16th Council, Council of Constance (A.D. 1414-1418)
SUMMARY:
SITE: Constance, Germany
YEARS: 1414 - 1418
POPES: Gregory XII, 1406 - 1415; Martin V, 1417 - 1431
EMPEROR: Sigismund of Luxembourg, 1410 - 1437
Ended the Great Schism, wich involved three rival claiments to the Papal throne; Condemned the teachings of John Wycliffe, who taught sola scriptura and denied the authority of the Pope and Bishops; denied the Real Presence and indulgences; Condemned the teachings of John Huss, who denied papal authority and its necessity for salvation and who taught wrongly about the nature of the Church; Promulgated disciplinary decrees
Council of Constance (1414-1418), 200 Bishops and Prelates were present, and was held during the great Schism of the West, with the object of ending the divisions in the Church. It only became legitimate when Gregory XI had formally convoked it. Owing to this circumstance it succeeded in putting an end to the schism by the election of Pope Martin V, which the Council of Pisa (1403) had failed to accomplish on account of its illegality. The rightful pope confirmed the former decrees of the synod against Wyclif and Hus. This council is thus only ecumenical in its last sessions (XLII-XLV inclusive) and with respect to the decrees of earlier sessions approved by Martin V.
ACTION: Called by Emperor Sigismund and Pope Gregory XII who authorized the convocation as he abdicated the Papacy. The anti-popes Benedict XIII (Avignon) and John XXIII (Pisa) also agreed to "abdicate" in the interests of unity. The council elevated Martin V to the Chair of Peter to end the confustion of the Western Schism. Pope Martin ratified the council ...except the decrees which proposed conciliarism. In addition to ending the Western Schism, Constance also Condemned the heresies of: 1) John Wycliffe, who rejected the Holy sacrifice of the Mass, emphasized scripture as the sole rule of faith, subscribed to Donatism, asserted the Pope is not the head of the Church, and Bishops have no authority; and, 2) John Huss, who preached the above after Wycliffe's death.
HERETICS: WYCLIFFE and HUSS.
INTRODUCTION 1
[This is the introduction given by Tanner in Decrees of the Ecumenical
Councils]
This council was summoned by AntiPope John XXIII, the Pisan pope [1 ] , with
the support of
Emperor Sigismund. It began on 5 November 1414 in the cathedral of Constance,
with many
bishops from all parts of Europe. Business in the council was transacted in a
way that
was largely new for an ecumenical council, namely votes were cast not by
Individual
persons but by nations.
The council, from the very beginning, proposed the following three topics:
1. To bring unity back to the church and to make an end to the schism which had
divided
the church since 1378 and which the council held at Pisa in 1409 had not healed
but
rather aggravated when it elected Alexander V as a third pope. When the council
of
Constance opened, Christians owed obedience to three different popes: some owed
obedience
to Gregory XII of the Roman party others to Benedict XIII of the Avignon party,
and
others to John XXIII, who had been elected after the death of Alexander V. John
XXIII and
Benedict XIII were deposed by the council, Gregory XII voluntarily resigned.
Then Martin
V was elected pope on 11 November 1417 and he was regarded as the legitimate
pontiff by
the church as a whole.
2. To eradicate heresies, especially those spread by John Wyclif in Britain and
by John
Hus and Jerome of Prague in Bohemia.
3. To reform the corrupt morals of the church. This, however, was only partly
accomplished in the final sessions of the council.
With regard to the ecumenical nature of the sessions, there is dispute about
those before
the election of Martin V and also about the significance and force of the
approval which
he gave to the matters transacted by the council. The decrees notably those of
sessions
3-5 and the decree Frequens (session 39), appear to proceed from the council's
teaching.
Objection has been made to them on the grounds of the primacy of the Roman
pontiff. There
is no doubt, however, that in enacting these decrees there was solicitude and
care to
choose the true and sure way ahead in order to heal the schism, and this could
only be
done by the authority of a council.
The acts of the council of Constance were first published by Jerome of Croaria
at Hagenau
in 1500 (Acta scitu dignissima docteque concinnata Constantiensis concilii
celebratissimi
= Asd), from the epitome of the acts which the council of Basel had ordered to
be
compiled and publicly accepted in 1442. This edition of the Basel epitome was
followed by
all general collections of the councils (including Editio Romana, IV 127-300,
even though
it ignores the council of Basel). These collections, down to Mansi (27, 529-
1240), added
various appendices. H. von der Hardt, in his great collection of the sources of
the
council of Constance, made an edition of the acts and decrees of the council
according to
the earliest trustworthy documents (Magnum oecumenicum Constantiense concilium,
in six
tomes, Frankfurt-Leipzig 1696-1700; tome IV, Corpus actorum et decretorum magni
Constantiensis concilii de Ecclesiae refor matione, unione ac fide = Hardt). We
have
followed von der Hardt's edition throughout and have noted only the principle
variants
provided by Asd. We indicate only, and do not print, the decrees pertaining to
the
internal administration of the council and of the church and to judicial acts.
Second Introduction
[By the e-text editor]
I have given the conventional session numbers for "the" Council of Constance so
as to
make cross referencing with other editions easier. However it is very
misleading
to do
so. One should not speak of "the" Council of Constance, but of the councils of
Constance.
There was a council of bishops [and others] beginning 16 November 1414 which
styled
itself ecumenical, but which the true pope of the day did not recognize as
such.
There
was another council [even if its members were those of the first] which he
convoked, by
proxy, on 4 July 1415 and did recognize as ecumenical. The ratification of
"the"
council
by Martin the fifth, given in a footnote to session 45, was a ratification of
everything
determined "in a conciliar way ... by this present council of Constance", i.e.
of the one
convoked on 4 July 1415. The intent of the words "in a conciliar way" is, on my
reading,
to distinguish the true [ecumenical] council from the false one.
The matter is crucial to the possibility of the Catholic doctrine of the
infallibility of
ecumenical councils, since the teachings of Vatican 1 on papal primacy are
inconsistent
with those of the first [non-ecumenical] Council of Constance [in particular
the
famous
session 5, Haec Sancta, which taught conciliarism] , but not with those of the
second
[ecumenical] one
Crucial to my claim is the question of who the true pope was and when a
genuinely
ecumenical council came into existence. I shall quote from Phillip Hughes (the
footnotes
here included are from Hughes' text) :
"Just five weeks after Baldassare Cossa so meekly accepted the council's
sentence, the
fathers met to receive the solemn abdication of Gregory XII. He was in fact,
and
to the
end he claimed to be in law, the canonically elected representative of the line
that went
back to Urban VI, the last pope to be acknowledged as pope by Catholics
everywhere [2 ] .
The abdication was arranged and executed with a care to safeguard all that
Gregory
claimed to be; and this merits - and indeed, requires - much more detailed
consideration
than it usually receives. [3 ]
Gregory XII sent to Constance as his representatives his protector Carlo
Malatesta, the
Lord of Rimini, and the Dominican cardinal, John Domenici -- to Constance
indeed, but not
to the General Council assembled there by the authority, and in the name, of
John XXIII.
The envoys' commission was to the emperor Sigismund, presiding over the various
bishops
and prelates whom his zeal to restore peace to the Church had brought together.
To these
envoys -- and to Malatesta in the first place-Gregory gave authority to convoke
as a
General Council -- to convoke and not to recognise -- these assembled bishops
and
prelates ; [4 ] and by a second bull [5 ] he empowered Malatesta to resign to
this
General Council in his name.
The emperor, the bishops and prelates consented and accepted the role Gregory
assigned.
And so, on July 4, 1415. Sigismund, clad in the royal robes, left the throne he
had
occupied in the previous sessions for a throne placed before the altar, as for
the
president of the assembly. Gregory's two legates sat by his side facing the
bishops. The
bull was read commissioning Malatesta and Domenici to convoke the council and
to
authorise whatever it should do for the restoration of unity and the
extirpation
of the
schism -- with Gregory's explicit condition that there should be no mention of
Baldassare
Cossa, [6 ] with his reminder that from his very election he had pledged
himself
to
resign if by so doing he could truly advance the good work of unity, and his
assertion
that the papal dignity is truly his as the canonically elected successor of
Urban VI.
Malatesta then delegated his fellow envoy, the cardinal John Domenici, to
pronounce the
formal operative words of convocation [7 ] ; and the assembly -- but in its own
way --
accepted to be thus convoked, authorised and confirmed in the name "of that
lord
who in
his own obedience is called Gregory XII" [8 ] . The council next declared that
all
canonical censures imposed by reason of the schism were lifted, and the bull
was
read by
which Gregory authorised Malatesta to make the act of abdication [9 ] and
promised to
consider as ratum gratum et firmum, and forever irrevocable, whatever
Malatesta,
as his
proxy, should perform. The envoy asked the council whether they would prefer
the
resignation immediately, or that it should be delayed until Peter de Luna's
decision was
known. The council preferred the present moment. It ratified all Gregory XII's
acts,
received his cardinals as cardinals, promised that his officers should keep
their posts
and declared that if Gregory was barred from re-election as pope, this was only
for the
peace of the Church, and not from any personal unworthiness. Then the great
renunciation
was made [10 ] , " . . . renuncio et cedo . . . et resigno . . . in hac
sacrosancta
synodo et universali concilio, sanctam Romanam et universalem eccleciam
repraesentante"and the council accepted it [11 ] , but again as made "on the
part of that
lord who in his own obedience was called Gregory XII". The Te Deum was sung and
a new
summons drawn up calling upon Peter de Luna to yield to the council's
authority.
The work of Pisa was now almost undone, and by this council which, in origin,
was a
continuation of Pisa. It had suppressed the Pisan pope whom Pisa, with biting
words, had
rejected as a schismatic and no pope."
Phillip Hughes A History of the Church, p289-291
SESSION 1 - 16 November 1414
[On the matters to be treated in the council, in which order and by which
officials [12
]]
John, bishop, servant of the servants of God, for future record. Wishing to
carry out
those things which were decreed at the council of Pisa [13 ] by our predecessor
of happy
memory, pope [14 ] Alexander V, regarding the summoning of a new general
council, we
earlier convoked this present council by letters of ours, the contents of which
we have
ordered to be inserted here:
John, bishop ... [15 ]
We have therefore come together with our venerable brothers, cardinals of the
holy Roman
church, and our court to this city of Constance at the appointed time. Being
present here
by the grace of God, we now wish, with the advice of this sacred synod, to
attend to the
peace, exaltation and reform of the church and to the quiet of the christian
people.
In such an arduous matter it is not right to rely on one's own strength, but
rather trust
should be placed in the help of God. Therefore, in order to begin with divine
worship, we
decreed, with the approval of this sacred council, that a special mass for this
purpose
should be said today. This mass has now been duly celebrated, by the grace of
God. We now
decree that such a mass shall be celebrated collegially in this and every other
collegiate church of this city whether secular or regular, once a week, namely
each
Friday, for the duration of this sacred council. Moreover, in order that the
faithful may
devote themselves to this holy celebration most fervently, whereby they will
feel
themselves refreshed by a more abundant gift of grace, we relax, mercifully in
the Lord,
the following amounts of enjoined penance to each and every one of them who is
truly
penitent and has confessed: for each mass, one year to the celebrating priest
and forty
days to those present at it. Furthermore, we exhort our venerable brothers,
cardinals of
the holy Roman church, as well as patriarchs, archbishops and bishops, and our
beloved
chosen sons, abbots and others in the priesthood, devoutly to celebrate this
mass once
every week, in order that the aforesaid divine aid may be implored; and we
grant
the same
indulgences to the celebrant and to those present at the mass. We exhort in the
Lord,
moreover, each and all who glory in the name of Christ, in order that the
desired outcome
to so great a matter may be obtained, to give themselves diligently to prayer,
fasting,
almsgiving and other pious works, so that God may be placated by our and their
humility,
and so deign to grant a happy outcome to this sacred gathering.
Considering, moreover, that a council should specially treat of those matters
which
concern the Catholic faith, according to the praiseworthy practices of the
early
councils, and aware that such things demand diligence, sufficient time and
study, on
account of their difficulty, we therefore exhort all those who are well versed
in the
sacred scriptures to ponder and to treat, both within themselves and with
others, about
those things which seem to them useful and opportune in this matter. Let them
bring such
things to our notice and to that of this sacred synod, as soon as they
conveniently can,
so that at a suitable time there may be decided what things, it seems, should
be
held and
what repudiated for the profit and increase of the same Catholic faith.
Let them especially ponder on the various errors which are said to have
sprouted
in
certain places at various times, especially on those which are said to have
arisen from a
certain John called Wyclif.
