those immediate apostles and pupils of his who
became involved in his fate) in favour of religious toleration, began to
be suspected of treason and Papacy because, had he been able to give the
law, it was thought he would have permitted such horrors as the public
exercise of the Roman Catholic religion.
The hissings and screamings of the vulgar against him as he moved forward
on his stedfast course he heeded less than those of geese on a common.
But there was coming a time when this proud and scornful statesman,
conscious of the superiority conferred by great talents and unparalleled
experience, would find it less easy to treat the voice of slanderers,
whether idiots or powerful and intellectual enemies, with contempt.
CHAPTER VIII.
Schism in the Church a Public Fact--Struggle for Power between the
Sacerdotal and Political Orders--Dispute between Arminius and
Gomarus--Rage of James I. at the Appointment of Voratius--Arminians
called Remonstrants--Hague Conference--Contra-Remonstrance by
Gomarites of Seven Points to the Remonstrants' Five--Fierce
Theological Disputes throughout the Country--Ryswyk Secession--
Maurice wishes to remain neutral, but finds himself the Chieftain of
the Contra-Remonstrant Party--The States of Holland Remonstrant by a
large Majority--The States-General Contra-Remonstrant--Sir Ralph
Winwood leaves the Hague--Three Armies to take the Field against
Protestantism.
Schism in the Church had become a public fact, and theological hatred was
in full blaze throughout the country.
The great practical question in the Church had been as to the appointment
of preachers, wardens, schoolmasters, and other officers. By the
ecclesiastical arrangements of 1591 great power was conceded to the civil
authority in church matters, especially in regard to such appointments,
which were made by a commission consisting of four members named by the
churches and four by the magistrates in each district.
Barneveld, who above all things desired peace in the Church, had wished
to revive this ordinance, and in 1612 it had been resolved by the States
of Holland that each city or village should, if the magistracy approved,
provisionally conform to it. The States of Utrecht made at the same time
a similar arrangement.
It was the controversy which has been going on since the beginning of
history and is likely to be prolonged to the end of time--the struggle
for power between the
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