登陆注册
18889900000172

第172章

The Jesuit was obliged to make all natural ties subordinate to the will of the General. And this General was a king more absolute than any worldly monarch, because he reigned over the minds of his subjects. His kingdom was an imperium in imperio; he was chosen for life and was responsible to no one, although he ruled for the benefit of the Catholic Church. In one sense a General of the Jesuits resembled the prime minister of an absolute monarch,--say such a man as Richelieu, with unfettered power in the cause of absolutism; and he ruled like Richelieu, through his spies, making his subordinates tools and instruments. The General appointed the presidents of colleges and of the religious houses; he admitted or dismissed, dispensed or punished, at his pleasure. There was no complaint; all obeyed his orders, and saw in him the representative of Divine Providence. Complaint was sin; resistance was ruin. It is hard for us to understand how any man could be brought voluntarily to submit to such a despotism. But the novice entering the order had to go through terrible discipline,--to be a servant, anything; to live according to rigid rules, so that his spirit was broken by mechanical duties. He had to learn the virtues of obedience before he could be fully enrolled in the Society. He was drilled for years by spiritual sergeants more rigorously than a soldier in Napoleon's army: hence the efficiency of the body; it was a spiritual army of the highest disciplined troops. Loyola had been a soldier; he knew what military discipline could do,--how impotent an army is without it, what an awful power it is with discipline, and the severer the better. The best soldier of a modern army is he who has become an unconscious piece of machinery;and it was this unreflecting, unconditional obedience which made the Society so efficient, and the General himself, who controlled it, such an awful power for good or for evil. I am only speaking of the organization, the machinery, the regime, of the Jesuits, not of their character, not of their virtues or vices. This organization is to be spoken of as we speak of the discipline of an army,--wise or unwise, as it reached its end. The original aim of the Jesuits was the restoration of the Papal Church to its ancient power; and for one hundred years, as I think, the restoration of morals, higher education, greater zeal in preaching: in short, a reformation within the Church. Jesuitism was, of course, opposed to Protestantism; it hated the Protestants; it hated their religions creed and their emancipating and progressive spirit; it hated religious liberty.

I need not dwell on other things which made this religious order so successful,--not merely their virtues and their mechanism, but their adaptation to the changing spirit of the times. They threw away the old dresses of monastic life; they quitted the cloister and places of meditation; they were preachers as well as scholars;they accommodated themselves to the circumstances of the times;they wore the ordinary dress of gentlemen; they remained men of the world, of fine manners and cultivated speech; there was nothing ascetic or repulsive about them, out in the world; they were all things to all men, like politicians, in order to accomplish their ends; they never were lazy, or profligate or luxurious. If their Order became enriched, they as individuals remained poor. The inferior members were not even ambitious; like good soldiers, they thought of nothing but the work assigned to them. Their pride and glory were the prosperity of their Order,--an intense esprit de corps, never equalled by any body of men. This, of course, while it gave them efficiency, made them narrow. They could see the needle on the barn-door,--they could not see the door itself.

Hence there could be no agreement with them, no argument with them, except on ordinary matters; they were as zealous as Saul, seeking to make proselytes. They yielded nothing except in order to win;they never compromised their Order in their cause. Their fidelity to their head was marvellous; and so long as they confined themselves to the work of making people better, I think they deserved praise. I do not like their military organization, but Ishould have no more right to abuse it than the organization of some Protestant sects. That is a matter of government; all sects and all parties, Catholic and Protestant, have a right to choose their own government to carry out their ends, even as military generals have a right to organize their forces in their own way. The history of the Jesuits shows this,--that an organization of forces, or what we call discipline or government, is a great thing. Achurch without a government is a poor affair, so far as efficiency is concerned. All churches have something to learn from the Jesuits in the way of discipline. John Wesley learned something;the Independents learned very little.

But there is another side to the Jesuits. We have seen why they succeeded; we have to inquire how they failed. If history speaks of the virtues of the early members, and the wonderful mechanism of their Order, and their great success in consequence, it also speaks of the errors they committed, by which they lost the confidence they had gained. From being the most popular of all the adherents of the papal power, and of the ideas of the Dark Ages, they became the most unpopular; they became so odious that the Pope was obliged, by the pressure of public opinion and of the Bourbon courts of Europe, to suppress their Order. The fall of the Jesuits was as significant as their rise. I need not dwell on that fall, which is one of the best known facts of history.