We exhort, moreover, all Catholics assembled here and others who will come to
this sacred
synod that they should seek to think on, to follow up and to bring to us, and
to
this
same sacred synod, those matters by which the body of Catholics may be led, if
God is
willing, to a proper reformation and to the desired peace. For it is our
intention and
will that all who are assembled for this purpose may say, consult about and do,
with
complete freedom, each and all of the things that they think pertain to the
above.
In order, however, that a rule may be observed in the procedure of this sacred
synod with
regard to what things are to be said and decided, the action to be taken and
the
regulating of customs, we think that recourse should be had to the practices of
the
ancient fathers, which are best learned from a canon of the council of Toledo,
the
contents of which we have decided to insert here [16 ] :
Nobody should shout at or in any way disturb the Lord's priests when they sit
in
the
place of blessing. Nobody should cause disturbance by telling idle stories or
jokes or,
what is even worse, by stubborn disputes. As the apostle says, if anyone thinks
himself
religious and does not bridle his tongue but deceives his heart, then his
religion is
vain. For, justice loses its reverence when the silence of the court is
disturbed by a
crowd of turbulent people. As the prophet says, the reverence due to justice
shall be
silence. Therefore whatever is being debated by the participants, or is being
proposed by
persons making an accusation, should be stated in quiet tones so that the
hearers' senses
are not disturbed by contentious voices and they do not weaken the authority of
the court
by their tumult. Whoever thinks that the aforesaid things should not be
observed
while
the council is meeting, and disturbs it with noise or dissensions or jests,
contrary to
the things forbidden here, shall leave the assembly, dishonourably stripped of
the right
to attend, according to the precept of the divine law (whereby it is commanded:
drive out
the scoffer, and strife will go out with him), and he shall be under sentence
of
excommunication for three days.
Since it may happen that some of the participants will not be in their rightful
seats, we
decree, with this sacred council's approval, that no prejudice shall arise to
any church
or person as a result of this seating arrangement.
Since certain ministers and officials are required in order that this council
may
proceed, we therefore depute, with this sacred council's approval, those named
below,
namely our beloved sons... [17 ]
SESSION 2 - 2 March 1415
[John XXIII publicly offers to resign the papacy]
SESSION 3 - 26 March 1415
[Decrees on the integrity and authority of the council, after the pope s flight
[18 ]]
For the honour, praise and glory of the most holy Trinity, Father and Son and
holy
Spirit, and to obtain on earth, for people of good will, the peace that was
divinely
promised in God's church, this holy synod, called the sacred general council of
Constance, duly assembled here in the holy Spirit for the purpose of bringing
union and
reform to the said church in its head and members, discerns declares, defines
and ordains
as follows.
First, that this synod was and is rightly and properly summoned to this city of
Constance, and likewise has been rightly and properly begun and held.
Next, that this sacred council has not been dissolved by the departure of our
lord pope
from Constance, or even by the departure of other prelates or any other
persons,
but
continues in its integrity and authority, even if decrees to the contrary have
been made
or shall be made in the future.
Next, that this sacred council should not and may not be dissolved until the
present
schism has been entirely removed and until the church has been reformed in
faith
and
morals, in head and members.
Next, that this sacred council may not be transferred to another place, except
for a
reasonable cause, which is to be debated and decided on by this sacred council.
Next, that prelates and other persons who should be present at this council may
not
depart from this place before it has ended, except for a reasonable cause which
is to be
examined by persons who have been, or will be, deputed by this sacred council.
When the
reason has been examined and approved, they may depart with the permission of
the person
or persons in authority. When the individual departs, he is bound to give his
power to
others who stay, under penalty of the law, as well as to others appointed by
this sacred
council, and those who act to the contrary are to be prosecuted.
SESSION 4 - 30 March 1415
[Decrees of the council on its authority and integrity, in the abbreviated form
read out
by cardinal Zabarella]
In the name of the holy and undivided Trinity, Father and Son and holy Spirit
Amen. This
holy synod of Constance, which is a general council, for the eradication of the
present
schism and for bringing unity and reform to God's church in head and members,
legitimately assembled in the holy Spirit to the praise of almighty God,
ordains,
defines, decrees, discerns and declares as follows, in order that this union
and
reform
of God's church may be obtained the more easily, securely, fruitfully and
freely.
First, that this synod, legitimately assembled in the holy Spirit, constituting
a general
council, representing the Catholic Church militant, has power immediately from
Christ,
and that everyone of whatever state or dignity, even papal, is bound to obey it
in those
matters which pertain to the faith and the eradication of the said schism. [19
]
Next, that our most holy lord pope John XXIII may not move or transfer the
Roman
curia
and its public offices, or its or their officials, from this city to another
place, nor
directly or indirectly compel the persons of the said offices to follow him,
without the
deliberation and consent of the same holy synod; this refers to those officials
or
offices by whose absence the council would probably be dissolved or harmed. If
he has
acted to the contrary in the past, or shall in the future, or if he has in the
past, is
now or shall in the future fulminate any processes or mandates or
ecclesiastical
censures
or any other penalties against the said officials or any other adherents of
this
council,
to the effect that they should follow him then all is null and void and in no
way are the
said processes, censures and penalties to be obeyed, inasmuch as they are null
and void,
and they are invalid. The said officials are rather to exercise their offices
in
the said
city of Constance, and to carry them out freely as before, as long as this holy
synod is
being held in the said city.
Next, that all translations of prelates, and depositions of the same, or of any
other
beneficed persons, revocations of commendams and gifts, admonitions,
ecclesiastical
censures, processes, sentences, acts and whatever has been or will be done or
accomplished by our aforesaid lord and his officials or commissaries, from the
time of
his departure, to the injury of the council or its adherents, against the
supporters or
participants of this sacred council, or to the prejudice of them or any one of
them, in
whatever way they may have been or shall be made or done, against the will of
the persons
concerned, are in virtue of the law itself null, quashed, invalid and void, and
of no
effect or moment, and the council by its authority quashes, invalidates and
annuls them.
[Next, it was declared and decided that three persons should be chosen from
each
nation
who know both the reasons of those wishing to depart and the punishments that
ought to be
inflicted on those departing without permission. [20 ]]
Next, that for the sake of unity new cardinals should not be created. Moreover,
lest for
reasons of deceit or fraud some persons may be said to have been made cardinals
recently,
this sacred council declares that those persons are not to be regarded as
cardinals who
were not publicly recognised and held to be such at the time of our lord pope's
departure
from the city of Constance.
SESSION 5 - 6 April 1415
The famous Haec Sancta decree contradicting Vatican 1 on papal
primacy/infallibility.
[Decrees of the council, concerning its authority and integrity, which had been
abbreviated by cardinal Zabarella at the preceding session, against the wishes
of the
nations, and which are now restored, repeated and confirmed by a public decree]
In the name of the holy and undivided Trinity, Father and Son and holy Spirit.
Amen. This
holy synod of Constance, which is a general council, for the eradication of the
present
schism and for bringing unity and reform to God's church in head and members,
legitimately assembled in the holy Spirit to the praise of almighty God,
ordains,
defines, decrees, discerns and declares as follows, in order that this union
and
reform
of God's church may be obtained the more easily, securely, fruitfully and
freely.
First it declares that, legitimately assembled in the holy Spirit, constituting
a general
council and representing the Catholic Church militant, it has power immediately
from
Christ; and that everyone of whatever state or dignity, even papal, is bound to
obey it
in those matters which pertain to the faith, the eradication of the said schism
and the
general reform of the said church of God in head and members.
Next, it declares that anyone of whatever condition, state or dignity, even
papal, who
contumaciously refuses to obey the past or future mandates, statutes,
ordinances
or
precepts of this sacred council or of any other legitimately assembled general
council,
regarding the aforesaid things or matters pertaining to them, shall be
subjected
to well-
deserved penance, unless he repents, and shall be duly punished, even by having
recourse,
if necessary, to other supports of the law.
Next, the said holy synod defines and ordains that the lord pope John XXIII may
not move
or transfer the Roman curia and its public offices, or its or their officials,
from the
city of Constance to another place, nor directly or indirectly compel the said
officials
to follow him, without the deliberation and consent of the same holy synod. If
he has
acted to the contrary in the past, or shall in the future, or if he has in the
past, is
now or shall in the future fulminate any processes or mandates or
ecclesiastical
censures
or any other penalties, against the said officials or any other adherents of
this sacred
council, to the effect that they should follow him, then all is null and void
and in no
way are the said processes, censures and penalties to be obeyed, inasmuch as
they are
null and void. The said officials are rather to exercise their offices in the
said city
of Constance, and to carry them out freely as before, as long as this holy
synod
h being
held in the said City.
Next, that all translations of prelates, or depositions of the same, or of any
other
beneficed persons, officials and administrators, revocations of commendams and
gifts,
admonitions, ecclesiastical censures, processes, sentences and whatever has
been
or will
be done or accomplished by the aforesaid lord pope John or his officials or
commissaries,
since the beginning of this council, to the injury of the said council or its
adherents,
against the supporters or participants of this sacred council, or to the
prejudice of
them or of any one of them, in whatever way they may have been or shall be made
or done,
against the will of the persons concerned, are by this very fact, on the
authority of
this sacred council, null, quashed, invalid and void, and of no effect or
moment, and the
council by its authority quashes, invalidates and annuls them.
Next, it declares that the lord pope John XXIII and all the prelates and other
persons
summoned to this sacred council, and other participants in the same synod, have
enjoyed
and do now enjoy full freedom, as has been apparent in the said sacred council,
and the
opposite has not been brought to the notice of the said summoned persons or of
the said
council. The said sacred council testifies to this before God and people. [21 ]
SESSION 6 - 17 April 1415
[At this session there were, among other minor deliberations, decrees about
admitting the
office of proctor in the matter of pope John XXIII's renunciation of the papacy
and about
the citing of Jerome of Prague.]
SESSION 7 - 2 May 1415
[At this session it was decreed that pope John should be publicly summoned and
that the
summons of Jerome of Prague, now charged with contumacy, should be repeated.]
SESSION 8 - 4 May 1415
This most holy synod of Constance, which is a general council and represents
the
Catholic
church and is legitimately assembled in the holy Spirit, for the eradication of
the
present schism and the elimination of the errors and heresies which are
sprouting beneath
its shade and for the reform of the church, make this perpetual record of its
acts.
[Sentence condemning various articles of John Wyclif]
We learn from the writings and deeds of the holy fathers that the Catholic
faith
without
which (as the Apostle says) it is impossible to please God , has often been
attacked by
false followers of the same faith, or rather by perverse assailants, and by
those who,
desirous of the world's glory, are led on by proud curiosity to know more than
they
should; and that it has been defended against such persons by the church's
faithful
spiritual knights armed with the shield of faith. Indeed these kinds of wars
were
prefigured in the physical wars of the Israelite people against idolatrous
nations.
Therefore in these spiritual wars the holy Catholic Church, illuminated in the
truth of
faith by the rays of light from above and remaining ever spotless through the
Lord's
providence and with the help of the patronage of the saints, has triumphed most
gloriously over the darkness of error as over profligate enemies. In our times,
however,
that old and jealous foe has stirred up new conflicts so that the approved ones
of this
age may be made manifest. Their leader and prince was that pseudo-christian
John
Wyclif.
He stubbornly asserted and taught many articles against the christian religion
and the
Catholic faith while he was alive. We have decided that forty-five of the
articles should
be set out on this page as follows.
1. The material substance of bread, and similarly the material substance of
wine, remain
in the sacrament of the altar.
2. The accidents of bread do not remain without their subject in the said
sacrament.
3. Christ is not identically and really present in the said sacrament in his
own
bodily
persona.
4. If a bishop or a priest is in mortal sin, he does not ordain or confect or
consecrate
or baptise.
5. That Christ instituted the mass has no basis in the gospel.
6. God ought to obey the devil.
7. If a person is duly contrite, all exterior confession is superfluous and
useless for
him.
8. If a pope is foreknown as damned and is evil, and is therefore a limb of the
devil, he
does not have authority over the faithful given to him by anyone, except
perhaps
by the
emperor.
9. Nobody should be considered as pope after Urban VI. Rather, people should
live like
the Greeks, under their own laws.
10. It is against sacred scripture for ecclesiastics to have possessions.
11. No prelate should excommunicate anyone unless he first knows that the
person
has been
excommunicated by God; he who does so thereby becomes a heretic and an
excommunicated
person.
12. A prelate excommunicating a cleric who has appealed to the king or the
king's council
is thereby a traitor to the king and the kingdom.
13. Those who stop preaching or hearing the word of God on account of an
excommunication
issued by men are themselves excommunicated and will be regarded as traitors of
Christ on
the day of judgment.
14. It is lawful for any deacon or priest to preach the word of God without
authorisation
from the apostolic see or from a Catholic bishop.
