of this one thing would take away all ground of
complaints and tumults upon account of conscience; and these causes
of discontents and animosities being once removed, there would
remain nothing in these assemblies that were not more peaceable and
less apt to produce disturbance of state than in any other meetings
whatsoever. But let us examine particularly the heads of these
accusations.
You will say that assemblies and meetings endanger the public
peace and threaten the commonwealth. I answer: If this be so, why
are there daily such numerous meetings in markets and Courts of
Judicature? Why are crowds upon the Exchange and a concourse of
people in cities suffered? You will reply: "Those are civil
assemblies, but these we object against are ecclesiastical." I
answer: It is a likely thing, indeed, that such assemblies as are
altogether remote from civil affairs should be most apt to embroil
them. Oh, but civil assemblies are composed of men that differ from
one another in matters of religion, but these ecclesiastical
meetings are of persons that are all of one opinion. As if an
agreement in matters of religion were in effect a conspiracy against
the commonwealth; or as if men would not be so much the more warmly
unanimous in religion the less liberty they had of assembling. But
it will be urged still that civil assemblies are open and free for
any one to enter into, whereas religious conventicles are more
private and thereby give opportunity to clandestine machinations. I
answer that this is not strictly true, for many civil assemblies are
not open to everyone. And if some religious meetings be private, who
are they (I beseech you) that are to be blamed for it, those that
desire, or those that forbid their being public! Again, you will say
that religious communion does exceedingly unite men's minds and
affections to one another and is therefore the more dangerous. But
if this be so, why is not the magistrate afraid of his own Church;
and why does he not forbid their assemblies as things dangerous to
his Government? You will say because he himself is a part and even
the head of them. As if he were not also a part of the commonwealth,
and the head of the whole people!
Let us therefore deal plainly. The magistrate is afraid of other
Churches, but not of his own, because he is kind and favourable to
the one, but severe and cruel to the other. These he treats like
children, and indulges them even to wantonness. Those he uses as
slaves and, how blamelessly soever they demean themselves,
recompenses them no otherwise than by galleys, prisons,
confiscations, and death. These he cherishes and defends; those he
continually scourges and oppresses. Let him turn the tables. Or let
those dissenters enjoy but the same privileges in civils as his
other subjects, and he will quickly find that these religious
meetings will be no longer dangerous. For if men enter into
seditious conspiracies, it is not religion inspires them to it in
their meetings, but their sufferings and oppressions that make them
willing to ease themselves. Just and moderate governments are
everywhere quiet, everywhere safe; but oppression raises ferments
and makes men struggle to cast off an uneasy and tyrannical yoke. I
know that seditions are very frequently raised upon pretence of
religion, but it is as true that for religion subjects are
frequently ill treated and live miserably. Believe me, the stirs
that are made proceed not from any peculiar temper of this or that
Church or religious society, but from the common disposition of all
mankind, who when they groan under any heavy burthen endeavour
naturally to shake off the yoke that galls their necks. Suppose this
business of religion were let alone, and that there were some other
distinction made between men and men upon account of their different
complexions, shapes, and features, so that those who have black hair
(for example) or grey eyes should not enjoy the same privileges as
other citizens; that they should not be permitted either to buy or
sell, or live by their callings; that parents should not have the
government and education of their own children; that all should
either be excluded from the benefit of the laws, or meet with
partial judges; can it be doubted but these persons, thus
distinguished from others by the colour of their hair and eyes, and
united together by one common persecution, would be as dangerous to
the magistrate as any others that had associated themselves merely
upon the account of religion? Some enter into company for trade and
profit, others for want of business have their clubs for claret.
Neighbourhood joins some and religion others. But there is only one
thing which gathers people into seditious commotions, and that is
oppression.
You will say "What, will you have people to meet at divine
service against the magistrate's will?" I answer: Why, I pray,
against his will? Is it not both lawful and necessary that they
should meet? Against his will, do you say? That is what I complain
of; that is the very root of all the mischief. Why are assemblies
less sufferable in a church than in a theatre or market? Those that
meet there are not either more vicious or more turbulent than those
that meet elsewhere. The business in that is that they are ill used,
and therefore they are not to be suffered. Take away the partiality
that is used towards them in matters of common right; change the
laws, take away the penalties unto which they are subjected, and all
things will immediately become safe and peaceable; nay, those that
are averse to the religion of the magistrate will think themselves
so much the more bound to maintain the peace of the commonwealth as
their condition is better in that place than elsewhere; and all the
several separate congregations, like so many guardians of the public
peace, will watch one another, that nothing may be innovated or
changed in the form of the government, because they can hope for
nothing better than what they already enjoy — that is, an equal
condition with their fellow-subjects under a just and moderate
government. Now if that Church which agrees in religion with the
prince be esteemed the chief support of any civil government, and
that for no other reason (as has already been shown) than because
the prince is kind and the laws are favourable to it, how much
greater will be the security of government where all good subjects,
of whatsoever Church they be, without any distinction upon account
of religion, enjoying the same favour of the prince and the same
benefit of the laws, shall become the common support and guard of
it, and where none will have any occasion to fear the severity of
the laws but those that do injuries to their neighbours and offend
against the civil peace?
