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THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES
BOOK 1
- ORIGIN AND ORGANIZATION OF THE INQUISITION
CHAPTER V.
3
DUTY OF THE RULER TO SUPRESS HERESY
A powerful impulse to this development is to be found
in the responsibility which grew upon the Church from its connection with the
State. When it could influence the monarch and procure from him edicts
condemning heretics to exile, deportation, to the mines, and even to death, it
felt that God had put into its hands powers to be exercised and not to be
neglected. At the same time, with natural human inconsistency, it could argue
that it was not responsible for the execution of the laws, and that its own
hands were unstained with blood. Even Ithacius, in the case of Priscillian, had
shrunk from the function of prosecutor and had put forward a layman in his
place. Similar devices, as we shall see, were practiced by the Inquisition, and
in either case they were transparently false. In the vast body of imperial
edicts inflicting upon heretics every variety of disability and punishment, the
most ardent churchmen might find conviction that the State recognized the
preservation of the purity of the faith as its first duty. Yet whenever the
State or any of its officials lagged in the enforcement of these laws, the
churchman was at hand to goad them on. Thus the African Church repeatedly asked
the intervention of the secular power to suppress the Donatists; Leo the Great
insisted with the Empress Pulcheria that the destruction of the Eutychians
should be her highest care; and Pelagius I, in urging Narses to suppress heresy
by force, sought to quiet the scruples of the soldier by assuring him that to
prevent or to punish evil was not persecution, but love. It became the general
doctrine of the Church, as expressed by St. Isidor of Seville, that princes are
bound not only to be orthodox themselves, but to preserve the purity of the
faith by the fullest exercise of their power against heretics. How abundantly
these assiduous teachings bore their bitter fruit is shown in the deplorable
history of the Church during those centuries, consisting as it does of heresy
after heresy relentlessly exterminated, until the Council of Constantinople, under
the Patriarch Michael Oxista, introduced the penalty of burning alive as the
punishment of the Bogomili. Nor were the heretics always behindhand, when they
gained opportunity, in improving the lesson which had been taught them so
effectually. The persecution of the Catholics by the Arian Vandals in Africa
under Genseric was quite worthy of orthodoxy; and when Hunneric succeeded his
father, and his proposition to the Emperor Zeno of mutual toleration was
refused, his barbarous zeal was inflamed to pitiless wrath. Under King Euric
the Wisigoth, also, there was a spasmodic persecution in Aquitaine. Yet, as a
rule, the Arian Goths and Burgundians set an example of toleration worthy of
imitation, and their conversion to Catholicism was attended with but little
cruelty on either side, except a passing ebullition in Spain at the crisis under
Leovigild, about 585, followed by disturbances which were rather political than
religious. Later Catholic monarchs, however, enacted laws punishing with exile
and confiscation any deviations from orthodoxy, which are notable as the only
examples of the kind under the Barbarians. The Catholic Merovingians in France
seem never to have troubled their Arian subjects, who were numerous in Burgundy
and Aquitaine. The conversion of these latter was gradual and apparently
peaceful.
The Latin Church through all this had taken little
part in actual persecution, for the Western mind lacked the perverse ingenuity
of the East in originating and adopting heresy. With the downfall of the
Western Empire it commenced the great task which absorbed its energies and by
which it earned the thanks of all succeeding generations—the conversion and
civilization of the Barbarians. Its new converts were not likely to indulge in
abstruse speculations; they accepted the faith which was taught them,
acquiesced for the most part in the established discipline, and while oft
unruly and turbulent, gave little trouble on the score of orthodoxy. Under
these influences the persecuting spirit died out. Claudius of Turin, whose
iconoclastic zeal destroyed all the images in his diocese, escaped without
punishment. Felix of Urgel was forgiven his Adoptianism, and was welcomed back
into the Church in spite of his repeated tergiversations, and though not
restored to his see, his residence for fifteen or twenty years at Lyons does
not seem to have been an imprisomnent, for he secretly maintained his
doctrines, and an heretical declaration was found among his papers after his
death. No force is alluded to when Archbishop Leidrad converted twenty thousand
of the Catalan followers of Felix, whose principal disciple, Elipandus,
Archbishop of Toledo, retained his primatial seat although there is no evidence
that he ever recanted his errors. In the case of the monk Gottschalc, who
disseminated his predestinarian heresy in extensive wanderings throughout Italy,
Dalmatia, Austria, and Bavaria, apparently without opposition, Rabanus of Mainz
finally summoned a council which condemned his doctrine in the presence of
Louis le Germanique. Yet it did not venture to punish him, but sent him to his
prelate, Hincmar of Reims, who, with the authority of Charles le Chauve,
declared him an incorrigible heretic in the Council of Chiersy in 849. So
little disposition was there to inflict penalties for heresy, though his
theories struck at the root of the mediatory power of the Church, that the
scourging ordered for him was carefully stated to be merely the discipline
provided by the Council of Agde for the infraction of the Benedictine rule
prohibiting monks from travelling without commendatory letters from their bishops;
and if he was imprisoned, we are told that this was simply to prevent him from
continuing to contaminate others. The Carolingian legislation was exceedingly
moderate as to heretics, merely classing them with Pagans, Jews, and infamous
persons, and subjecting them to certain disabilities.
HESITATION TO PUNISH IN THE ELEVENTH AND TWELFTH CENTURIES
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