15. Nobody is a civil lord or a prelate or a bishop while he is in mortal sin.
16. Secular lords can confiscate temporal goods from the church at their
discretion when
those who possess them are sinning habitually, that is to say sinning from
habit
and not
just in particular acts.
17. The people can correct sinful lords at their discretion.
18. Tithes are purely alms, and parishioners can withhold them at will on
account of
their prelates' sins.
19. Special prayers applied by prelates or religious to a particular person
avail him or
her no more than general prayers, if other things are equal.
20. Whoever gives alms to friars is thereby excommunicated.
21. Whoever enters any religious order whatsoever, whether it be of the
possessioners or
the mendicants, makes himself less apt and suitable for the observance of God's
commands.
22. Saints who have founded religious orders have sinned in so doing.
23. Members of religious orders are not members of the christian religion.
24. Friars are bound to obtain their food by manual work and not by begging.
[22
]
25. All are simoniacs who bind themselves to pray for people who help them in
temporal
matters.
26. The prayer of someone foreknown as damned profits nobody.
27. All things happen from absolute necessity.
28. Confirming the young, ordaining clerics and consecrating places have been
reserved to
the pope and bishops because of their greed for temporal gain and honour.
29. Universities, places of study, colleges, degrees and academic exercises in
these
institutions were introduced by a vain pagan spirit and benefit the church as
little as
does the devil.
30. Excommunication by a pope or any prelate is not to be feared since it is a
censure of
antichrist.
31. Those who found religious houses sin, and those who enter them belong to
the
devil.
32. It is against Christ's command to enrich the clergy.
33. Pope Silvester and the emperor Constantine erred in endowing the church.
34. All the members of mendicant orders are heretics, and those who give them
alms are
excommunicated.
35. Those who enter a religious or other order thereby become incapable of
observing
God's commands, and consequently of reaching the kingdom of heaven, unless they
leave
them.
36. The pope with all his clerics who have property are heretics, for the very
reason
that they have property; and so are all who abet them, namely all secular lords
and other
laity.
37. The Roman church is Satan's synagogue; and the pope is not the immediate
and
proximate vicar of Christ and the apostles.
38. The decretal letters are apocryphal and seduce people from Christ's faith,
and
clerics who study them are fools.
39. The emperor and secular lords were seduced by the devil to endow the church
with
temporal goods.
40. The election of a pope by the cardinals was introduced by the devil.
41. It is not necessary for salvation to believe that the Roman church is
supreme among
the other churches. [23 ]
42. It is ridiculous to believe in the indulgences of popes and bishops.
43. Oaths taken to confirm civil commerce and contracts between people are
unlawful.
44. Augustine, Benedict and Bernard are damned, unless they repented of having
owned
property and of having founded and entered religious orders; and thus they are
all
heretics from the pope down to the lowest religious.
45. All religious orders alike were introduced by the devil.
[Condemnation of Wyclif's books]
This same John Wyclif wrote books called by him Dialogus and Trialogus and many
other
treatises, works and pamphlets in which he included and taught the above and
many other
damnable articles. He issued the books for public reading, in order to publish
his
perverse doctrine, and from them have followed many scandals, losses and
dangers
to souls
in various regions, especially in the kingdoms of England and Bohemia. Masters
and
doctors of the universities and houses of study at Oxford and Prague, opposing
with God's
strength these articles and books, later refuted the above articles in
scholastic form.
They were condemned, moreover, by the most reverend fathers who were then the
archbishops
and bishops of Canterbury, York and Prague, legates of the apostolic see in the
kingdoms
of England and of Bohemia. The said archbishop of Prague, commissary of the
apostolic see
in this matter, also judicially decreed that the books of the same John Wyclif
were to be
burnt and he forbade the reading of those that survived.
After these things had again been brought to the notice of the apostolic see
and
a
general council, the Roman pontiff condemned the said books, treatises and
pamphlets at
the lately held council of Rome [24 ] , ordering them to be publicly burnt and
strictly
forbidding anyone called a Christian to dare to read, expound, hold or make any
use of
any one or more of the said books, volumes, treatises and pamphlets, or even to
cite them
publicly or privately, except in order to refute them. In order that this
dangerous and
most foul doctrine might be eliminated from the church's midst, he ordered, by
his
apostolic authority and under pain of ecclesiastical censure, that all such
books,
treatises, volumes and pamphlets should be diligently sought out by the local
ordinaries
and should then be publicly burnt; and he added that if necessary those who do
not obey
should be proceeded against as if they were promoters of heresy.
This sacred synod has had the aforesaid forty-five articles examined and
frequently
considered by many most reverend fathers, cardinals of the Roman church,
bishops, abbots,
masters of theology, doctors in both laws and many notable persons. After the
articles
had been examined it was found, as indeed is the case, that some of them,
indeed
many,
were and are notoriously heretical and have already been condemned by holy
fathers,
others are not Catholic but erroneous, others scandalous and blasphemous, some
offensive
to the ears of the devout and some rash and seditious. It was also found that
his books
contain many other similar articles and introduce into God's church teaching
that is
unsound and hostile to faith and morals. This holy synod, therefore, in the
name
of our
lord Jesus Christ, in ratifying and approving the sentences of the aforesaid
archbishops
and of the council of Rome, repudiates and condemns for ever, by this decree,
the
aforesaid articles and each one of them in particular, and the books of John
Wyclif
called by him Dialogus and Trialogus, and the same author's other books,
volumes,
treatises and pamphlets (no matter what name these may go under, and for which
purpose
this description is to be regarded as an adequate listing of them). It forbids
the
reading, teaching, expounding and citing of the said books or of any one of
them
in
particular, unless it is for the purpose of refuting them. It forbids each and
every
Catholic henceforth, under pain of anathema, to preach, teach or affirm in
public the
said articles or any one of them in particular, or to teach, approve or hold
the
said
books, or to refer to them in any way, unless this is done, as has been said,
for the
purpose of refuting them. It orders, moreover, that the aforesaid books,
treatises,
volumes and pamphlets are to be burnt in public, in accordance with the decree
of the
synod of Rome, as stated above. This holy synod orders local ordinaries to
attend with
vigilance to the execution and due observance of these things, insofar as each
one is
responsible, in accordance with the law and canonical sanctions.
[Condemnation of 260 other articles of Wyclif] [25 ]
When the doctors and masters of the university of Oxford examined the aforesaid
written
works, they found 260 articles in addition to the 45 articles that have been
mentioned.
Some of them coincide in meaning with the 45 articles, even if not in the forms
of words
used. Some of them, as has been said, were and are heretical, some seditious,
some
erroneous, others rash, some scandalous, others unsound, and almost all of them
contrary
to good morals and the Catholic truth. They were therefore condemned by the
said
university in correct and scholastic form. This most holy synod, therefore,
after
deliberating as mentioned above, repudiates and condemns the said articles and
each one
of them in particular; and it forbids, commands and decrees in the same way as
for the
other 45 articles. We order the contents of these 260 articles to be included
below [26 ]
.
[The council pronounces John Wyclif a heretic, condemns his memory and orders
his bones
to be exhumed]
Furthermore, a process was begun, on the authority or by decree of the Roman
council, and
at the command of the church and of the apostolic see, after a due interval of
time, for
the condemnation of the said Wyclif and his memory. Invitations and
proclamations were
issued summoning those who wished to defend him and his memory, if any still
existed.
However, nobody appeared who was willing to defend him or his memory. Witnesses
were
examined by commissaries appointed by the reigning lord pope John and by this
sacred
council, regarding the said Wyclif's final impenitence and obstinacy. Legal
proof was
thus provided, in accordance with all due observances, as the order of law
demands in a
matter of this kind, regarding his impenitence and final obstinacy. This was
proved by
clear indications from legitimate witnesses. This holy synod, therefore, at the
instance
of the procurator-fiscal and since a decree was issued to the effect that
sentence should
be heard on this day, declares, defines and decrees that the said John Wyclif
was a
notorious and obstinate heretic who died in heresy, and it anathematises him
and
condemns
his memory. It decrees and orders that his body and bones are to be exhumed, if
they can
be identified among the corpses of the faithful, and to be scattered far from a
burial
place of the church, in accordance with canonical and lawful sanctions.
SESSION 9 - 13 May 1415
[Pope John is publicly summoned for the second time and an inquiry against him
is
decreed.]
SESSION 10 - 14 May 1415
[John XXIII is summoned for the third time, he is accused of contumacy and is
suspended
from the papacy.]
SESSION 11 - 25 May 1415
[Pope John XXIII is publicly charged and forty-four articles against him are
produced.]
SESSION 12 - 29 May 1415
[Decree stating that the process for electing a pope, if the see happens to be
vacant,
may not begin without the council's express consent [27 ] ]
This most holy general synod of Constance, representing the Catholic Church,
legitimately
assembled in the holy Spirit, for the eradication of the present schism and
errors, for
bringing about the reform of the church in head and members, and in order that
the unity
of the church may be obtained more easily, quickly and freely, pronounces,
determines,
decrees and ordains that if it happens that the apostolic see becomes vacant,
by
whatever
means this may happen, then the process of electing the next supreme pontiff
may
not
begin without the deliberation and consent of this sacred general council. If
the
contrary is done then it is by this very fact, by the authority of the said
sacred
council, null and void. Nobody may accept anyone elected to the papacy in
defiance of
this decree, nor in any way adhere to or obey him as pope, under pain of
eternal
damnation and of becoming a supporter of the said schism. Those who make the
election in
such a case, as well as the person elected, if he consents, and those who
adhere
to him,
are to be punished in the forms prescribed by this sacred council. The said
holy
synod,
moreover, for the good of the church's unity, suspends all positive laws, even
those
promulgated in general councils, and their statutes, ordinances, customs and
privileges,
by whomsoever they may have been granted, and penalties promulgated against any
persons,
insofar as these may in any way impede the effect of this decree.
[Sentence deposing pope John XXIII]
In the name of the holy and undivided Trinity, Father and Son and holy Spirit
Amen. This
most holy general synod of Constance, legitimately assembled in the holy
Spirit,
having
invoked Christ's name and holding God alone before its eyes, having seen the
articles
drawn up and presented in this case against the lord pope John XXIII, the
proofs
brought
forward, his spontaneous submission and the whole process of the case, and
having
deliberated maturely on them, pronounces, decrees and declares by this
definitive
sentence which it commits to writing: that the departure of the aforesaid lord
pope John
XXIII from this city of Constance and from this sacred general council,
secretly
and at a
suspicious hour of the night, in disguised and indecent dress, was and is
unlawful,
notoriously scandalous to God's church and to this council, disturbing and
damaging for
the church's peace and unity, supportive of this long-standing schism, and at
variance
with the vow, promise and oath made by the said lord pope John to God, to the
church and
to this sacred council; that the said lord pope John has been and is a
notorious
simoniac, a notorious destroyer of the goods and rights not only of the Roman
church but
also of other churches and of many pious places, and an evil administrator and
dispenser
of the church's spiritualities and temporalities; that he has notoriously
scandalised
God's church and the christian people by his detestable and dishonest life and
morals,
both before his promotion to the papacy and afterwards until the present time,
that by
the above he has scandalised and is scandalising in a notorious fashion God's
church and
the christian people; that after due and charitable warnings, frequently
reiterated to
him, he obstinately persevered in the aforesaid evils and thereby rendered
himself
notoriously incorrigible; and that on account of the above and other crimes
drawn from
and contained in the said process against him, he should be deprived of and
deposed from,
as an unworthy, useless and damnable person, the papacy and all its spiritual
and
temporal administration. The said holy synod does now remove, deprive and
depose
him. It
declares each and every Christian, of whatever state, dignity or condition, to
be
absolved from obedience, fidelity and oaths to him. It forbids all Christians
henceforth
to recognise him as pope, now that as mentioned he has been deposed from the
papacy, or
to call him pope, or to adhere to or in any way to obey him as pope. The said
holy synod,
moreover, from certain knowledge and its fullness of power, supplies for all
and
singular
defects that may have occurred in the above-mentioned procedures or in any one
of them.
It condemns the said person, by this same sentence, to stay and remain in a
good
and
suitable place, in the name of this sacred general council, in the safe custody
of the
most serene prince lord Sigismund, king of the Romans and of Hungary, etc., and
most
devoted advocate and defender of the universal church, as long as it seems to
the said
general council to be for the good of the unity of God's church that he should
be so
condemned. The said council reserves the right to declare and inflict other
punishments
that should be imposed for the said crimes and faults in accordance with
canonical
sanctions, according as the rigour of justice or the counsel of mercy may
advise.