Why did the Jesuits become unpopular and lose their influence?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 烈风记

    烈风记

    一个现代人来到元代末年,在这个波澜壮阔,争取民族自由的时代,他能做些什么?他会对我们民族的未来做如何的改变,从而避免我们民族的悲剧呢?请看《烈风记》!
  • 弄嫡

    弄嫡

    嫣然一笑竹篱间,桃李漫山总粗俗。她是云嫣篱,他说那是世上最美的名字。落花凡尘,终究物是人非。花篱下再遇,她嫣然一笑,倾国倾城。只,他还记得,那年花篱下。
  • 我的男友是明星

    我的男友是明星

    男友出轨还被自己撞见,夏青青真的没想到还有比这更要命的。夏青青:“云先生,这是您的蒸鸡蛋。”云舒:“夏小姐这份正餐我还没吃呢,这个不急。”夏青青:“请注意您的用词,我们很熟吗?”云舒:“睡过算不算很熟?吃干抹净就想要逃走嘛?你要对我负责。”夏青青:“……”碰瓷的都没有你会赖!眼睛在看哪里!手放哪里!
  • 宣生六记

    宣生六记

    他送她一坛忘忧,她笑着说,“你就是我所有忧愁的来源,既忘不了你,又如何能够忘忧!”续集已出,敬请吐槽┐(‘~`;)┌
  • 异武国度

    异武国度

    岁月无痕沧桑有迹,两国相争数百年,终于在最后一场爆发中停止下来,谁都不是胜利者,因为他们失去太多太多。而异之国的国令并没有因此改变,一个生活在完美童年的孩子,被赶出自己的国家,他被人们称为“神之弃子”。这个孩子仿佛重演数百年前的历史。但他明白杀戮并不是终止一切的方式。他的愿望很简单,只是想回到那个儿时的地方,他的家乡异之国。每日两更,不定时爆发。
  • 腹黑校董的小甜心

    腹黑校董的小甜心

    裴少白没想到自己念念不忘的小女孩就是眼前对自己怒目相对,龇牙咧嘴的纪暖歌,一下子,裴少白觉得眼前的女孩,面若桃花,明眸似水,粉唇娇艳欲滴,怎么看怎么可爱,于是,就趁机占了便宜。但是,纪暖歌的便宜可不是那么好占的,且看暖如阳光的少女如何俘获冷酷腹黑的霸气校董吧!感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!
  • 比尔盖茨为什么优秀

    比尔盖茨为什么优秀

    “愚笨的人,熬过痛苦,忘却经验;平庸之人,用痛苦换取经验;聪明之人,借他人经验以自用。”让我们借着比尔·盖茨的成功经验,审查和激发自己,并重新调整自己的成功策略和创富方式,有效出击,去赢取人生的辉煌。
  • 网游之幸运混混

    网游之幸运混混

    《幻月》开放,曾经在游戏中伤心的陈英本不欲进入游戏,奈何半夜救下了星辰工作室大老板的千金陶昕,机缘巧合之下拿去了陶昕的初吻,无奈之下陈英被迫作为陶昕的专属矿工,进入游戏。
  • 萌神菜鸟

    萌神菜鸟

    “你有见过打领带,穿着西装的小偷吗?”这句话几乎是咬着牙齿说出来的,眼里闪过一丝火苗,说完嘴里还发出咯吱咯吱的声音两个冤家的囧囧日常!
  • 梦魇军团

    梦魇军团

    睡觉,除了做梦,还能做什么?当李念拥有可以穿梭别人梦境的能力时,一个个新奇的世界在他眼前展开。隐私?秘密?都在李念眼中一览无余。利用穿梭梦境的能力,李念悄然的改变着自己的生活。……等等,为什么这个梦境里有少女在洗澡?我真的不是故意闯进来的啊!哎哟!别打脸!群号:242936899。