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THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES
BOOK 1
- ORIGIN AND ORGANIZATION OF THE INQUISITION
CHAPTER II
-
HERESY.
8
The Waldenses
In a sect so widely scattered, from Aragon to Bohemia,
consisting mostly of poor and simple folk, hiding their belief in the lowlands,
or dwelling in separate communities among the mountain fastnesses of the
Cottian Alps or of Calabria, it was inevitable that differences of organization
and doctrine should arise, and that there should be variations in the rapidity
of independent development. The labors of Dieckhoff,
Herzog, and especially of Montet in recent times,
have shown that the early Waldenses were not
Protestants in our modern sense, and that, in spite of persecution, many of
them long continued to regard themselves as members of the Church of Rome, with
a persistence proving how real were the abuses which had forced them to schism,
and finally to heresy. Yet, in others, the spirit of revolt ripened much more
rapidly, and it is impossible, within our limited space, to present a definite scheme
of a doctrine which differed in so many points according to time and
circumstance.
In the crucial test of belief in transubstantiation,
for instance, as early as the thirteenth century, an experienced inquisitor, in
drawing up instructions for the examination of Waldenses,
assumes disbelief in the existence of the body and blood in the Eucharist as
one of the points whereby to detect them, and in 1332 we hear of such a denial
among the Waldenses of Savoy.
Yet about this latter
date Bernard Gui assures us that they believed in it,
and M. Montet has shown from their successive
writings how their views on the subject changed. The inquisitor who burned the Waldenses of Cologne in 1392 tells us that they denied
transubstantiation, but they added, that if it occurred it could not be wrought
in the hands of a sinful priest. So it was with regard to purgatory—which for a
long while was regarded as an open question, to be definitely decided in the
negative by the close of the fourteenth century—together with the suffrages of
the saints, the invocation of the Virgin, and the other devices of which it was
the excuse.
The antisacerdotalism in which the sect
took its rise, naturally, in its development, tended to do away with all that
interposed mediators between God and man, although this progress was by no
means uniform. The Waldenses burned in Strasbourg, in
1212, rejected all distinction between the laity and the priesthood. In
Lombardy, about the same time, the community elected ministers either temporary
or for life. Both the French and Lombard Waldenses of
this period held that the Eucharist could only be made by an ordained priest,
though they differed as to the necessity of his not being in mortal sin.
Bernard Gui speaks of three orders among them—deacons,
priests, and bishops; M. Montet has found in a MS. of
1401: a form of Waldensian ordination; and when the Unitas Fratrum of Bohemia was
organized in 1467, it had recourse, as we shall see hereafter, to the Waldensian Bishop Stephen to consecrate its first bishops.
Yet the antisacerdotal tendencies were so strong that
the difference between the laity and priesthood was greatly diminished, and the
power of the keys was wholly rejected. About 1400, the Nobla Leyezon declares that all the popes, cardinals,
bishops, and abbots since the days of Silvester could
not pardon a single mortal sin, for God alone has the power of pardon. As the
soul thus dealt directly with God, the whole machinery of indulgences and
so-called pious works was thrown aside. It is true that faith without works was
idle—“la fe es ociosa sensa las obras”'—but good
works were piety, repentance, charity, justice, not pilgrimages and formal exercises,
the founding of churches and the honoring of saints.
The Waldensian system thus
created a simple church organization with a tendency ever to grow simpler. As a
general proposition it may be stated that the distinction between the clergy
and laity was reduced to a minimum, especially when transubstantiation was rejected.
The layman could hear confessions, baptize, and preach. In some places it was
the custom for each head of a family on Holy Thursday to administer communion
in a simple fashion, consecrating the elements and distributing them himself.
Yet of necessity there was a recognized priesthood, known as the Perfected, or Majorales, who taught the faithful and converted the
unbeliever, who renounced all property and separated themselves from their
wives, or who had observed strict chastity from youth, who wandered around
hearing confessions and making converts, and were supported by the voluntary
contributions of those who labored for their bread. The Pomeranian Waldenses believed that every seven years two of these were
transported to the gate of Paradise, that they might understand the wisdom of
God. One marked distinction between them and the laity was that, when on trial
before the Inquisition, the prohibition of swearing was relaxed in favor of the
latter, who might take an oath under compulsion, while the Perfects would die
rather than violate the precept. The inquisitors, while complaining of the
ingenuity with which the heretics evaded their examination, admitted that all
were much more solicitous to save their friends and kindred than themselves.
With this tendency towards a restoration of
evangelical simplicity, it followed that the special religious teaching of the Waldenses was to a great extent ethical. The reply of an
unfortunate before the Inquisition of Toulouse, when questioned as to what his
instructors had taught him, was “that he should neither speak nor do evil, that
he should do nothing to others that he would not have done to himself, and that
he should not lie or swear”—a simple formula enough, but one which practically
leaves little to be desired; and a similar statement was made to the Celestinian Peter in his inquisition of the Pomeranian Waldenses in 1394.