[Decree to the effect that none of the three contenders for the papacy may be
re-elected
as pope]
The said holy synod decrees, determines and ordains for the good of unity in
God's church
that neither the lord Baldassare de Cossa, recently John XXIII, nor Angelo
Correr nor
Peter de Luna, called Gregory XII and Benedict XIII by their respective
obediences, shall
ever be re-elected as pope. If the contrary happens, it is by this very fact
null and
void. Nobody, of whatever dignity or pre-eminence even if he be emperor, king,
cardinal
or pontiff, may ever adhere to or obey them or any one of them, contrary to
this
decree,
under pain of eternal damnation and of being a supporter of the said schism.
Let
those
who presume to the contrary, if there are any in the future, also be firmly
proceeded
against in other ways, even by invoking the secular arm. [28 ]
SESSION 13 - 15 June 1415
[Condemnation of communion under both kinds, recently revived among the
Bohemians by
Jakoubek of Stribro]
In the name of the holy and undivided Trinity, Father and Son and holy Spirit,
Amen.
Certain people, in some parts of the world, have rashly dared to assert that
the
christian people ought to receive the holy sacrament of the eucharist under the
forms of
both bread and wine. They communicate the laity everywhere not only under the
form of
bread but also under that of wine, and they stubbornly assert that they should
communicate even after a meal, or else without the need of a fast, contrary to
the
church's custom which has been laudably and sensibly approved, from the
church's
head
downwards, but which they damnably try to repudiate as sacrilegious. Therefore
this
present general council of Constance, legitimately assembled in the holy
Spirit,
wishing
to provide for the safety of the faithful against this error, after long
deliberation by
many persons learned in divine and human law, declares, decrees and defines
that,
although Christ instituted this venerable sacrament after a meal and ministered
it to his
apostles under the forms of both bread and wine, nevertheless and
notwithstanding this,
the praiseworthy authority of the sacred canons and the approved custom of the
church
have and do retain that this sacrament ought not to be celebrated after a meal
nor
received by the faithful without fasting, except in cases of sickness or some
other
necessity as permitted by law or by the church. Moreover, just as this custom
was
sensibly introduced in order to avoid various dangers and scandals, so with
similar or
even greater reason was it possible to introduce and sensibly observe the
custom
that,
although this sacrament was received by the faithful under both kinds in the
early
church, nevertheless later it was received under both kinds only by those
confecting it,
and by the laity only under the form of bread. For it should be very firmly
believed, and
in no way doubted, that the whole body and blood of Christ are truly contained
under both
the form of bread and the form of wine. Therefore, since this custom was
introduced for
good reasons by the church and holy fathers, and has been observed for a very
long time,
it should be held as a law which nobody may repudiate or alter at will without
the
church's permission. To say that the observance of this custom or law is
sacrilegious or
illicit must be regarded as erroneous. Those who stubbornly assert the opposite
of the
aforesaid are to be confined as heretics and severely punished by the local
bishops or
their officials or the inquisitors of heresy in the kingdoms or provinces in
which
anything is attempted or presumed against this decree, according to the
canonical and
legitimate sanctions that have been wisely established in favour of the
Catholic
faith
against heretics and their supporters.
[That no priest, under pain of excommunication, may communicate the people
under
the
forms of both bread and wine]
This holy synod also decrees and declares, regarding this matter, that
instructions are
to be sent to the most reverend fathers and lords in Christ, patriarchs,
primates,
archbishops, bishops, and their vicars in spirituals, wherever they may be, in
which they
are to be commissioned and ordered on the authority of this sacred council and
under pain
of excommunication, to punish effectively those who err against this decree.
They may
receive back into the church's fold those who have gone astray by communicating
the
people under the forms of both bread and wine, and have taught this, provided
they repent
and after a salutary penance, in accordance with the measure of their fault,
has
been
enjoined upon them. They are to repress as heretics, however, by means of the
church's
censures and even if necessary by calling in the help of the secular arm, those
of them
whose hearts have become hardened and who are unwilling to return to penance.
From this point on the council becomes a duly convened ecumenical council, all
previous
sessions being ultra-vires.
SESSION 14 - 4 July 1415
[29 ]
[Uniting of the followers of pope Gregory XII and of the former pope John
XXIII,
now that
both men have abdicated]
In order that the reunion of the church may be possible and that a beginning
may
be made
which is fitting and pleasing to God, since the most important part of any
matter is its
beginning, and in order that the two obediences--namely the one claiming that
the lord
John XXIII was formerly pope and the other claiming that the lord Gregory XII
is
pope--
may be united together under Christ as head, this most holy general synod of
Constance,
legitimately assembled in the holy Spirit and representing the Catholic Church,
accepts
in all matters the convoking, authorising, approving and confirming that is now
being
made in the name of the lord who is called Gregory XII by those obedient to
him,
insofar
as it seems to pertain to him to do this, since the certainty obtained by
taking
a
precaution harms nobody and benefits all, and it decrees and declares that the
aforesaid
two obediences are joined and united in the one body of our lord Jesus Christ
and of this
sacred universal general council, in the name of the Father and of the Son and
of the
holy Spirit.
[Decree stating that the election of the Roman pontiff is to be made in the
manner and
form to be laid down by the sacred council, and that the council shall not be
dissolved
until the election of the next Roman pontiff has been made]
The most holy general synod of Constance, etc., enacts, pronounces, ordains and
decrees,
in order that God's holy church may be provided for better, more genuinely and
more
securely, that the next election of the future Roman pontiff is to be made in
the manner,
form, place, time and way that shall be decided upon by the sacred council;
that
the same
council can and may henceforth declare fit, accept and designate, in the manner
and form
that then seems suitable, any persons for the purposes of this election,
whether
by
active or by passive voice, of whatever state or obedience they are or may have
been, and
any other ecclesiastical acts and all other suitable things, notwithstanding
any
proceedings, penalties or sentences; and that the sacred council shall not be
dissolved
until the said election has been held. The said holy synod therefore exhorts
and
requires
the most victorious prince lord Sigismund, king of the Romans and of Hungary,
as
the
church's devoted advocate and as the sacred council's defender and protector,
to
direct
all his efforts to this end and to promise on his royal word that he wishes to
do this
and to order letters of his majesty to be made out for this purpose.
[The council approves Gregory XII's resignation]
The most holy general synod of Constance, legitimately assembled in the holy
Spirit,
representing the universal Catholic Church, accepts, approves and commends, in
the name
of the Father, the Son and the holy Spirit, the cession renunciation and
resignation made
on behalf of the lord who was called Gregory XII in his obedience, by the
magnificent and
powerful lord Charles Malatesta. here present, his irrevocable procurator for
this
business, of the right, title and possession that he had, or may have had, in
regard to
the papacy. [30 ]
SESSION 15 - 6 July 1415
[Sentence condemning 260 articles Wyclif] [31 ]
The books and pamphlets of John Wyclif, of cursed memory, were carefully
examined by the
doctors and masters of Oxford university. They collected 260 unacceptable
articles from
these books and pamphlets and condemned them in scholastic form. This most holy
general
synod of Constance, representing the Catholic Church, legitimately assembled in
the holy
Spirit for the purpose of extirpating schism, errors and heresies, has had all
these
articles examined many times by many most reverend fathers, cardinals of the
Roman
church, bishops, abbots, masters of theology, doctors of both laws, and very
many other
notable persons from various universities. It was found that some, indeed many,
of the
articles thus examined were and are notoriously heretical and have already been
condemned
by holy fathers, some are offensive to the ears of the devout and some are rash
and
seditious. This holy synod, therefore, in the name of our lord Jesus Christ,
repudiates
and condemns, by this perpetual decree, the aforesaid articles and each one of
them in
particular; and it forbids each and every Catholic henceforth, under pain of
anathema, to
preach, teach, or hold the said articles or any one of them. The said holy
synod
orders
local ordinaries and inquisitors of heresy to be vigilant in carrying out these
things
and duly observing them, insofar as each one is responsible, in accordance with
the law
and canonical sanctions. Let anyone who rashly violates the aforesaid decrees
and
sentences of this sacred council be punished, after due warning, by the local
ordinaries
on the authority of this sacred council, notwithstanding any privilege. [32 ]
[Articles of John Wyclif selected from the 260]
1. Just as Christ is God and man at the same time, so the consecrated host is
at
the same
time the body of Christ and true bread. For it is Christ's body at least in
figure and
true bread in nature; or, which comes to the same thing, it is true bread
naturally and
Christ's body figuratively.
2. Since heretical falsehood about the consecrated host is the most important
point in
individual heresies, I therefore declare to modern heretics, in order that this
falsehood
may be eradicated from the church, that they cannot explain or understand an
accident
without a subject. And therefore all these heretical sects belong to the number
of those
who ignore the fourth chapter of John: We worship what we know.
3. I boldly foretell to all these sects and their accomplices that even by the
time
Christ and all the church triumphant come at the final judgment riding at the
trumpet
blast of the angel Gabriel, they shall still not have proved to the faithful
that the
sacrament is an accident without a subject.
4. Just as John was Elias in a figurative sense and not in person, so the bread
on the
altar is Christ's body in a figurative sense. And the words, This is my body,
are
unambiguously figurative, just like the statement "John is Elias".
5. The fruit of this madness whereby it is pretended that there can be an
accident
without a subject is to blaspheme against God, to scandalise the saints and to
deceive
the church by means of false doctrines about accidents.
6. Those who claim that the children of the faithful dying without sacramental
baptism
will not be saved, are stupid and presumptuous in saying this.
7. The slight and short confirmation by bishops, with whatever extra solemnised
rites,
was introduced at the devil's suggestion so that the people might be deluded in
the
church's faith and the solemnity and necessity of bishops might be believed in
the more.
8. As for the oil with which bishops anoint boys and the linen cloth which goes
around
the head, it seems that this is a trivial rite which is unfounded in scripture;
and that
this confirmation, which was introduced after the apostles, blasphemes against
God.
9. Oral confession to a priest, introduced by Innocent [33 ] , is not as
necessary to
people as he claimed. For if anyone offends his brother in thought, word or
deed, then it
suffices to repent in thought, word or deed.
10. It is a grave and unsupported practice for a priest to hear the confessions
of the
people in the way that the Latins use.
11. In these words, You are clean, but not all are, the devil has laid a snare
of the
unfaithful ones in order to catch the Christian's foot. For he introduced
private
confession, which cannot be justified, and after the person's malice has been
revealed to
the confessor, as he decreed in the law, it is not revealed to the people.
12. It is a probable conjecture that a person who lives rightly is a deacon or
a
priest.
For just as I infer that this person is John, so I recognise by a probable
conjecture
that this person, by his holy life, has been placed by God in such an office or
state.
13. The probable evidence for such a state is to be taken from proof provided
by
the
person's deeds and not from the testimony of the person ordaining him. For God
can place
someone in such a state without the need of an instrument of this kind, no
matter whether
the instrument is worthy or unworthy. There is no more probable evidence than
the
person's life. Therefore if there is present a holy life and Catholic doctrine,
this
suffices for the church militant. (Error at the beginning and at the end.)
14. The bad life of a prelate means that his subjects do not receive orders and
the other
sacraments. They can receive them from such persons, however, when there is
urgent need,
if they devoutly beseech God to supply on behalf of his diabolical ministers
the
actions
and purpose of the office to which they have bound themselves by oath.
15. People of former times would copulate with each other out of desire for
temporal gain
or for mutual help or to relieve concupiscence, even when they had no hope of
offspring;
for they were truly copulating as married persons. [34 ]
16. The words, I will take you as wife, are more suitable for the marriage
contract than,
I take you as wife. And the first words ought not to be annulled by the second
words
about the present, when someone contracts with one wife in the words referring
to the
future and afterwards with another wife in those referring to the present.
17. The pope, who falsely calls himself the servant of God's servants, has no
status in
the work of the gospel but only in the work of the world. If he has any rank,
it
is in
the order of demons, of those who serve God rather in a blameworthy way.
18. The pope does not dispense from simony or from a rash vow, since he is the
chief
simoniac who rashly vows to preserve, to his damnation, his status here on the
way.
(Error at the end.)
19. That the pope is supreme pontiff is ridiculous. Christ approved such a
dignity
neither in Peter nor in anyone else.
20. The pope is antichrist made manifest. Not only this particular person but
also the
multitude of popes, from the time of the endowment of the church, of cardinals,
of
bishops and of their other accomplices, make up the composite, monstrous person
of
antichrist. This is not altered by the fact that Gregory and other popes, who
did many
good and fruitful things in their lives, finally repented.
21. Peter and Clement, together with the other helpers in the faith, were not
popes but
God's helpers in the work of building up the church of our lord Jesus Christ.
22. To say that papal pre-eminence originated with the faith of the gospel is
as
false as
to say that every error arose from the original truth.
