Manning was now thirty-eight,
and it was clear that he was the rising man in the
Church of England. He had many powerful connections:
he was the brother-in-law of Samuel Wilberforce, who
had been lately made a bishop; he was a close friend
of Mr. Gladstone, who was a Cabinet Minister; and
he was becoming well known in the influential circles
of society in London. His talent for affairs
was recognised not only in the Church, but in the
world at large, and he busied himself with matters
of such varied scope as National Education, the administration
of the Poor Law, and the Employment of Women.
Mr. Gladstone kept up an intimate correspondence with
him on these and on other subjects, mingling in his
letters the details of practical statesmanship with
the speculations of a religious thinker. ‘Sir
James Graham,’ he wrote, in a discussion of
the bastardy clauses of the Poor Law, ’is much
pleased with the tone of your two communications.
He is disposed, without putting an end to the application
of the workhouse test against the mother, to make
the remedy against the putative father “real
and effective” for expenses incurred in the
workhouse. I am not enough acquainted to know
whether it would be advisable to go further.
You have not proposed it; and I am disposed to believe
that only with a revived and improved discipline in
the Church can we hope for any generally effective
check upon lawless lust.’ ‘I agree
with you eminently,’ he writes, in a later
letter, ’in your doctrine of FILTRATION.
But it sometimes occurs to me, though the question
may seem a strange one, how far was the Reformation,
but especially the Continental Reformation, designed
by God, in the region of final causes, for that purification
of the Roman Church which it has actually realised?’
In his archdeaconry, Manning lived
to the full the active life of a country clergyman.
His slim, athletic figure was seen everywhere in the
streets of Chichester, or on the lawns of the neighbouring
rectories, or galloping over the downs in breeches
and gaiters, or cutting brilliant figures on the ice.
He was an excellent judge of horse-flesh, and the
pair of greys which drew his hooded phaeton so swiftly
through the lanes were the admiration of the county.
His features were already beginning to assume their
ascetic cast, but the spirit of youth had not yet
fled from them, so that he seemed to combine the attractions
of dignity and grace. He was a good talker, a
sympathetic listener, a man who understood the difficult
art of preserving all the vigour of a manly character
and yet never giving offence. No wonder that
his sermons drew crowds, no wonder that his spiritual
advice was sought for eagerly by an ever-growing group
of penitents; no wonder that men would say, when his
name was mentioned, ’Oh, Manning! No power
on earth can keep him from a bishopric!’
Such was the fair outward seeming
of the Archdeacon’s life; but, the inward reality
was different. The more active, the more fortunate,
the more full of happy promise his existence became,
the more persistently was his secret imagination haunted
by a dreadful vision—the lake that burneth
forever with brimstone and fire. The temptations
of the Evil One are many, Manning knew; and he knew
also that, for him at least, the most subtle and terrible
of all temptations was the temptation of worldly success.
He tried to reassure himself, but it was in vain.
He committed his thoughts to a diary, weighing scrupulously
his every motive, examining with relentless searchings
into the depths of his heart. Perhaps, after
all, his longings for preferment were merely legitimatehopes
for ’an elevation into a sphere of higher usefulness’.
But no. there was something more than that. ’I
do feel pleasure,’ he noted, ’in honour,
precedence, elevation, the society of great people,
and all this is very shameful and mean.’
After Newman’s conversion, he
almost convinced himself that his ‘visions of
an ecclesiastical future’ were justified by the
role that he would play as a ’healer of the
breach in the Church of England’. Mr. Gladstone
agreed with him; but there was One higher than Mr.
Gladstone, and did He agree? ’I am pierced
by anxious thoughts. God knows what my desires
have been and are, and why they are crossed. ...
I am flattering myself with a fancy about depth and
reality. ... The great question is: Is God
enough for you now? And if you are as now even
to the end of life, will it suffice you? ...
Certainly I would rather choose to be stayed on God,
than to be in the thrones of the world and the Church.
Nothing else will go into Eternity.’
In a moment of ambition, he had applied
for the Readership of Lincoln’s Inn, but, owing
chiefly to the hostile influence of the Record, the
appointment had gone elsewhere. A little later,
a more important position was offered to him—
the office of sub-almoner to the Queen, which had
just been vacated by the Archbishop of York, and was
almost certain to lead to a mitre. The offer
threw Manning into an agony of self-examination.
He drew up elaborate tables, after the manner of Robinson
Crusoe, with the reasons for and against his acceptance
of the post:
For
against1. That it comes unsought.
