THE HOLY SEE AND THE WANDERING OF THE NATIONS
CHAPTER V.
ST. GREGORY THE GREAT.
“The banner of the Church is ever flying!
Less than a storm avails not to unfold
The Cross emblazoned there in massive gold:
Away with doubts and sadness, tears and sighing!
It is by faith, by patience, and by dying
That we must conquer, as our sires of old”.
—Aubrey de Vere, ‘St. Peter's Chains’.
The historian, who has carefully followed the fortunes
of Rome as a city during a thousand years, describes it as beginning a new life
from the time when Narses, in the year 552, came to reside there as imperial
prefect and representative of the absent eastern lord Justinian. Narses so
ruled for fifteen years, but when he was recalled there ensued a long time of
terrible distress and anxiety—a time of temporal servitude, but one also of
spiritual expansion. The complete ruin of Rome as a secular city, the overthrow
of all that ancient world of which Rome was the centre and capital, had been
effected in the struggle ended by the extinction of the Gothic kingdom. By
degrees the laws, the monuments, the very recollections of what had been,
passed away. The heathen temples ceased to be preserved as public monuments.
The Capitol, on its desolate hill, lifted into the still air its fairy world of
pillars in a grave-like silence, startled only by the owl’s night cry. The huge
palace of the Caesars still occupied the Palatine in unbroken greatness, a
labyrinth of empty halls yet resplendent with the finest marbles, here and
there still covered with gold-embroidered tapestry. But it was falling to
pieces like a fortress deserted by its occupants. In some small corner of its
vast spaces there might still be seen a Byzantine prefect, an eunuch from the
court of the eastern despot, or a semi-Asiatic general, with secretaries,
servants, and guards. The splendid forums built by Caesar after Caesar, each a
homage paid by the ruler of the day to the Roman people, whom he fed and
feared, became pale with age. Their history clung round them like a fable. The
massive blocks of Pompey’s theatre showed need of repairs, which were not
given. The Circus Maximus, where the last and dearest of Roman pleasures—the
chariot races—were no longer celebrated, stretched its long lines beneath the
imperial palace covered with dust and overgrown with grass. The colossal amphitheatre
of Titus still reared its circle perfect, but stripped of its decorations. The
gigantic baths, fed by no aqueduct since the ruin wrought by Vitiges the Goth, rose like fallen cities in a wilderness.
Ivy began to creep over them. The costly marble mantle of their walls dropped
away in pieces or was plundered for use. The Mosaic pavements split. There were
still in those beautiful chambers seats of bright or dark marble, baths of
porphyry or Oriental alabaster. But these found their way by degrees to
churches. They served for episcopal chairs, or to receive the bones of a saint,
or to become baptismal fonts. Yet not a few remained in their desolation till
the walls dropped down upon them, or the dust covered them for centuries. In
course of time the rain perforated the uncared-for vaultings of these shady galleries. Having served for refuge to the thief, the coiner, or
the assassin, they became like dripping grottoes.
Thus stood the temples, triumphal arches, pillars, and
statues before the eyes of a young Roman noble, one out of the few patrician
families still surviving. These were the sights with which St. Gregory, who
claimed kindred with the Anician race, was familiar
from his boyhood, so that the desolation of Jerusalem rose before his mind as the
state of his own Rome pressed on his eyes and seared his heart.
This skeleton of a city was scarcely inhabited by the
remnant of a people, decimated by hunger and pestilence, and in perpetual fear
to see its ill-defended gates broken into by Lombard savages. The walls of
Aurelian, half demolished by Totila and hurriedly repaired by Belisarius, alone
saved it year after year from the horrors which fell upon captured cities; and
would not have saved it but for the indomitable spirit, the perpetual wisdom,
foresight, and courage of a son who had been exalted to the Chair of Peter.
While Old Rome lay thus, the shadow of its former
self, bereft of all political power, looking to the imperial exarch at Ravenna
for its temporal rule, in danger moreover of inundation from its own Tiber,
whose banks were no longer maintained with unremitting care, New Rome beside
the Bosporus rioted in all the pomp and circumstance of a court still the head
of a vast empire. The tributes of all the East, of numberless cities in Asia
Minor, in Syria, in Egypt, were still borne unceasingly within its walls, which
rose as an impregnable fortress between Europe and Asia. Its emperor still
thought himself the lord of the world; its bishop assumed the title of
Ecumenical Patriarch. Both emperor and bishop cast but a disdainful glance on
the widowed rival which threatened to sink into the grave of waters brought
down by her own river. Constantinople could raise and pay armies from all the
races of the North and East. A single imperial regiment was quartered at Rome,
which, being ill-paid, became disaffected and neglectful of its charge, and
could not be counted upon by the Pope for vigorous defence against the
ever-pressing danger of a Lombard inroad.
So began the Church’s Rome. Enslaved politically to
Byzantium, wherein the so-called Roman State, with Greek subtlety, carried on
the principles of the old heathen government and practiced a remorseless
despotism, the city of the ancient Caesars and the people they fed on “bread
and games” ceased to exist, and was changed into the holy city, whose life was
the Chair of Peter. From the time of Narses, during all the two hundred years
of Lombard assault and Byzantine neglect and exaction, the Pope alone, watchful
and unceasingly active, carried out the fabric of the Roman hierarchy. Its
gradual increase, its springing up out of the dust of the old Roman State under
the most difficult circumstances, will ever claim the astonishment of the
after-world as the greatest transformation to be found in history.
Let us approach the secret of this transformation in
the person of the man who best represents it.
Gregory was born about the year 540, and so was
witness from his childhood of the intense misery and special degradation of
Rome produced by the Gothic war. He was himself the son of Gordian, a man of
senatorial rank, from whom he inherited great landed property. Through him he
was the great grandson of that illustrious Pope Felix III., whom we have seen
resist with success the insolence of Acacius and the despotism of Zeno. Gregory
had therefore a doubly noble inheritance—that of a true Roman noble's spirit,
and that of the Church's championship. His paternal house stood on that
well-known slope of the Coelian hill, opposite the imperial palace on the
Palatine, from which in after-time he sent forth St. Augustine with the monks
his brethren to be the Apostle of paganised England.
He founded six monasteries in Sicily upon his property, and changed his
father's palace into a seventh, in which he followed the Benedictine Rule. In
early manhood he had been praetor or prefect of the city, being probably the
most eminent of all its citizens in wealth and rank. But his mother St. Silvia,
a woman of fervent piety, had educated him with great care. He turned from the
secular to the religious life, following perhaps her example, since on the
death of his father she became a nun. He was a monk on the Coelian hill when
Pope Benedict in the year 577 named him seventh deacon of the Roman Church.
Pope Pelagius II. sent him as nuncio to Constantinople, an office equally
difficult and honorable. The emperor Tiberius was then reigning, with whom he
became intimate, and with his successor Mauritius. Gregory dwelt in the
imperial palace, with some monks of his own monastery whom he had brought with
him, pursuing the Rule in all pious observances, winning also the esteem and
friendship of many distinguished men, and making himself fully acquainted with
the mechanism of the eastern court. He also delivered the patriarch Eutychius
from a false Origenistic notion, that the bodies of
the blessed after the resurrection were not glorified, but lost their quality
as bodies. There also he became warmly attached to St. Leander, who afterwards,
as archbishop of Seville, greatly helped him in recovering Spain from Arianism
to the Catholic faith. The charge of Pope Pelagius to his nuncio Gregory throws
a vivid light upon the condition of Rome at the time. His instructions ran: “Lay
before our lord the emperor that no words can express the calamities brought
upon us by the perfidy of the Lombards, breaking their own engagements. Our
brother Sebastian, whom we send to you, has promised to describe to him the
necessities and dangers of all Italy. Join him in that entreaty to succor us,
for the commonwealth is in such distress, that unless God inspire him to show
us his servants the mercy of his natural disposition, and move him to give us a
single Magister militum and a single Dux, we are utterly destitute, for Rome and its neighborhood are
specially defenseless. The exarch writes that he can give us no help, for he
has not force enough to guard Ravenna. Therefore, may God command the emperor
quickly to succor us, before the army of that most wicked nation take the
places still remaining to us”.
Gregory returned from Constantinople in 585, and lived
as one of the seven deacons on the Coelian hill, when, on 8th February, 590,
Pope Pelagius died of the pestilence, and Gregory was unanimously chosen to
succeed him.
It was a moment of the greatest depression. The Tiber
had in the winter overflowed a large portion of the city. The destruction
wrought had been followed by a terrible plague. Gregory strove to escape the
charge put upon him, and besought the emperor not to confirm his election. In
the meantime, the clergy and people urged upon him the provisional exercise of
the episcopal charge. As such he ordered a sevenfold procession to entreat the
cessation of the plague. The clergy of Rome, the abbots, the abbesses with
their nuns, the children, the laymen, the widows, and the married women, each
company separately arranged, were to start from seven different churches, and
to close their pilgrimage together at the basilica of St. Maria Maggiore.
During the procession itself eighty victims to the
plague fell dead. But as Gregory was passing over the bridge of St. Peter’s, a
heavenly vision consoled them in the midst of their litanies. The archangel
Michael was seen over the tomb of Hadrian, sheathing his flaming sword in token
that the pestilence was to cease. Gregory heard the angelic antiphon from
heavenly voices—Regina Coeli, lætare,
and added himself the concluding verse—Ora pro nobis Deum, alleluia.
The assent of the emperor Mauritius arriving from
Constantinople about six months after his election compelled Gregory to become
Pope. At first, indeed, he disguised himself and took to flight, and hid
himself in the woods. The people fasted and prayed three days for his
discovery. He was found, and then permitted himself to be taken back to Rome,
where he was received with great rejoicing. He was led, according to custom, to
the “Confession” of St. Peter, where he made his profession of faith. He was
then consecrated, the 3rd September, 590. Nor can any words but his own
adequately express his feelings, together with the character of the time in
which he lived. With heavy heart he approached the burden laid upon him.
Neither then nor ever after did he deceive himself as
to the gravity of the situation. “Since”, are his words, “I submitted the shoulders
of my spirit to this burden of the episcopal office, I can no longer collect my
soul, distracted as it is on so many sides. At one time I have to consider the
affairs of churches and monasteries, often taking into account the lives and
actions of individuals. At another time I have to represent my fellow-citizens
in their affairs. Again, I have to groan over the swords of barbarians
advancing to storm us, and to dread the wolves which lie in wait for a flock
huddled together in fear. Then, again, I must charge myself with the care of
public affairs, to provide means even for those to whom the maintenance of
order is entrusted, or I must patiently endure certain depredators, or take
precautions against them, that tranquility be not disturbed”. In another place
he says: “Daily I feel what fullness of peace I have lost, to what fullness of
cares I have been exalted. If you love me, weep for me, since so many temporal
businesses press on me that I seem as if this dignity had almost excluded me
from the love of God. Not of the Romans only am I bishop, but bishop of the
Lombards, whose right is the right of the sword, whose favor is punishment. The
billows of the world so surge upon me, that I despair of steering into harbour
the frail vessel entrusted to me by God, while my hand holds the helm amid a
thousand storms”.
Again, in his synodical letter announcing his
accession to the patriarchs, he says: “Especially, whoever bears the title of
Pastor in this place is grievously occupied by external cares, so that he is
often in doubt whether he is executing the work of a Pastor or that of an
earthly lord”. Thus thirteen hundred years ago spoke the Pope. Does his
language in the nineteenth century differ much from his language in the sixth?
Shortly after his accession, preaching to his people in St. Peter's, he said: “Where,
I pray you, is any delight to be found in this world? Mourning meets us
everywhere; groans surround us. Ruined cities, fortresses overthrown, lands
laid waste, the earth reduced to a desert. The fields have none to till them.
There is scarcely a dweller in the cities. Yet even these poor remnants of the
human race are smitten daily and without ceasing. The scourge of heaven's
justice strikes without end, because even under its strokes our bad actions are
not corrected. We see men led into captivity, beheaded, slain before our eyes.
What pleasure, then, does life retain, my brethren? If yet we are fond of such
a world, it is not joys but wounds which we love. We see the condition of that
Rome which anon seemed to be mistress of the world: worn down by sorrows which
have no measure, desolate of inhabitants, assaulted by enemies, filled with
ruins. We see in it fulfilled what long ago our prophet said against Samaria: ‘Set
on a vessel; set it on, I say, and put water into it. Heap together into it the
pieces thereof’. And then: ‘The seething of it is boiling hot; and the bones
thereof are thoroughly sodden in the midst thereof’. And further: ‘Heap
together the bones, which I will burn with fire: the flesh shall be consumed,
and the whole composition shall be sodden, and the bones shall be consumed.
Then set it empty upon burning coals, that it may be hot, and the brass thereof
may be melted’. Now the vessel was set on when our city was founded. The water
was put into it and the pieces heaped together, when there was a confluence of
peoples to it from all sides. Like boiling water they bubbled up with the world’s
actions; like bits of flesh they were boiled in their own heat. He says well, ‘The
seething of it is boiling hot, and the bones thereof are thoroughly sodden in
the midst thereof’. For great, indeed, in it at first was the heat of secular
glory; but presently the glory itself and those who followed it burnt out.
Bones mean the powerful of the world; flesh its various peoples: as bones
support flesh, so the powerful of the world rule the weakness of the masses.
But now, behold, all the powerful of this world have been taken from it. The
bones, then, are thoroughly sodden. The peoples are gone; the flesh, then, is
boiled up. There follows then: ‘Heap together the bones, which I will burn with
fire; the flesh shall be consumed, and the whole composition shall be sodden;
and the bones shall waste away’. For where is the senate? where any longer a
people? The bones are wasted, the flesh consumed; all pride of secular
dignities is perished out of it. The whole composition is sodden. Yet every day
the sword, every day innumerable sorrows press upon us, the poor remaining
remnant. So, then, this also applies: ‘Set it empty upon burning coals’. For
since there is no senate, since the people has died out, and yet sorrow and
suffering are multiplied day by day on the few that remain, Rome is empty, and
yet it burns. We apply this to men, but we see the very structures destroyed by
the multiplication of ruins. So that he adds, upon the empty city, ‘Burn it and
melt its brass’. For it is come to the vessel itself being destroyed, in which
before both flesh and bones were consumed. For when the dwellers have fallen
away even the walls fall. But where are those who once rejoiced in its glory?
