Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 October 2012
The origins of the term consensus fidelium lie in the rhetorical tropes of pagans who exhorted unity between friends and within cities – tropes supporting the hierarchy of imperial elites. The earliest Christians adapted this language for the same purpose within churches: to speak of unity and lay involvement in support of Church hierarchy. After the Reformation, Church of England writers used this rhetoric to enforce conformity to church polity and morality. The Tractarians and their successors employed a rhetorical ‘voice of the laity’ as a bolster for episcopal power. While the early twentieth century saw some in the Church of England and Anglican Communion use this same rhetoric to bring the laity into actual decision-making processes, the rhetoric of recent statements by the Communion has left power firmly with bishops.
The School of Theology, University of the South, Sewanee, TN 37375, USA. I wish to thank my colleagues James Dunkly, Paul Holloway and Brown Patterson, and my student Joycelyn Stabler, for their help with this article. I am also grateful for the insights of Edmund Newey, of those who heard me present a version at the University of Heidelberg, and of an anonymous reviewer for JAS.
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25. This point is made by Gillian Evans, ‘Rome's Response to ARCIC and the Problem of Confessional Identity’, One in Christ 28 (1992), pp. 155–67, at p. 166. Evans makes a contemporary point: ‘Between the two positions, that there must be complete unanimity in the faith; and that each Church ought to hold the faith in its own distinctive way as constitutive for its being that Church [i.e. through disputation], stands a third: that variations in matters of faith at least in some matters may be “legitimate” ’ (p. 166).Google Scholar
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29. Here I will use Eden, Charles Page, The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor, D.D. (10 vols.; London: Longmans etc., rev. edn., 1847–54). Eden, a Fellow of Oriel, was a contributor to the Tracts for the Times, and editor of two volumes of the Library of Anglo-Catholic Theology, who ‘revised and corrected’ the Evangelical Bishop Heber's edition of Taylor. The Theological Works of Herbert Thorndike (ed. Arthur W. Haddan; 6 vols.; Oxford: J.H. Parker, 1844–56) in the Library of Anglo-Catholic Theology was also Tractarian; henceforth Taylor, Works and Thorndike, Works.Google Scholar
30. Here I will use The Practical Works of Richard Baxter: With a Life of the Author and a Critical Examination of his Works by the Rev. William Orme (23 vols., London: James Duncan, 1830); henceforth Baxter, Works.Google Scholar
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32. Hooker, Laws, I.10.8, a passage on the laws of human society that may originate with Aquinas, Summa Theologica, I-II.97.3: ‘if they are free, and able to make their own laws, the consent of the whole people expressed by a custom counts far more in favor of a particular observance than does the authority of the sovereign, who has not the power to frame laws, except as representing the people’ (trans. Anton C. Pegis (ed.) Basic Writings of Saint Thomas Aquinas [Indianapolis, IN: Hackett, 1997]); my italics.Google Scholar
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35. Hooker, Laws, I.8.11. On such a view of reason, see Edmund Newey, ‘The Form of Reason: Participation in the Work of Richard Hooker, Benjamin Whichcote, Ralph Cudworth and Jeremy Taylor’, Modern Theology 18 (2002), pp. 1–26.Google Scholar
36. Hooker, Laws, IV.4.2.Google Scholar
37. Hooker, Laws, V.7.2 quoting Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, 6.11. See Harrison, William H., ‘Prudence and Custom: Revisiting Hooker on Authority’, Anglican Theological Review 84 (2002), pp. 897–913. For Jewish and Christian authorities, see Hooker, Laws, V.8.3.Google Scholar
38. Hooker, Laws, 36.1.2, trans. at Hooker, Laws, III.11.13. Hooker quoted Augustine's original letter rather than following Aquinas (Summa Theologica, I-II.97.3) in adding the extra sentence found in Gratian, Decretum, I.11.7: ‘And, as violators of the divine ordinances are to be corrected, so too are those who scorn ecclesiastical customs’ (trans. Thompson, Augustine, The Treatise on Laws [Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1993]).Google Scholar
39. Hooker, Laws, Preface, 4.1.Google Scholar
40. For a discussion of the relevant passages of Laws, see Locke, Kenneth A., The Church in Anglican Theology: A Historical, Theological and Ecumenical Exploration (Farnham, UK and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2009), pp. 51–58.Google Scholar
41. Hooker, Laws, VIII.6.11; my italics.Google Scholar
