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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
6
NEGLECT OF PREACHING.
There was another source of oppression which had a
loftier motive and better results, but which was none the less grinding upon
the mass of the people. It was about this time that the fashion set in of
building magnificent churches and abbeys, and the invention of stained glass
and its rapid introduction show the luxury of ornamentation which was sought.
While these structures were in some degree the expression of ardent faith, yet
more were they the manifestation of the pride of the prelates who erected them,
and in our admiration of these sublime relics of the past, in whatever
reverential spirit we may view the towering spire, the long-arched nave, and
the glorious window, we must not lose sight of the supreme effort which they
cost—an effort which inevitably fell upon suffering serf and peasant. Peter
Cantor assures us that they were built out of exactions on the poor, out of the
unhallowed gains of usury, and out of the lies and deceits of the quaestuarii or
pardoners; and the vast sums lavished upon them, he assures us, would be much
better spent in redeeming captives and relieving the necessities of the
helpless.
It was hardly to be expected that prelates such as
filled most of the sees of Christendom should devote
themselves to the real duties of their position. Foremost among these duties
was that of preaching the word of God and instructing their flocks in faith and
morals. The office of preacher, indeed, was especially an episcopal function; he was the only man in the diocese authorized to exercise it; it
formed no part of the duty or training of the parish priest, who could not
presume to deliver a sermon without a special license from his superior. It
need not surprise us, therefore, to see this portion of Christian teaching and
devotion utterly neglected, for the turbulent and martial prelates of the day
were too wholly engrossed in worldly cares to bestow a thought upon a matter
for which their unfitness was complete. In 1031 the Council of Limoges
expressed a wish that preaching should be done, not only at the episcopal seat, but in other churches, when the will of God
inspires a competent doctor to the task; but the Church slumbered on until the
spread of heresy aroused it to a sense of its unwisdom in neglecting so powerful a source of influence.
In 1209 the Council of Avignon
ordered the bishops to preach more frequently and diligently than heretofore,
and, when opportunity offered, to cause preaching to be done by honest and
discreet persons. In 1215 the great Council of Lateran admitted the
impracticability of bishops attending to this among so many more pressing
avocations, and directed them to provide and pay proper persons to visit their
parishes and edify the people by word and example. Yet little improvement could
be expected from exhortations such as these, and the heretics had the field
virtually to themselves until the Preaching Friars arose and were steadily
rebuffed by those whose negligence they replaced. The Troubadour Inquisitor Izarn does not hesitate to declare that heresy never could
have spread had there been good preachers to oppose it, and that it never could
have been subdued but for the Dominicans.
The character of the lower orders of ecclesiastics
could not be reasonably expected to be better than that of their prelates.
Benefices were mostly in the gift of the bishops, though, of course, advowsons were frequently held by the laity; special rights
of patronage were held by religious bodies, and many of these latter filled
vacancies in their own ranks by co-optation. Whatever was the nominating power,
however, the result was apt to be the same. It is the universal complaint of
the age that benefices were openly sold, or were bestowed through favor,
without examination into the qualifications of the appointee, or the slightest
regard as to his fitness.
Even the rigid virtue of St. Bernard did not prevent
him, in 1151, from soliciting a provostship for a
graceless youth, the nephew of his friend the Bishop of Auxerre, though
repentance induced by cooler reflection led him to withdraw his application,
which he could the more easily do on learning that his friend, in dying, had
left no less than seven churches to his beloved nephew. In the same year he was
more cautious in refusing Count Thibaut of Champagne some preferment which he
had asked for his son, a child of tender years: but the mere request for it
shows how benefices, when not sold, were wont to be distributed; and it is
safe to say that there were few like St. Bernard, with courage and conviction
to reject the solicitations of the powerful.
It is true that the canon law was
full of admirable precepts respecting the virtues and qualifications requisite
for incumbents, but in practice they were a dead letter. Alexander III was
moved to indignation when he learned that the Bishop of Coventry was in the
habit of giving churches to boys under ten years of age, but he could only
order that the cures should be entrusted to competent vicars until the nominees
reached a proper age, and this age he himself fixed at fourteen; while other
popes charitably reduced to seven the minimum age for holding simple benefices
or prebends. No effectual check for abuses of
patronage, of course, could be expected of Rome, when the curia itself was the
most eager recipient of benefit from the wrong. Its army of pimps and parasites
was ever on the watch to obtain fat preferments in
all the lands of Europe, and the popes were constantly writing to bishops and
chapters demanding places for their friends.
That pluralities, with all their attendant evils and
abuses, should be habitual under such a system follows as a matter of course.
In vain reforming popes and councils issued constitutions prohibiting them; in
vain indignant moralists inveighed against the scandals and injuries which they
occasioned, the ruin of the temporalities, the sacrifice of souls, and the
general contempt excited for the Church. Forbidden by the canon law, like all
other abuses they were a source of profit to the Roman curia, which was always
ready to issue dispensations when the holders of pluralities found themselves
likely to be disturbed in their sin; or they could be used for purposes of
statecraft, as when Innocent IV, in 1246, by skilful use of such dispensations
broke up the menacing combination of the nobles of France. In fact, learned
doctors of theology were found to defend the lawfulness of the abuse, as was
done in a public disputation about the year 1238 by Master Philip, Chancellor
of the University of Paris, who was a notorious pluralist himself. His fate,
however, was a solemn warning to others. On his death-bed his friend, William
of Auvergne, Bishop of Paris, urged him to resign all his benefices but one,
promising to make good the sacrifice if he should recover, but Philip refused,
on the ground that he wished to experience whether he should be subjected to
damnation on that account. The disputatious ardor of the schoolman was
gratified. Soon after his death a dusky shade appeared to the good bishop at
his prayers, announced itself to be the chancellor's soul, and declared that it
was damned to eternity; though it must be admitted that habitual licentiousness
was superadded to pluralism as a cause of hopeless perdition.
A clergy recruited in such a manner and subjected to
such influences could only, for the most part, be a curse to the people under
their spiritual direction. A purchased benefice was naturally regarded as a
business investment, to be exploited to the utmost profit, and there was little
scruple in turning to account every device for extorting money from
parishioners, while the duties of the Christian pastorate received little
attention.
TITHES.—SALE OF SACRAMENTS.
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