Where is their pomp and pride, and those ecstasies of frequent transport?
“In Rome are fulfilled the prophet’s words against Niniveh: ‘Where is the dwelling of the lions, and the
feeding-place of the young lions?’ Were not its commanders and its princes
lions who overran the whole world, and ravened, and slaughtered the prey? Here
the young lions found their feeding-place, because the boyhood, the youth, the
flower of manhood, from generation to generation, flocked hither, when they
sought to get on in the world. Now Rome is desolate, worn down, full of
sorrows. No one comes to it to get on in the world; no man of power or violence
remains to raven on the prey. Then may we say, ‘Where is the dwelling of the
lions, and the feeding-place of the young lions?’ Upon it has fallen the lot of
Judea, foretold by the prophet: ‘Enlarge thy baldness as the eagle’. For man is
wont to be bald upon the head alone; but the eagle's baldness is over all his
body. When very old, his plumes and feathers fall from his whole body. The city
which has lost its inhabitants, in losing its feathers, has enlarged its
baldness as the eagle. Shrunk also are its wings, with which it used to fly to
the prey, for all its men of might, by whom it ravened, are extinguished”.
We may here contrast the language concerning the Rome
which lay before their eyes of the two Popes St. Leo and St. Gregory. They
spoke with an interval between them of 140 years. The first spoke still of the
actual queen of the world, of the secular empire subdued and inherited by the
spiritual. The feathers of Leo’s eagle shone to him with celestial light; the
talons of the royal bird traversed the earth not to raven, but to feed a
conquered world with Christian doctrine. St. Gregory speaks of the eagle as
bald; but we shall see that he who day by day guarded the gates of defenseless
Rome against the Lombard spoiler, barbarian also and heretic, fed no less the
ends of the earth with Christian doctrine. It was he who brought the Ultima Thule, and its inhabitants the penitus toto divisos orbe Britannos again under
the yoke of Christ, and taught the sea-kings humanity.
A little later St. Gregory closed his exposition of
the prophet Ezechiel in St. Peter’s with these
sorrowful words: “So far, dear brethren, by the gift of God, we have searched
out hidden meanings for you. Let no man blame me if I close them here, because,
as you all witness, our sufferings have grown enormous. On every side we are
encircled with swords: on every side we are in imminent peril of death. Some
return to us maimed of their hands; of others we hear that they are captured;
of others, again, that they are slain. My tongue can no longer expound, when my
spirit is weary of my life. Let no one ask me to unfold the Scriptures; for my
harp is turned to mourning, and my voice to the cry of the weeper. The eye of
my heart no longer keeps its watch in the discussion of mysteries; my soul
droops for weariness. Study has lost its charm for me. I have forgotten to eat
my bread for the voice of my groaning. How can one who is not allowed to live
take pleasure in the mystical sense of Scripture? How can one whose daily
chalice is bitterness present sweets for others to drink? What remains for us
but while we weep to give thanks for the strokes of the scourge which we suffer
for our iniquities. Our Creator is become our Father by the Spirit of adoption
whom He has given to us: sometimes He feeds His sons with bread; sometimes He
corrects them with the scourge; because He schools us by sorrows and by gifts
for the unending inheritance”.
This was the Rome in which Gregory ruled as Pope for
fourteen years, since he saw the archangel's sword sheathed over the castle of
St. Angelo, into which name the pagan mausoleum was baptized. Pestilence in the
city, where the remnant of a people wandered disconsolate by the mighty halls
and vast spaces of the old emperors—swords of pagan or Arian barbarians all
round the patched-up walls of Aurelian. City after city through the hapless
Italy reported as plundered or ruined by the Lombard devastation. Presently the
trials of a sick-bed and frequent attacks of gout were added to his daily tale
of sorrows. In the last years of Gregory it came to pass that the universal
Church was governed from the sick-bed of one worn down, not by years—for he
died at sixty-four—but by sufferings of body and mind. The prisoner of the
Lombards had to struggle perpetually with the spirit of Byzantine despotism and
the aggressive arrogance of a prelate whom successive eastern sovereigns had
nursed from a suffragan of Heraclea to be the
claimant of an ecumenical patriarchate. Yet the eyes of Gregory were bent
likewise on the northern conquerors who had seized the provinces of the West.
Before he was Pope he had observed in the slave-market of Rome the fair-haired
Angles whom he would fain make angels; when Pope he sent forth from his
father's house, which he had given to the great Father Benedict, those who were
to carry the banner of that father into the isle lost to Christ. In that island
he appointed the primate of Canterbury, and designed the primate of York.
Through St. Leander and St. Isidore, and the martyr
St. Hermenegild, he recovered Spain from the Arian
blight; through the queen Theodelinda he made some impression upon Lombard
cruelty and misbelief; through the Frankish monarchy
he won back France from dissolution and heresy. As he saw the palaces around
him deserted, and the broken aqueducts mourn over their intercepted streams in
a wasted Campagna, and the glory of Trajan's forum become paler day by day, he
thought that the end of the world was coming—and so thinking and so saying, he
founded Christendom. In Rome itself, the almsgivers whom he had organized
traversed the streets daily, carrying food to the hungry, medicine and medical
aid to the sick. Every month he allotted portions of corn, wine, oil, cheese,
fish, vegetables. The Church seemed to be the general provider. Every day he
fed at his table twelve poor pilgrims, and served them himself. The nuns who
took refuge in Rome, from the destruction of their monasteries by the Lombards,
amounted to three thousand, whom Gregory supported, especially during the
severe winter of 597. He wrote to the sister of the emperor Mauritius: “To
their prayers and tears and fasts Rome owes its delivery from the sword of the
Lombards”. Other cities also he saved, and so he distributed the vast patrimony
of the Roman Church in Southern Italy, Sicily, Africa, France, Illyricum, with
such wisdom and so beneficent a mercy, that historians trace to him the
beginning of that temporal sovereignty which two hundred years after him the
Popes were to take in change for the cruel abandonment, paired with incessant
exaction, of Byzantine despotism; and the most loyal of subjects were called to
be the most beneficent of sovereigns; and the people who had found them fathers
from age to age rejoiced to see the fathership united
with kingship.
What had happened to the Italy recovered by the arms
of Belisarius and Narses, to the unity of the Roman empire, which caused the
calamitous state described by Gregory?
Both Belisarius and Narses had enrolled a multifarious
host of adventurers under the banner which professed to deliver Rome and Italy
from the Gothic occupation. Narses especially had awakened the greed of the
Lombards by the sight of Italy’s fair lands. Scarcely had he ceased to govern
Rome, in 567, when the effect of this became visible. What Alaric, what
Odoacer, what Theodoric, had done, Alboin did with yet more terrible results;
and the fourth captivity which Nova Roma had prepared for her mother, become in
her mind a hated rival, was the hardest, the longest, the most destructive of
all. It is doubtful whether the retort of the eunuch Narses to the empress
Sophia, when she recalled him from his government to ply, as she said, the
spindle, that he would spin for her such a thread as in her life she would not
disentangle, is authentic, but it undoubtedly presents historic truth. Whether
or not Narses called the Lombards into Italy, their king Alboin came from
Pannonia over the Carnian Alps into the plain which
has ever since borne their name; and this was in the next year—568—to the recall
of Narses. The Goth and the Herules had worked much
woe and wrought great destruction; but the Goths compared to the Lombards were
as knights compared to villains. The Lombards, inferior to them by far in
strength both of body and of mind, this rudest of Teuton races seemed incapable
of receiving culture. It had, moreover, fewer elements in it capable of being
worked into the stable order of a state. In belief it was partly Arian and
partly pagan. It had also a mixture of Sarmatian blood. When they broke into
Italy, the cities of that land, however wasted and depopulated through Attila
and the Gothic wars, yet retained their Roman form, yet were full of ancient
monuments, splendid still in desolation. Now, one after another fell under the
sword of those barbarians. Milan surrendered to Alboin in the autumn of 569,
and after three years' siege he entered as conqueror into Theodoric’s palace in
Pavia. Only Rome, Ravenna, and the cities of the coast still carried the
imperial flag. The Romans themselves regarded as a marvel the maintenance of
their scarcely defended city. Alboin aimed at making the palace of the Caesars
his royal residence. His warriors advanced with terrible devastation from
Spoleto to the very walls of Rome in the time of Pope John III, who died, after
nearly thirteen years’ government, the 13th July, 573.
Rome was then so severely pressed that the See of Peter remained more than a year unfilled; for the
Lombards were encamped before Rome, and hindered communication with Byzantium,
whence Benedict I, the newly-elected Pope, had to wait for the imperial
confirmation. The Book of the Popes recites that during his four years’
government the Lombards overran all Italy, and that pestilence and hunger
consumed her people. Rome, also, was visited by both. The emperor Tiberius
tried to succor it by sending corn from Egypt to the harbour Porto.
Alboin had been murdered, and Kleph had succeeded him, on whose death, in 575, the Lombards fell into anarchy, and
were divided into thirty-six dukes, and Faroald, the
first duke of Spoleto, held Rome besieged when Benedict I died, in 578; and so
his successor, Pelagius II, a Roman of Gothic descent, was consecrated without
the emperor’s confirmation. The beleaguered Pope sent a cry of distress by an
embassy to the eastern emperor, together with a gift of 3000 pounds’ weight of
gold from the impoverished city. But the emperor, engaged in a Persian war,
could only send insufficient troops to Ravenna, more precious to him than Rome,
declined the Roman gold, and advised to corrupt with it the Lombard commanders. Zoto, the Lombard duke of Beneventum, returning from
Rome, which had ransomed itself, destroyed St. Benedict's monastery of Monte
Cassino, in 580. The monks escaped to Rome, carrying with them the Saint’s
autograph of his Rule. Pope Pelagius II received them in the Lateran basilica.
There they founded the first Benedictine monastery in Rome. They named it after
St. John the Baptist and St. John the Evangelist, and so Constantine's
basilica, or the Church of the Saviour, became in
after-times St. John Lateran. Monte Cassino lay in ruins 140 years, during
which time the great Order had its chief seat in Rome.
Thus did Rome and Italy learn what they had gained by
reunion with the eastern empire under Justinian. The pitiless financial
exaction of that empire was exerted wherever it had power. War and pestilence
ravaged town and country. It cost the Church a labor of 200 years to turn the
Lombards from Arians and savages into Catholics who should one day be capable
of resisting a Barbarossa and generating a Dante.
What, during these 200 years, an imperial exarch at
Ravenna was like Gregory tells us in a letter to his friend Sebastian, bishop
of Sirmium: “Words cannot express what I suffer from
your friend, the lord Romanus. I may say that his malice against us is worse
than the swords of the Lombards. The enemies who slay us seem to us kinder than
the magistrates of the commonwealth, who wear our hearts out with their
malignity, their plundering, and their deceit. At one and the same time to
superintend bishops and clergy, monasteries also and the people, carefully to
watch against insidious attacks of our enemies, and be perpetually on guard
against the treachery and ill-treatment of our rulers, you, my brother, can the
better judge what labor and sorrow is here in proportion to the purity of your
affection for me who suffer it”.
This glimpse will be enough of the generation which
preceded the accession of St. Gregory to the Chair of Peter. The whole fifty
years of his life up to that time were for his country like the prophet's
scroll, inscribed with lamentation and mourning and woe. And in his words to
the bishop of Sirmium he gives a faithful picture of
the position which his successors held until the time when at length they
invoked the king of the Franks to come to the succor of St. Peter.
The calamities which fell upon Italy, and especially
upon Rome, in the five captures of the Gothic war, in the subsequent descent of
the Lombards, in the subjection of the old capital to a distant and despotic
lord, were so great that eye-witnesses declare no language could express them.
That they were to the Popes themselves unspeakably distressing, that the Popes
did all in their power to avert them, the letters of the Popes remain to
testify. I must now dwell for a time on the singular result which they had upon
the Roman Primacy. When temporal calamities less than these fell upon the
cities of Alexandria and Antioch, the seats of the other two original Petrine patriarchates, the authority of their prelates sunk
almost to nothing. Before these calamities they had yielded up a large portion
of their dignity and autonomy to the overreaching see of the eastern capital,
the rank of which, above that of a simple bishopric, rested on nothing but the
emperor’s will to concentrate spiritual power in his own hands, by making its
seat for the whole eastern empire the city of the Bosporus. But when Rome was
ruined in the Gothic war nothing of the kind took place. St. Gregory inherited
his place as successor of St. Peter without the least impairment of the
authority which his see had held from the beginning. One wound, indeed, had
been inflicted upon it by the Herule Odoacer, when in
occupation of the sovereign power which he held over Italy, in name, by
delegation of the emperor Zeno, in fact, as head of the foreign mercenaries, he
had claimed a right to confirm the election of the Pope when chosen. Theodoric
and Theodotus had continued to exert that right—and from the Goths Justinian
had taken it—and Gregory himself, as we have seen, had applied to the imperial
power at Constantinople to frustrate his own election by clergy and people. But
the Pope, when once recognized, entered upon his full and undiminished
authority. All that St. Leo had been St. Gregory was, though Rome had been almost
destroyed, and was in the temporal rule subject to the emperor’s officer, the
exarch at Ravenna. I do not know any fact of history which brings out more
distinctly the character of the Pope as inheriting the charge over the whole
Church committed by our Lord to St. Peter. That was not a charge depending on
the city in which it might be exercised. It was a charge committed to the chief
of the Apostles. As our Lord promised to be with the apostolic body to the
consummation of the world, as all their spiritual powers depended on His being
with them, so, above all, most of all, the spiritual power of their head. Rome
might be absolutely destitute of inhabitants after Totila’s victory, but the Pope was not touched. Rome might cease to be capital even of a
province, but the Pope was not touched. And it was a series of the most
terrible disasters which revealed this prerogative of the Pope as head of the
Christian hierarchy. The Pope might be a captive at Constantinople, scorned,
deceived, torn away even from the refuge of the altar, surrounded with spies,
betrayed by subservient bishops and patriarchs, and, worst of all, be laboring
under the stigma of an election originally enforced by arbitrary violence; a
despotic emperor might do his worst, but the Pope's successors carried on his
prerogatives unimpaired. The walls of Aurelian preserved Rome from the Lombard,
but the Pontiff who kept guard over them was not contained in them. His rule
was intangible by material attack as it was beyond the reach of material
despotism. Italy might be ruined, and a new Rome made out of its ruins, but the
Pope would be the maker of it. And the most terrible calamity was chosen to
reveal this singular prerogative. The death of Senatus populusque Romanus discovered even to
the outside world the life which proceeded from St. Peter’s body, as each
archbishop received from St. Peter's successor the pallium which had been laid
upon it. Thus was conveyed to the mind by the senses that participation of the
Primacy, in which consisted all the authority which he exercised over other
bishops. The violence of the Teuton, the misbelief of
the Arian, the despotism of the Byzantine, were unconsciously co-operating to
this result.
