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THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES
BOOK 1
- ORIGIN AND ORGANIZATION OF THE INQUISITION
CHAPTER I
THE CHURCH IN THE TWELFTH CENTURY
11
FETICHISM.
How sedulously this fetichism was inculcated by those who profited from the control of the fetiches is shown by a thousand stories and incidents of
the time. Thus a twelfth-century chronicler piously narrates that when, in 887,
the relics of St. Martin of Tours were brought home from Auxerre, whither they
had been carried to escape the Danish incursions, two cripples of Touraine, who
earned an easy livelihood by beggary, on hearing of the approach of the
saintly bones, counseled together to escape from the territory as quickly as
possible, lest the returning saint should cure them and thus deprive them of
claims on the alms of the charitable. Their fears were well founded, but their
means of locomotion were insufficient, for the relics arrived in Touraine
before they could get beyond the bounds of the province, and they were cured in
spite of themselves.
The eagerness with which rival princes and republics
disputed with each other the possession of these wonder-working fetiches, and the manner in which the holy objects were
obtained by force or fraud and defended by the same methods, form a curious
chapter in the history of human credulity, and show how completely the
miraculous virtue was held to reside in the relic itself, wholly irrespective
of the crimes through which it was acquired or the frame of mind of the
possessor. Thus in the above case, Ingelger of Anjou
was obliged to reclaim from the Auxerrois the bones
of St. Martin at the head of an armed force, more peaceful means of recovering
the venerated relics having failed; and in 1177 we see a certain Martin, canon
of the Breton church of Bomigny, stealing the body of
St. Petroc from his own church for the benefit of the
Abbey of St. Mevennes, which would not surrender it
until the intervention of King Henry II was brought to bear.
Two years after
the capture of Constantinople the Venetian leaders, in 1206, forcibly broke
into the Church of St. Sophia and carried off a picture of the Virgin, said to
have been painted by St. Luke, in which popular superstition imagined her to
reside, and kept it in spite of excommunication and interdict launched against
them by the patriarch and confirmed by the papal legate. Fairly illustrative of
this belief is a story told of a merchant of Groningen who in one of his
voyages coveted the arm of St. John the Baptist belonging to a hospital, and
obtained it by bribing heavily the mistress of the guardian, who induced him to
steal it. On his return the merchant built a house and secretly encased the
relic in a pillar forming part of the structure. Under its protection he
prospered mightily and grew wealthy, till once in a conflagration he refused to
take measures to save the house, saying that it was under good guardianship.
The house was not burned, and public curiosity was so much excited that he was
forced to reveal his talisman, when the people carried it off and deposited it
in a church, where it worked many miracles, while the merchant was reduced to
poverty. It was a superstition even less rational than that which led the
Romans to conjure into their camp the tutelary deity of a city which they were
besieging; and the universal wearing of relics as charms or amulets had in it
nothing to distinguish it from the similar practices of paganism. Even the
images and portraits of saints and martyrs had equal virtue. A single glance at
the representation of St. Christopher, for instance, was held to preserve one
from disease or sudden death for the rest of the day—
"Christophori sancti speciem quicumque tuetur
Illo namque die nullo languore tenetur—
and a huge image of the gigantic saint was often
painted on the outside of churches for the preservation of the population. The
custom of selecting a patron saint by lot at the altar is another manifestation
of the same blindness of superstition.
The Eucharist was particularly efficacious as a fetich. During the persecution of heresy in the Rhinelands by the inquisitor Conrad of Marburg, in 1233,
one obstinate culprit refused to burn in spite of all the efforts of his
zealous executioners, until a thoughtful priest brought to the roaring pile a
consecrated host. This at once dissolved the spell by a mightier magic, and the
luckless heretic was speedily reduced to ashes. A conventicle of these same heretics possessed an image of Satan which gave forth oracular
responses, until a priest entering the room produced from his bosom a pyx containing the body of Christ, when Satan at once
acknowledged his inferiority by falling down. Not long afterwards St. Peter
Martyr overcame, by the same means, the imposture of a Milanese heretic in
whose behalf a demon was wont to appear in a heterodox church in the shape of
the Virgin, resplendent and holding in her arms the holy Child.
The evidence
in favor of heresy seemed to be overwhelming, until St. Peter dispelled it by
presenting to the demon a host, and saying, "If thou art the true Mother
of God, adore this thy Son", whereupon the demon disappeared in a flash of
lightning, leaving an intolerable stench behind him. The consecrated wafer was
popularly believed to possess a magic efficacy of incomparable power, and
stories are numerous of the punishment inflicted on those who sacrilegiously
sought thus to use it. A priest who retained it in his mouth for the purpose of
using it to overcome the virtue of a woman of whom he was enamored, was
afflicted with the hallucination that he had swelled to the point that he
could not pass through a doorway; and on burying the sacred object in his
garden it was changed into a small crucifix bearing a man of flesh and freshly
bleeding. So when a woman kept the wafer and placed it in her beehive to stop
an epidemic among the bees, the pious insects built around it a complete
chapel, with walls, windows, roof, and bell-tower, and inside an altar on
which they reverently placed it. Another woman, to preserve her cabbages from
the ravages of caterpillars, crumbled a holy wafer and sprinkled it over the
vegetables, when she was at once afflicted with incurable paralysis. This
particular form of fetichism was evidently not
regarded with favor, but it was the direct evolution of orthodox teaching. It
was the same in respect to the water in which a priest washed his hands after
handling the Eucharist, to which supernatural virtues were ascribed, but the
use of which was condemned as savoring of sorcery.
The power of these magic formulas, as I have said, was
wholly disconnected with any devotional feeling on the part of those who
employed them. Thus the efficacy of St. Thomas of Canterbury was illustrated by
a story of a matron whose veneration for him led her to invoke him on all
occasions, and even to teach her pet bird to repeat the formula "Sancte Thoma adjuva me!" Once a hawk seized the bird and flew away with it, but on the bird uttering
the accustomed phrase, the hawk fell dead and the bird returned unhurt to its
mistress. So little, indeed, of sanctity was requisite, that wicked priests
employed the mass as an incantation and execration, mentally cursing their
enemies while engaged in its solemnization, and expecting that in some way the
malediction would work evil on the person against whom it was directed. Nay, it
was even used in connection with the immemorial superstition of the wax
figurine which represented the enemy to be destroyed, and mass celebrated ten
times over such an image was supposed to insure his death within ten days.
Even confession could be used as a magic formula to
escape the detection of guilt. As demons professed a knowledge of every crime
committed, and would reveal them through the mouth of those whom they
possessed, demoniacs were frequently used as detectives in case of suspected
persons. Yet when sins were confessed with due contrition, the absolution
wiped them forever from the demon's memory, and he would deny all knowledge of
them—a fact which was regularly acted on by those afraid of exposure; for even
after the demon had revealed the guilt, the perpetrator could go at once and
confess, and then confidently return and challenge a repetition of the
denunciation.
Examples such as these could be multiplied almost indefinitely,
but they would only serve to weary the reader. What I have given will probably
suffice to illustrate the degeneracy of the Christianity superimposed upon
paganism and wielded by a sacerdotal body so worldly in its aspirations as that
of the Middle Ages.
CONTEMPORARY OPINION.
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