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Question XXXI
Of One Taken and Convicted, but Denying Everything
The twelfth method of finishing
and concluding a process on behalf of the faith is used when the person accused
of heresy, after a diligent examination of the merits of the process in
consultation with skilled lawyers, is found to be convicted of heresy by the
evidence of the facts or by the legitimate production of witnesses, but not by
his own confession. That is to say, he may be convicted by the evidence of the
facts, in that he has publicly practiced heresy; or by the evidence of witnesses
against whom he can take no legitimate exception; yet, though so taken and
convicted, he firmly and constantly denies the charge. See Henry of Segusio On
Heresy, question 34.
The procedure in such a case is as
follows. The accused must be kept in strong durance fettered and chained, and
must often be visited by the officers, both in a body and severally, who will
use their own best endeavours and those of others to induce him to discover the
truth; telling him that if he refuses and persists in his denial, he will in the
end be abandoned to the secular law, and will not be able to escape temporal
death.
But if he continues for a long time
in his denials, the Bishop and his officers, now in a body and now severally,
now personally and now with the assistance of other honest and upright men,
shall summon before them now one witness, now another, and warm him to attend
strictly to what he has deposed, and to be sure whether or not he has told the
truth; that he should beware lest in damning another temporally he damn himself
eternally; that if he be afraid, let him at least tell them the truth in secret,
that the accused should not die unjustly. And let them be careful to talk to him
in such a way that they may see clearly whether or not his depositions have been
true.
But if the witnesses, after this
warning, adhere to their statements, and the accused maintains his denials, let
not the Bishop and his officers on that account be in any haste to pronounce a
definitive sentence and hand the prisoners over to secular law; but let them
detain him still longer, now persuading him to confess, now yet again urging the
witnesses (but one at a time) to examine their consciences as well. And let the
Bishop and his officers pay particular attention to that witness who seems to be
of the best conscience and the most disposed to good, and let them more
insistently charge him on his conscience to speak the truth whether or not the
matter was as he had deposed. And if they see any witness vacillate, or there
are any other indications that he has given false evidence, let them attest him
according to the counsel of learned men, and proceed as justice shall require.
For it is very often found that after
a person so convicted by credible witnesses has long persisted in his denials,
he has at length relented, especially on being truly informed that he will not
be delivered to the secular Court, but be admitted to mercy if he confesses his
sin, and he has then freely confessed the truth which he had so long denied. And
it is often found that the witnesses, actuated by malice and overcome by enmity,
have conspired together to accuse an innocent person of the sin of heresy; but
afterwards, at the frequent entreaty of the Bishop and his officers, their
consciences have been stricken with remorse and, by Divine inspiration, they
have revoked their evidence and confessed that they have out of malice put that
crime upon the accused. Therefore the prisoner in such a case is not to be
sentenced hastily, but must be kept for a year or more before he is delivered up
to the secular Court.
When a sufficient time has elapsed,
and after all possible care has been taken, if the accused who has been thus
legally convicted has acknowledged his guilt and confessed in legal from that he
hath been for the period stated ensnared in the crime of heresy, and has
consented to abjure that and every heresy, and to perform such satisfaction as
shall seem proper to the Bishop and Inquisitor for one convicted of heresy both
by his own confession and the legitimate production of witnesses; then let him
as a penitent heretic publicly abjure all heresy, in the manner which we have
set down in the eighth method of concluding a process on behalf of the faith.
But if he has confessed that he hath
fallen into such heresy, but nevertheless obstinately adheres to it, he must be
delivered to the secular Court as an impenitent, after the manner of the tenth
method which we have explained above.
But if the accused has remained firm
and unmoved in his denial of the charges against him, but the witnesses have
withdrawn their charges, revoking their evidence and acknowledging their guilt,
confessing that they had put so great a crime upon an innocent man from motives
of rancour and hatred, or had been suborned or bribed thereto; then the accused
shall be freely discharged, but they shall be punished as false witnesses,
accusers or informers. This made clear by Paul of Burgos in his comment on the
Canon c. multorum. And sentence or penance shall be pronounced against
them as shall seem proper to the Bishop and Judges; but in any case such false
witnesses must be condemned to perpetual imprisonment on a diet of bread and
water, and to do penance for all the days of their life, being made to stand
upon the steps before the church door, etc. However, the Bishops have power to
mitigate or even to increase the sentence after a year or some other period, in
the usual manner.