1. Not therefore to be accepted. Such
things are trials as well as
leadings.2. That it
is honourable. 2. Being what I am, ought I
not therefore to decline it — (1)
as humiliation; (2) as revenge on
myself for Lincoln’s Inn;
(3) as a testimony?
And so on. He found in the end
ten ‘negative reasons’, with no affirmative
ones to balance them, and, after a week’s deliberation,
he rejected the offer.
But peace of mind was as far off from
him as ever. First the bitter thought came to
him that ’in all this Satan tells me I am doing
it to be thought mortified and holy’; and then
he was obsessed by the still bitterer feelings of
ineradicable disappointment and regret. He had
lost a great opportunity, and it brought him small
comfort to consider that ’in the region of counsels,
self-chastisement, humiliation, self-discipline, penance,
and of the Cross’, he had perhaps done right.
The crisis passed, but it was succeeded
by a fiercer one. Manning was taken seriously
ill, and became convinced that he might die at any
moment. The entries in his Diary grew more elaborate
than ever; his remorse for the past, his resolutions
for the future, his protestations of submission to
the will of God, filled page after page of parallel
columns, headings and sub-headings, numbered clauses,
and analytical tables. ’How do I feel about
Death?’ he wrote. ’Certainly great
fear:
1. Because of the uncertainty
of our state before God. 2. Because of the consciousness-(1)
of great sins past, (2) of great sinfulness, (3)
of most shallow repentance. What shall I do?’
He decided to mortify himself, to
read St Thomas Aquinas, and to make his ‘night
prayers forty instead of thirty minutes’.
He determined during Lent ’to use no pleasant
bread (except on Sundays and feasts) such as cake
and sweetmeat’; but he added the proviso ‘I
do not include plain biscuits’. Opposite
this entry appears the word ‘kept’.
And yet his backslidings were many. Looking back
over a single week, he was obliged to register ‘petulance
twice’ and ‘complacent visions’.
He heard his curate being commended for bringing
so many souls to God during Lent, and he ‘could
not bear it’; but the remorse was terrible:
’I abhorred myself on the spot, and looked upward
for help.’ He made out list upon list of
the Almighty’s special mercies towards him,
and they included his creation, his regeneration, and
(No. 5) ’the preservation of my life six times
to my knowledge:
(1) In illness at the age of nine.
(2) In the water. (3) By a runaway horse at Oxford.
(4) By the same. (5) By falling nearly through the
ceiling of a church. (6) Again by a fall of a horse.
And I know not how often in shooting, riding, etc.’
At last he became convalescent; but
the spiritual experiences of those agitated weeks
left an indelible mark upon his mind, and prepared
the way for the great change which was to follow.For
he had other doubts besides those which held him in
torment as to his own salvation; he was in doubt about
the whole framework of his faith. Newman’s
conversion, he found, had meant something more to
him than he had first realised. It had seemed
to come as a call to the redoubling of his Anglican
activities; but supposing, in reality, it were a call
towards something very different—towards
an abandonment of those activities altogether?
It might be ‘a trial’, or again it might
be a ‘leading’; how was he to judge?
Already, before his illness, these doubts had begun
to take possession of his mind. ‘I am conscious
to myself,’ he wrote in his Diary, ’of
an extensively changed feeling towards the Church
of Rome … The Church of England seems to me
to be diseased: 1. ORGANICALLY (six sub-headings).
2. FUNCTIONALLY (seven subheadings) ...
Wherever it seems healthy, it approximates the system
of Rome.’ Then thoughts of the Virgin Mary
suddenly began to assail him :
’(1) If John the Baptist were
sanctified from the womb, how much more the
B.V.!
(2) If Enoch and Elijah were exempted
from death, why not the B.V. from sin?
(3) It is a strange way of loving
the Son to slight the mother!’
The arguments seemed irresistible,
and a few weeks later the following entry occurs—
’Strange thoughts have visited me:
(1) I have felt that the Episcopate
of the Church of England is secularised and bound
down beyond hope….
(2) I feel as if a light had fallen
upon me. My feeling about the Roman Church is
not intellectual. I have intellectual difficulties,
but the great moral difficulties seem melting.
(3) Something keeps rising and saying,
“You will end in the Roman Church”.’
He noted altogether twenty-five of
these ‘strange thoughts’. His mind
hovered anxiously round—
’(1) The Incarnation, (2) The
Real Presence, i. Regeneration, ii.
Eucharist, and (3) The Exaltation of S. M. and Saints.’
His twenty-second strange thought
was as follows: ’How do I know where I
may be two years hence? Where was Newman five
years ago?’
