Part 21 (1/2)

[111] 22nd Canon of Codex Africa.n.u.s.

[112] The Nestorian profession of faith, in fifth act of Council of Ephesus.

[113] Pacian, Ep. 1.

[114] Cyril, Catech. 18.

[115] Aug. de vera relig. c .6, de utilit. credendi, c. 7.

[116] Pacian, Ep. 3, ”The Church is a full and solid body, diffused already through the whole world. As a city, I say, whose parts are in unity. Not as you Novatians, an insolent particle, or a gathered wen, separated from the rest of the body.”

[117] Such as are grammata koinonika, Euseb. H. E. lib. 7, c. 30.

epistolai koinonikai, Basil. Ep. 190, or kanonikai, Ep. 224, letters of peace commendatory, ecclesiastical, &c.

[118] See especially Chrys. Hom. 30 on 1 Cor.

[119] Irenaeus, Lib. 3, c. 3.

[120] Compare Jerome's often-quoted pa.s.sage, Ep. 15, to Pope Damasus, ”Whoso gathereth not with thee, scattereth; that is, whoso is not of Christ is of antichrist.”

[121] For the meaning of ”come together,” see farther on, c. 40.

”G.o.d hath placed in the Church Apostles, Prophets, Doctors, and all the rest of the operation of the Spirit, of which all those are not partakers who do not _run together to the Church_, but defraud themselves of life by an evil intention and a very bad conduct. For where the Church is, there is the Spirit; and where is the Spirit of G.o.d, there is the Church and all grace.”

[122] See S. Cyprian's letters, 69, 55, 45, 70, 73. 40. Consider the force of the words, ”Peter, upon whom the Church had been built by the Lord, speaking one for all, and _answering with the voice of the Church_, says, Lord, to whom shall we go?” Ep. 55, on which Fenelon (de sum. Pontif. auct. c. 12) remarks, ”What wonder, then, if Pope Hormisdas and other ancient fathers says, ”the Roman, that is, the Catholic Church,” since Peter was wont to answer _with the voice of the Church_? What wonder if the body of the Church speaks by mouth of its head?”

[123] De Pudicitia, c. 21.

[124] This Montanist corruption (into which Ambrose on Ps. 38, n.

37, and Pacian in his three letters to Semp.r.o.nian, state that the Novatians also fell,) induced some fathers, and especially Augustine, (Enarrat. on Ps. 108. n. 1, Tract 118 on John, n. 4, and last Tract n. 7) to teach that the keys were bestowed on Peter so far forth as he represented the person of the Church in right of his Primacy. By which mode of speaking they meant this one thing, that the power of the keys, as being necessary to the Church, and inst.i.tuted for her good, began indeed in Peter, and was communicated to him in a peculiar manner but by no means dropt, or could possibly drop, with him.

[125] Tertull. De Praesc. c. 32.

[126] Pacian, ad Semp.r.o.nium, Epis. 3, -- 11.

[127] Ambrose, de Poenit. Lib. 1, c. 7, n. 33.

[128] Synodical Epistle, among the letters of Ambrose.

[129] Optatus, de Schism. Donat. Lib. 2, c. 2, and Lib. 7, c. 3.

[130] Gregory, de vita sua, Tom. 2, p. 9.

[131] Jerome, adv. Jovin. Lib. 1, n. 14.

[132] Augustine, in Ps. Cont. partem Donati, cont. Epist. Fundam. c.

4, de utilitate credendi, c. 17, and Epist. 43.

[133] Gelasius, Epis. 14.

[134] Hormisdas, Mansi, Tom. 8, 451, in the conditions on which he readmitted the Patriarch of Constantinople and the Eastern bishops to communion.