For it must be added that the Rome which survived
after the conquest by Justinian only lived by the Primacy of which it was the
seat. Two historians of the city, writing from quite opposite points of view,
one a Catholic Christian, the other a rationalistic unbeliever, unite in
witnessing that from the time of Narses the spiritual power of the Primacy was
the spring of all action. Not only such new buildings as arose were churches
and the work of the Popes; St. Gregory also fed the city from the patrimonium of
the church which he administered. Rome had been made by her empire, which the
political wisdom and valor of her citizens had formed through so many
centuries. When at length the wandering of the nations had broken up that
empire, and the northern soldiers whom the emperors, specially from Constantine
onwards, had enrolled in her armies and taken for their ministers and generals,
followed the example of Alaric and Ataulph, and
assumed the rule for themselves, the situation of Rome offered it no
protection. The emperor who, at the beginning of the fifth century, took refuge
from Alaric in Ravenna was followed a century later by the Gothic king, whose
body, still reposing in his splendid tomb at Ravenna, was a memorial that this
fortress had been the centre of his power. Theodoric was succeeded by the
exarch, the permanent representative of an absent lord. We are following the
fortunes of Rome in the 300 years from Genseric to Astolphus.
In the second and third of these three centuries Rome would have ceased to
exist, but for the imperishable life which did not come from her but was stored
up in her. That life was the form of her new body; otherwise it would have been
a carcase lying prostrate in the dust of moldering
theatres and desolated baths. Their patriarchs saved neither Antioch nor
Alexandria; but the Papacy not only saved Rome, but created her anew.
Out of such a Rome St. Gregory poured forth his
sorrows to the empress Constantine, wife of Mauritius: “It is now
seven-and-twenty years since we have been living in this city among the swords
of the Lombards”. He was writing in the year 595, and he reckons from the
descent of Alboin in 568. “What the sums called for from the Church in these
years day by day to live at all have been I cannot express. I may say in a word
that as your Majesties have, with the first army of Italy at Ravenna, a
chancellor of the exchequer who supplies daily wants, so in this city for the
like purpose I am such a person. And yet this same church which at one and the
same time is at such endless expense for the clergy, the monasteries, the poor,
the people, and moreover for the Lombards, is pressed also by the affliction of
all the churches, which groan over the pride of this one man, yet do not
venture to utter a word”.
And Gregory, referring just before to the pride of
this one man, who had the audacity to put in a letter to the Pope himself, a
superscription in which, according to the Pope's judgment, he claimed to be
sole bishop in the Church, used words which will serve to indicate what Gregory
conceived his own authority to be, as well as the source on which it rested: “I
beseech you, by Almighty God, not to permit your Majesty’s time to be polluted
by one man's arrogance. Do not in any way give your consent to so perverse an
appellation. By no means let your Majesty in such a cause despise me the
individual, for the sins of Gregory are indeed so great as to deserve such
treatment, but there are no sins of the Apostle Peter that he should deserve in
your time such treatment. Wherefore, I again and again entreat you, by Almighty
God, that as former princes, your progenitors, have sought the favor of the
holy Apostle Peter, so you also would seek it and preserve it for yourselves.
Nor let his honor be in your mind the least diminished by our sins, his
unworthy servant: that he may be now your helper in all things, and hereafter
be able to pardon your sins”.
I quote the following passage from a letter to the
emperor Mauritius himself, not only because Gregory alleges as the root of his
own authority the three great words spoken by our Lord to Peter, but for the
description of the times in which he lived, and the vast importance of union
between the two great powers. This, he says, if faithfully maintained on both
sides, would have protected them from such calamities.
“Your Majesty, who is appointed by God, watches, among
the other cares of your empire, with the uprightness of a spiritual zeal over
the preservation of sacerdotal charity. For, with piety as well as truth, you
think that no one can rule well the things of this world unless he knows how to
treat divine things, and that the peace of the human commonwealth depends on
the peace of the universal Church. For, most gracious emperor, what power of
man, what masterful arm of flesh, would presume to lay unholy hands upon the
dignity of your most Christian empire, if the bishops were with one accord of
mind to beseech their Redeemer for you by their words, and, if need be, by
their deservings? Is there any nation so ferocious as
to use its sword so cruelly for the destruction of the faithful, unless our
life, who are called but are not bishops, had upon it the stain of the worst
actions? While, deserting what belongs to us, and aiming at what is beyond us,
we add our own sins to the brute strength of barbarians. Our guilt sharpens the
swords of our enemies, and weighs down the strength of the State. What excuse
can we make who press down the people of God, over which we unworthily preside,
with the burden of our sins? Who preach with our tongues and kill by our
examples? Whose works teach iniquity, while their words make a show of justice?
We wear down the body with fasts, while the mind swells with arrogance. This
puts on poor apparel; that has more than imperial pride. We lie in ashes, and
despise dignities. We teach the humble, and lead the proud, and hide the wolf's
teeth in the sheep's face. What result has all this but that, while we impose
on men, we are made known to God? Thus it is with the greatest wisdom that your
Majesty seeks the peace of the Church as the means of stilling the tumults of
war, and would make the hearts of bishops rest once more in its solid
structure. That is my wish: in that to the utmost of my power I obey you.
“But since it is not my cause but God’s, and since not
I only but the whole Church is thrown into confusion; since sacred laws, since
venerable councils, since the very commands even of our Lord Jesus Christ are
disturbed by the invention of this haughty and pompous language, let the most
pious emperor lance the wound and overcome the sick man's resistance by the
force of the imperial authority. If you bind up that wound, you raise up the
State; and by cutting off such abuses, contribute to the length of your reign.
“For to all who know the Gospel it is notorious that
the charge of the whole Church was entrusted by the voice of the Lord to the
holy Apostle Peter, chief of all the Apostles”. And he then cites, as so many
of his predecessors cited, the three great words. He concludes: “Peter received
the keys of the kingdom of heaven, the power of binding and loosing, the charge
of the whole Church, the Principate over it; yet he is not called the universal
Apostle, and John, my colleague as bishop, endeavors to be called universal
bishop.
“All things in Europe are delivered over to the power
of barbarians. Our cities are destroyed, our fortresses overthrown, our
provinces depopulated. The ground remains untilled. Day by day idolaters
exercise their rage upon the faithful, who are cruelly slaughtered; and bishops
who should lie in dust and ashes seek for themselves vanitous names: glory in new and profane titles.
“Am I in this defending a cause proper to myself? Am I
resisting my own special injury? Nay, it is the cause of Almighty God: the
cause of the universal Church. Who is he who, in spite of the commands of the
Gospel, in spite of the decrees of councils, presumes to usurp a new title for
himself? I would that he who has agreed to be called universal may be himself
one, without the diminution of others.
“And we know, indeed, that many bishops of
Constantinople have fallen into the gulf of heresy; have become not heretics
only but heresiarchs. Thence came Nestorius, who, deeming Jesus Christ, the
Mediator of God and man, to be two persons, because he did not believe that God
could become man, went even to the extent of Jewish unbelief. Thence came
Macedonius, who denied the Godhead of the Holy Spirit, consubstantial with the
Father and the Son. If, then, anyone seizes upon that name for himself, as in
the judgment of all good men he has done, the whole Church—which God
forbid—falls from its state when he who is called universal falls. But far from
the hearts of Christians be that blasphemous name in which the honor due to all
bishops is taken away, while one madly arrogates it to himself.
“I know that in honor of St. Peter, prince of the
Apostles, that title was offered to the Roman Pontiff during the venerable
Council of Chalcedon. But no one of them ever consented to use this name of
singularity; lest while something peculiar was given to one, all bishops should
be deprived of the honor due to them. Do we, then, not seek the glory of this
name, even when offered to us, and does another catch at it for himself, when
it is not offered?
“Your Majesty, then, must bend that neck which refuses
obedience to the canons. He must be restrained, who does an injury to the whole
Church; who is proud in heart; who has a greed after a name given to none
other; who by such a singular name throws a slur upon your empire also in
putting himself over it.
“We are all scandalized at this: let the author of the
scandal return to right, and all contest between bishops will cease. For I am
the servant of all bishops so long as they live like bishops. But whoever,
through vainglory and contrary to the statutes of the Fathers, lifts his neck
against Almighty God, I trust in Almighty God that he will not bend me even
with the sword”.
As Gregory quotes the three words said to Peter, with
application of them to his own see, it seems needless to repeat other passages in
which he says the same thing. But there is a letter to Eulogius,
patriarch of Alexandria, which begins by saying that this patriarch had written
to him much concerning the See of Peter, and that he
sat in it in his successors down to Gregory's own time. Whereupon Gregory,
before himself citing the three words, says: “Who does not know that holy
Church is founded on the solidity of the chief Apostle, whose name expressed
his firmness, being called Peter from Petra”. Then he calls the attention of Eulogius to the fact that all the three patriarchal sees
were sees of Peter, with this remarkable inference, that “though there were
many Apostles, only the see of the prince of the
Apostles, which is the see of one in three places,
received supreme authority in virtue of its very principate”.
Let us attempt to gather the meaning of the various
statements quoted from St. Gregory, and see whether they do not form a coherent
whole.
He claims, like all his predecessors, the three great
texts concerning Peter, as conveying the charge of the whole Church, the
Principate, to Peter and his heirs, that is, the Popes preceding him.
He contrasts in the most pointed manner this charge
with the name of Ecumenical, which he translates universal, patriarch, as
assumed by the bishop of Constantinople, and he contrasts not the name only,
but the thing which he conceives to be meant by the name and carried in it.
He contrasts likewise the moderation of his
predecessors, who, though inheriting Peter's charge over the whole Church,
declined to accept a name which seemed to exclude other bishops from their
proper honor.
Peter’s charge over the whole Church, then, in the
judgment of Gregory, had descended to himself, as he wrote to the empress, “though
the sins of Gregory, who is Peter’s unworthy servant, are great, the sins of
the Apostle are none”, to justify the treatment he has met with in this
assumption by another of the title Ecumenical. In a word, the charge is a
command of the Gospel, the assumption is “a name of blasphemy and diabolical
pride, and a forerunner of Antichrist”.
I conceive that we may interpret St. Gregory’s mind in
this way. When he so wrote he had behind him rather more than five full
centuries since St. Peter and St. Paul had given up their lives in Rome for the
Christian faith, and become its patron saints. In all that time Gregory had
seen the hierarchy founded by the bearer of the keys fill the earth. Peter, as
a token of his Principate, had put his name in the three chief sees, sitting
himself as bishop in Antioch for seven years; sitting also himself in Rome, as
bishop, and dying there; sending also his disciple Mark from Rome to
Alexandria. Our Lord's gift and charge to Peter was the source of unity in His
Church. He Himself being mediator between God and man united His Church with
the Divine Trinity in unity. Then He gave the keys of His kingdom to Peter, in
whom unity was secured through the three patriarchs and the other bishops. Such
was the constitution which stood without a break before St. Gregory from the
Apostles to the Nicene Council. From St. Sylvester to his own time the Popes
had been maintaining that constitution. But now the claim of the bishops of
Constantinople was directly against this constitution. Pope Gelasius, his
predecessor, had told that bishop in his day that he had no rank above that of
a simple bishop. For all their adventitious rank they rested, not upon God, not
upon Jesus Christ, not upon St. Peter, but upon the residence of the emperors
in their city. That was the ground upon which they called themselves
ecumenical, a title which Gregory interpreted universal. Their first step in
moving beyond the position of simple bishop was when the 150 bishops at
Constantinople in 381 attempted to give them the second place in rank. And this
they did not upon any ground of apostolic descent, but because Constantinople
was Nova Roma. As to their act in doing this Gregory writes to Eulogius: “The Roman Church up to this time does not
possess, nor has received, the canons or the acts of that council; it has
received that council so far as it condemned Macedonius”. Their next step was
at the Council of Chalcedon to attempt passing a canon, to the effect that the
Fathers had given its rank to Rome because it was the capital, that the 150 Fathers
had therefore given the second rank to Constantinople, because it was the new
capital; and that, therefore, the Pontic, the Arian,
and the Thracian exarchs of Caesarea, Ephesus, and
Heraclea should be subjected to it. This canon St. Leo had absolutely rejected,
and the emperor Marcian had accepted his rejection.
In the 130 years from St. Leo to himself, St. Gregory had seen the assumptions
of the bishops of Constantinople continually increasing. They rested upon the
imperial favor. And now in the case of John the Faster they had gone so far
that he prefixed his assumed title of ecumenical patriarch to the very
documents which he sent to the Pope for revision. And this though the cause had
been settled by himself, and had now come before the Pope, whose power
therefore to revise the sentence of one who called himself ecumenical patriarch
he did not dispute.