It was significant, but hardly surprising,
that, after his illness, Manning should have chosen
to recuperate in Rome. He spent several months
there, and his Diary during the whole of that period
is concerned entirely with detailed descriptions of
churches, ceremonies, and relics, and with minute accounts
of conversations with priests and nuns. There
is not a single reference either to the objects of
art or to the antiquities of the place; but another
omission was still more remarkable. Manning had
a long interview with Pius IX, and his only record
of it is contained in the bald statement: ’Audience
today at the Vatican’. Precisely what passed
on that occasion never transpired; all that is known
is that His Holiness expressed considerable surprise
on learning from the Archdeacon that the chalice was
used in the Anglican Church in the administration of
Communion. ‘What!’ he exclaimed, is
the same chalice made use of by everyone?’ ‘I
remember the pain I felt,’ said Manning, long
afterwards, ’at seeing how unknown we were to
the Vicar of Jesus Christ. It made me feel our
isolation.’
On his return to England, he took
up once more the work in his Archdeaconry with what
appetite he might. Ravaged by doubt, distracted
by speculation, he yet managed to maintain an outward
presence of unshaken calm. His only confidant
was Robert Wilberforce, to whom, for the next two
years, he poured forth in a series of letters, headed
‘under the seal’ to indicate
that they contained the secrets of the confessional—
the whole history of his spiritual perturbations.
The irony of his position was singular; for, during
the whole of this time, Manning was himself holding
back from the Church of Rome a host of hesitating
penitents by means of arguments which he was at the
very moment denouncing as fallacious to his own confessor.
But what else could he do? When he received,
for instance, a letter such as the following from
an agitated lady, what was he to say?
’My dear father in Christ,
’... I am sure you would
pity me and like to help me, if you knew the unhappy,
unsettled state my mind is in, and the misery of being
entirely, wherever I am, with those
who look upon joining the Church of Rome as the most
awful “fall” conceivable to any one, and
are devoid of the smallest comprehension of how any
enlightened person can do it. ... My old Evangelical
friends, with all my deep, deep love for them, do
not succeed in shaking me in the least. ...
’My brother has just published
a book called “Regeneration”, which all
my friends are reading and highly extolling; it has
a very contrary effect to what he would desire on
my mind. I can read and understand it all in
an altogether different sense, and the facts which
he quotes about the articles as drawn up in 1536,
and again in 1552, and of the Irish articles of 1615
and 1634, startle and SHAKE me about the Reformed
Church in England far more than anything else, and
have done so ever since I first saw them in Mr. Maskell’s
pamphlet (as quoted from Mr Dodsworth’s).
’I do hope you have some time
and thought to pray for me still. Mr. Galton’s
letters long ago grew into short formal notes, which
hurt me and annoyed me particularly, and I never answered
his last, so, literally, I have no one to say things
to and get help from, which in one sense is a comfort
when my convictions seem to be leading me on and on,
and gaining strength in spite of all the dreariness
of my lot.
’Do you know I can’t help
being very anxious and unhappy about poor Sister Harriet.
I am afraid of her going out of her
mind. She comforts herself by an occasional
outpouring of everything to me, and I had a letter
this morning. ... She says Sister May has promised
the Vicar never to talk to her or allow her to talk
on the subject with her, and I doubt whether this
can be good for her, because though she has lost her
faith, she says, in the Church of England, yet she
never thinks of what she could have faith in, and
resolutely without inquiring into the question determines
riot to be a Roman Catholic, so that really, you see,
she is allowing her mind to run adrift and yet perfectly
powerless.
’Forgive my troubling you with
this letter, and believe me to be always your faithful,
grateful and affectionate daughter,
’Emma RYLE.
‘P.S. I wish I could see you once more
so very much.’
How was Manning, a director of souls,
and a clergyman of the Church of England, to reply
that in sober truth there was very little to choose
between the state of mind of Sister Emma, or even
of Sister Harriet, and his own? The dilemma was
a grievous one: when a soldier finds himself
fighting for a cause in which he has lost faith, it
is treachery to stop, and it is treachery to go on.
At last, in the seclusion of his library,
Manning turned in agony to those old writings which
had provided Newman with so much instruction and assistance;
perhaps the Fathers would do something for him as
well. He ransacked the pages of St. Cyprian and
St. Cyril; he went through the complete works of St.
