12. Now,
this authority, perfect in itself, and plainly meant to be unfettered, so long
assailed by a philosophy that truckles to the State, the Church, has never
ceased to claim for herself and openly to exercise. The Apostles themselves
were the first to uphold it, when, being forbidden by the rulers of the
synagogue to preach the Gospel, they courageously answered: "We must obey
God rather than men."16 This same authority the holy Fathers of
the Church were always careful to maintain by weighty arguments, according as
occasion arose, and the Roman Pontiffs have never shrunk from defending it with
unbending constancy. Nay, more, princes and all invested with power to rule
have themselves approved it, in theory alike and in practice. It cannot be
called in question that in the making of treaties, in the transaction of
business matters, in the sending and receiving ambassadors, and in the
interchange of other kinds of official dealings they have been wont to treat
with the Church as with a supreme and legitimate power. And, assuredly, all ought
to hold that it was not without a singular disposition of God's providence that
this power of the Church was provided with a civil sovereignty as the surest
safeguard of her independence.
|