Nor, indeed, did it appear over what domain he claimed
to be universal. It might be over the eastern bishops; it might be over the two
patriarchs of Alexandria and Antioch, with the later patriarch of Jerusalem; it
might be over the actual Roman empire; it might be, finally, over the whole
Church. But whichever it might be, the claim would equally be, in Gregory's
judgment, unlawful, based simply and solely upon imperial power; resting also
in its origin upon a direct untruth, which assaulted the whole foundation
whereon the charge of the whole Church, the Principate of Gregory, rested;
couched, moreover, in language which would enable future generations of Greeks
to draw the conclusion that, since the Primacy of Rome proceeded from its being
the capital, when Rome ceased to be the capital, and Constantine's city became
the capital, the Primacy also passed to it.
Thus, in the whole assumption of the bishops of
Constantinople, it was presupposed that the spiritual power and the hierarchy
of the Church descended not from Jesus Christ, but from the emperors. So it is
clear that this empty title, which seemed to the emperor Mauritius a
meaningless word, a mere nothing, contained in itself the whole system of
Antichrist. The Pope saw it, and his words are the more significant when we
remember that at the time he uttered them the man had already reached full
manhood who was to cut the empire of Justinian in half, to deprive of their
liberty three of the eastern patriarchs, destroy a multitude of the Christian
people, and be parent of the religion which through the course of 1200 years
has shown itself to be specially anti-Christian. There in his Arab tent, as yet
the faithful husband of an old wife, was the future Khalif,
in whom the spiritual and the temporal power would be joined together; who
would set up in a false theocracy that usurpation which Constantine's eastern
successors were striving to carry out in the Christian Church. Mahommed would consecrate that very false principle which
was at the root of the ecumenical patriarch's arrogance. Thus the strongest
word used by Gregory of John the Faster's assumption, that it was “a name of
blasphemy, of diabolical pride, and a forerunner of Antichrist”, received its
exact verification within a generation after Gregory had spoken it.
But Gregory’s charge and Principate were of divine
creation, and did not exclude the proper power and jurisdiction either of every
bishop or of the whole episcopate, at the head of which it stood, and through
which it worked, carefully maintaining what had been from the beginning,
preserving the rank and place of each, consolidating all in the one structure.
The intruder set up by the imperial power deposed Alexandria and Antioch to
make them subject to himself; the lawful shepherd maintained Alexandria and
Antioch because they grew upon the tree of which he was the trunk. His charge
did not exclude, but did indeed include them. The reasoning of St. Gregory in
his letter to the emperor of the day, and his very words in his letter to the
patriarch Eulogius, have become a matter of faith by
their enrolment in the decree of the Vatican Council. That decree defines the
Principate to be an episcopal power of jurisdiction, which is immediate, over
the whole Church. By it the whole Church becomes one flock, under one shepherd.
And it further defines that, “It is so far from being true that this power of
the Supreme Pontiff is injurious to the ordinary and immediate power of
episcopal jurisdiction, by which bishops placed by the Holy Spirit have
succeeded the Apostles, and as true pastors feed and rule the flocks severally
assigned to them, each his own, that this jurisdiction is asserted, strengthened,
and maintained by the supreme and universal pastor, according to St. Gregory’s
words: ‘My honor is the honor of the universal Church; my honor is the solid
strength of my brethren; then am I truly honored when his due rank is given to
each’.”
It may be observed that Gregory’s position against the
assumption of John the Faster is the same as St. Leo’s position against Anatolius. In both cases the Popes discerned the hostile
power located in the see of Nova Roma which was at
work against the original order of the Church, and the Pope who was at the head
of it. The only difference lies in the great advance which the hostile power
had made on one hand, and on the other hand the excessively difficult temporal
position in which St. Gregory had to fight the battle for the cause, as he
said, of the universal Church. Yet the speech of the Pope beleaguered by the
Lombards in a decimated and subject Rome is as strong as the speech of the Pope
who had the imperial grandchildren of Theodosius for friends and supporters,
and, when they failed, saved Rome by her two Apostles from the destruction
menaced by Attila and Genseric.
But there was no one in the eastern Church—neither the
emperor Mauritius, nor the patriarch John the Faster, nor the patriarch Eulogius—who failed to acknowledge the Pope’s charge over
the whole Church, grounded on the three texts to Peter. Gregory himself
reprehends the patriarch Eulogius for giving him in
the superscription of his letter the title “universal Pope”. He chose for himself,
in opposition to the bishop John’s arrogated title of ecumenical patriarch,
that of “servant of the servants of God”. The title chosen indicated the temper
in which St. Gregory exercised the vast charge which he had inherited. For if
there is any one principle which seems to serve as the favorite maxim of his
whole pontificate, it is that expressed in a letter to the bishop of Syracuse.
That bishop had been speaking of an African primate who had professed that he
was subject to the Apostolic See. St. Gregory's comment is: “If a bishop is in
any fault, I know not any bishop who is not subject to it. But when no fault
requires it, all are equal according to the estimation of humility”. Natalis, archbishop of Salona, in Dalmatia, had given the
Pope much trouble. The Pope deals with him tenderly in more than one letter.
But he says: “After the letters of my predecessor (Pelagius) and my own, in the
matter of Honoratus the archdeacon, were sent to your Holiness, in despite of
the sentence of us both, the above-mentioned Honoratus was deprived of his
rank. Had either of the four patriarchs done this, so great an act of contumacy
could not have been passed over without the most grievous scandal. However, as
your brotherhood has since returned to your duty, I take notice neither of the
injury done to me, nor of that to my predecessor”.
Of the immense energy shown by St. Gregory in the
exercise of his Principate, of the immense influence wielded by him both in the
East and in the West, of the acknowledgment of his Principate by the answers
which emperor and patriarch made to his demands and rebukes, we possess an
imperishable record in the fourteen books of his letters which have been
preserved to us. They are somewhat more than 850 in number. They range over every
subject, and are addressed to every sort of person. If he rebukes the ambition
of a patriarch, and complains of an emperor’s unjust law, he cares also that
the tenants on the vast estates of the Church which his officers superintend at
a distance should not be in any way harshly treated. He writes to his defensor in Sicily: “I am informed that if anyone has a
charge against any clerks, you throw a slight upon the bishops by causing these
clerks to appear in your own court. If this be so, we expressly order you to
presume to do so no more, because beyond doubt it is very unseemly. If anyone
charges a clerk, let him go to his bishop, for the bishop himself to hear the
case, or depute judges. If it come to arbitration, let the so-deputed judges
cause the parties to select a judge. If a clerk or a layman have anything
against a bishop, you should act between them either by hearing the cause
yourself, or by inducing the parties to choose judges. For if his own
jurisdiction is not preserved to each bishop, what else results but that the
order of the Church is thrown into confusion by us, the very persons who are
charged with its maintenance.
“We have also been informed that certain clerks, put
into penance for faults they had committed by our most reverend brother the
bishop John, have been dismissed by your authority without his knowledge. If
this is true, know that you have committed an altogether improper act, worthy
of great censure. Restore, therefore, at once those clerks to their own bishop,
nor ever do this again, or you will incur from us severe punishment”.
I have quoted already his letters on eastern affairs.
They might be enlarged upon to any extent. As to those who held the highest
rank, he has warm sympathy with a deposed patriarch of Antioch, sending him a
copy of the letter which announced his accession, as well as to the sitting
patriarchs. After twenty years' deposition Anastasius was restored. He has also
close friendship with Eulogius, patriarch of
Alexandria, to whom he writes gracefully: “Besides our mutual affection, there
is a peculiar bond uniting us to the Alexandrian Church. All know that the
Evangelist Mark was sent by his master Peter; thus we are clasped together by
the unity of the master and the disciple. I seem to sit in the disciple's see
for the master’s sake, and you in the master's see for the sake of the
disciple. To this we must add your personal merits; for we know how you follow
the institutions of him from whom you spring. Thus we are touched with
compassion for what you suffer; but we shrink from telling you what we endure
ourselves by the daily plundering, killing, and maiming of our people by the
Lombards”.
Let us here take a short view of Gregory’s incessant
activity among the western nations in process of formation. In his struggle to
tame the ferocity, lawlessness, and unbelief of the Lombards, he betakes
himself to the illustrious Catholic queen Theodelinda. He strives to use her
influence with her husband Agilulf, on behalf of Rome, ever the object of
oppression. Knowing her to be a good Christian, he sent her his Dialogues. He
also set before her the supremacy of his see, because she had been misled into
withdrawing from the communion of the new archbishop of Milan, Constantius. The
Pope assures her that the archbishop, as well as himself, venerates the
doctrinal decisions of the Four Councils. He adds: “Since, then, by my own
public profession you know the entireness of our belief, it is fitting that you
have no further scruple concerning the Church of St. Peter, prince of the
Apostles. But persist in the true faith, and ground your life on the rock of
the Church, that is, in his confession: lest your many tears and your good
works avail nothing, if they be separated from the true faith. For as branches
wither without a root, so works, however good they seem, are nothing if
separated from the solidity of the faith”.
Ten of his letters are addressed to Brunechild, the terrible queen of the Franks. But his
letter to all the Gallic bishops in the kingdom of Childebert will best set forth his authority. That king then reigned over nearly all
France. The Pope began by saying that the universe itself was ruled by
graduated orders of spirits. If there was such distinction of ranks even in the
sinless, what man should hesitate to obey a disposition to which angels are
subject? “Since, then, each individual office is happily fulfilled when there
is a superior to whom application can be made, we have thought it good,
following ancient custom, to make our brother Virgilius, bishop of Arles, our
representative in the churches which are in the kingdom of our most illustrious
son king Childebert. We do this in order that the
integrity of the Catholic faith, that is, of the Four holy Councils, may by
God's protection be carefully preserved; and that, if any contention should
arise between our brethren and fellow-bishops, he may, by virtue of his
authority, as holding the place of the Apostolic See, reduce it by discreet
moderation. We have also enjoined him, that if any contest should arise
requiring the presence of others, he should collect a sufficient number of our
brethren and fellow-bishops, discuss the matter equitably, and determine it in
conformity with the canons. But if, which the divine power avert, contest
should arise on a matter of faith, or some business emerge about which there is
great hesitation, and which for its magnitude requires the judgment of the
Apostolic See, after diligent examination of the facts, he is to make report to
us, that we may terminate all doubt thereon by a fitting sentence”.
In this letter we are at a hundred years after the
conversion of Clovis. The Catholic kingdom has swallowed up its Arian
competitors whether at Toulouse or at Lyons, and over it stands the protecting
vigor of Gregory, as a hundred and fifty years before that of Leo strove to
support the falling empire. Arles receives the pallium for the Frankish
kingdom, as it held it for the Theodocian empire,
from Rome. Leo saw the imperial line expire at Rome; from Rome Gregory places the
bishops “of his most illustrious son Childebert”
under the old primacy of Arles. This is the “solidity” of the rock of Peter in
which Gregory recommends the queens Theodelinda and Brunechild to place themselves.
We know how Gregory, while yet a Roman deacon and
monk, walking one day from the palace which he had made a monastery, scarcely
more than a stone’s-throw to the forum in which a slave-market was held, was
moved to pity at the sight of the fair-haired Angles; how he was minded to
leave Rome himself on a mission to convert them; how he was kept back by the
affection of the Romans; how Pope Pelagius suddenly died of the plague, and
Gregory, in spite of all his efforts, was made to succeed him; how from the See of Peter he sent out Augustine and his forty monks to
the lost island in the Atlantic, where, since Stilicho withdrew the Roman
armies, every cruelty had reveled, and every pagan
abomination had been practiced by the Saxon invaders. To many, no doubt, the
subsequent success of Gregory's venture to convert the Anglo-Saxon England has
served to disguise its danger and difficulty at the time. When Augustine
reached the shores of Kent, the successive invasions of the Saxon pirates had
set up eight petty kingdoms upon the ruin of the Roman civilization and the
Christian Church. The miseries which are covered under those five generations
of unrecorded strife are supposed to have exceeded the misery endured in
France, Spain, Italy, and the Illyrian provinces during the same time. The old
inhabitants were reduced to slavery, or exterminated, or driven to the three
corners of Cornwall, Wales, and Strathclyde. So
bitter was the British feeling under the destruction of their country and the
wrongs they had endured, that it overcame all Christian principle in them, and
the Welsh refused all aid to the Roman missionary in the attempt to convert a
race so cruel. It required all St. Gregory's firmness to induce his own monks
to persist. In all the annals of Christian enterprise during eighteen
centuries, there is probably not one which presented less hope of success than
St. Gregory’s resolution to add the spiritual beauty of the Christian to the
physical beauty which he admired in the captives of the Roman forum.
Among those to whom he applied to assist and further
his purpose was the great queen of the Franks. To Brunechild he directed a letter saluting her, he says, with the charity of a father: “We
hear that, by the help of God, the English people is willing to become
Christian; and we recommend the bearer of these, the servant of God, Augustine,
to your Excellency, to help him in all things, and to protect his work”.
It was also to Virgilius, bishop of Arles, and primate
of all the Gallic bishops, as we have seen, by Gregory’s own appointment, that
he sent Augustine, after his first success with Ethelbert, to receive episcopal
consecration.
From Gregory's own hand, and in virtue of his
apostolic power, England in its second spring received its division into two
provinces, one to be seated at Canterbury, the other at York. His letters to
St. Augustine still exist to show how he entered into all the difficulties of
the missionary, all the needs of a land in conversion from paganism. From him
date the great prerogatives of the see of Canterbury,
extending over the whole island, inasmuch as it was the matrix of the Church in
England. If sons may deny their father, Englishmen may deny Gregory, and add to
schism the guilt of parricide.
