Page:Historical Lectures and Addresses.djvu/83

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

THE FRIARS.[1]

I.

THE COMING OF THE FRIARS.

The history of the Christian Church may be described as a history of continual reformations. We are tempted sometimes to speak of one Reformation as though it were the chief or the most notable one; but there are many reformations in the history of the Church which in their importance can at least come into comparison with that one which we are accustomed to call "The Reformation". It is the object of these lectures to consider one of these reformations, which was fraught with very important results, not only to the Church, but to civilisation in general—the reformation, we will call it, of the thirteenth century.

If we are to understand its importance and its significance, it will be well to consider first what we might expect in the nature of things that the history of the Church would be. It is perfectly true that the Church as a society and as an institution is not of this world; but it is equally true that the work of the Church has to be done in the world. It is true that it is constantly the object of the Church to influence the world; but

  1. A course of lectures given in St. Paul's Cathedral in November, 1892, and here printed from the reporter's notes.