23. There are twelve procurators and disciples of antichrist: the pope,
cardinals,
patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, archdeacons, officials, deans, monks, canons
with their
two-peaked hats, the recently introduced pseudo-friars, and pardoners.
24. It is clear that whoever is the humbler, of greater service to the church,
and the
more fervent in Christ's love towards his church, is the greater in the church
militant
and to be reckoned the most immediate vicar of Christ.
25. Whoever holds any of God's goods unjustly, is taking the things of others
by
rapine,
theft or robbery.
26. Neither the depositions of witnesses, nor a judge's sentence, nor physical
possession, nor inheritance, nor an exchange between persons, nor a gift, nor
all such
things taken together, confer dominion or a right to anything upon a person
without
grace. (An error, if it is understood as referring to sanctifying grace.)
27. Unless the interior law of charity is present, nobody has more or less
authority or
righteousness on account of charters or bulls. We ought not to lend or give
anything to a
sinner so long as we know that he is such, for thus we would be assisting a
traitor of
our God.
28. Just as a prince or a lord does not keep the title of his office while he
is
in
mortal sin, except in name and equivocally, so it is with a pope, bishop or
priest while
he has fallen into mortal sin.
29. Everyone habitually in mortal sin lacks dominion of any kind and the licit
use of an
action, even if it be good in its kind.
30. It is known from the principles of the faith that a person in mortal sin,
sins
mortally in every action.
31. In order to have true secular dominion, the lord must be in a state of
righteousness.
Therefore nobody in mortal sin is lord of anything.
32. All modern religious necessarily become marked as hypocrites. For their
profession
demands that they fast, act and clothe themselves in a particular way, and thus
they
observe everything differently from other people.
33. All private religion as such savours of imperfection and sin whereby a
person is
indisposed to serve God freely.
34. A private religious order or rule savours of a blasphemous and arrogant
presumption
towards God. And the religious of such orders dare to exalt themselves above
the
apostles
by the hypocrisy of defending their religion.
35. Christ does not teach in scripture about any kind of religious order in
antichrist's
chapter. Therefore it is not his good pleasure that there should be such
orders.
The
chapter is composed, however, of the following twelve types: the pope,
cardinals,
patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, archdeacons, officials, deans, monks, canons,
friars of
the four orders, and pardoners.
36. I infer as evident from the faith and works of the four sects--which are
the
caesarean clergy, the various monks, the various canons, and the friars-that
nobody
belonging to them is a member of Christ in the catalogue of the saints, unless
he
forsakes in the end the sect which he stupidly embraced.
37. Paul was once a pharisee but abandoned the sect for the better sect of
Christ, with
his permission. This is the reason why cloistered persons, of whatever sect or
rule, or
by whatever stupid vow they may be bound, ought freely to cast off these
chains,
at
Christ's command, and freely join the sect of Christ.
38. It is sufficient for the laity that at some times they give tithes of their
produce
to God's servants. In this way they are always giving to the church, even if
not
always
to the caesarean clergy deputed by the pope or by his dependents.
39. The powers that are claimed by the pope and the other four new sects are
pretended
and were diabolically introduced in order to seduce subjects; such are
excommunications
by caesarean prelates, citations, imprisoning, and the sale of money rents.
40. Many simple priests surpass prelates in such power. Indeed, it appears to
the
faithful that greatness of spiritual power belongs more to a son who imitates
Christ in
his way of life than to a prelate who has been elected by cardinals and similar
apostates.
41. The people may withhold tithes, offerings and other private alms from
unworthy
disciples of Christ, since God's law requires this. The curse or censure
imposed
by
antichrist's disciples is not to be feared but rather is to be received with
joy. The
lord pope and bishops and all religious or simple clerics, with titles to
perpetual
possession, ought to renounce them into the hands of the secular arm. If they
stubbornly
refuse, they ought to be compelled to do so by the secular lords.
42. There is no greater heretic or antichrist than the cleric who teaches that
it is
lawful for priests and levites of the law of grace to be endowed with temporal
possessions. The clerics who teach this are heretics or blasphemers if ever
there were
any.
43. Temporal lords not only can take away goods of fortune from a church that
is
habitually sinning, nor is it only lawful for them to do so, but indeed they
are
obliged
to do so under pain of eternal damnation.
44. God does not approve that anyone be judged or condemned by civil law.
45. If an objection is made against those who oppose endowments for the church,
by
pointing to Benedict, Gregory and Bernard, who possessed few temporal goods in
poverty,
it may be said in reply that they repented at the end. If you object further
that I
merely pretend that these saints finally repented of their falling away from
God's law in
this way, then you may teach that they are saints and I will teach that they
repented at
the end.
46. If we ought to believe in sacred scripture and in reason, it is clear that
Christ's
disciples do not have the authority to exact temporal goods by means of
censures, and
those who attempt this are sons of Eli and of Belial.
47. Each essence has one suppositum, following which another suppositum, equal
to the
first, is produced. This is the most perfect immanent action possible to
nature.
48. Each essence, whether corporeal or incorporeal, is common to three
supposita; and the
properties, the accidents and the operations inhere in common in all of them.
49. God cannot annihilate anything, nor increase or diminish the world, but he
can create
souls up to a certain number, and not beyond it.
50. It is impossible for two corporeal substances to be co-extensive, the one
continuously at rest in a place and the other continuously penetrating the body
of Christ
at rest.
51. Any continuous mathematical line is composed of two, three or four
contiguous points,
or of only a simply finite number of points; and time is, was and will be
composed of
contiguous instants. It is not possible that time and a line, if they exist,
are
composed
of in this way. (The first part is a philosophical error, the last part is an
error with
regard to God's power.)
52. It must be supposed that one corporeal substance was formed at its
beginning
as
composed of indivisibles, and that it occupies every possible place.
53. Every person is God.
54. Every creature is God.
55. Every being is everywhere, since every being is God.
56. All things that happen, happen from absolute necessity.
57. A baptised child foreknown as damned will necessarily live long enough to
sin in the
holy Spirit, wherefore it will merit to be condemned for ever. Thus no fire can
burn the
child until that time or instant.
58. I assert as a matter of faith that everything that will happen, will happen
of
necessity. Thus if Paul is foreknown as damned, he cannot truly repent; that
is,
he
cannot cancel the sin of final impenitence by contrition, or be under the
obligation not
to have the sin.
[Sentence against John Hus]
The most holy general council of Constance, divinely assembled and representing
the
Catholic Church, for an everlasting record. Since a bad tree is wont to bear
bad
fruit,
as truth itself testifies, so it is that John Wyclif, of cursed memory, by his
deadly
teaching, like a poisonous root, has brought forth many noxious sons, not in
Christ Jesus
through the gospel, as once the holy fathers brought forth faithful sons, but
rather
contrary to the saving faith of Christ, and he has left these sons as
successors
to his
perverse teaching. This holy synod of Constance is compelled to act against
these men as
against spurious and illegitimate sons, and to cut away their errors from the
Lord's
field as if they were harmful briars, by means of vigilant care and the knife
of
ecclesiastical authority, lest they spread as a cancer to destroy others.
Although,
therefore, it was decreed at the sacred general council recently held at Rome
[35 ] that
the teaching of John Wyclif, of cursed memory, should be condemned and the
books
of his
containing this teaching should be burnt as heretical; although his teaching
was
in fact
condemned and his books burnt as containing false and dangerous doctrine; and
although a
decree of this kind was approved by the authority of this present sacred
council
[36 ] ;
nevertheless a certain John Hus, here present in person at this sacred council,
who is a
disciple not of Christ but rather of the heresiarch John Wyclif, boldly and
rashly
contravening the condemnation and the decree after their enactment, has taught,
asserted
and preached many errors and heresies of John Wyclif which have been condemned
both by
God's church and by other reverend fathers in Christ, lord archbishops and
bishops of
various kingdoms, and masters in theology at many places of study. He has done
this
especially by publicly resisting in the schools and in sermons, together with
his
accomplices, the condemnation in scholastic form of the said articles of John
Wyclif
which has been made many times at the university of Prague, and he has declared
the said
John Wyclif to be a Catholic man and an evangelical doctor, thus supporting his
teaching,
before a multitude of clergy and people. He has asserted and published certain
articles
listed below and many others, which are condemned and which are, as is well
known,
contained in the books and pamphlets of the said John Hus. Full information has
been
obtained about the aforesaid matters, and there has been careful deliberation
by
the most
reverend fathers in Christ, lord cardinals of the holy Roman church, patriarchs
archbishops, bishops and other prelates and doctors of holy scripture and of
both laws,
in large numbers. This most holy synod of Constance therefore declares and
defines that
the articles listed below, which have been found on examination, by many
masters
in
sacred scripture, to be contained in his books and pamphlets written in his own
hand, and
which the same John Hus at a public hearing, before the fathers and prelates of
this
sacred council, has confessed to be contained in his books and pamphlets, are
not
Catholic and should not be taught to be such but rather many of them are
erroneous,
others scandalous, others offensive to the ears of the devout, many of them are
rash and
seditious, and some of them are notoriously heretical and have long ago been
rejected and
condemned by holy fathers and by general councils, and it strictly forbids them
to be
preached, taught or in any way approved. Moreover, since the articles listed
below are
explicitly contained in his books or treatises, namely in the book entitled De
ecclesia
and in his other pamphlets, this most holy synod therefore reproves and
condemns
the
aforesaid books and his teaching, as well as the other treatises and pamphlets
written by
him in Latin or in Czech, or translated by one or more other persons into any
other
language, and it decrees and determines that they should be publicly and
solemnly burnt
in the presence of the clergy and people in the city of Constance and
elsewhere.
On
account of the above, moreover, all his teaching is and shall be deservedly
suspect
regarding the faith and is to be avoided by all of Christ's faithful. In order
that this
pernicious teaching may be eliminated from the midst of the church, this holy
synod also
orders that local ordinaries make careful inquiry about treatises and pamphlets
of this
kind, using the church's censures and even if necessary the punishment due for
supporting
heresy, and that they be publicly burnt when they have been found. This same
holy synod
decrees that local ordinaries and inquisitors of heresy are to proceed against
any who
violate or defy this sentence and decree as if they were persons suspected of
heresy.
[Sentence of degradation against J. Hus]
Moreover, the acts and deliberations of the inquiry into heresy against the
aforesaid
John Hus have been examined. There was first a faithful and full account made
by
the
commissioners deputed for the case and by other masters of theology and doctors
of both
laws, concerning the acts and deliberations and the depositions of very many
trustworthy
witnesses. These depositions were openly and publicly read out to the said John
Hus
before the fathers and prelates of this sacred council. It is very clearly
established
from the depositions of these witnesses that the said John has taught many
evil,
scandalous and seditious things, and dangerous heresies, and has publicly
preached them
during many years. This most holy synod of Constance, invoking Christ's name
and
having
God alone before its eyes, therefore pronounces, decrees and defines by this
definitive
sentence, which is here written down, that the said John Hus was and is a true
and
manifest heretic and has taught and publicly preached, to the great offence of
the divine
Majesty, to the scandal of the universal church and to the detriment of the
Catholic
faith, errors and heresies that have long ago been condemned by God's church
and
many
things that are scandalous, offensive to the ears of the devout, rash and
seditious, and
that he has even despised the keys of the church and ecclesiastical censures.
He
has
persisted in these things for many years with a hardened heart. He has greatly
scandalised Christ's faithful by his obstinacy since, bypassing the church's
intermediaries, he has made appeal directly to our lord Jesus Christ, as to the
supreme
judge, in which he has introduced many false, harmful and scandalous things to
the
contempt of the apostolic see, ecclesiastical censures and the keys. This holy
synod
therefore pronounces the said John Hus, on account of the aforesaid and many
other
matters, to have been a heretic and it judges him to be considered and
condemned
as a
heretic, and it hereby condemns him. It rejects the said appeal of his as
harmful and
scandalous and offensive to the church's jurisdiction. It declares that the
said
John Hus
seduced the christian people, especially in the kingdom of Bohemia, in his
public sermons
and in his writings; and that he was not a true preacher of Christ's gospel to
the same
christian people, according to the exposition of the holy doctors, but rather
was a
seducer. Since this most holy synod has learnt from what it has seen and heard,
that the
said John Hus is obstinate and incorrigible and as such does not desire to
return to the
bosom of holy mother the church, and is unwilling to abjure the heresies and
errors which
he has publicly defended and preached, this holy synod of Constance therefore
declares
and decrees that the same John Hus is to be deposed and degraded from the order
of the
priesthood and from the other orders held by him. It charges the reverend
fathers in
Christ, the archbishop of Milan and the bishops of Feltre Asti, Alessandria,
Bangor and
Lavour with duly carrying out the degradation in the presence of this most holy
synod, in
accordance with the procedure required by law.
