This page has been validated.
DEATH OF ARCHBISHOP ZBINEK
21

masters with all fear; not only to the good and gentle, but also to the froward.[1] See how the apostle of Christ commands obedience to every human creature and to froward rulers, but obedience for God’s sake, and not in the case of commands that are froward, but those which are lawful and uttered to the praise of God Almighty, to the end that servants may obey their masters and those set over them. Whatever, therefore, the Roman pontiff Gregory XII. or the holy mother Church, yea, and your grace, lawfully enjoins, I will humbly obey. But I cannot engage in controversy to win the greater praise: for our Saviour forbade this to His disciples in Luke xii.;[2] nor can I side with my apostolic lord in his failure to observe the oath which was sworn, as it were, before all Christendom.[3] For in so doing I should be acting contrary to Christ, who says in Matt. v.: Let your speech be, Yea, yea: no, no:[4] and who says by the prophet: Vow ye, and pray to the Lord your God.[5] Therefore as far as these two points are concerned, the controversy of Pope and anti-pope and the breaking of the oath, I am neutral; but not in the sense of the term as used by the crowd who are ignorant that “neutral” is a relative term like the simple word from which it is compounded, requiring the context of the subject matter.[6] Consequently, when the phrase “He is neutral” is used, it is unintelligible unless the alternatives are added, and it is clearly shown in what respect he

  1. 1 Peter ii. 18.
  2. Luke xii. 58.
  3. See The Age of Hus, p. 44; Niem. De Schismate (ed. Erler), pp. 206–9.
  4. Matt, v. 37.
  5. Ps. lxxv. 12. Vulg. (A. V. lxxvi. 11).
  6. P.: requirens substantiam adjacentiam. Better, on the whole, to read with Höfler, adjacentium.