But if the accused, after a year or
other longer period which has been deemed sufficient, continues to maintain his
denials, and the legitimate witnesses abide by their evidence, the Bishop and
Judges shall prepare to abandon him to the secular Court; sending to him certain
honest men zealous for the faith, especially religious, to tell him that he
cannot escape temporal death while he thus persists in his denial, but will be
delivered up as an impenitent heretic to the power of the secular Court. And the
Bishop and his officers shall give notice to the Bailiff or authority of the
secular Court that on such a day at such an hour and in such a place (not inside
a church) he should come with his attendants to receive an impenitent heretic
whom they will deliver to him. And let him make public proclamation in the usual
places that all should be present on such a day at such an hour and place to
hear a sermon preached on behalf of the faith, and that the Bishop and his
officer will hand over a certain obstinate heretic to the secular Court.
On the appointed day for the
pronouncement of sentence the Bishop and his officer shall be in the place
aforesaid, and the prisoner shall be placed on high before the assembled clergy
and people so that he may be seen by all, and the secular authorities shall be
present before the prisoner. Then sentence shall be pronounced in the following
manner:
We, N., by the mercy of God Bishop of
such city, or Judge in the territories of such Prince, seeing that you, N., of
such a place in such a Diocese, have been accused before us of such heresy
(naming it); and wishing to be more certainly informed whether the charges made
against you were true, and whether you walked in darkness or in the light; we
proceeded to inform ourselves by diligently examining the witnesses, by often
summoning and questioning you on oath, and admitting an Advocate to plead in
your defence, and by proceeding in every way as we were bound by the canonical
decrees.
And wishing to conclude your trial in
a manner beyond all doubt, we convened in solemn council men learned in the
Theological faculty and in the Canon and Civil Laws. And having diligently
examined and discussed each circumstance of the process and maturely and
carefully considered with the said learned men everything which has been said
and done in this present case, we find that you, N., have been legally convicted
of having been infected with the sin of heresy for so long a time, and that you
have said an done such and such (naming them) on account of which it manifestly
appears that you are legitimately convicted of the said heresy.
But since we desired, and still
desire, that you should confess the truth and renounce the said heresy, and be
led back to the bosom of Holy Church and to the unity of the Holy Faith, that so
you should save your soul and escape the destruction of both your body and soul
in hell; we have by our own efforts and those of others, and by delaying your
sentence for a long time, tried to induce you to repent; but you being
obstinately given over to wickedness have scorned to agree to our wholesome
advice, and have persisted and do persist with stubborn and defiant mind in your
contumacious and dogged denials; and this we say with grief, and grieve and
mourn in saying it. But since the Church of God has waited so long for you to
repent and acknowledge your guilt, and you have refused and still refuse, her
grace and mercy can go no farther.
Wherefore that you may be an example
to others and that they may be kept from all such heresies, and that such crimes
may not remain unpunished: We the Bishop and Judges named on behalf of the
faith, sitting in tribunal as Judges judging, and having before us the Holy
Gospels that our judgement may proceed as from the countenance of God and our
eyes see with equity, and having before our eyes only God and the glory and
honour of the Holy Faith, we judge, declare and pronounce sentence that you
standing here in our presence on this day at the hour and place appointed for
the hearing of your final sentence, are an impenitent heretic, and as such to be
delivered or abandoned to secular justice; and as an obstinate and impenitent
heretic we have by this sentence cast you off from the ecclesiastical Court and
deliver and abandon you to secular justice and the power of the secular Court.
And we pray that the said secular Court may moderate its sentence of death upon
you. this sentence was given, etc.
The Bishop and Judges may, moreover,
arrange that just men zealous for the faith, known to and in the confidence of
the secular Court, shall have access to the prisoner while the secular Court is
performing its office, in order to console him and even yet induce him to
confess the truth, acknowledge his guilt, and renounce his errors.
But if it should happen that after
the sentence, and when the prisoner is already at the place where he is to be
burned, he should say that he wishes to confess the truth and acknowledge his
guilt, and does so; and if he should be willing to abjure that and every heresy;
although it may be presumed that he does this rather from fear of death than for
love of the truth, yet I should be of the opinion that he may in mercy be
received as a penitent heretic and be imprisoned for life. See the gloss on the
chapters ad abolendam and excommunicamus. Nevertheless, according
to the rigour of the law, the Judges ought not to place much faith in a
conversion of this sort; and furthermore, they can always punish him on account
of the temporal injuries which he has committed.
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