A persecuted Church is almost inevitably
a pure Church, and the men who through those dreary centuries lay in hiding,
with the stake ever before their eyes, to spread what they believed to be the
unadulterated truths of the gospel in obedience to the commands of Christ, were
not likely to contaminate their high and holy mission with vulgar vices. In
fact, the unanimous testimony of their persecutors is that their external
virtues were worthy of all praise, and the contrast between the purity of their
lives and the depravity which pervaded the clergy of the dominant Church is
more than once deplored by their antagonists as a most effective factor in the
dissemination of heresy. An inquisitor who knew them well describes them: “Heretics
are recognizable by their customs and speech, for they are modest and well
regulated. They take no pride in their garments, which are neither costly nor
vile. They do not engage in trade, to avoid lies and oaths and frauds, but live
by their labor as mechanics—their teachers are cobblers. They do not accumulate
wealth, but are content with necessaries. They are chaste and temperate in meat
and drink. They do not frequent taverns or dances or other vanities. They restrain
themselves from anger. They are always at work; they teach and learn and
consequently pray but little. They are to be known by their modesty and
precision of speech, avoiding scurrility and detraction and light words and
lies and oaths. They do not even say vere or certe regarding them as oath”. Such is the general
testimony, and the tales which were told as to the sexual abominations customary
among them may safely be set down as devices to excite popular detestation,
grounded possibly on extravagances of asceticism, such as were common among the
early Christians, for the Waldenses held that
connubial intercourse was only lawful for the procurement of offspring. An
inquisitor admits his disbelief as to these stories, for which he had never
found a basis worthy of credence, nor does anything of the kind make its appearance
in the examinations of the sectaries under the skilful handling of their
persecutors, until in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the inquisitors of
Piedmont and Provence found it expedient to extract such confessions from their
victims.
There was also objected to them the hypocrisy which
led them to conceal their belief under assiduous attendance at mass and
confession, and punctual observance of orthodox externalities; but this, like
the ingenious evasions under examination, which so irritated their
inquisitorial critics, may readily be pardoned to those with whom it was the
necessity of self-preservation, and who, at least during the earlier period,
had often no other means of enjoying the sacraments which they deemed essential
to salvation. They were also ridiculed for their humble condition in life, being
almost wholly peasants, mechanics, and the like—poor and despised folks of whom
the Church took little count, except to tax when orthodox and burn when
heretic.
But their crowning offence was their love and reverence for Scripture,
and their burning zeal in making converts. The Inquisitor of Passau informs us
that they had translations of the whole Bible in the vulgar tongue, which the
Church vainly sought to suppress, and which they studied with incredible
assiduity. He knew a peasant who could recite the Book of Job word for word;
many of them had the whole of the New Testament by heart, and, simple as they
were, were dangerous disputants. As for the missionary spirit, he tells of one
who, on a winter night, swam the river Ips in order
to gain a chance of converting a Catholic; and all, men and women, old and
young, were ceaseless in learning and teaching. After a hard day’s labor they
would devote the night to instruction; they sought the lazar-houses to carry
salvation to the leper; a disciple of ten days’ standing would seek out another
whom he could instruct, and when the dull and untrained brain would fain
abandon the task in despair they would speak words of encouragement: “Learn a
single word a day, in a year you will know three hundred, and thus you will
gain in the end”. Surely if ever there was a God-fearing people it was these
unfortunates under the ban of Church and State, whose secret passwords were, “Ce dit sainct Pol, Ne mentir”, “Ce dit sainct Jacques, Ne jurer”,
“Ce dit sainct Pierre, Ne rendre mal pour
mal, mais biens contraires”. The Nobla Leyezon scarce says more than the inquisitors, when it
bitterly declares that the sign of a Vaudois, deemed
worthy of death, was that he followed Christ and sought to obey the commandments
of God.
" Que si n'i a alcun bon que ame e tema Yeshu Xrist,
Que nou volha
maudire ni jurar ni mentir,
Ni avoutrar ni aucir ni penre de l'altruy,
Ni venjar se de li seo enemis,
Ilh dion qu'es Vaudes e degne de punir,
E li troban cayson en meczonja e engan."
In fact, amid the license of the Middle Ages ascetic
virtue was apt to be regarded as a sign of heresy. About 1220 a clerk of Spire,
whose austerity subsequently led him to join the Franciscans, was only saved by
the interposition of Conrad, afterwards Bishop of Hildesheim, from being burned
as a heretic, because his preaching led certain women to lay aside their
vanities of apparel and behave with humility.
The sincerity with which the Waldenses adhered to their beliefs is shown by the thousands who cheerfully endured the
horrors of the prison, the torture-chamber, and the stake, rather than return
to a faith which they believed to be corrupt. I have met with a case in 1320,
in which a poor old woman at Pamiers submitted to the
dreadful sentence for heresy simply because she would not take an oath. She
answered all interrogations on points of faith in orthodox fashion, but though
offered her life if she would swear on the Gospels, she refused to burden her
soul with the sin, and for this she was condemned as a heretic.
That all antisacerdotalists should agree, even under persecution, in a common creed, is not to be expected.
In the decrees against heretics and in the writings of controversialists we
meet the names of other sects, but they are of too little importance in numbers
and duration to require more than a passing notice. The Passagii (“all-holy” or “vagabond”) or Circumcisi were Judaizing Christians, who sought to escape the domination
of Rome by a recourse to the old law and denying the equality of Christ with
God. The Joseppini were still more obscure, and their
errors appear mostly to lie in the region of artificial and unclean sexual
asceticism. The Siscidentes were virtually the same
as the Waldenses, the only difference being as to the
administration of the Eucharist. The Ordibarii and Ortlibenses, followers of Ortlieb of Strasbourg, who flourished about the year 1216, were likewise externally
akin to the Waldenses, but indulged in doctrinal
errors to which we shall have to recur hereafter. The Runcarii appear to have been a connecting link between the Poor Men of Lyons and the Albigenses or Manichaeans; an
intermediate sect whose existence might be presupposed as an almost necessary
result of the common interests and common sufferings of the two leading
branches of heresy.
THE CATHARI
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