But Gregory was hardly less active in restoring Spain
from the Arian blight than in giving birth to a new Christian England. He
writes, in 594: “We have heard from many who have come from Spain how lately Hermenegild, son of Leovigild, king of the Visigoths, has
been converted from the Arian heresy to the Catholic faith by the preaching of
Leander, bishop of Seville, long united to me in intimate friendship. His Arian
father, by bribes and threats alike, tried to bring him back. Not succeeding,
he deprived him of his rank and all his possessions. When this also failed, he
put him in close imprisonment, fettering both neck and hands. So Hermenegild learnt to despise the earthly kingdom, and to
yearn after the heavenly, while he lay in bonds and sackcloth. When Easter
came, his father sent him in the middle of the night an Arian bishop that he
might receive communion sacrilegiously consecrated, and so recover his favors. Hermenegild repulsed the bishop with strong reproaches. The
father, hearing his report, burst into fury and sent officers to destroy him.
They split open his skull with an axe, and so destroyed the life of the body
which he had disregarded. Miracles followed. Psalms were heard about the body
of the royal martyr—royal, indeed, because he was a martyr”.
Writing to St. Leander, archbishop of Seville, Gregory
says: “I am so tossed by this world’s waves that I cannot steer to harbour this
old weather-beaten bark which the secret dispensation of God has committed to
my care. Shipwreck creaks in its worn-out planks. Dearest brother, if you love
me, stretch out the hand of your prayers to me in this tempest. Your reward for
helping me will be greater success in your own labors. No words of mine can
express the joy which I feel at hearing the perfect conversion of our common
son, king Rechared, to the Catholic faith”.
On another occasion Gregory writes to Leander, sending
him the pallium, “blessed by Peter, prince of the Apostles”, only to be used at
Mass: “I see by your letter that burning charity which kindles others. He who
is not himself on fire cannot inflame others. I always call to mind your life
with great veneration. But as for me I am not what I was: ‘Call me not Noemi,
which is fair; call me Mara, for I am full of bitterness’. Following the way of
my Head, I had resolved to be the scorn of men, the outcast of the people. But
the burden of this honor weighs me down; innumerable cares pierce me like
swords. There is no rest of the heart. I was tranquil in my monastery. The
tempest arose; I am in its waves, suffering with the loss of quiet a shipwreck
of mind. The gout oppresses you; I also am terribly pained by it. It will be
well if, under these strokes of the scourge, we perceive them to be gifts, by
which the sense of the flesh may atone for sins which delights of the flesh may
have led us to commit. The shortness of my letter will show how weak and how
occupied I am, who say so little to one whom I love so much”.
St. Gregory tells us that king Rechared,
after the martyrdom of his brother St. Hermenegild,
was converted from the Arian heresy, and brought the whole Visigothic nation to
the Catholic faith. “The brother of a martyr fitly became a preacher of the
faith. If Hermenegild had not died a martyr, this he
would not have been able to do; for 'except the grain of wheat falling into the
ground dieth, itself remaineth alone; but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit'.
This we see to be doing in the members which we know to have been done in the
Head. In the nation of the Visigoths one died that many might live”
A letter of St. Gregory to this king Rechared is extant, which one of the greatest French
bishops, Hincmar of Reims, nearly three hundred years after it was written,
thought worthy to be sent as a present to the emperor Charles the Bald. I quote
portions of it:
“Most excellent son, words cannot tell the delight
which I receive from your work and from your life. When I hear the power of
that new miracle wrought in our days, that by means of your Excellency the
whole nation of the Goths has been brought over from the error of the Arian
heresy to the solidity of the right faith, I exclaim with the prophet, ‘This is
the change of the hand of the Most High’. Is there a heart of stone which would
not be softened on hearing of so great a work into praises of Almighty God and
affection for your Excellency? Often, when my sons meet, it is my pleasure to
tell them of the deeds wrought by you, and to join my admiration with theirs. I
get angry with myself that I am lazy, useless, and inert, while kings are laboring
for the gain of the heavenly country by the ingathering of souls. What, then,
shall I allege to the Judge at that tremendous tribunal, if I come before Him
then with empty hands, while your Excellency leads a long train of the faithful
whom you have drawn into the grace of the true faith by zealous and continuous
preaching? But by God's gift this is my great consolation, to love in you that
holy work which I have not in myself. When your acts move me to a great
exultation, I make mine by charity what is yours by labor. Thus, in your work
and our exultation over it, we may cry out with the angels over the conversion
of the Goths, ‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men of good
will’. But how joyfully St. Peter, prince of the Apostles, has received your
offerings is borne witness to all men by your life.
“You tell me that the abbots, who were carrying your
offering to St. Peter, were driven back by a bad sea passage into Spain. Your
gifts, which afterwards arrived, were not refused, but the courage of their
bearers was tried. The adversity which good intentions encounter is a trial of
virtue, not a judgment of reprobation. When St. Paul came to preach in Italy,
how great was the blessing he brought; yet he was ship wrecked in coming, but
the ship of his heart was not broken by the waves of the sea.
“Also, I am told that your Excellency issued a certain
decree against the misbelief of the Jews, which they
strove by a bribe to have modified. This bribe you despised, and in the desire
to please God preferred innocence to gold. This brought to my mind king David's
act. He longed for a draught from the fountain of Bethlehem, which the enemy's
host encompassed. His soldiers risked their lives to bring it. But he refused,
saying: ‘God forbid that I should drink the blood of these men. So he offered
it to the Lord’. If an armed king made a sacrifice to God of the water which he
refused, think what a sacrifice to Almighty God that king presented who for His
love refused to receive, not water, but gold. Therefore, most excellent son, I
say confidently that the gold which you refused to receive against God you
offered to Him. These are great deeds, the glory of which is due to God....
“Government of subjects should be tempered with great
moderation, lest power steal away the judgment. A kingdom is ruled well when
the glory of ruling does not overmaster the spirit. Provide also against fits
of anger, lest unlimited power be used hurriedly. Anger in punishing even
delinquents should not anticipate judgment like a mistress, but follow reason
as a servant, coming when she is called. If it once is in possession of the
mind, it puts down to justice even a cruel deed. Therefore it is written: ‘The
wrath of man worketh not the justice of God’; and
again: ‘Let everyone be swift to hear but slow to speak’. I do not doubt but
that by God’s help you practice all this. But as opportunity offers, I creep
behind your good works, that when an adviser adds himself to what you do
without advice, you may not be alone in your doing. May Almighty God stretch
forth His heavenly hand to protect you in all your acts, granting you
prosperity in the present life, and, after long years, eternal joy.
“I enclose a small key from the most sacred body of
the Apostle St. Peter, with his blessing. It contains an iron filing from his
chains, that what bound his neck for martyrdom may deliver yours from all sin.
I have also given the bearer of these a cross for
you: it contains some of the wood of the Lord's cross, and hair of St. John
Baptist; by which you may always be consoled by our Saviour through the intercession of His precursor. To our most reverend brother and
fellow-bishop Leander we have sent the pallium from the See of the Apostle St.
Peter, in accordance with ancient custom, with your life, with his own goodness
and dignity”.
This letter of St. Gregory had been drawn forth by one
from king Rechared to him, in which the king said he
had been minded to inform of his conversion one who was superior to all other
bishops, that he had sent a golden jeweled chalice which he hoped might be
found worthy of the Apostle who was first in honor. “I beseech your Highness,
when you have an opportunity, to find me out with your golden letters. For how
truly I love you is not, I think, unknown to one whose breast the Lord
inspires, and those who behold you not in the body, yet hear your good report;
I commend to your Holiness with the utmost veneration Leander, bishop of
Seville, who has been the means of making known to us your good will. I am
delighted to hear of your health, and beg of your Christian prudence that you
would frequently commend to our common Lord in your prayers the people who,
under God, are ruled by us, and have been added to Christ in your times, that
true charity towards God may be strengthened by the very distance which divides
us”.
The fact commemorated in these letters was indeed one
for which the Pope might well use the angelical hymn of praise. “The bishops of
Spain”, says Gibbon, “respected themselves and were respected by the public;
their indissoluble union confirmed their authority; and the regular discipline
of the Church introduced peace, order, and stability into the government of the
State. From the reign of Rechared, the first Catholic
king, to that of Witiza, the immediate predecessor of
the unfortunate Roderic, sixteen national councils were successively convened.
The six metropolitans—Toledo, Seville, Merida, Braga, Tarragona, and
Narbonne—presided according to their respective seniority; the assembly was
composed of their suffragan bishops, who appeared in
person or by their proxies; and a place was assigned to the most holy or
opulent of the Spanish abbots. During the first three days of the convocation,
as long as they agitated the ecclesiastical questions of doctrine and
discipline, the profane laity was excluded from their debates, which were
conducted, however, with decent solemnity. But on the morning of the fourth day
the doors were thrown open for the entrance of the great officers of the
palace, the dukes and counts of the provinces, the judges of the cities, and
the Gothic nobles; and the decrees of heaven were ratified by the consent of
the people. The same rules were observed in the provincial assemblies, the
annual synods which were empowered to hear complaints and to redress
grievances; and a legal government was supported by the prevailing influence of
the Spanish clergy.... The national councils of Toledo, in which the free
spirit of the barbarians was tempered and guided by episcopal policy, have
established some prudent laws for the common benefit of the king and people.
The vacancy of the throne was supplied by the choice of the bishops and
palatines; and after the failure of the line of Alaric, the regal dignity was
still limited to the pure and noble blood of the Goths. The clergy who anointed
their lawful prince always recommended the duty of allegiance; and the
spiritual censures were denounced on the heads of the impious subjects who
should resist his authority, conspire against his life, or violate by an
indecent union the chastity even of his widow. But the monarch himself, when he
ascended the throne, was bound by a reciprocal oath to God and his people that
he would faithfully execute his important trust. The real or imaginary faults
of his administration were subject to the control of a powerful aristocracy;
and the bishops and palatines were guarded by a fundamental privilege that they
should not be degraded, imprisoned, tortured, nor punished with death, exile,
or confiscation, unless by the free and public judgment of their peers”."
We have here the historian, who is one of the
bitterest enemies of the Christian Church and Faith, avowing that the barbarian
Visigoths received from the hands of that Church and Faith, at the end of the
sixth century, the great institutions of a limited Christian monarchy,
consecrated by the Church, in which the king at his accession solemnly avowed
his responsibility for his exercise of the immense functions entrusted to him;
also of parliaments, in which clergy and laity sat together in common deliberation
upon the affairs of the State, grievances were redressed, and laws for the
benefit of king and people passed; in fact, a reign of legal government, based
upon law and justice, and confirmed by religious sanction.
And in all this the hand of the Pope was seen, sending
to the chief bishop of Spain the pallium direct from the body of St. Peter, on
which it had been laid, as the visible symbol of apostolic power dwelling in
the Apostle’s See, and radiating from it.
This is the first instance, and not the least
striking, of a fact which lies at the foundation of modern Europe; for so the
Teuton war leaders became Christian kings, and so the northern barbarians were
changed into Christian nations. For that which Gibbon here describes took place
in all the Teuton peoples who accepted the Catholic faith. He has elsewhere
said: “The progress of Christianity has been marked by two glorious and
decisive victories: over the learned and luxurious citizens of the Roman
empire, and over the warlike barbarians of Scythia and Germany, who subverted
the empire and embraced the religion of the Romans”.
Of this latter victory we can celebrate the
accomplishment, as St. Gregory did, in the words of the angelic hymn, but the
details have not been preserved for us, even in the scanty proportion which we
possess concerning the former. Fighting for thirty years with the Lombards for
the very existence of Rome, Gregory was the contemporary and witness of this
second victory. Not until the Arian heresy was subdued by the Catholic faith
could it be said to be accomplished. The pontificate of his ancestor in the
third degree, Pope Felix III, might be called heroic, in that, while under the
domination of the Arian Herule, Odoacer, he resisted
the meddling with the received doctrine of the Church by the emperor Zeno,
guided by the larger mind and treacherous fraud of Acacius, the bishop of
Constantinople, who ruled its emperor. Then the Arian Vandals bitterly
persecuted the Church in Africa, and the Visigoth Arians had possession of
France from the Loire southwards, and of Spain. Nowhere in the whole world was
there a Catholic prince. The north and east of France and Belgium was held by
the still pagan Franks. By the time of Gregory, Clovis and his sons had
extinguished the Arian Visigoth kingdom and the Arian kingdom of Burgundy, and
ruled one Catholic kingdom of all France. Under Rechared,
the Arian Visigoth kingdom in Spain became Catholic. Gregory also announced to
his friend, the patriarch Eulogius, that the pagan
Saxons in England were receiving the Catholic faith by thousands from his
missionary. The taint which the wickedness of the eastern emperor Valens had
been so mysteriously allowed to communicate to the nascent faith of the Teuton
tribes, through the noblest of their family, the Goths, was, during the century
which passed between Pope Felix and Pope Gregory, purged away. It was decided
beyond recall that the new nations of the West should be Catholic. Five times
had Rome been taken and wasted: at one moment, it is said, all its inhabitants
had deserted it and fled. The ancient city was extinct: in and out of it rose
the Rome of the Popes, which Gregory was feeding and guarding. The eastern
emperor, who called himself the Roman prince, in recovering her had destroyed her;
but the life that was in her Pontiff was indestructible. The ecumenical
patriarch was foiled by the Servant of the servants of God: in proportion as
the eastern bishops submitted their original hierarchy, of apostolic
institution, and the graduated autonomy which each enjoyed under it, to an
imperial minister, termed a patriarch, in Constantinople, all the bishops of
the West, placed as they were under distinct kingdoms, found their common
centre, adviser, champion, and ruler in the Chair of Peter, fixed in a ruined
Rome. If Gregory, in his daily distress, thought that the end of the world was
coming, all subsequent ages have felt that in him the world of the future was
already founded. In the two centuries since the death of the great Theodosius,
the countries which form modern Europe had passed through indescribable
disturbance, a misery without end—dislodgement of the old proprietors, a
settlement of new inhabitants and rulers. The Christian religion itself had
receded for a time far within the limits which it had once reached, as in the
north of France, in Germany, and in Britain. The rulers of broad western lands,
with the conquering host which they led, had become the victims first, and then
the propagators, of the same fatal heresy. The conquered population alone
remained Catholic. The conversion of Clovis was the first light which arose in
this darkness. And now, a hundred years after that conversion, Paris and
Bordeaux, and Toulouse and Lyons, Toledo and Seville, were Catholic once more,
and Gregory, a provincial captive in a collapsing Rome, was owned by all these
cities as the standard and arbiter of their faith, and the king of the
Visigoths thankfully received a few filings from the chains of the Apostle
Peter as a present which worthily celebrated his conversion.
