The Jesuits
The Jesuits PREFACECHAPTER I. GENERAL OBJECT AND ORGANIZATION.CHAPTER II. PLAN OF ACTION.CHAPTER III. THE CONNECTING TIE.CHAPTER IV. MORALITY.CHAPTER V.RELIGION.FOOTNOTES.Copyright
The Jesuits
Edward N. Hoare
PREFACE
The first edition of the following pages was prepared as a
Lecture for the Islington Protestant Institute. The delivery
of that Lecture has led to a more careful study of the subject, so
that in this second edition there is a considerable quantity of
additional information, which I trust may be found
important.One gentleman has done me the honour of noticing the first
edition, and publishing a pamphlet in order to show that the
constitution quoted on page 32 should be rendered as the reader
will find it there. It is a matter of great regret to me that
he should have thought it right to say of the remainder of the
lecture, that “statements which few surely can believe, will, he
trusts, produce in the minds of readers an effect the very reverse
of that intended.” If he had pointed out any inaccuracy, I
should have been only too happy to correct it; and any proof of
error on my part would have been much more satisfactory to his
readers than a general and unsupported insinuation. In the
present edition he will find, I believe, a clear reference to every
important extract; and abundant opportunity is afforded him, if
possible, to disprove my statements.E. H.
CHAPTER I. GENERAL OBJECT AND ORGANIZATION.
Of all the various human combinations that have ever risen to
adorn or to disgrace humanity, the Society of the Jesuits is
perhaps the most remarkable. The great men of the world have
constructed mighty schemes for its government, and the utmost
powers of the human mind have again and again been called out in
order to combine men for the attainment of some given end; but of
all these varied schemes, I believe it may be safely affirmed that
there never yet has been known one so admirably suited to its end,
so beautifully adjusted in its parts, so wonderfully adapted to the
real condition of society, or possessing so extraordinary a
capability of applying its movements, so as to meet the ways and
wishes of all those countless characters upon whom its action is
employed. The question whether such an institution is a curse
or a blessing to the human race must, of course, depend on two
things, viz., the object to which its efforts are directed, and the
principles by which they are controlled. If that object be
the honour of the Lord Jesus Christ, and if those principles be in
harmony with the Word of God, then, clearly, so varied and
effective an instrumentality must act most powerfully for the
benefit of man; but if, on the other hand, its object be to pervert
the truth and impede its progress,—if, again, the principles of its
action be flatly opposed, not merely to the Word of God, but also
to the most elementary maxims of even natural morality,—then it is
equally clear that the perfection of the instrument merely adds to
its fatal power, and just in proportion to the completeness of the
machinery will be the deadliness of the blight which it will
produce upon society.Now the avowed object of the Order of Jesuits is the support
of the See of Rome. In the original plan submitted by Loyola
to Pope Paul III. it was stated, “The Society of Jesus shall
constitute a trained host, ready at all times to fight for God’s
vicegerent, the holy Roman Father, and for the Roman Catholic
Church, in which alone is salvation.” To this declaration of
their original designs, the Society has to this day avowedly
adhered; and although their countless intrigues against the other
Orders have shown very clearly that, in professing to serve the
Pope, they have had an ulterior end, viz., the aggrandizement and
exaltation of their own Order, yet we must always regard this as
their professed design, and form our estimate of the object of the
Society by our estimate of the value of the Popedom. There
are, alas, those who, trying it by this test, would pronounce its
object good; but, thanks be to God! there is, I verily believe, a
vast, and vastly increasing, multitude who have been driven by
recent events to bring Popery to the test of Scripture, and who
have risen from the study with the deep and indelible conviction
that, instead of being our Lord’s vicegerent, the Pope of Rome is
the usurper of his sovereignty; and that, therefore, if this be the
object of Jesuitism, Jesuitism must be bad; and if this be the end
of its action, the better its machinery the worse its effects upon
the world.The full principles of the Society it is extremely difficult
to discover or to describe, inasmuch as there appears to be a very
wide difference between the system as exhibited in its public
documents and as carried out in the practice of its members.
There are countless facts in the history of the order which prove
conclusively that there is one code for the world to look at, and
another for the world to feel; a uniform for inspection days, and a
plain dress for common life. The constitutions and other
acknowledged documents are open to the world, but if we want to
know how the Jesuit will act when he has secretly wormed his way
into the confidence of our family, or to discover any real moral
principle by which the conduct of such an one will be guided, I
believe that we shall be utterly at a loss. He has his own
secret instructions from his superiors, and what they are will
probably be never known out of the Order, till the great day shall
come when the secrets of all hearts shall be made
known.We must be content, therefore, with only superficial
information upon the subject; but there is enough in the undoubted
avowals of the Society to amaze the conscience of any honest
mind. It is true that we are able to examine merely its
authorized documents as prepared to meet the world’s eye, and that
when we have been through them all we shall know but a fragment of
the system; but at the same time we shall learn enough to discover
that, in order to the attainment of its object, the Society is
prepared to set aside all the dictates either of conscience or of
Scripture; and we shall also obtain ample evidence to convict the
Church of Rome of the awful guilt of abandoning honesty in order to
secure power, and of sacrificing moral virtue in order to attain
supreme dominion.ORGANIZATION.The Members of the Society are arranged in the following
classes:—[10]The Professed, who, in fact, constitute the real body of the
Order. The property of the Society is vested in them, and
they only have a right to attend a general congregation, or to vote
at the election of a General. They are all priests, and none
are admitted till the age of twenty-five. They are
distinguished from the other classes by having taken four instead
of three vows, the rest having vowed three things, viz., obedience,
poverty, and chastity, but the professed having added a fourth
promise, viz., absolute obedience to the Pope, as the Vicar of
Christ.Spiritual Coadjutors, whose office is to assist the professed
in spiritual things; such as preaching, hearing confessions,
superintending Colleges, &c. These, likewise, must all be
priests.Secular Coadjutors. These are all laymen, and their
office is to fill such secular offices as may be required, in order
to promote the objects of the Society. They act as servants
and inferior officers in the Colleges and other houses; but they
are employed, when qualified, for higher and more important
duties.[11a] They are expected also to influence their neighbours
by conversation and other means.[11b] They are drawn from all ranks, some being unable to
read, and others educated men.[11c] It is clear that this class must supply the Society
with one of the most effective of its agencies. The lay
coadjutor may act in any capacity, as a merchant, statesman,
mechanic, or anything else which his Superior may deem expedient,
and may thus secure a powerful influence without any person having
the least idea that a Jesuit is in his neighbourhood.Approved scholars, or those youths who have been selected as
likely to prove suitable for the future purposes of the Society,
and are being trained in Jesuit Colleges. Although their
education is not yet complete, these scholars have been required to
take the three vows, and moreover to add the promise that they will
be ready, when required, to devote themselves to the service of the
Society.Those whose future rank is not yet decided, but who are
admitted upon the condition that they shall be employed in whatever
way the Society shall deem most suited to their
talents.To this list Mr. Duller adds another class, which he terms
affiliated members, or adjuncts, which he states includes even
ladies.[12a]