That we may draw towards a conclusion. The sum of all we drive at
is that every man may enjoy the same rights that are granted to
others. Is it permitted to worship God in the Roman manner? Let it
be permitted to do it in the Geneva form also. Is it permitted to
speak Latin in the market-place? Let those that have a mind to it be
permitted to do it also in the Church. Is it lawful for any man in
his own house to kneel, stand, sit, or use any other posture; and to
clothe himself in white or black, in short or in long garments? Let
it not be made unlawful to eat bread, drink wine, or wash with water
in the church. In a word, whatsoever things are left free by law in
the common occasions of life, let them remain free unto every Church
in divine worship. Let no man's life, or body, or house, or estate,
suffer any manner of prejudice upon these accounts. Can you allow of
the Presbyterian discipline? Why should not the Episcopal also have
what they like? Ecclesiastical authority, whether it be administered
by the hands of a single person or many, is everywhere the same; and
neither has any jurisdiction in things civil, nor any manner of
power of compulsion, nor anything at all to do with riches and
revenues.
Ecclesiastical assemblies and sermons are justified by daily
experience and public allowance. These are allowed to people of some
one persuasion; why not to all? If anything pass in a religious
meeting seditiously and contrary to the public peace, it is to be
punished in the same manner and no otherwise than as if it had
happened in a fair or market. These meetings ought not to be
sanctuaries for factious and flagitious fellows. Nor ought it to be
less lawful for men to meet in churches than in halls; nor are one
part of the subjects to be esteemed more blamable for their meeting
together than others. Every one is to be accountable for his own
actions, and no man is to be laid under a suspicion or odium for the
fault of another. Those that are seditious, murderers, thieves,
robbers, adulterers, slanderers, etc., of whatsoever Church, whether
national or not, ought to be punished and suppressed. But those
whose doctrine is peaceable and whose manners are pure and blameless
ought to be upon equal terms with their fellow-subjects. Thus if
solemn assemblies, observations of festivals, public worship be
permitted to any one sort of professors, all these things ought to
be permitted to the Presbyterians, Independents, Anabaptists,
Arminians, Quakers, and others, with the same liberty. Nay, if we
may openly speak the truth, and as becomes one man to another,
neither Pagan nor Mahometan, nor Jew, ought to be excluded from the
civil rights of the commonwealth because of his religion. The Gospel
commands no such thing. The Church which "judgeth not those that are
without"[9] wants it not. And the
commonwealth, which embraces indifferently all men that are honest,
peaceable, and industrious, requires it not. Shall we suffer a Pagan
to deal and trade with us, and shall we not suffer him to pray unto
and worship God? If we allow the Jews to have private houses and
dwellings amongst us, why should we not allow them to have
synagogues? Is their doctrine more false, their worship more
abominable, or is the civil peace more endangered by their meeting
in public than in their private houses? But if these things may be
granted to Jews and Pagans, surely the condition of any Christians
ought not to be worse than theirs in a Christian commonwealth.
You will say, perhaps: "Yes, it ought to be; because they are
more inclinable to factions, tumults, and civil wars." I answer: Is
this the fault of the Christian religion? If it be so, truly the
Christian religion is the worst of all religions and ought neither
to be embraced by any particular person, nor tolerated by any
commonwealth. For if this be the genius, this the nature of the
Christian religion, to be turbulent and destructive to the civil
peace, that Church itself which the magistrate indulges will not
always be innocent. But far be it from us to say any such thing of
that religion which carries the greatest opposition to covetousness,
ambition, discord, contention, and all manner of inordinate desires,
and is the most modest and peaceable religion that ever was. We
must, therefore, seek another cause of those evils that are charged
upon religion. And, if we consider right, we shall find it to
consist wholly in the subject that I am treating of. It is not the
diversity of opinions (which cannot be avoided), but the refusal of
toleration to those that are of different opinions (which might have
been granted), that has produced all the bustles and wars that have
been in the Christian world upon account of religion. The heads and
leaders of the Church, moved by avarice and insatiable desire of
dominion, making use of the immoderate ambition of magistrates and
the credulous superstition of the giddy multitude, have incensed and
animated them against those that dissent from themselves, by
preaching unto them, contrary to the laws of the Gospel and to the
precepts of charity, that schismatics and heretics are to be outed
of their possessions and destroyed. And thus have they mixed
together and confounded two things that are in themselves most
different, the Church and the commonwealth. Now as it is very
difficult for men patiently to suffer themselves to be stripped of
the goods which they have got by their honest industry, and,
contrary to all the laws of equity, both human and divine, to be
delivered up for a prey to other men's violence and rapine;
especially when they are otherwise altogether blameless; and that
the occasion for which they are thus treated does not at all belong
to the jurisdiction of the magistrate, but entirely to the
conscience of every particular man for the conduct of which he is
accountable to God only; what else can be expected but that these
men, growing weary of the evils under which they labour, should in
the end think it lawful for them to resist force with force, and to
defend their natural rights (which are not forfeitable upon account
of religion) with arms as well as they can? That this has been
hitherto the ordinary course of things is abundantly evident in
history, and that it will continue to be so hereafter is but too
apparent in reason. It cannot indeed, be otherwise so long as the
principle of persecution for religion shall prevail, as it has done
hitherto, with magistrate and people, and so long as those that
ought to be the preachers of peace and concord shall continue with
all their art and strength to excite men to arms and sound the
trumpet of war. But that magistrates should thus suffer these
incendiaries and disturbers of the public peace might justly be
wondered at if it did not appear that they have been invited by them
unto a participation of the spoil, and have therefore thought fit to
make use of their covetousness and pride as means whereby to
increase their own power. For who does not see that these good men
are, indeed, more ministers of the government than ministers of the
Gospel and that, by flattering the ambition and favouring the
dominion of princes and men in authority, they endeavour with all
their might to promote that tyranny in the commonwealth which
otherwise they should not be able to establish in the Church? This
is the unhappy agreement that we see between the Church and State.