42. Hooker, Laws, VIII.6.8 [Folger edition 6.7]: ‘till it be proved that some special law of Christ hath for ever annexed unto the clergy alone the power to make ecclesiastical laws, we are to hold it a thing most consonant with equity and reason, that no ecclesiastical laws be made in a Christian commonwealth, without consent as well of the laity as of the clergy, but least of all without consent of the highest power’.Google Scholar
43. The OED refers to Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene (1596): ‘That all the cares and euill which they meet, May … Seeme gainst common sence to them most sweet’ (IV, canto 10, stanza 2).Google Scholar
44. Shapiro, Barbara, Probability and Certainty in 17th Century England: A Study of the Relationships between Natural Science and Religion, History, Law, and Literature (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983), p. 4.Google Scholar
45. Epilogue, I.3.20 (Thorndike, Works, II.1, p. 46), I.1.5 (p. 17). I.4.15 argues for the reasonable probability of revelation at the Council of Jerusalem (p. 70). Charles Miller has argued from phrases such as these for Thorndike's ‘common sense’ ecclesiology in The Doctrine of the Church in the Thought of Herbert Thorndike (DPhil. dissertation, Oxford, 1990), ch. 1.Google Scholar
46. Analogy, Intro[2] (1736) in The Works of Bishop Butler (ed. David E. White; Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2006), p. 151; henceforth Butler, Works.Google Scholar
47. Analogy, ii.6[.16]: ‘Common men, were they as much in earnest about religion as about their temporal affairs, are capable of being convinced, upon real evidence, that there is a God who governs the world; and they feel themselves to be of a moral nature; and accountable creatures. And as Christianity entirely falls in with this their natural sense of things; so they are capable, not only of being persuaded, but of being made to see, that there is evidence of miracles wrought in attestation of it [i.e. Christianity], and many appearing completions of prophecy’ (Butler, Works, p. 270); my italics.Google Scholar
48. Tennant, Bob, lays stress on the rhetorical nature of Butler's work, which was often written to be preached (Conscience, Consciousness and Ethics in Joseph Butler's Philosophy and Ministry [Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2011]). Regarding patronage, Samuel Clarke and Edward Talbot provided ‘the Butler circle's entire patronage’ (p. 31). Tennant comments on two of Butler's published sermons, which refer to God as ‘friend’: ‘God is the friend of people in the same way as the master of a household is a friend of the domestic servants in the household’ (p. 60).Google Scholar
49. Epilogue, Book I, Preface, 10 (Thorndike, Works, II.1, p. 7).Google Scholar
50. This is the title of ch. 6 in Quantin, The Church of England.Google Scholar
51. Epilogue, Book I, Preface, 9 (Thorndike, Works, II.1, p. 7); my italics. Thorndike published a condensed form of the argument of Epilogue in 1662 called Just Weights and Measures writing in ch. 7.4: ‘go no further, than the consent of the Church will bear us out. For if we make new and private conceits of the Scripture, and the sense of it, [or] law to the Church, which we reform; we found a new Church upon that Christianity, which the only Church of God never owned’ (Thorndike, Works, V, p. 125).Google Scholar
52. ‘For inasmuch as the consensus of the faithful hands on the certain testimony of the Apostles concerning Christ, on the basis of the faithful let the Church for its part stand firm. It is manifest that it is with the Church as [their] author, and on the Church's authority, that the Scriptures are accepted as the Word of God’; Thorndike, De ratione ac iure (London: Thomas Roycroft, 1670), p. 80 (I owe this translation to Christopher Bryan and Christopher McDonough).Google Scholar
53. Epilogue, I.6.16-21 (Thorndike, Works, II.1, pp. 120–24), citing Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen, Cyril of Jerusalem, Vincent of Lérins and Thomas Aquinas. Although Thorndike gave Tertullian less authority because of his Montanism, nevertheless ‘common sense must needs tell’ against those who would reject Tertullian's witness to a factual matter; Epilogue, I.7.32 (Thorndike, Works, II.1, p. 132).Google Scholar
54. Epilogue, I.8.17 (Thorndike, Works, II.1, p. 150).Google Scholar
55. Epilogue, I.8.17 (Thorndike, Works, II.1, p. 150); my italics.Google Scholar
56. Miller explains: ‘In the late 1640s and throughout the 1650s even the Presbyterian establishment increasingly felt the challenge posed by a burgeoning Independency … Thorndike's discussion of conciliarism, his attempt to articulate a view of the church as a “standing synod,” seem to have been developed largely in response to the claims of Congregational ecclesiology’; The Doctrine of the Church pp. 301–302.Google Scholar