Optatus and St. Leo; he explored the vast treatises
of Tertullian and Justin Martyr. He had a lamp
put into his phaeton, so that he might lose no time
during his long winter drives. There he sat,
searching St. Chrysostom for some mitigation of his
anguish, while he sped along between the hedges to
distant sufferers, to whom he duly administered the
sacraments according to the rites of the English Church.
He hurried back to commit to his Diary the analysis
of his reflections, and to describe, under the mystic
formula of secrecy, the intricate workings of his conscience
to Robert Wilberforce. But, alas! he was no Newman;
and even the fourteen folios of St. Augustine himself,
strange to say, gave him very little help.
The final propulsion was to come from
an entirely different quarter. In November, 1847,
the Reverend Mr. Gorham was presented by the Lord
Chancellor to the living of Bramford Speke in the
diocese of Exeter. The Bishop, Dr. Phillpotts,
was a High Churchman, and he had reason to believe
that Mr. Gorham held evangelical opinions; he therefore
subjected him to an examination on doctrine, which
took the form partly of a verbal interrogatory, lasting
thirty-eight hours, and partly of a series of one
hundred and forty-nine written questions. At the
end of the examination he came to the conclusion that
Mr. Gorham held heretical views on the subject of
Baptismal Regeneration, and he therefore refused to
institute. Mr. Gorham, thereupon, took proceedings
against the Bishop in the Court of Arches. He
lost his case; and he then appealed to the judicial
Committee of the Privy Council.
The questions at issue were taken
very seriously by a large number of persons.
In the first place, there was the question of Baptismal
Regeneration itself. This is by no means an easy
one to disentangle; but it may be noted that the doctrine
of Baptism includes: (1) God’s intention,
that is to say, His purpose in electing certain persons
to eternal life—an abstruse and greatly
controverted subject, upon which the Church of England
abstains from strict definition; (2) God’s action,
whether by means of sacraments or otherwise—concerning
which the Church of England maintains the efficacy
of sacraments,’ but does not formally deny that
grace may be given by other means, repentance and faith
being present; and (3) the question whether sacramental
grace is given instrumentally, by and at the moment
of the act of baptism, or in consequence of an act
of prevenient grace rendering the receiver worthy—that
is to say, whether sacramental grace in baptism is
given absolutely or conditionally.
It was over this last question that
the dispute raged hottest in the Gorham Case.
The High Church party, represented by Dr. Phillpotts,
asserted that the mere act of baptism conferred regeneration
upon the recipient and washed away his original sin.
To this the Evangelicals, headed by Mr. Gorham, replied
that, according to the Articles, regeneration would
not follow unless baptism was rightly received.
What, then, was the meaning of ‘rightly’?
Clearly it implied not merely lawful administration,
but worthy reception; worthiness, therefore, is the
essence of the sacrament; and worthiness means faith
and repentance. Now, two propositions were accepted
by both parties—that all infants are born
in original sin, and that original sin could be washed
away by baptism. But how could both these propositions
be true, argued Mr. Gorham, if it was also true that
faith and repentance were necessary before baptism
could come into operation at all? How could an
infant in arms be said to be in a state of faith and
repentance? How, therefore, could its original
sin be washed away by baptism? And yet, as every
one agreed, washed away it was.
The only solution of the difficulty
lay in the doctrine of prevenient grace; and Mr. Gorham
maintained that unless God performed an act of prevenient
grace by which the infant was endowed with faith and
repentance, no act of baptism could be effectual;
though to whom, and under what conditions, prevenient
grace was given, Mr. Gorham confessed himself unable
to decide. The light thrown by the Bible upon
the whole matter seemed somewhat dubious, for whereas
the baptism of St. Peter’s disciples at Jerusalem
and St. Philip’s at Samaria was followed by
the gift of the Spirit, in the case of Cornelius the
sacrament succeeded the gift. St. Paul also was
baptised; and as for the language of St. John iii
5; Rom. vi 3, 4; I Peter iii 21, it admits of more
than one interpretation. There could, however,
be no doubt that the Church of England assented to
Dr. Phillpotts’ opinion; the question was whether
or not she excluded Mr. Gorham’s. If it
was decided that she did, it was clear that henceforward,
there would be very little peace for Evangelicals
within her fold.