[Sentence condemning J. Hus to the stake]
This holy synod of Constance, seeing that God's church has nothing more that it
can do,
relinquishes John Hus to the judgment of the secular authority and decrees that
he is to
be relinquished to the secular court.
[Condemned articles of J. Hus]
1. There is only one holy universal church, which is the total number of those
predestined to salvation. It therefore follows that the universal holy church
is
only
one, inasmuch as there is only one number of all those who are predestined to
salvation.
2. Paul was never a member of the devil, even though he did certain acts which
are
similar to the acts of the church's enemies.
3. Those foreknown as damned are not parts of the church, for no part of the
church can
finally fall away from it, since the predestinating love that binds the church
together
does not fail.
4. The two natures, the divinity and the humanity, are one Christ.
5. A person foreknown to damnation is never part of the holy church, even if he
is in a
state of grace according to present justice; a person predestined to salvation
always
remains a member of the church, even though he may fall away for a time from
adventitious
grace, for he keeps the grace of predestination.
6. The church is an article of faith in the following sense: to regard it as
the
convocation of those predestined to salvation, whether or not it be in a state
of grace
according to present justice.
7. Peter neither was nor is the head of the holy Catholic Church.
8. Priests who live in vice in any way pollute the power of the priesthood, and
like
unfaithful sons are untrustworthy in their thinking about the church's seven
sacraments,
about the keys, offices, censures, customs, ceremonies and sacred things of the
church,
about the veneration of relics, and about indulgences and orders.
9. The papal dignity originated with the emperor, and the primacy and
institution of the
pope emanated from imperial power.
10. Nobody would reasonably assert of himself or of another, without
revelation,
that he
was the head of a particular holy church; nor is the Roman pontiff the head of
the Roman
church.
11. It is not necessary to believe that any particular Roman pontiff is the
head
of any
particular holy church, unless God has predestined him to salvation.
12. Nobody holds the place of Christ or of Peter unless he follows his way of
life, since
there is no other discipleship that is more appropriate nor is there another
way
to
receive delegated power from God, since there is required for this office of
vicar a
similar way of life as well as the authority of the one instituting.
13. The pope is not the manifest and true successor of the prince of the
apostles, Peter,
if he lives in a way contrary to Peter's. If he seeks avarice, he is the vicar
of Judas
Iscariot. Likewise, cardinals are not the manifest and true successors of the
college of
Christ's other apostles unless they live after the manner of the apostles,
keeping the
commandments and counsels of our lord Jesus Christ.
14. Doctors who state that anybody subjected to ecclesiastical censure, if he
refuses to
be corrected, should be handed over to the judgment of the secular authority,
are
undoubtedly following in this the chief priests, the scribes and the pharisees
who handed
over to the secular authority Christ himself, since he was unwilling to obey
them in all
things, saying, It is not lawful for us to put any man to death; these gave him
to the
civil judge, so that such men are even greater murderers than Pilate.
15. Ecclesiastical obedience was invented by the church's priests, without the
express
authority of scripture.
16. The immediate division of human actions is between those that are virtuous
and those
that are wicked. Therefore, if a man is wicked and does something, he acts
wickedly; if
he is virtuous and does something, he acts virtuously. For just as wickedness,
which is
called crime or mortal sin, infects all the acts of a wicked man, so virtue
gives life to
all the acts of a virtuous man.
17. A priest of Christ who lives according to his law, knows scripture and has
a
desire
to edify the people, ought to preach, notwithstanding a pretended
excommunication. And
further on: if the pope or any superior orders a priest so disposed not to
preach, the
subordinate ought not to obey.
18. Whoever enters the priesthood receives a binding duty to preach; and this
mandate
ought to be carried out, notwithstanding a pretended excommunication.
19. By the church's censures of excommunication, suspension and interdict the
clergy
subdue the laity, for the sake of their own exaltation, multiply avarice
protect
wickedness and prepare the way for antichrist. The clear sign of this is the
fact that
these censures come from antichrist. In the legal proceedings of the clergy
they
are
called fulminations, which are the principal means whereby the clergy proceed
against
those who uncover antichrist's wickedness, which the clergy has for the most
part usurped
for itself.
20. If the pope is wicked, and especially if he is foreknown to damnation, then
he is a
devil like Judas the apostle, a thief and a son of perdition and is not the
head
of the
holy church militant since he is not even a member of it.
21. The grace of predestination is the bond whereby the body of the church and
each of
its members is indissolubly joined with the head.
22. The pope or a prelate who is wicked and foreknown to damnation is a pastor
only in an
equivocal sense, and truly is a thief and a robber.
23. The pope ought not to be called "most holy" even by reason of his office,
for
otherwise even a king ought to be called "most holy" by reason of his office
and
executioners and heralds ought to be called "holy", indeed even the devil would
be called
"holy" since he is an official of God.
24. If a pope lives contrary to Christ, even if he has risen through a right
and
legitimate election according to the established human constitution, he would
have risen
by a way other than through Christ, even granted that he entered upon office by
an
election that had been made principally by God. For, Judas Iscariot was rightly
and
legitimately elected to be an apostle by Jesus Christ who is God, yet he
climbed
into the
sheepfold by another way.
25. The condemnation of the forty-five articles of John Wyclif, decreed by the
doctors,
is irrational and unjust and badly done and the reason alleged by them is
feigned, namely
that none of them is Catholic but each one is either heretical or erroneous or
scandalous.
26. The viva voce agreement upon some person, made according to human custom by
the
electors or by the greater part of them, does not mean by itself that the
person
has been
legitimately elected or that by this very fact he is the true and manifest
successor or
vicar of the apostle Peter or of another apostle in an ecclesiastical office.
For, it is
to the works of the one elected that we should look irrespective of whether the
manner of
the election was good or bad. For, the more plentifully a person acts
meritoriously
towards building up the church, the more copiously does he thereby have power
from God
for this.
27. There is not the least proof that there must be one head ruling the church
in
spiritual matters who always lives with the church militant.
28. Christ would govern his church better by his true disciples scattered
throughout the
world, without these monstrous heads.
29. The apostles and faithful priests of the Lord strenuously governed the
church in
matters necessary for salvation before the office of pope was introduced, and
they would
continue to do this until the day of judgment if--which is very possible--there
is no
pope.
30. Nobody is a civil lord, a prelate or a bishop while he is in mortal sin.
[Sentence condemning John Petit's proposition, "Any tyrant-']
This most holy synod wishes to proceed with special care to the eradication of
errors and
heresies which are growing in various parts of the world, as is its duty and
the
purpose
for which it has assembled. It has recently learnt that various propositions
have been
taught that are erroneous both in the faith and as regards good morals, are
scandalous in
many ways and threaten to subvert the constitution and order of every state.
Among these
propositions this one has been reported: Any tyrant can and ought to be killed,
licitly
and meritoriously, by any of his vassals or subjects, even by means of plots
and
blandishments or flattery, notwithstanding any oath taken, or treaty made with
the
tyrant, and without waiting for a sentence or a command from any judge. This
holy synod,
wishing to oppose this error and to eradicate it completely, declares, decrees
and
defines, after mature deliberation, that this doctrine is erroneous in the
faith
and with
regard to morals, and it rejects and condemns the doctrine as heretical,
scandalous and
seditious and as leading the way through perjury to frauds, deceptions, lies
and
betrayals. It declares, decrees and defines, moreover, that those who
stubbornly
assert
this very pernicious doctrine are heretics and are to be punished as such
according to
canonical and legitimate sanctions. [37 ]
SESSION 16 - 11 July 1415
[Deliberation about the council's legates due to depart with the emperor
Sigismund for
Spain; minor deliberations about the conduct of the council's business.]
SESSION 17 - 15 July 1415
[The emperor's imminent departure from the council is treated of; the council
offers
prayers for his success.]
SESSION 18 - 17 August 1415
[Decrees about various matters to be decided by the council: power is given to
judges to
make decisions, and for pairs of them to hear cases; that bulls of the council
are to be
obeyed; that forgers of conciliar bulls are to be punished in the same way as
forgers of
apostolic letters; that letters are to be despatched regarding the graces
granted by the
former pope John, except expectative and exceptional graces; ambassadors to
Italy are
appointed.]
SESSION 19 - 23 September 1415
[Jerome of Prague finally abjures his faith publicly and solemnly. There is
promulgated
at this session an Ordinance between the friars Minor of the strict observance
and others
of the common life, to put an end to the discords which have arisen in certain
provinces;
another Ordinance by which cases of heresy are committed to certain judges. It
is also
decreed that, notwithstanding safe conducts of emperors and kings and others, a
competent
judge can inquire into heresy; that the lord vice-chancellor shall expedite the
Caroline
constitution [38 ] under a bull of the council; that those with benefices who
are
attending the council shall receive the fruits of their benefices in their
absence, that
the letters regarding provisions to patriarchal, metropolitan and other
churches, which
were granted by the former pope John before his suspension, shall be
despatched.]
SESSION 20 - 21 November 1415
[A warning is decreed against the duke of Austria, on behalf of the bishop of
Trent.]
SESSION 21 - 30 May 1416
[Sentence condemning Jerome of Prague]
In the name of the Lord, Amen. Christ our God and saviour, the true vine whose
Father is
the vine-dresser, said when teaching his disciples and other followers in these
matters:
If anyone does not abide in me, he shall be cast forth as a branch and shall
wither. This
holy synod of Constance is following the teaching and carrying out the commands
of this
sovereign teacher and master in this case of inquiry into heresy which was
started by the
same holy synod. It notes the public talk and loud outcry against the said
master Jerome
of Prague, master of arts, layman. From the acts and proceedings of the case it
is
evident that the said Jerome has held, asserted and taught various heretical
and
erroneous articles, which were long ago condemned by holy fathers, some of
which
are
blasphemous, others scandalous and others offensive to the ears of the devout
as
well as
rash and seditious. They were long ago asserted, preached and taught by John
Wyclif and
John Hus, of cursed memory, and were included in various of their books and
pamphlets.
These articles, doctrines and books of the aforesaid John Wyclif and John Hus,
as well as
the memory of Wyclif, and finally the person of Hus, were condemned and damned
by this
same holy synod and its sentence of heresy. The said Jerome later, during the
course of
this inquiry, in this holy synod, approved and consented to this sentence of
condemnation
and acknowledged and professed the true, Catholic and apostolic faith. He
anathematised
all heresy, especially that for which he had been defamed-and he confessed
himself
defamed--and which John Wyclif and John Hus had taught and held in the past in
their
works, sermons and pamphlets, and on account of which the said Wyclif and Hus,
together
with their dogmas and errors, had been condemned as heretical by this same holy
synod,
and their teaching likewise condemned. He professed acceptance of every
condemnation of
the aforesaid things and swore that he would remain in the truth of the faith,
and that
if he ever dared to think or preach anything to the contrary then he wished to
submit to
the severity of canon law and to be bound to eternal punishment. He offered and
gave this
profession of his, written in his own hand to this holy synod. Many days after
his
profession and abjuration, however, like a dog returning to its vomit, he asked
for a
public hearing to be granted to him in this same holy synod, in order that he
might vomit
forth in public the deadly poison which lay hidden within his breast. The
hearing was
granted to him and he asserted, said and professed in effect, at a public
assembly of the
same synod, that he had wrongly consented to the aforesaid sentence condemning
the said
Wyclif and John Hus and that he had lied in approving the sentence. He did not
fear to
state that he had lied. Indeed, he revoked now and for eternity his confession,
approval
and profession regarding the condemnation of the two men. He asserted that he
had never
read any heresy or error in the books of the said Wyclif and John Hus, even
though it was
clearly proved, before his profession to the sentence on the two men, that he
had
carefully studied, read and taught their books and it is clear that many errors
and
heresies are contained in them. The said Jerome professed, however, that he
held
and
believed what the church holds and believes regarding the sacrament of the
altar
and the
transubstantiation of the bread into the body of Christ, saying that he
believed
in
Augustine and the other doctors of the church more than in Wyclif and Hus. It
is
evident
from the above that the said Jerome adhered to the condemned Wyclif and Hus and
their
errors, and that he was and is a supporter of them. This holy synod has
therefore decreed
and now declares that the said Jerome is to be cast away as a branch that is
rotten,
withered and separated from the vine; and it pronounces, declares and condemns
him as a
heretic who has relapsed into heresy and as an excommunicated and anathematised
person.
SESSION 22 - 15 October 1416
[The treaty of Narbonne, between the king of Aragon, the emperor and the envoys
of the
council, is confirmed [39 ] : the king of Aragon withdraws obedience from
Benedict XIII
and recognises the council of Constance through his envoys.]
SESSION 23 - 5 November 1416
[Beginning of the process against Peter de Luna, called Benedict XIII in his
obedience.]