It is to be observed that this absolute defeat of the
Arian heresy in several countries is accomplished in spite of the power which,
in all of them, was wielded by Arian rulers. In vain had Genseric, Hunnerich, Guntamund, and Thrasimund oppressed and tortured the Catholics of Africa,
banished their bishops, and set up nominees of their own as Arian bishops in
their places for a hundred years. No sooner did Belisarius land on their soil
than the fabric reared with every possible deceit and cruelty fell to the
ground. The Arian Vandal king was carried away in triumph, as the spoil of a
single battle, to Constantinople, and the Catholic bishops, while they hailed
Justinian as their deliverer, met in plenary council, acknowledging the Primacy
of Peter, as in the days of St. Augustine. In vain had the powerful Visigoth
monarchy, seated during three generations at Toulouse, persecuted with fraud
and cruelty its Catholic people. A single blow from the arm of Clovis delivered
from their rule the whole country from the Loire to the Pyrenees. In vain had Gondebald and his family in Burgundy wavered between the
heresy which he professed and the Catholic faith which he admired. The children
of Clovis absorbed that kingdom also. But the strongest example of all remains.
In vain, too, had Theodoric, after the murder of his rival Odoacer when an
invited guest in the banquet of Ravenna, covered over the savage, and governed
with wisdom and moderation a Catholic people, whom he soothed by choosing their
noblest—Cassiodorus, Symmachus, and Boethius—for his ministers. He had formed
into a family compact by marriages the Arian rulers in Africa, Spain, and Gaul.
His moderation gave way when he saw the eastern emperor resume the policy of a
Catholic sovereign. He put on the savage again, and he ended with the murder
not only of his own long-trusted ministers, but of the Pope, who refused to be
his instrument in procuring immunity for heresy from a Catholic emperor.
At his death, overclouded with the pangs of remorse,
the Arian rule which he had fostered with so much skill showed itself to have
no hold upon an Italy to which he had given a great temporal prosperity. The
Goths, whom he had seemed to tame, were found incapable of self-government, and
every Roman heart welcomed Belisarius and Narses as the restorers of a power
which had not ceased to claim their allegiance, even through the turpitudes and
betrayals of Zeno and Anastasius.
The best solution which I know for this wonderful
result, brought about in so many countries, is contained in a few words of
Gibbon: “Under the Roman empire the wealth and jurisdiction of the bishops,
their sacred character and perpetual office, their numerous dependents, popular
eloquence and provincial assemblies, had rendered them always respectable and
sometimes dangerous. Their influence was augmented by the progress of
superstition” (by which he means the Catholic faith), “and the establishment of
the French monarchy may in some degree be ascribed to the firm alliance of a
hundred prelates who reigned in the discontented or independent cities of Gaul”.
But how were these prelates bound together in a firm alliance? Because each one
of them felt what a chief among them, St. Avitus, under an Arian prince,
expressed to the Roman senate in the matter of Pope Symmachus by the direction
of his brother bishops, that in the person of the Bishop of Rome the principate
of the whole Church was touched; that “in the case of other bishops, if there
be any lapse, it may be restored; but if the Pope of Rome is endangered, not
one bishop but the episcopate itself will seem to be shaken”. If the bishops
had been all that is above described with the exception of this one thing, the
common bond which held them to Rome, how would the ruin of their country, the
subversion of existing interests, the confiscation of the land, the imposition
of foreign invaders for masters, have acted upon them? It would have split them
up into various parties, rivals for favor and the power derived from favor. The
bishops of each country would have had national interests controlling their
actions. The Teuton invaders were without power of cohesion, without fraternal
affection for each other; their ephemeral territories were in a state of
perpetual fluctuation. The bishops locally situated in these changing districts
would have been themselves divided. In fact, the Arian bishops had no common
centre. They were the nominees and partisans of their several sovereigns. They
presented no one front, for their negation was no one faith. We cannot be wrong
in extending the action assigned by Gibbon to the hundred bishops of Gaul, to
the Catholic bishops throughout all the countries in which a poorer Catholic
population was governed by Arian rulers. The divine bond of the Primacy, resting
upon the faith which it represented, secured in one alliance all the bishops of
the West. Nor must we forget that the Throne of Peter acknowledged by those
bishops as the source of their common faith, the crown of the episcopate, was
likewise regarded by the Arian rulers themselves as the great throne of
justice, above the sway of local jealousies and subordinate jurisdictions. It
represented to their eyes the fabric of Roman law, the wonderful creation of
centuries, which the northern conquerors were utterly unable to emulate, and
made them feel how inferior brute force was to civil wisdom and equity.
In the constitution of the Visigothic kingdom of Spain
from the time of Rechared, when it became Catholic,
we see the first fruits of the Church’s beneficent action on the northern
invaders. The barbarian monarchy from its original condition of a military
command in time of war, directing a raid of the tribe or people upon its
enemies, becomes a settled rule, at the head of estates which meet in annual
synod, and in which bishops and barons sit side by side. Government reposes on
the peaceable union of the Two Powers. In process of time this sort of
political order was established everywhere throughout the West, by the same
action and influence of the Church. In the Roman empire the supreme power had
been in its origin a mandate conferred by the citizens of a free state on one
of their number for the preservation of the commonwealth. The notion of
dynastic descent was wanting to it from the beginning. But the power which
Augustus had received in successive periods of ten years passed to his
successors for their life. Still they were rather life-presidents with royal
power than kings. And it may be noticed that in that long line no blessing
seemed to rest on the succession of a son to his father; much, on the contrary,
on the adoption of a stranger of tried capacity guided by the choice of the
actual ruler. But in the lapse of centuries the imperial power had become
absolute. Especially in the successors of Constantine, and in the city to which
he had given his name and chosen for the home of his empire, not a shadow of
the old Roman freedom remained. One after another the successful general or the
adventurer in some court intrigue supplanted or murdered a predecessor, and
ascended the throne, but with undiminished prerogatives. Great was the contrast
in all the new kingdoms at whose birth the influence of the Church presided.
There the kings all sat by family descent, in which, however, was involved a
free acceptance on the part of their people. The bishops who had had so large a
part in the foundation of the several kingdoms had a recognized part in their
future government. Holding one faith, and educated in the law of the Romans,
and joined on to the preceding ages by their mental culture as well as their
belief, they contributed to these kingdoms a stability and cohesion which were
wanting to the Teuton invaders in themselves. They incessantly preached peace
as a religious necessity to those tribes which had been as ready to consume
each other as to divide the spoils of their Roman subjects. This united phalanx
of bishops in Gaul conquered in the end even the excessive degeneracy,
self-indulgence, and cruelty of the Merovingian race. Thanks to their perpetual
efforts, while the policy of a Clovis made a France, the wickedness of his
descendants did not destroy it, but only themselves, and caused a new family to
be chosen wherein the same tempered government might be carried on.
It is remarkable that while the Byzantine emperors,
from the extinction of the western empire, were using their absolute power to
meddle with the doctrine of the Church which Constantine acknowledged to be
divine, and to fetter its liberty which he acknowledged to be unquestionable, the
Popes from that very time were through the bishops, to whom they were the sole
centre in so many changes and upheavals, constructing the new order of things.
Through them the Church maintained her own liberty, and allied with it a civil
liberty which the East had more and more surrendered.
In the East, the Church in time was younger than the
empire; in the West, she preceded in time these newly formed monarchies. Amid
the universal overthrow which the invaders had wrought she alone stood unmoved.
The heresy which had so threatened her disappeared. On Goths, and Franks, and
Saxons, and Alemans, she was free to exercise her
divine power. It is in that sixth century of tremendous revolutions that she
laid the foundation of the future European society. Byzantium was descending to
Mahomet while Rome was forecasting the Christian commonwealth of Charles the
Great. In the Rome of Constantine, while the old civilization had accepted her
name, the old pagan principles had continually impeded her action. The civil
rulers especially had harked back after the power of the heathen Pontifex Maximus; but in these new peoples who were not yet
peoples, but only the unformed matter (materia prima) out
of which peoples might be made, the Church was free to put her own ideal as a
form within them. They had the rudiments of institutions, which they trusted
her to organize. They placed her bishops in their courts of justice, in their
halls of legislation. The greatest of their conquerors in the hour of his
supreme exaltation, which also was received from the Pope, was proud to be
vested by her in the dalmatic of a deacon.
Of this new world St. Gregory, in his desolated Rome,
stood at the head.
There is yet another aspect of this wonderful man
which we have to consider. We possess about 850 of his letters. If we did but
possess the letters of his sixty predecessors in the same relative proportion
as his, the history of the Church for the five centuries preceding him, instead
of being often a blank, would present to us the full lineaments of truth. The
range of his letters is so great, their detail so minute, that they illuminate
his time and enable us to form a mental picture, and follow faithfully that
pontificate of fourteen years, incessantly interrupted by cares and anxieties
for the preservation of his city, yet watching the beginnings and strengthening
the polity of the western nations, and counterworking the advances of the
eastern despotism. The divine order of greatness is, we know, to do and to
teach. Few, indeed, have carried it out on so great a scale as St. Gregory. The
mass of his writing preserved to us exceeds the mass preserved to us from all
his predecessors together, even including St. Leo, who with him shares the name
of Great, and whose sphere of action the mind compares with his. If he became
to all succeeding times an image of the great sacerdotal life in his own
person, so all ages studied in his words the pastoral care, joining him with
St. Gregory of Nazianzum and St. Chrysostom. The man
who closed his life at sixty-four, worn out not with age, but with labor and
bodily pains, stands, beside the learning of St. Jerome, the perfect episcopal
life and statesmanship of St. Ambrose, the overpowering genius of St.
Augustine, as the fourth doctor of the western Church, while he surpasses them
all in that his doctorship was seated on St. Peter's
throne. If he closes the line of Fathers, he begins the period when the Church,
failing to preserve a rotten empire in political existence, creates new
nations; nay, his own hand has laid for them their foundation-stones, and their
nascent polity bears his manual inscription, as the great campanile of St. Mark
wears on its brow the words, Et Verbum caro factum est. These were the words which St. Gregory
wrote as the bond of their internal cohesion, as the source of their greatness,
permanence, and liberty upon the future monarchies of Europe.
What mortal could venture to decide which of the two
great victories allowed by Gibbon to the Church is the greater? But we at least
are the children of the second. It was wrought in secrecy and unconsciousness,
as the greatest works of nature and of grace are wrought, but we know just so
much as this, that St. Gregory was one of its greatest artificers. The
Anglo-Saxon race in particular, for more than a thousand years, has celebrated
the Mass of St. Gregory as that of the Apostle of England. Down to the
disruption of the sixteenth century, the double line of its bishops in
Canterbury and York, with their suffragans, regarded him as their founder, as
much as the royal line deemed itself to descend from William the Conqueror. If
Canterbury was Primate of all England and York Primate of England, it was by
the appointment of Gregory. And the very civil constitution of England, like
the original constitutions of the western kingdoms in general, is the work in
no small part of that Church which St. Augustine carried to Ethelbert, and
whose similar work in Spain Gibbon has acknowledged. Under the Norman
oppression it was to the laws of St. Edward that the people looked back. The
laws of St. Edward were made by the bishops of St. Gregory.
How deeply St. Gregory was impressed with the
conviction of his own vocation to be the head of the whole Church we have seen
in his own repeatedly quoted words. What can a Pope claim more than the
attribution to himself as Pope of the three great words of Christ spoken to
Peter? Accordingly, all his conduct was directed to maintain every particular
church in its due subordination to the Roman Church, to reconcile schismatics
to it, to overcome the error and the obstinacy of heretics. Again, since all
nations have been called to salvation in Christ, St. Gregory pursued the
conversion of the heathen with the utmost zeal. When only monk and cardinal
deacon, he had obtained the permission of Pope Pelagius to set out in person as
missionary to paginazed Britain. He was brought back
to Rome after three days by the affection of the people, who would not allow
him to leave them. When the death of Pope Pelagius placed him on the papal
throne, he did not forget the country the sight of whose enslaved children had
made them his people of predilection.
With regard to the churches belonging to his own
patriarchate, a bishop in each province, usually the metropolitan, represented
as delegate the Roman See. To these, as the symbol of their delegated authority
as his vicarii, Gregory sent the pallium. All the
bishops of the province yielded them obedience, acknowledged their summons to
provincial councils. A hundred years before Pope Symmachus had begun the
practice of sending the pallium to them, but Gregory declined to take the gifts
which it had become usual to take on receiving it. St. Leo, fifty years before
Symmachus, had empowered a bishop to represent him at the court of the eastern
emperor, and had drawn out the office and functions of the nuncio. Like his
great predecessor, St. Gregory carefully watched over the rights of the
Primacy. Upon the death of a metropolitan, he entrusted during the vacancy the
visitation of the churches to another bishop, and enjoined the clergy and
people of the vacant see to make a new choice under the superintendence of the
Roman official. The election being made, he carefully examined the acts, and,
if it was needed, reversed them. As he required from the metropolitans strict
obedience to his commands, so he maintained on the one hand the dependence of
the bishops on their metropolitans, while on the other he protected them
against all irregular decisions of the metropolitan. He carefully examined the
complaints which bishops made against their metropolitan; and when bishops
disagreed with each other, and their disagreement could not be adjusted by the
metropolitan, he drew the decision to himself.
