May Tyrants Tremble. Fergus Whelan
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Abernethy had founded his Belfast Society in 1703 of which A.T.Q. Stewart had this to say:
Orthodox Presbyterian historians have little good to say about it. While reluctantly recognizing the intellectual abilities of its members, they have deplored their ecclesiastical indiscipline and accused them of opening the door to Schism and heresy. Undoubtedly it created the nucleus of ministers who would come to be called ‘New Light’ and through them it precipitated the great storm over doctrine which would soon break over the Synod.1
It is perhaps of some significance that Haliday’s ‘unusual early career had taken him well outside the bounds of provincial Presbyterianism, and he studied theology at the university of Leyden in the Netherlands’.2 He was licensed at Rotterdam in 1706 and subsequently ordained at Geneva.3 Haliday’s stance at Rosemary Lane was not just another local schism over obscure points of doctrine to which all shades of Ulster Presbyterianism are so prone. Though the controversy had been in gestation in Ireland from nearly twenty years earlier, the issue at stake had been fought over in England in the previous decade from the Glorious Revolution of 1688. The conflict had, in a sense, been imported into England from the Netherlands and had been promoted by two philosophers both of whom had spent time in the Netherlands. The towering figure in the controversy was the philosopher John Locke whom William Drennan often claimed as the inspiration for his political ideas. The other philosopher involved was the flamboyant, irreverent and enigmatic young Irishman John Toland (1670–1722).
Locke had been in exile in Holland in the wake of the Rye House Plot of 1683 which was an attempt to overthrow Charles II and assassinate his brother, the avowed Roman Catholic James Duke of York. Holland was a staunchly Protestant State but probably the only place in Europe where the different sects were free to worship as they pleased and propagate their opinions. Locke’s time there was a period of great intellectual upheaval. Christopher Walker has described what was happening. Essentially, hard-line Calvinism was crumbling as post Calvinists began abandoning the severity and intolerance of the Genevan master and discovering different types of Protestantism in the more humane, tolerant and rational versions of Arminianism and Socinianism.4
The heresy that Reverends Haliday, Abernethy, Drennan and their friends were suspected of was Socinianism. To understand the world view of the non-subscribers, one needs to know a little of the nature of this heresy. Faustus Socinus was born in Sienna in 1539. He was a wandering scholar who had been profoundly influenced by the Humanism of Erasmus. When he arrived in Krakow in the ‘tolerant Kingdom of Poland’ in 1580 he encountered a growing anti-Trinitarian movement styling itself the Minor Reformed Church.5 Though he never joined this sect, he soon became its spiritual leader. The sect eventually moved to the town of Rakow where it flourished for more than thirty years. They established an academy there whose pupils, at one point, numbered one thousand.6
The Socinians believed in a ‘scrupulous and vigorous Biblicism and the right to reason in religion’.7 As there is no reference to the Blessed or Holy Trinity in the Scriptures, Socinians believed in only one God and did not regard Jesus as God but as a moral, human, teacher. They refused to believe in anything they could not understand. Socinus wrote in favour of the separation of Church and State and declared himself against civil punishment of heretics by exile, prison or execution. He was writing at a time when many of the states of Europe, Catholic and Protestant alike, used the stake, the executioner’s block, inquisitions, torture and forced mass exile of populations to punish such crimes as believing in, or refusing to believe in, transubstantiation.
Socinus died in 1604 and thirty-four years later, in 1638, the Socinians were forced to leave Poland or to conform to Roman Catholicism. Many fled to Transylvania, East Prussia and the Palatinate, while others found asylum in Holland, in Amsterdam and Leyden. Their printing press moved to Holland and an imposing series of volumes containing all the main Socinian writings was printed in Amsterdam in 1665–6.8
The lapse of the Licensing Laws in England in 1695 gave Locke and Toland the opportunity to publish their controversial views. Locke published The Reasonableness of Christianity as Delivered in the Scriptures and Toland published his Christianity not Mysterious. Both books promoted similar ideas though they were written in somewhat different styles. Locke was careful and prudent whereas Toland loved to provoke. Both works were an explicit attack on orthodox Christian priest-craft and advocated a return to a simple moral Christianity. Each Christian should be free to come to their own views without persecution by Church or State. Locke denounced those who would try to enforce religious orthodoxy: the Protestant Reformation challenged not only Roman orthodoxy but also the very idea of orthodoxy. From its beginning, the principal goal was to transform Christianity from a religion of priestly orthodoxy to one of freedom of conscience.9
Locke published his Essay Concerning Human Understanding and Two Treatises on Government in 1690. He had published his Letter on Toleration the previous year. In his Letter he said: ‘The heads and leaders of the Church, moved by avarice and an insatiable desire for 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 … that schismatics and heretics … are to be destroyed.’10
Orthodox churchmen grasped instinctively that many of Locke’s ideas were Socinian. Locke denied this, declaring that there was ‘not one word of Socinianism in his work’.11 Yet this did not cut much ice with his contemporaries, some of whom argued that Locke ‘might pass for the Socinus of his age or that he was Socinianized all over’.12 One modern historian has taken his cue from Locke’s detractors and branded him with the title ‘the Socinian John Locke’.13 Whether this is fair or not, it was grossly unfair for Locke’s contemporary Edward Stillingfleet, the bishop of Worchester, to attack Locke for what John Toland had written. The bishop alleged that Locke held Unitarian views because he believed him to be the source of the ideas expressed in Toland’s Christianity not Mysterious.
Toland was born in Donegal in 1670. He was probably the son of a Roman Catholic priest and his first language was Gaelic. In his early years, he became a Presbyterian and was educated at Glasgow, Edinburgh, Leyden and Utrecht.14 His education in Holland was paid for by Reverend Daniel Williams (1643–1716) who, for twenty years, ministered to the Dublin Wood Street congregation, until 1687.
During his studies and travels Toland acquired nine languages. He was a strident spokesperson for republican virtue and, in his lifetime, he published over one hundred books.15 Christianity not Mysterious was published between December 1695 and June 1696. Draft papers for the work ‘had possibly been sent to John Locke in late March 1695’.16 In Christianity not Mysterious Toland: ‘applied the Lockean theory of the meaning of religious mystery, arguing that since mysteries such as the Holy Trinity do not stand for distinct ideas, Christianity must either employ meaningless doctrines, or else be non-mysterious … for’, writes Toland, ‘if we have no idea of a thing, it is … lost labour for us to trouble ourselves about it’.17
Shortly after his book was published, Toland arrived in Dublin to find that a great clamour had been raised against him and it. He was attacked from the pulpits and in the press. His book was arraigned by a Dublin Grand Jury none of whom had read one word of his work. Finally, it was declared heretical by the Irish House of Commons. It was to be burnt twice (once before Parliament and once before the civic buildings).18 Toland claimed that one member of Parliament suggested that the author should be burnt along with his book.19 This was no small matter as Thomas Akenhead, an eighteen-year-old student