SESSION 24 - 28 November 1416
[A citation against Peter de Luna, called Benedict XIII in his obedience, is
decreed.]
SESSION 25 - 14 December 1416
[The envoys of the Spanish count of Foix are united with the council in
accordance with the terms of the treaty of Narbonne.]
SESSION 26 - 24 December 1416
[The envoys of the king of Navarre are united with the council in accordance
with the terms of the treaty of Narbonne.]
SESSION 27 - 20 February 1417
[The dispute between Frederick, duke of Austria, and the bishop of Trent is
discussed: a
report is made on the carrying out of the warning decreed in session 20.]
SESSION 28 - 3 March 1417
[The Trent dispute is concluded: Frederick, duke of Austria, is condemned.]
I The articles of Narbonne concerning the unity of the church, which were
agreed
between
the emperor Sigismund and the envoys of the council of Constance on the one
side, and the
envoys of the kings and princes of Benedict XIII's obedience on the other side,
were
published by the council in a general assembly on 13 December 1415 (see Hardt
4,584).
They are printed in Hardt 2, 542-554.
SESSION 29 - 8 March 1417
[Peter de Luna is accused of contumacy.]
SESSION 30 - 10 March 1417
[The process against Peter de Luna continues.]
SESSION 31 - 31 March 1417
[A warning is decreed against Philip, count of Vertus, at the request of the
bishop of
Asti. Other minor deliberations take place.]
SESSION 32 - 1 April 1417
[Peter de Luna is again accused of contumacy and an inquiry about him is
established.]
SESSION 33 - 12 May 1417
[The process against Peter de Luna, who is deemed contumacious, continues.]
SESSION 34 - 5 June 1417
[Everything is made ready for the condemnation of Peter de Luna.]
SESSION 35 - 18 June 1417
[The envoys of the king of Castile are united with the council in accordance
with the
terms of the treaty of Narbonne.]
SESSION 36 - 22 July 1417
[It is decreed that Peter de Luna is to be cited to hear the council's
sentence.]
SESSION 37 - 26 July 1417
[Definitive sentence whereby Peter de Luna, pope Benedict XIII, is divested of
the papacy
and deprived of the faith.]
May this judgment come forth from the face of him who sits on the throne, and
from his
mouth proceeds a double-edged sword, whose scales are just and weights are
true,
who will
come to judge the living and the dead, our lord Jesus Christ, Amen. The Lord is
just and
loves just deeds, his face looks on righteousness. But the Lord looks on those
who do
evil so as to cut off their remembrance from the earth. Let there perish, says
the holy
prophet, the memory of him who did not remember to show mercy and who
persecuted
the poor
and needy. How much more should there perish the memory of Peter de Luna,
called
by some
Benedict XIII, who persecuted and disturbed all people and the universal
church?
For, how
greatly he has sinned against God's church and the entire christian people,
fostering,
nourishing and continuing the schism and division of God's church How ardent
and
frequent
have been the devout and humble prayers, exhortations and requests of kings,
princes and
prelates with which he has been warned in charity, in accordance with the
teaching of the
gospel, to bring peace to the church, to heal its wounds and to reconstitute
its
divided
parts into one structure and one body, as he had sworn to do, and as for a long
time it
was within his power to do ! He was unwilling, however, to listen to their
charitable
admonitions. How many were the persons afterwards sent to attest to him!
Because
he did
not listen at all even to these, it has been necessary, in accordance with the
aforesaid
evangelical teaching of Christ, to say to the church, since he has not listened
even to
her, that he should be treated as a heathen and a publican. All these things
have been
clearly proved by the articles coming from the inquiry into faith and the
schism
held
before this present synod, regarding the above and other matters brought
against
him, as
well as by their truth and notoriety. The proceedings have been correct and
canonical,
all the acts have been correctly and carefully examined and there has been
mature
deliberation. Therefore this same holy general synod, representing the
universal
church
and sitting as a tribunal in the aforesaid inquiry, pronounces, decrees and
declares by
this definitive sentence written here, that the same Peter de Luna, called
Benedict XIII
as has been said, has been and is a perjurer, a cause of scandal to the
universal church,
a promoter and breeder of the ancient schism, that long established fission and
division
in God's holy church, an obstructer of the peace and unity of the said church,
a
schismatic disturber and a heretic, a deviator from the faith, a persistent
violator of
the article of the faith One holy Catholic Church, incorrigible, notorious and
manifest
in his scandal to God's church, and that he has rendered himself unworthy of
every title,
rank, honour and dignity, rejected and cut off by God, deprived by the law
itself of
every right in any way belonging to him in the papacy or pertaining to the
Roman
pontiff
and the Roman church, and cut off from the Catholic Church like a withered
member. This
same holy synod, moreover, as a precautionary measure, since according to
himself he
actually holds the papacy, deprives, deposes and casts out the said Peter from
the papacy
and from being the supreme pontiff of the Roman church and from every title,
rank,
honour, dignity, benefice and office whatsoever. It forbids him to act
henceforth as the
pope or as the supreme and Roman pontiff. It absolves and declares to be
absolved all
Christ's faithful from obedience to him, and from every duty of obedience to
him
and from
oaths and obligations in any way made to him. It forbids each and every one of
Christ's
faithful to obey, respond to or attend to, as if he were pope, the said Peter
de
Luna,
who is a notorious, declared and deposed schismatic and incorrigible heretic,
or
to
sustain or harbour him in any way contrary to the aforesaid, or to offer him
help, advice
or good will. This is forbidden under pain of the offender being counted as a
promoter of
schism and heresy and of being deprived of all benefices, dignities and
ecclesiastical or
secular honours, and under other penalties of the law, even if the dignity is
that of a
bishop, a patriarch, a cardinal, a king or the emperor. If they act contrary to
this
prohibition, they are by this very fact deprived of these things, on the
authority of
this decree and sentence, and they incur the other penalties of the law. This
holy synod,
moreover, declares and decrees that all and singular prohibitions and all
processes,
sentences, constitu- tions, censures and any other things whatsoever that were
issued by
him and might impede the aforesaid, are without effect; and it invalidates,
revokes and
annuls them; saving always the other penalties which the law decrees for the
above cases.
SESSION 38 - 28 July 1417
[Decree about the right to vote of the deputies of the kings of Castile and
Aragon,
concerning which agreement had not been reached among the said deputies in the
previous
session; decrees about other lesser matters.]
SESSION 39 - 9 October 1417
[On general councils]
The frequent holding of general councils is a pre-eminent means of cultivating
the Lord's
patrimony. It roots out the briars, thorns and thistles of heresies, errors and
schisms,
corrects deviations, reforms what is deformed and produces a richly fertile
crop
for the
Lord's vineyard. Neglect of councils, on the other hand, spreads and fosters
the
aforesaid evils. This conclusion is brought before our eyes by the memory of
past times
and reflection on the present situation. For this reason we establish, enact,
decree and
ordain, by a perpetual edict, that general councils shall be held henceforth in
the
following way. The first shall follow in five years immediately after the end
of
this
council, the second in seven years immediately after the end of the next
council, and
thereafter they are to be held every ten years for ever. They are to be held in
places
which the supreme pontiff is bound to nominate and assign within a month before
the end
of each preceding council, with the approval and consent of the council, or
which, in his
default, the council itself is bound to nominate. Thus, by a certain
continuity,
there
will always be either a council in existence or one expected within a given
time. If
perchance emergencies arise, the time may be shortened by the supreme pontiff,
acting on
the advice of his brothers, the cardinals of the Roman church, but it may never
be
prolonged. Moreover, he may not change the place assigned for the next council
without
evident necessity. If an emergency arises whereby it seems necessary to change
the place-
-for example in the case of a siege, war, disease or the like--then the supreme
pontiff
may, with the consent and written endorsement of his aforesaid brothers or of
two-thirds
of them, substitute another place which is suitable and fairly near to the
place
previously assigned. It must, however, be within the same nation unless the
same
or a
similar impediment exists throughout the nation. In the latter case he may
summon the
council to another suitable place which is nearby but within another nation,
and
the
prelates and other persons who are customarily summoned to a council will be
obliged to
come to it as if it had been the place originally assigned. The supreme pontiff
is bound
to announce and publish the change of place or the shortening of time in a
legal
and
solemn form within a year before the date assigned, so that the aforesaid
persons may be
able to meet and hold the council at the appointed time.
[Provision to guard against future schisms]
If it happens--though may it not!--that a schism arises in the future in such a
way that
two or more persons claim to be supreme pontiffs, then the date of the council,
if it is
more than a year off, is to be brought forward to one year ahead; calculating
this from
the day on which two or more of them publicly assumed the insignia of their
pontificates
or on which they began to govern. All prelates and others who are bound to
attend a
council shall assemble at the council without the need for any summons, under
pain of the
law's sanctions and of other penalties which may be imposed by the council, and
let the
emperor and other kings and princes attend either in person or through official
deputies,
as if they had been besought, through the bowels of the mercy of our lord Jesus
Christ,
to put out a common fire. Each of those claiming to be the Roman pontiff is
bound to
announce and proclaim the council as taking place at the end of the year, as
mentioned,
in the previously assigned place; he is bound to do this within a month after
the day on
which he came to know that one or more other persons had assumed the insignia
of
the
papacy or was administering the papacy; and this is under pain of eternal
damnation, of
the automatic loss of any rights that he had acquired in the papacy, and of
being
disqualified both actively and passively from all dignities. He is also bound
to
make the
council known by letter to his rival claimant or claimants, challenging him or
them to a
judicial process, as well as to all prelates and princes, insofar as this is
possible. He
shall go in person to the place of the council at the appointed time, under
pain
of the
aforesaid penalties, and shall not depart until the question of the schism has
been fully
settled by the council. None of the contenders for the papacy, moreover shall
preside as
pope at the council. Indeed, in order that the church may rejoice more freely
and quickly
in one undisputed pastor, all the contenders for the papacy are suspended by
law
as soon
as the council has begun, on the authority of this holy synod, from all
administration;
and let not obedience be given in any way by anyone to them, or to any one of
them until
the question has been settled by the council.
If it happens in the future that the election of a Roman pontiff is brought
about through
fear, which would weigh upon even a steadfast man, or through pressure, then we
declare
that it is of no effect or moment and cannot be ratified or approved by
subsequent
consent even if the state of fear ceases. The cardinals, however, may not
proceed to
another election until a council has reached a decision about the election,
unless the
person elected resigns or dies. If they do proceed to this second election,
then
it is
null by law and both those making the second election and the person elected,
if
he
embarks upon his reign as pope, are deprived by law of every dignity, honour
and
rank--
even cardinalatial or pontifical--and are thereafter ineligible for the same,
even the
papacy itself; and nobody may in any way obey as pope the second person
elected,
under
pain of being a fosterer of schism. In such a case the council is to provide
for
the
election of a pope. It is lawful, however, and indeed all the electors are
bound, or at
least the greater part of them, to move to a safe locality and to make a
statement about
the said fear. The statement is to be made in a prominent place before public
notaries
and important persons as well as before a multitude of the people. They are to
do this as
quickly as they can without danger to their persons, even if there is a threat
of danger
to all their goods. They shall state in their allegation the nature and extent
of the
fear and shall solemnly swear that the allegation is true that they believe
they
can
prove it and that they are not making it out of malice or calumny. Such an
allegation of
fear cannot be delayed in any way until after the next council.
After they have moved and have alleged the fear in the above form, they are
bound to
summon the person elected to a council. If a council is not due for more than a
year
after their summons, then its date shall be brought forward by the law itself
to
only a
year ahead, in the way explained above. The elected person is bound under pain
of the
aforesaid penalties, and the cardinals under pain of automatically losing the
cardinalate
and all their benefices, to announce and proclaim the council within a month
after the
summons, in the way mentioned above, and to make it known as soon as possible.
The
cardinals and other electors are bound to come in person to the place of the
council, at
a suitable time, and to remain there until the end of the affair.
The other prelates are bound to answer the cardinals' summons, as mentioned
above, if the
person elected fails to issue a summons. The latter will not preside at the
council since
he will have been suspended by law from all government of the papacy from the
time the
council begins, and he is not to be obeyed by anyone in any matter under pain
of
the
offender becoming a promoter of schism. If the aforesaid emergencies arise
within a year
before the beginning of a council-namely that more than one person claim to be
pope or
that someone has been elected through fear or pressure--then those who claim to
be pope,
or the one elected through fear or pressure, as well as the cardinals, are
deemed by law
as having been summoned to the council. They are bound, moreover, to appear in
person at
the council, to explain their case and to await the council's judgment. But if
some
emergency happens during the above occurrences whereby it is necessary to
change
the
place of the council--for example a siege or war or disease or some such--then
nevertheless all the aforesaid persons, as well as all prelates and others who
are
obliged to attend a council, are bound to assemble at a neighbouring place
suitable for
the council, as has been said above. Moreover, the greater part of the prelates
who have
moved to a particular place within a month may specify it as the place of the
council to
which they and others are bound to come, just as if it had been the place first
assigned.