57. Calvin, Institutes, IV.3.8. Another instance of Thorndike's rhetorical approach to Calvinists came when naming the Epilogue, Book II, Of the Covenant of Grace. According to McGiffert, Michael, Thorndike aimed ‘to wrench the substance of the covenant from Puritan custodians, to get an Anglican grip upon its practicum and to represent both, newly and powerfully forged, to his once and future Church’; ‘Herbert Thorndike and the Covenant of Grace’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 58 (2007), pp. 440–460, at p. 442.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
58. Just Weights and Measures, ch. 7.1 (Thorndike, Works, V, p. 122); my italics highlight Vincent, Commonitorium 2.6.Google Scholar
59. Just Weights and Measures, ch. 6.8 (Thorndike, Works, V, p. 117).Google Scholar
60. Just Weights and Measures, ch. 6.7 found patristic evidence that the English Church owed Rome the ‘respect which was owed to their mother-Church; but that they either owed it or shewed it the respect of a subject to a sovereign … none at all’ (Thorndike, Works, V, p. 116).Google Scholar
61. Ductor Dubitantium, II.3 Rule 19.3 (Taylor, Works, IX, p. 693). Cf. n. 38 above, for, unlike Hooker, Taylor takes this quotation straight from Gratian.Google Scholar
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63. ‘The conscience must be confident, and it must also have reason enough so to be: or at least, so much as can secure the confidence from illusion; although possibly the confidence may be greater than the evidence, and the conclusion bigger than the premises. Thus the good simple man that about the time of the Nicene council confuted the stubborn and subtle philosopher by a confident saying over his creed: and the holy and innocent idiot, or plain easy people of the laity, that cannot prove christianity by any demonstrations, but by that of a holy life, and obedience unto death’, Ductor Dubitantium, I.2 Rule 2.5 (Taylor, Works, IX, p. 52); Taylor also used the legend of the ‘simple good man’ and the Nicene Creed (from Sozomen, Hist. Eccl. 1.18; Socrates, Hist. Eccl. 1.8; Rufinus, Hist. Eccl. 1.3) in the sermon ‘Via Intelligentiae’ (Taylor, Works, VIII, p. 385).Google Scholar
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70. One of the first references in the OED came in a church context: ‘Bishop Colenso is … decidedly against what seems to be the consensus of the Protestant missionaries’; Saturday Review (London) 637, 21 December 1861.Google Scholar
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80. Pusey wrote of Cyprian's councils concerning the lapsed: ‘there is not the slightest trace of any wish of the Laity to assume to themselves any part of the legislation, which our Lord had entrusted to the Bishops’; The Councils of the Church from the Council of Jerusalem a.d. 51, to the Council of Constantinople a.d. 381, (Oxford: John Henry Parker, 1857), p. 90.Google Scholar
81. Keble, Letters of Spiritual Council and Guidance (ed. R.F. Wilson; Oxford and London: James Parker and Co., 3rd edn, 1875), p. 297; this undated letter to an unnamed recipient cited approvingly Gladstone's A Letter to the Right Rev. William Skinner, D.D. on the Functions of Laymen in the Church (London: John Murray, 1852), pp. 34–35.Google Scholar
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100. The Virginia Report: The Report of the Inter-Anglican Theological and Doctrinal Commission (1997), 3.9.Google Scholar
101. The Lambeth Conference 1948: The Encyclical Letter from the Bishops; together with Resolutions and Reports (London: SPCK, 1948), Pt. 2, pp. 84–85.Google Scholar
102. Lambeth Conference, Pt 2, p. 85; quoting the report of the Archbishops’ Commission on Christian Doctrine (of which Rawlinson was a member), Doctrine in the Church of England (London: SPCK, 1938), p. 35.Google Scholar
103. Virginia Report, 1.2: ‘From the earliest time in the history of the Christian community, an admonishing voice has been heard exhorting believers to maintain agreement with one another and thereby to avert divisions.… Nevertheless the controversies themselves were stages on a road towards greater consensus.’Google Scholar
104. Virginia Report, 3.51, which continues: ‘The emergence of the Lambeth Conference and more recently, the Primates’ Meeting and the Anglican Consultative Council, together with the primacy of the Archbishop of Canterbury, have become effective means … of binding the Anglican Communion together.’ The Windsor Report (2004), 98, called these four the ‘Instruments of Unity’; the Anglican Covenant calls them ‘Instruments of Communion’.Google Scholar
105. Virginia Report, 6.18. See also the bold claim at 6.20: ‘The bishops at Lambeth are to represent those who have no voice.’Google Scholar
106. Communion, Conflict and Hope: The Kuala Lumpur Report of the Third Inter-Anglican Theological and Doctrinal Commission (2008), 18. My thanks to Christopher Wells for bringing this report to my attention.Google Scholar
107. Communion, Conflict and Hope, 17, 61.Google Scholar
108. Communion, Conflict and Hope, 113; also 123 rightly recognizes that ‘Talk of broken communion has often been a form of exchange to gain rhetorical advantage.’Google Scholar