Gregory also held many councils in Rome which passed
decisions upon doctrine and discipline. We may take as a specimen that which he
held in the Lateran Church on the 5th April, 601, with twenty-four bishops and
many priests and deacons. It is headed: “Gregory, bishop, servant of the
servants of God, to all bishops”. The Pope says that his own government of a
monastery had shown him how necessary it was to provide for their perpetual
security: “Since we have come to the knowledge that in very many monasteries
the monks have suffered much to their prejudice and grievance from bishops ...
we therefore, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by the authority of the
blessed Peter, prince of the Apostles, in whose place we preside over this
Church, forbid that henceforth any bishop or layman, in respect of the
revenues, goods, or charters of monasteries, the cells or buildings belonging
to them, do in any manner or upon any occasion diminish them, or use deceit or
interference”. If there be a contest whether any property belong to the church
of a bishop or to a monastery, arbitrators shall decide. If an abbot dies, no
stranger, but one of the same community, must be chosen by the brethren, freely
and concordantly, for his successor. If no fitting person is found in the
monastery itself, the monks are to provide that one be chosen from another
monastery. In the abbot’s lifetime no other superior may be set over the
monastery, except the abbot have committed transgressions punishable by the
canons. Against the will of the abbot no monk may be chosen to be set over
another monastery or receive holy orders. The bishop may not make an inventory
of the goods of the monastery, nor mix himself, even after the abbot's death,
in the concerns of the monastery; he may hold no public mass in the monastery,
that there be no meeting of people, or women, there; he may set up no pulpit
there, and without the consent of the abbot make no regulation, and employ no
monk for any church service.
All the bishops answered: “We rejoice in the liberties
of the monks, and confirm what your Holiness has set forth as to this”.
As metropolitan of the particular Roman province,
Gregory was equally active. The political circumstances of Italy had exerted
the most prejudicial effect on the Church. Ecclesiastical life was impaired.
The discipline both of monks and clergy was weakened. Bishops had become
negligent in their duties; many churches orphaned or destroyed. But at the end
of his pontificate things had so improved that he might well be termed the
reformer of Church discipline. He watched with great care over the conduct and
administration of the bishops. In this the officers called defensors, that is, who
administered the patrimony of the Church in the different provinces, helped him
greatly in carrying out his commands. In the war with the Lombards, many
episcopal sees had been wasted, and many of their bishops expelled. Gregory
provided for them, either in naming them visitors of his own, or in calling in
other bishops to their support. He rebuilt many churches which had been destroyed.
He carefully maintained the property of churches: he would not allow it to be
alienated, except to ransom captives or convert heathens. The Roman Church had
then large estates in Africa, Gaul, Sicily, Corsica, Dalmatia, and especially
in the various provinces of Italy. These were called the Patrimony of Peter.
They consisted in lands, villages, and flocks. In the management of these
Gregory’s care did not disdain the minutest supervision. His strong sense of
justice did not prevent his being a merciful landlord, and especially he cared
for the peasantry and cultivators of the soil.
The monastic life which in his own person he had so
zealously practiced, as Pope he so carefully watched over that he has been
called the father of the monks. He encouraged the establishment of monasteries.
Many he built and provided for himself out of the Roman Church’s property. Many
which wanted for maintenance he succored. He issued a quantity of orders
supporting the religious and moral life of monks and nuns. He invited bishops
to keep guard over the discipline of monasteries, and blamed them when
transgressions of it came to light. But he also protected monasteries from hard
treatment of bishops, and, according to the custom of earlier Popes, exempted
some of them from episcopal authority.
In restoring schismatics to unity he was in general
successful. He wrought such a union among the bishops of Africa that Donatism lost influence more and more, and finally
disappeared. He dealt with the obstinate Milanese schism which had arisen out
of the treatment of the Three Chapters. He won back a great part of the Istrians. He had more trouble with the two archbishops of
Constantinople, John the Faster and Cyriacus; and his former friend the emperor
Mauritius turned against him, so that he welcomed the accession of Phocas, as a
deliverance of the Church from unjust domination. The unquestioning loyalty
with which, as a civil subject, he welcomed this accession has been unfairly
used against him. As first of all the civil dignitaries of the empire he could
only accept what had been done at Constantinople. But in all his fourteen years
neither the difficulty of circumstances nor the consideration of persons
withheld him from carrying out his resolutions with a patience and a firmness
only equaled by gentleness of manner. From beginning to end he considered
himself, and acted, as set by God to watch over the maintenance of the canons, the discipline enacted by them, and so doing to
perfect by his wisdom as well as to temper by his moderation the vast fabric of
the Primacy as it had grown itself, and nurtured in its growth the original
constitution of the Church during nearly six hundred years.
We may now say a few words upon the Primacy itself as
exerted by St. Leo at the Council of Chalcedon, and the Primacy as exerted by
St. Gregory in the fourteen years from 590 to 604; also on the interval between
them, and the relative position of the bishop of Constantinople to Leo in the
person of Anatolius, and to Gregory in the person of
John the Faster. We see at once that the intention which Leo discerned in Anatolius, which he sternly reprehended and summarily
overthrew, has been fully carried out by John the Faster, who, in documents
sent to the Pope himself for revision, as superior, terms himself ecumenical
patriarch. Who had made him first a patriarch and then ecumenical? The emperor
alone. He is so called in the laws of Justinian. The 140 years from Leo to
Gregory are filled with the continued rise of the Bishop of Nova Roma under the
absolute power of the emperor. He has succeeded not only in taking precedence
of the legitimate patriarchs of Alexandria and Antioch; he has more than once
stripped of their rights the metropolitans and bishops subject to the great see
of the East, and himself consecrated at Constantinople a patriarch of Antioch
by order of the emperor of the day. This Acacius did, humbly begging the Pope’s
pardon for such a transgression of the due order and hierarchy, and repeating
the offence against the Nicene order and constitution on the first opportunity.
In the same way he has interfered with the elections at Alexandria. We learn
from the instruction given by Pope Hormisdas to his legates that all the
eastern bishops when they came to Constantinople obtained an audience of the
emperor only through the bishop of Constantinople. The Pope carefully warns his
legates against submitting to this pretension. Pope Gelasius told the bishop in
his day that his see had no ecclesiastical rank above that of a simple bishop. We
laugh, he said, at the pretension to erect an apostolical throne upon an imperial residence. But, in the meantime, Constantinople has
become the head of all civil power. The emperor of the West has ceased to be.
The Roman senate, at the bidding of a Herule commander of mercenaries, has sent back even the symbols of imperial rank to
the eastern emperor; and in return Zeno has graciously made Odoacer patricius of Rome, with the power of king, until Theodoric
was ready to be rewarded with the possession of Italy for services rendered to
the eastern monarch, with the purpose likewise of diverting his attention from
Nova Roma. Therefore, in spite of the submission rendered by all the East, the
bishops, the court, the emperor, and by Justinian himself; in spite, also, of
two bishops successively degraded by an emperor, the bishop of Constantinople
ever advances. The law of Justinian, which acknowledges the Pope as first of
all bishops in the world, and gives him legal rank as such, makes the bishop of
the new capital the second. Presently Justinian becomes by conquest immediate
sovereign of Rome. The ancient queen and maker of the empire is humbled in the
dust by five captures; is even reduced to a desert for a time; and when a
portion of her fugitive citizens comes back to the abandoned city, a Byzantine
prefect rules it with absolute power. A Greek garrison, the badge of Rome’s
degradation, supports his delegated rule. Presently the seat of that rule is
for security transferred to Ravenna, and Rome is left, not merely discrowned, but defenseless. All the while the bishop of
Constantinople is seated in the pomp of power at the emperor's court; within
the walls of the eastern capital his household rivals that of the emperor; in
certain respects the public worship gives him a homage greater than that
accorded to the absolute lord of the East. He reflects with satisfaction that
the one person in the West who can call his ministration to account is exposed
to the daily attacks of barbarians: is surrounded with palaces whose masters
are ruined, and which are daily dropping into decay. The Pope, behind the
crumbling walls of Aurelian, shudders at the cruelties practiced on his people:
the bishop of Constantinople, by terming himself ecumenical, announces
ostentatiously that he claims to rule all his brethren in the East—that he is
supreme judge over his brother patriarchs. One only thing he does not do: he
claims no power over the Pope himself; he does not attempt to revise his
administration in the West. He acknowledges his primacy, seated as it is in a
provincial city, pauperized, and decimated with hunger and desertion.
In this interval the Pope has seen seven emperors pass
like shadows on the western throne, and their place taken first by an Arian Herule and then by an Arian Goth. Herule and Goth disappear, the last at the cost of a war which desolates Italy during
twenty years, and casts out, indeed, the Gothic invader and confiscator of
Italy, but only to supply his place by the grinding exactions of an absent
master, followed immediately by the inroad of fresh savages, far worse than the
Goth, under whose devastation Italy is utterly ruined. Whatever portion of
dignity the old capital of the world lent to Leo is utterly lost to Gregory. It
has been one tale of unceasing misery, of terrible downfall to Rome, from
Genseric to Agilulf. It may seem to have been suspended during the thirty-three
years of Theodoric, but it was the iron force of hostile domination wielded by
the gloved hand. When the Goth was summoned to depart, he destroyed ruthlessly.
The rage of Vitiges casts back a light upon the
mildness of Theodoric; the slaughters ordered by Teia are a witness to Gothic humanity. No words but those of Gregory himself, in
applying the Hebrew prophet, can do justice to the temporal misery of Rome. The
Pope felt himself silenced by sorrow in the Church of St. Peter, but he ruled
without contradiction the Church in East and West. Not a voice is heard at the
time, or has come down to posterity, which accuses Gregory of passing the
limits of power conceded to him by all, or of exercising it otherwise than with
the extremest moderation.
Disaster in the temporal order, continued through five
generations, from Leo to Gregory, has clearly brought to light the purely
spiritual foundation of the papal power. If the attribution to the Pope of the
three great words spoken by our Lord to St. Peter, made to Pope Hormisdas by
the eastern bishops and emperor, does not prove that they belong to the Pope
and were inherited by him from St. Peter, what proof remains to be offered? If
the attribution is so proved, what is there in the papal power which is not
divinely conferred and guaranteed? Neither the first Leo, nor the first
Gregory, nor the seventh Gregory, nor the thirteenth Leo, ask for more; nor can
they take less.
If St. Gregory exercised this authority in a ruined
city, over barbarous populations which had taken possession of the western
provinces, over eastern bishops who crouched at the feet of an absolute monarch, over a rival who, with all the imperial power to
back him, did not attempt to deny it, how could a greater proof of its divine
origin be given?
In this respect boundless disaster offers a proof
which the greatest prosperity would have failed to give. Not even a Greek could
be found who could attribute St. Gregory’s authority in Rome to his being
bishop of the royal city. The barbarian inundation had swept away the invention
of Anatolius.
But this very time was also that in which the heresy
whose leading doctrine was denial of the Godhead of the Church's founder came
from a threatening of supremacy to an end. In Theodoric Arianism seemed to be
enthroned for predominance in all the West. His civil virtues and powerful
government, his family league of all the western rulers,—for he himself had
married Andefleda, sister of Clovis, and had given
one daughter for wife to the king of the Vandals in Africa, and another to the
king of the Visigoths in France,—was a gage of security. In Gregory's time the
great enemy has laid down his arms. He is dispossessed from the Teuton race in
its Gallic, Spanish, Burgundian, African settlements. Gregory, at the head of
the western bishops who in every country have risked life for the faith of
Rome, has gained the final victory. One only Arian tribe survives for a time,
ever struggling to possess Rome, advancing to its gates, ruining its Campagna,
torturing its captured inhabitants, but never gaining possession of those
battered walls, which Totila in part threw down and Belisarius in piecemeal
restored. And Gregory, too, is chosen to stop the Anglo-Saxon revel of cruelty
and destruction, which has turned Britain from a civilized land into a
wilderness, and from a province of the Catholic Church to paganism, from the
very time of St. Leo. Two tribes were the most savage of the Teuton family, the
Saxon and the Frank. The Frank became Catholic, and Gregory besought the rulers
of the converted nation to help his missionaries in their perilous adventure to
convert the ultramarine neighbours, still savage and pagan. He also ordered
their chief bishop to consecrate the chief missionary to be archbishop of the
Angles. As there was a Burgundian Clotilda by the
side of Clovis, there was a Frankish Bertha by the side of Ethelbert; and these
two women have a glorious place in that second great victory of the Church. The
Visigoth and Ostrogoth with their great natural gifts could not found a
kingdom. Their heresy deprived the Father of the Son, and they were themselves
sterile. Those who denied a Divine Redeemer were not likely to convert a world.
But all through Gregory’s life the Byzantine spirit of
encroachment was one of his chief enemies. The claim of its bishop to be
ecumenical patriarch stopped short of the Primacy. But one after another the
bishops of that see sought by imperial laws to detach the bishops of Eastern
Illyria from their subjection to the western patriarchate. Their nearness to
Constantinople, their being subjects of the eastern emperor, helped this
encroachment.
It would appear also that in Gregory's time—a hundred
years after Pope Gelasius had put the bishop of the imperial city in
remembrance that he had been a suffragan to
Heraclea—the legislation of Justinian had succeeded in inducing the Roman See
to acknowledge that bishop as a patriarch. His actual power had gone far
beyond. There can be no doubt that, while the Pope had become legally the
subject of the eastern emperor, the bishop of Constantinople had become in fact
the emperor's ecclesiastical minister in subjugating the eastern episcopate.
The Nicene episcopal hierarchy subsisted indeed in name. To the Alexandrian and Antiochene patriarchs two had been added—one at
Jerusalem, the other at Constantinople. But the last was so predominant—as the
interpreter of the emperor's will—that he stood at the head of the bishops in
all the realm ruled from Constantinople over against the Pope as the head of
the western bishops in many various lands.
The bishops were in Justinian's legislation everywhere
great imperial officers, holding a large civil jurisdiction, especially charged
with an inspection of the manner in which civil governors performed their own
proper functions; most of all, the patriarchs and the Pope.
But that episcopal autonomy—if we may so call it—under
the presidence of the three Petrine patriarchs, which was in full life and vigor at the Nicene Council, which St.
