Chapter XLIII.
In the meantime, the
emperor compels those deputies of our party who had been sent from the
council at Ariminum to join in communion with the heretics. At the same
time, he hands them a confession of faith which had been drawn up by
these wicked men, and which, being expressed in deceptive terms, seemed
to exhibit the Catholic faith, while unfaithfulness secretly lay hid in
it. For under an appearance of false reasoning, it abolished the use of
the word Ousia as being ambiguous, and as having been too
hastily adopted by the fathers, while it rested upon no Scriptural
authority. The object of this was that the Son might not be believed to
be of one substance with the Father. The same confession of faith
acknowledged that the Son was like the Father. But deception was
carefully prepared within the words, in order that he might be like,
but not equal. Thus, the deputies being sent away, orders were given to
the prefect that he should not dissolve the Synod, until all professed
by their subscriptions their agreement to the declaration of faith
which had been drawn up; and if any should hold back with excessive
obstinacy, they should be driven into banishment, provided their number
did not amount to fifteen. But when the deputies returned, they were
refused communion, although they pleaded the force which had been
brought to bear upon them by the king. For when it was discovered what
had been decreed, greater disturbance arose in their affairs and
purposes. Then by degrees numbers of our people, partly overcome
through the weakness of their character, and partly influenced by the
thought of a weary journeying into foreign lands, surrendered to the
opposite party. These were now, on the return of the deputies, the
stronger of the two bodies, and had taken possession of the church, our
friends being driven out of it. And when the minds of our people once
began to incline in that direction, they rushed
118in flocks over to the other side, until the
number of our friends was diminished down to twenty.