Whereas if each of them would contain itself within its own bounds —
the one attending to the worldly welfare of the commonwealth, the
other to the salvation of souls — it is impossible that any discord
should ever have happened between them. Sed pudet hoec opprobria.
etc. God Almighty grant, I beseech Him, that the gospel of peace may
at length be preached, and that civil magistrates, growing more
careful to conform their own consciences to the law of God and less
solicitous about the binding of other men's consciences by human
laws, may, like fathers of their country, direct all their counsels
and endeavours to promote universally the civil welfare of all their
children, except only of such as are arrogant, ungovernable, and
injurious to their brethren; and that all ecclesiastical men, who
boast themselves to be the successors of the Apostles, walking
peaceably and modestly in the Apostles' steps, without intermeddling
with State Affairs, may apply themselves wholly to promote the
salvation of souls.
FAREWELL.
PERHAPS it may not be amiss to add a few
things concerning heresy and schism. A Turk is not, nor can be,
either heretic or schismatic to a Christian; and if any man fall off
from the Christian faith to Mahometism, he does not thereby become a
heretic or schismatic, but an apostate and an infidel. This nobody
doubts of; and by this it appears that men of different religions
cannot be heretics or schismatics to one another.
We are to inquire, therefore, what men are of the same religion.
Concerning which it is manifest that those who have one and the same
rule of faith and worship are of the same religion; and those who
have not the same rule of faith and worship are of different
religions. For since all things that belong unto that religion are
contained in that rule, it follows necessarily that those who agree
in one rule are of one and the same religion, and vice versa. Thus
Turks and Christians are of different religions, because these take
the Holy Scriptures to be the rule of their religion, and those the
Alcoran. And for the same reason there may be different religions
also even amongst Christians. The Papists and Lutherans, though both
of them profess faith in Christ and are therefore called Christians,
yet are not both of the same religion, because these acknowledge
nothing but the Holy Scriptures to be the rule and foundation of
their religion, those take in also traditions and the decrees of
Popes and of these together make the rule of their religion; and
thus the Christians of St. John (as they are called) and the
Christians of Geneva are of different religions, because these also
take only the Scriptures, and those I know not what traditions, for
the rule of their religion.
This being settled, it follows, first, that heresy is a
separation made in ecclesiastical communion between men of the same
religion for some opinions no way contained in the rule itself; and,
secondly, that amongst those who acknowledge nothing but the Holy
Scriptures to be their rule of faith, heresy is a separation made in
their Christian communion for opinions not contained in the express
words of Scripture. Now this separation may be made in a twofold
manner:
1. When the greater part, or by the magistrate's patronage the
stronger part, of the Church separates itself from others by
excluding them out of her communion because they will not profess
their belief of certain opinions which are not the express words of
the Scripture. For it is not the paucity of those that are
separated, nor the authority of the magistrate, that can make any
man guilty of heresy, but he only is a heretic who divides the
Church into parts, introduces names and marks of distinction, and
voluntarily makes a separation because of such opinions.
2. When any one separates himself from the communion of a Church
because that Church does not publicly profess some certain opinions
which the Holy Scriptures do not expressly teach.
Both these are heretics because they err in fundamentals, and
they err obstinately against knowledge; for when they have
determined the Holy Scriptures to be the only foundation of faith,
they nevertheless lay down certain propositions as fundamental which
are not in the Scripture, and because others will not acknowledge
these additional opinions of theirs, nor build upon them as if they
were necessary and fundamental, they therefore make a separation in
the Church, either by withdrawing themselves from others, or
expelling the others from them. Nor does it signify anything for
them to say that their confessions and symbols are agreeable to
Scripture and to the analogy of faith; for if they be conceived in
the express words of Scripture, there can be no question about them,
because those things are acknowledged by all Christians to be of
divine inspiration and theref