Gregory still recognized in his letter to Eulogius,
was greatly impaired. While barbaric inundation had swept over the West, the
struggles of the Nestorian and Eutychean heresies, especially in the two great
cities of Alexandria and Antioch, had disturbed the hierarchy and divided the
people which the master at Constantinople could hardly control. That state of
the East which St. Basil deplored in burning words—which almost defied every
effort of the great Theodosius to restore it to order—had gone on for more than
two hundred years. The Greek subtlety was not pervaded by the charity of
Christ, and they carried on their disputes over that adorable mystery of His
Person in which the secret of redeeming power is seated, with a spirit of party
and savage persecution which portended the rise of one who would deny that
mystery altogether, and reduce to a terrible servitude those who had so abused
their liberty as Christians and offered such a scandal to the religion of unity
which they professed.
From St. Sylvester to St. Leo, and, again, from St.
Leo to St. Gregory, the effort of the Popes was to maintain in its original
force the Nicene constitution of the Church. Well might they struggle for the
maintenance of that which was a derivation from their own
fountainhead—"the administration of Peter"—during the three centuries
of heathen persecution by the empire. It was not they who tightened the exercise
of their supreme authority. The altered condition of the times, the tyranny of
Constantius and Valens, the dislocation of the eastern hierarchy, the rise of a
new bishop in a new capital made use of by an absolute sovereign to control
that hierarchy, a resident council at Constantinople which became an
"instrument of servitude" in the emperor's hands to degrade any
bishop at his pleasure and his own patriarch when he was not sufficiently
pliant to the master,—these were among the causes which tended to bring out a further
exercise of the power which Christ had deposited in the hands of His Vicar to
be used according to the needs of the Church. No one has expressed with greater
moderation than St. Gregory the proper power of his see, in the words I have
quoted above: “I know not what bishop is not subject to the Apostolical See, if any fault be found in bishops. But when no fault requires it, all are
equal according to the estimation of humility”. In Rome there is no growth by
aid of the civil power from a suffragan bishop to an
universal Papacy. The Papacy shows itself already in St. Clement, a disciple of
St. Peter’s, “whose name is written in the book of life”, and who, involving
the Blessed Trinity, affirms that the orders emanating from his see are the
words of God Himself. This is the ground of St. Gregory's moderation; and
whatever extension may hereafter be found in the exercise of the same power by
his successors is drawn forth by the condition of the times, a condition often
opposed to the inmost wishes of the Pope. Those are evil times which require “a
thousand bishops rolled into one” to oppose the civil tyranny of a
Hohenstaufen, the violence of barbarism in a Rufus, or the corruption of wealth
in a Plantagenet.
Between St. Peter and St. Gregory, in 523 years, there
succeeded full sixty Popes. If we take any period of like duration in the
history of the world's kingdoms, we shall find in their rulers a remarkable
contrast of varying policy and temper. Few governments, indeed, last so long.
But in the few which have so lasted we find one sovereign bent on war, another
on peace, another on accumulating treasure, another on spending it; one given
up to selfish pleasures, here and there a ruler who reigns only for the good of
others. But in Gregory's more than sixty predecessors there is but one idea: “Thou
art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church, and the gates of hell
shall not prevail against it”, is the compendious expression of their lives and
rule. For this St. Clement, who had heard the words of his master, suffered
exile and martyrdom in the Crimea. For this five Popes, in the decade between
250 and 260, laid down their lives. The letter of St. Julius to the Eusebian prelates is full of it. St. Leo saw the empire of
Rome falling around him, but he is so possessed with that idea that he does not
allude to the ruin of temporal kingdoms. St. Gregory trembles for the lives of
his beleaguered people, but he does not know the see which is not subject to
the Apostolic See. In weakness and in power, in ages of an ever varying but
always persistent adversity, in times of imperial patronage, and, again, under
heretical domination, the mind of every Pope is full of this idea. The strength
or the weakness of individual character leaves it untouched. In one, and only
one, of all these figures his dignity is veiled in sadness. Pope Vigilius at
Constantinople, in the grasp of a despot, and with the stain of an irregular
election never effaced from his brow, is still conscious of it, still has
courage to say, “You may bind me, but you will not
bind the Apostle St. Peter”. Six hundred years after St. Gregory, when
accordingly the succession of Popes had been rather more than doubled, I find
the biographer of Innocent III thus commenting on his election in 1198: “The
Church in these times ever had an essential preponderance over worldly
kingdoms. Resting on a spiritual foundation, she had in herself the vigor of
immaterial power, and maintained in her application of it the superiority over
merely material forces. She alone was animated by a clearly recognized idea,
which never at any time died out of her. For its maintenance and actuation were
not limited to the person of a Pope, who could only be the representative, the
bearer, the enactor, for the world of this idea in its fullest meaning. If here
and there a particular personality seemed unequal to the carrying out such a
charge, the force of the idea did not suffer any defect through him. Most papal
governments were very short in their duration. This itself was a challenge to
those whose life was absorbed in that of the Church to place at its head a man
whose ability, enlightened and guided by strength of will, afforded a secure
assurance for the exercise of an universal charge. From the clear
self-consciousness of the Church in this respect proceeded that firm pursuance
of a great purpose distinctly perceived. It met with no persistent or wisely
conducted resistance on the part of the temporal power. On one side all rays
had their focus in one point. In temporal princes the rays were parted. Few of
these showed in their lives a purpose to which all their acts were made
consistently subordinate. As circumstances swayed them, as the desire of the
moment led them away, they threw themselves, according to their personal
inclinations, with impetuous storm and violence upon the attainment of their
wishes. They had to yield in the end to the power of the Church, slower,
indeed, but continuous, pursued with superiority of spirit, moreover with the
firm conviction of guidance from above, and of the special protection from this
inseparable, and so attaining its mark. One only royal race ventured on a
contest with the Church for supremacy; for one only, the Hohenstaufen, were
conscious of a fixed purpose. They encountered a direct struggle with the
Church; but the conflict issued to the honor of the Church. The Popes who led
it came out of it with a renown in the world's history, which without that
conflict they would never have so gloriously attained. If we look from these
events before and afterwards upon the ages, and see how the institution of the
Papacy outlasts all other institutions in Europe, how it has seen all States
come and go, how in the endless change of human things it alone remains
unchanged, ever with the same spirit, can we then wonder if many look up to it
as the Rock unmoved amid the roaring billows of centuries?” And he adds in a
note, “This is not a polemical statement, but the verdict of history”.
The time of St. Gregory in history bore the witness of
six centuries; the time of Innocent III of twelve; the time of Leo XIII bears
that of more than eighteen centuries to the consideration of this contrast
between the natural fickleness of men and of lives of men, shown from age to
age, and the persistence, on the other hand, of one idea in one line of men.
The eighteen centuries already past are yet only a part of an unknown future.
But to construct such a Rock amid the sea and the waves roaring in the history
of the nations reveals an abiding divine power. It leaves the self-will of man
untouched, yet sets up a rampart against it. The explanation attempted three
hundred and fifty years ago of an imposture or an usurpation is incompatible
with the clearness of an idea which is carried out persistently through so many
generations. Usurpations fall rapidly. But in this one case the divine words
themselves contain the idea more clearly expressed than any exposition can
express it. The King delineates His kingdom as none but God can; it must also
be added that He maintains it as none but God can maintain.
We may return to St. Gregory’s own time, and note the
unbroken continuity of the Primacy from St. Peter himself. It is a period of
nearly six hundred years from the day of Pentecost. Just in the middle comes
the conversion of Constantine. Before it Rome is mainly a heathen city, the
government of which bears above all things an everlasting enmity against any
violation of the supreme pontificate annexed by the provident Augustus to the
imperial power, and jealously maintained by every succeeding emperor. To suffer
an infringement of that pontificate would be to lose the grasp over the hundred
varieties of worship allowed by the State. Yet when Constantine acknowledged
the Christian faith, the names of St. Peter and St. Paul were in full
possession of the city, so far as it was Christian. They were its
patron-saints. Every Christian memory rested on the tradition of St. Peter’s
pontifical acts, his chair, his baptismal font, his dwelling-place, his
martyrdom. The impossibility of such a series of facts taking possession of a
heathen city during the period antecedent to Constantine's victory over
Maxentius, save as arising from St. Peter's personal action at Rome, is
apparent.
In the second half of this period, from Constantine to
St. Gregory, the civil pre-eminence of Rome is perpetually declining. The
consecration of New Rome as the capital of the empire, in 330, by itself alone
strikes at it a fatal blow. Presently the very man who had reunited the empire
divided it among his sons, and after their death the division became permanent.
Valentinian I., in 364, whether he would or not, was obliged to make two
empires. From the death of Theodosius, in 395, the condition of the western
empire is one long agony. The power of Constantinople continually increases. At
the death of Honorius, in 423, the eastern emperor becomes the over-lord of the
western. During fifty years Rome lived only by the arm of two semi-barbarian
generals, Stilicho and Aetius. Both were assassinated for the service; and in
the boy Romulus Augustulus a western emperor ceased
to be, and the senate declared that one emperor alone was needed. After fifty
years of Arian occupation, the Gothic war ruined the city of Rome. In Gregory's
time it had ceased to be even the capital of a province. Its lord dwelt at
Constantinople; Rome was subject to his exarch at Ravenna.
Yet from Constantine and the Nicene Council the
advance of Rome's Primacy is perpetual. In Leo I. it is universally
acknowledged. At the fall of the western empire Acacius attempts his schism. He
is supported while living by the emperor Zeno, and his memory after his death
by the succeeding emperor Anastasius, who reigned for twenty-seven years,
longer than any emperor since Augustus had reigned over the whole empire. All
the acts of these two princes show that they would have liked to attach the
Primacy to their bishop at Constantinople. Anastasius twice enjoyed the luxury
of deposing him through the resident council. But Anastasius died, and the result
of the Acacian schism was a stronger confession of
the Roman Primacy made to Pope Hormisdas, the subject of the Arian Theodoric,
by the whole Greek episcopate, than had ever been given before. The sixth
century and the reign of Justinian completed the destruction of the civil state
of Rome; and the Primacy of its bishop, St. Gregory, was more than ever
acknowledged.
Not a shadow of usurpation or of claim to undue power
rested upon that unquestioned Primacy which St. Gregory exercised. While he thought
the end of the world was at hand, while he watched Rome perishing street by
street, he planted unconsciously a western Christendom in what he supposed all
the time to be a perishing world. Civil Rome was not even a provincial capital;
spiritual Rome was the acknowledged head of the world-wide Church.
I know not where to find so remarkable a contrast and
connection of events as here. Temporal losses, secular ambitions, episcopal
usurpations, violent party spirit, schism and heresy in the great eastern
patriarchates, and amid it all the descent of the Teutons on the fairest lands of the western empire, the establishment of new
sovereignties in Spain, Gaul, and Italy, under barbarians who at the time of
their descent were Arian heretics, and afterwards became Catholic, with the
result that Gregory has to keep watch within the walls of Rome for a whole
generation against the Lombard, still in unmitigated savagery and unabated
heresy, and that the world-wide Church acknowledges him for her ruler without a
dissenting voice. The "Servant of the servants of God" chides and
corrects the would-be “ecumenical patriarch”, who has risen since Constantine
from the suffragan of a Thracian city to be bishop of
Nova Roma and right hand of the emperor; who has deposed Alexandria from the
second place and Antioch from the third, but cannot take the first place from
the See of Peter. The perpetual ambition of the
bishops of Nova Roma, the perpetual fostering of that ambition for his own
purpose by the emperor, only illustrates more vividly the inaccessible dignity
which both would fain have transferred to the city of Constantine, but were
obliged to leave with the city of Peter. As the forum of Trajan sinks down
stone by stone, the kings of the West are preparing to flock in pilgrimage to
the shrine of Peter. This was the answer which the captives in the forum made
to the deliverer of their race.
There is nothing like this elsewhere in history.
Constantine, Valens, Theodosius, Justinian, and, no
less, Alaric and Ataulph, Attila and Genseric, Theodoric
and Clovis, Arius, Nestorius, Eutyches, as well as St. Athanasius, St. Basil,
St. Ambrose, St. Chrysostom, St. Augustine, St. Cyril, and, again, Dioscorus,
Acacius, and a multitude of the most opposing minds and beliefs which these
represent, contribute, in their time and degree, for the most part
unconsciously, and many against their settled purpose, to acknowledge this
Primacy as the Rock of the Church, the source of spiritual jurisdiction, the
centre of a divine unity in a warring world. In St. Gregory we see the power
which has had antecedents so strange and concomitants so repulsive deposited in
the hands of a feeble old man who is constantly mourning over the cares in
which that universal government involves him, while the world for evermore
shall regard him as the type and standard of the true spiritual ruler, who
calls himself, not Ecumenical Bishop, but Servant of the servants of God. It is
a title which his successors will take from his hand and keep for ever as the badge
of the Primacy which it illustrates, while it serves as the seal of its acts of
power. He calls himself servant just when he is supreme.
In St. Gregory the Great, the whole ancient world, the
Church's first discipline and original government, run to their ultimate issue.
In him the patriarchal system, as it met the shock of absolute power in the
civil sovereign, and the subversion of the western empire by barbarous
incursions, accompanied by the establishment of new sovereignties and the
foundation of a new Rome, the rival and then the tyrant of the old Rome,
receives its consummation. The medieval world has not yet begun. The spurious Mahometan theocracy is waiting to arise. In the midst of a
world in confusion, of a dethroned city falling into ruins, the successor of
St. Peter sits on an undisputed spiritual throne upon which a new world will be
based in the West, against which the Khalifs of a
false religion will exert all their rage in the East and South, and strengthen
the rule which they parody. A new power, which utterly denies the Christian
faith, which destroys hundreds of its episcopal sees and severs whole countries
from its sway, will dash with all its violence against the Rock of Peter, and
finally will have the effect of making the bishop who is there enthroned more
than ever the symbol, the seat, and the champion of the Kingdom of the Cross.
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