The council, after it has thus been summoned and has assembled and become
acquainted with
the cause of the schism, shall bring a suit of contumacy against the electors
or
those
claiming to be pope or the cardinals, if perchance they fail to come. It shall
then
pronounce judgment and shall punish, even beyond the aforesaid penalties and in
such a
way that the fierceness of the punishment acts as an example to others, those
who are to
blame--no matter of what state or rank or pre-eminence, whether ecclesiastical
or
secular, they may be--in starting or fostering the schism, in their
administering or
obeying, in their supporting those who governed or in making an election
against
the
aforesaid prohibition, or who lied m their allegations of fear.
The disturbance caused by fear or pressure at a papal election corrodes and
divides, in a
lamentable way, the whole of Christianity. In order that it may be assiduously
avoided,
we have decided to decree, in addition to what has been said above, that if
anyone brings
to bear or causes, or procures to be brought about, fear or pressure or
violence
of this
kind upon the electors in a papal election, or upon any one of them, or has the
matter
ratified after it has been done, or advises or acts in support of it, or
knowingly
receives or defends someone who has done this, or is negligent in enforcing the
penalties
mentioned below--no matter of what state or rank or pre-eminence the offender
may be,
even if it be imperial or regal or pontifical, or any other ecclesiastical or
secular
dignity he may hold--then he automatically incurs the penalties contained in
pope
Boniface VIII's constitution which begins Felicis, and he shall be effectively
punished
by them.
Any city--even if it be Rome itself, though may it not be!--or any other
corporation that
gives aid, counsel or support to someone who does these things, or that does
not
have
such an offender punished within a month, insofar as the enormity of the crime
demands
and there exists the possibility of inflicting the punishment, shall
automatically be
subject to ecclesiastical interdict. Furthermore the city, apart from the one
mentioned
above, shall be deprived of the episcopal dignity, notwithstanding any
privileges to the
contrary. We wish, moreover, that this decree be solemnly published at the end
of every
general council and that it be read out and publicly announced before the start
of a
conclave, wherever and whenever the election of a Roman pontiff is about to
take
place.
[On the profession to be made by the pope]
Since the Roman pontiff exercises such great power among mortals, it is right
that he be
bound all the more by the incontrovertible bonds of the faith and by the rites
that are
to be observed regarding the church's sacraments. We therefore decree and
ordain, in
order that the fullness of the faith may shine in a future Roman pontiff with
singular
splendour from the earliest moments of his becoming pope, that henceforth
whoever is to
be elected Roman pontiff shall make the following confession and profession in
public, in
front of his electors, before his election is published.
In the name of the holy and undivided Trinity, Father and Son and holy Spirit.
Amen. In
the year of our Lord's nativity one thousand etc., I, N., elected pope, with
both heart
and mouth confess and profess to almighty God, whose church I undertake with
his
assistance to govern, and to blessed Peter, prince of the apostles, that as
long
as I am
in this fragile life I will firmly believe and hold the Catholic faith,
according to the
traditions of the apostles, of the general councils and of other holy fathers,
especially
of the eight holy universal councils-namely the first at
Nicaea, the second at
Constantinople, the third at
Ephesus, the fourth at
Chalcedon, the fifth and sixth at
Constantinople, the seventh at
Nicaea and the eighth at
Constantinople--as well as of the general councils at the
Lateran,
Lyons and
Vienne,
and I will preserve this faith unchanged to the last dot and will confirm,
defend and
preach it to the point of death and the shedding of my blood, and likewise I
will follow
and observe in every way the rite handed down of the ecclesiastical sacraments
of the
Catholic Church. This my profession and confession, written at my orders by a
notary of
the holy Roman church, I have signed below with my own hand. I sincerely offer
it on this
altar N. to you, almighty God, with a pure mind and a devout conscience, in the
presence
of the following. Made etc.
[That prelates may not be translated without their consent]
When prelates are translated, there is commonly both spiritual and temporal
loss
and
damage of a grave nature for the churches from which they are transferred. The
prelates,
moreover, sometimes do not maintain the rights and liberties of their churches
as
carefully as they otherwise might, out of fear of being translated. The
importunity of
certain people who seek their own good, not that of Jesus Christ, may mean that
the Roman
pontiff is deceived in such a matter, as one ignorant of the facts, and so is
easily led
astray. We therefore determine and ordain, by this present decree, that
henceforth
bishops and superiors ought not to be translated unwillingly without a grave
and
reasonable cause which, after the person in question has been summoned, is to
be
inquired
into and decided upon with the advice of the cardinals of the holy Roman
church,
or the
greater part of them, and with their written endorsement. Lesser prelates, such
as abbots
and others with perpetual benefices, ought not to be changed, moved or deposed
without a
just and reasonable cause that has been inquired into.
We add, moreover, that for abbots to be changed the written endorsement of the
cardinals
is necessary--just as it is necessary for bishops, as has been said-saving,
however, the
constitutions and privileges of any churches, monasteries and orders.
[On spoils and procurations]
Papal reservations as well as the exacting and receiving of procurations which
are due to
ordinaries and other lesser prelates, by reason of a visitation, and of spoils
on
deceased prelates and other clerics, are seriously detrimental to churches,
monasteries
and other benefices and to churchmen. We therefore declare, by this present
edict, that
it is reasonable and in the public interest that reservations made by the pope,
as well
as exactions and collections of this kind made by collectors and others
appointed or to
be appointed by apostolic authority, are henceforth in no way to occur or to be
attempted. Indeed, procurations of this kind, as well as spoils and the goods
of
any
prelates found at their deaths, even if they are cardinals or members of the
papal
household or officials or any other clerics whatsoever, in the Roman curia or
outside it,
no matter where or when they die, are to belong to and to be received by, fully
and
freely, those persons to whom they would and ought to belong with the ending of
the
aforesaid reservations, mandates and exactions. We forbid the exaction of such
spoils on
prelates even inferior ones and others, which are outside and contrary to the
form of
common law. However, the constitution of pope Boniface VIII of happy memory,
beginning
Praesenti, which was published with this specially in mind, is to remain in
force.
SESSION 40 - 30 OCTOBER 1417
[Reforms to be made by the pope together with the council before it is
dissolved]
The most holy synod of Constance [40 ] declares and decrees that the future
supreme Roman
pontiff, who by God's grace is to be elected very soon, together with this
sacred council
or those to be deputed by the individual nations, is bound to reform the church
in its
head and in the Roman curia, according to justice and the good government of
the
church,
before this council is dissolved, under the topics contained in the following
articles,
which were at various times put forward by the nations by way of reforms.
1. First, the number, quality and nationality of the lord cardinals.
2. Next, reservations of the apostolic see.
3. Next, annates, common services and petty services.
4. Next, collations to benefices and expectative graces.
5. Next, the cases that are, or are not, to be heard at the Roman curia.
6. Next, appeals to the Roman curia.
7. Next, the offices of chancery and penitentiary.
8. Next, exemptions and incorporations made at the time of the schism.
9. Next, commendams.
10. Next, confirmation of elections. [41 ]
11. Next, intercalary fruits.
12. Next, not alienating goods of the Roman church and of other churches.
13. Next, for what reasons and how a pope can be corrected or deposed.
14. Next, the eradication of simony.
15. Next, dispensations.
16. Next, revenues of the pope and the cardinals.
17. Next, indulgences.
18. Next, tithes.
With this addition, that when the nations have deputed their representatives as
mentioned above, the others may freely return to their own countries with the
pope's permission.
[That the election of the Roman pontiff may be begun, notwithstanding the
absence of
Peter de Luna's cardinals]
The most holy general synod of Constance notes what was previously agreed upon
at
Narbonne concerning the church's unity and the admission to this synod of the
cardinals
of the obedience of Peter de Luna, called Benedict XIII in his obedience. It
notes, too,
that after the notorious expulsion of the said Peter de Luna, the aforesaid
cardinals who
had been summoned before the expulsion according to the terms of the agreement,
did not
come within three months and more after the aforesaid expulsion. The synod
therefore
decrees and declares that, notwithstanding their absence, it will proceed to
the
election
of the Roman pontiff on the authority of the said synod and according to what
has been
decided by the same synod. It declares, however, that if they arrive before the
election
of the future supreme pontiff has been completed, and if they adhere to the
council, they
are to be admitted to the aforesaid election together with the other cardinals,
according
to the directives of the law and what shall be decided by the council.
[On the manner and form of electing the pope]
For the praise, glory and honour of almighty God and for the peace and unity of
the
universal church and of the whole christian people. The election of the future
Roman and
supreme pontiff is soon to be held. We wish that it may be confirmed with
greater
authority and by the assent of many persons and that, mindful as we are of the
state of
the church, no doubts or scruples may later remain in people's minds regarding
the said
election but rather that a secure, true full and perfect union of the faithful
may result
from it. Therefore this most holy general synod of Constance, mindful of the
common good
and with the special and express consent and the united wish of the cardinals
of
the holy
Roman church present at the same synod, and of the college of cardinals and of
all the
nations at this present council, declares, ordains and decrees that, for this
time only,
at the election of the Roman and supreme pontiff, there shall be added to the
cardinals
six prelates or other honourable churchmen in holy orders, from each of the
nations
currently present and named at the same synod, who are to be chosen by each of
the said
nations within ten days. This same holy synod gives power to all these people,
insofar as
it is necessary, to elect the Roman pontiff according to the form here laid
down. That is
to say, the person is to be regarded as the Roman pontiff by the universal
church without
exception who is elected and admitted by two-thirds of the cardinals present at
the
conclave and by two-thirds of those from each nation who are to be and have
been
added to
the cardinals. Moreover, the election is not valid nor is the person elected to
be
regarded as supreme pontiff unless two-thirds of the cardinals present at the
conclave,
and two-thirds of those from each nation who should be and have been added to
the same
cardinals, agree to elect him as Roman pontiff. The synod also declares,
ordains
and
decrees that the votes of any persons cast at the election are null unless, as
has been
said, two-thirds of the cardinals, and two-thirds of those from each nation who
should be
and have been added to them, agree, directly or by way of addition, upon one
person. This
must be added, moreover, that the prelates and other persons who should be and
have been
added to the cardinals for the election, are bound to observe all and singular
apostolic
constitutions, even penal ones, which have been promulgated regarding the
election of the
Roman pontiff, just as the cardinals themselves are bound to observe them, and
they are
bound to their observance. The said electors, both cardinals and others, are
also bound
to swear, before they proceed to the election, that in attending to the
business
of the
election, they will proceed with pure and sincere minds--since it is a question
of
creating the vicar Jesus Christ, the successor of the blessed Peter, the
governor of the
universal church and the leader of the Lord's flock--and that they firmly
believe it will
benefit the public good of the universal church if they entirely prescind from
all
affection for persons of any particular nation, or other inordinate affections,
as well
as from hatred and graces or favours bestowed, in order that by their ministry
a
beneficial and suitable pastor may be provided for the universal church. This
same holy
synod, mindful of this notorious vacancy in the Roman church, fixes and assigns
the next
ten days for all and singular cardinals of the holy Roman church, whether
present here or
absent, and the other electors mentioned above, to enter into the conclave
which
is to be
held in this city of Constance, in the commune's principal building which has
already
been allocated for this purpose. The synod ordains, declares and decrees that
within
these next ten days the aforesaid electors, both cardinals and others mentioned
above,
must enter into the conclave for the purpose of holding the election and of
doing and
carrying out all the other matters according as the laws ordain and decree in
all things,
besides those mentioned above regarding the cardinals and other electors,
concerning the
election of a Roman pontiff. The same holy synod wishes all these laws to
remain
in force
after the above matters have been observed. For this time, however, it
approves,
ordains,
establishes and decrees this particular form and manner of election. The same
holy synod,
in order to remove all scruples, makes and declares fit for actively and
passively
carrying out all legitimate acts at the same synod, insofar as this is
necessary, all
those who are present at the same synod as well as those who will come and
adhere to it,
always saving the other decrees of this same sacred council, and it will supply
for any
defects, if perchance any shall occur in the above, notwithstanding any
apostolic
constitutions, even those published in general councils, and other
constitutions
to the
contrary.
SESSION 41 - 8 November 1417
[Everything is prepared for the start of the conclave to elect a pope. On 11
November
cardinal Oddo Colonna is elected pontiff as Martin V.]
SESSION 42 - 28 December 1417
[In this session a bull of Martin V was