But there was another issue, even
more fundamental than that of Baptismal Regeneration
itself, involved in the Gorham trial. An Act
passed in 1833 had constituted the Judicial Committee
of the Privy Council the supreme court of appeal for
such cases; and this Committee was a body composed
entirely of laymen. It was thus obvious that
the Royal Supremacy was still a fact, and that a collection
of lawyers appointed by the Crown had the legal right
to formulate the religious doctrine of the Church of
England. In 1850 their judgment was delivered;
they reversed the decision of the Court of Arches,
and upheld the position of Mr. Gorham. Whether
his views were theologically correct or not, they
said, was not their business; it was their business
to decide whether the opinions under consideration
were contrary or repugnant to the doctrine of the
Church of England as enjoined upon the clergy by its
Articles, Formularies, and Rubrics; and they had come
to the conclusion that they were not. The judgement
still holds good; and to this day, a clergyman of the
Church of England is quite at liberty to believe that
Regeneration does not invariably take place when an
infant is baptised.
The blow fell upon no one with greater
violence than upon Manning. Not only was the
supreme efficacy of the sign of the cross upon a baby’s
forehead one of his favourite doctrines, but up to
that moment he had been convinced that the Royal Supremacy
was a mere accident—a temporary usurpation
which left the spiritual dominion of the Church essentially
untouched. But now the horrid reality rose up
before him, crowned and triumphant; it was all too
clear that an Act of Parliament, passed by Jews, Roman
Catholics, and Dissenters, was the ultimate authority
which decided upon the momentous niceties of the Anglican
faith. Mr. Gladstone also, was deeply perturbed.
It was absolutely necessary, he wrote, to ’rescue
and defend the conscience of the Church from the present
hideous system’. An agitation was set on
foot, and several influential Anglicans, with Manning
at their head, drew up and signed a formal protest
against the Gorham judgment. Mr. Gladstone however,
proposed another method of procedure: precipitate
action, he declared, must be avoided at all costs,
and he elaborated a scheme for securing procrastination,
by which a covenant was to bind all those who believed
that an article of the creed had been abolished by
Act of Parliament to take no steps in any direction,
nor to announce their intention of doing so, until
a given space of time had elapsed. Mr. Gladstone
was hopeful that some good might come of this—though
indeed he could not be sure. ‘Among others,’
he wrote to Manning, ’I have consulted Robert
Wilberforce and Wegg-Prosser, and they seemed inclined
to favour my proposal. It might, perhaps, have
kept back Lord Feilding. But he is like a cork.’
The proposal was certainly not favoured
by Manning. Protests and procrastinations, approving
Wegg-Prossers and cork-like Lord Feildings—all
this was feeding the wind and folly; the time for
action had come. ‘I can no longer continue,’
he wrote to Robert Wilberforce, ’under oath
and subscription binding me to the Royal Supremacy
in Ecclesiastical causes, being convinced:
(1) That it is a violation of the
Divine Office of the Church.
(2) That it has involved the Church
of England in a separation from the Universal Church,
which separation I cannot clear of the character of
schism.
(3) That it has thereby suspended
and prevented the functions of the Church of England.’
It was in vain that Robert Wilberforce
pleaded, in vain that Mr. Gladstone urged upon his
mind the significance of John iii 8. [’The wind
bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound
thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither
it goeth; so is everyone that is born of the Spirit.’]
‘I admit,’ Mr. Gladstone wrote, ’that
the words might in some way be satisfied by supposing
our Lord simply to mean “the facts of nature
are unintelligible, therefore, be not afraid if revealed
truths be likewise beyond the compass of the understanding”;
but this seems to me a meagre meaning.’
Such considerations could hold him no longer, and
Manning executed the resignation of his office and
benefice before a public notary. Soon afterwards,
in the little Chapel off Buckingham Palace Road, kneeling
beside Mr. Gladstone, he worshipped for the last time
as an Anglican. Thirty years later the Cardinal
told how, just before the Communion service commenced,
he turned to his friends with the words: ’I
can no longer take the Communion in the Church of England.’
’I rose up, and laying my hand on Mr. Gladstone’s
shoulder, said “Come”. It was the
parting of the ways. Mr. Gladstone remained;
and I went my way. Mr. Gladstone still remains
where I left him.’
On April 6th, 1851, the final step
was taken: Manning was received into the Roman
Catholic Church. Now at last, after the long
struggle, his mind was at rest. ‘I know
what you mean,’ he wrote to Robert Wilberforce,
’by saying that one sometimes feels as if all
this might turn out to be only another “Land
of Shadows”. I have felt it in time past,
but not now. The theologia from Nice to St. Thomas
Aquinas, and the undivided unity suffused throughout
the world, of which the Cathedra Petri is the centre,
isnow 1800 years old, and mightier in every power now
than ever— in intellect, in science, in
separation from the world; and purer too, refined
by 300 years of conflict with the modern infidel civilisation—all
of this is a fact more solid than the earth.’