Grotius expressed himself in similar terms to Baron Oxenstiern: Surely it is the true language of the Gospel.
[Sidenote: CHAP. XII.]
In the first appendix to this work,—we shall insert, an account
“of the Formularies,
Confessions of Faith, and Symbolic Books, of
the Roman Catholic, Greek,
and principal Protestant churches:”—
In the second appendix,—we shall insert an account of the principal attempts made, since the Reformation, for the re-union of Christians.—The former is abridged from the “Historical and Literary Account of the Confessions of Faith,” which was formerly published by the present writer;—the second is an essay appended to that work:—both have been before referred to in the present publication.
[Sidenote: XII. 3. His Project of Religious Pacification.]
Grotius[065] thought that the most compendious way to produce universal religious peace among Christians, would be to frame, with the concurrence of all the orthodox Eastern and Western churches, a formulary which should express, briefly and explicitly, all the articles of faith, the belief of which they agree in thinking essential to salvation. In a letter addressed from Paris in 1625,[066] he mentions that Gustavus Adolphus had entertained projects of religious pacification, and had taken measures to effect it; that he had procured a meeting of divines of the Lutheran and Reformed churches and that they had separated amicably: Grotius says that the differences between them were as slight as those between the Greek and Coptic churches.
For some time, Grotius flattered himself that he should succeed in his project of pacification. In one of his letters to his brother, he mentions distinguished Protestants, who approved and encouraged them
“I perceive,” he says, “that by conversing with men of the most learning among the reformed, and explaining my sentiments to them, they are of my opinion; and that their number will increase, if my treatises are dispersed. I can truly affirm, that I have said nothing in them from party spirit, but followed truth as closely as I could."[067]
[Sidenote: CHAP. XII.]
He imagined that some Catholics entered into his views.
“The ablest men among
the Catholics,” he thus writes to his
brother, “think that
what I have published is written with great
freedom and moderation, and
approve of it."[068]
These pacific projects of Grotius cemented the union between him and Father Petau.