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The history of the popes, from the close of the middle ages VOLUME I. BOOK 1 CHAPTER I THE LITERARY RENAISSANCE IN ITALY AND THE CHURCH
WITH the exception of the period which witnessed the transformation of
the Pagan into the Christian world, the history of mankind hardly offers one
more striking than that of the transition from the Middle Ages to modern times.
One of the most powerful elements in this epoch of marked contrasts was the
exhaustive appreciation and extension of the study of the ancient world,
commonly known as the Renaissance, or the new birth of classical antiquity.
This movement naturally began in Italy, where the memory of the classic past
had never been wholly effaced, and with it opens a new epoch.
The object of this work is not to demonstrate the origin and development
of this revolution, effected in science, poetry, art, and life. The historian
of the Popes is only concerned with the Renaissance, in so far as it comes in
contact with the Church and the Holy See.
Thoroughly and correctly appreciate this relation, we must bear in mind
that in this movement, which began in the realm of literature, there were from
the first two conflicting currents, discernible, more or less, in its gifted
founders, Petrarch and Boccaccio.
Like the author of the “Divine Comedy”, Petrarch took his stand upon the
Church, and succeeded in combining enthusiastic admiration for classical
antiquity with devout reverence for Christianity. His passionate love for the
antique did not make him forget the sublimity of the Christian mysteries. On
the contrary, the poet repeatedly and energetically declared that he looked on
the Gospel as higher than all the wisdom of the ancients. “We may”, he writes
to his friend Giovanni Colonna, “love the schools of the philosophers, and
agree with them only when they are in accordance with the truth, and when they
do not lead us astray from our chief end. Should anyone attempt to do this, were he even Plato or Aristotle, Varro or Cicero we must
firmly and constantly despise and reject him. Let no subtlety of arguments, no
grace of speech, no renown, ensnare us; they were but men, learned, so far as
mere human erudition can go, brilliant in eloquence, endowed with the gifts of
nature, but deserving of pity inasmuch as they lacked the highest and ineffable
gift. As they trusted only in their own strength and did not strive after the
true light, they often fell like blind men. Let us admire their intellectual
gifts, but in such wise as to reverence the Creator of these gifts. Let us have
compassion on the errors of these men, while we congratulate ourselves and
acknowledge that out of mercy, without merit of our own, we have been favored
above our forefathers by Him, who has hidden His secrets from the wise and
graciously manifested them to little ones. Let us study philosophy so as to
love wisdom. The real wisdom of God is Christ. In
order to attain true philosophy, we must love and reverence Him above all
things. We must first be Christians - then we may be what we will. We must read
philosophical, poetical, and historical works in such manner that the Gospel of
Christ shall ever find an echo in our hearts. Through it alone can we become
wise and happy; without it, the more we have learned, the more ignorant and
unhappy shall we be. On the Gospel alone as upon the one immoveable foundation,
can human diligence build all true learning”.
In justification of his love for the philosophers and poets of
antiquity, Petrarch repeatedly appeals to St. Augustine, whose “tearful
Confessions” were among his favorite books. “So great a Doctor of the Church”,
he says, “was not ashamed to let himself be guided by Cicero, although Cicero
pursued a different end. Why, indeed, should he be ashamed? No leader is to be
despised, who points out the way of salvation. I do not mean to deny that in
the classical writers there is much to be avoided, but in Christian writers
also there are many things that may mislead the unwary reader. St. Augustine
himself, in a laborious work, with his own hand rooted the weeds out of the
rich harvest field of his writings. In short, the books are rare that can be
read without danger, unless the light of Divine Truth illuminates us, and
teaches us what is to be chosen and what to be avoided. If we follow that
Light, we may go on our way with security”. Petrarch never flinched from
expressing his devout sentiments; he repeatedly showed himself the apologist of
Christianity, and on the occasion of his solemn crowning at the Capitol, went
to the Basilica of St. Peter to lay his wreath of laurels on the altar of the
Prince of the Apostles.
Yet Petrarch did not escape the leaven of his age or the influence of
the dangerous elements of antiquity. He often succumbed to the sensual passion
so faithfully depicted in his work, “On Contempt of the World”; his inordinate
love of preferment is another blot upon his stormy life, and we discover in him
not a few traits at variance with his devout Christian intuitions. Among these
are his scornful attitude towards scholastic theology, which had, indeed, much
degenerated, and his craving for fame. On this point we shall judge him the
more leniently, if we reflect that even the heart of a Dante, whose immortal
poem upholds the Christian view of the nothingness of human glory, was not
impervious to this weakness. Still it is sad to see a man so eminent in
intellectual gifts as Petrarch, yearning after crowns of laurel, royal favors,
and popular ovations, and pursuing the phantom of glory in the courts of profligate
princes. Undoubtedly this ardent passion for renown, to which the Christian
conscience of the poet opposed such an inefficacious resistance, must be
considered as a taint of heathenism. In the old classical authors, especially
in Cicero, this ideal of human fame was so vividly presented to the mind of
Petrarch, that at times it entirely eclipsed the Christian ideal.
But he has one uncontested excellence: never does a wanton or sensual
thought mar the pure silver ring of his sonnets. In this respect, the most
marked contrast exists between him and his friend and contemporary Boccaccio,
whose writings breathe an atmosphere of heathen corruption. The way in which
this great master of style and delineation of character sets at naught all
Christian notions of honor and decency, is simply appalling. His idyll, “Ameto”, reeks with the profligacy of the ancient world, and
preaches pretty plainly the “Gospel of free love”; and his satire, “Corbaccio”, or “The Labyrinth of Love”, displays the most
revolting cynicism. A critic of no severe stamp declares that even the modern
naturalistic writers can hardly outbid the defilement of this lampoon. And the
most celebrated of all Boccaccio’s works, the “Decameron”, is a presentation of
purely heathen principles, in the unrestrained gratification of the passions. A
modern literary historian says, that the provocative, sensuous style of the
stories may find its explanation - without the possibility of excuse - in the
prevalent immorality of the times, and the unchaining of all evil passions,
caused by the plague; their effect is all the more dangerous, from the genuine
wit, with which the writer describes the triumph of cunning, whether over
honest simplicity or narrow-minded selfishness.
In his stories Boccaccio takes especial delight in heaping ridicule and
contempt on ecclesiastics, monks and nuns, and with polished irony, represents
them as the quintessence of all immorality and hypocrisy.
And yet Boccaccio was no unbeliever or enemy of the Church. His insolent
language regarding ecclesiastical personages is by no means the outcome of a
mind essentially hostile to the Church, and none of his contemporaries
considered it as such. A preacher of penance, who visited Boccaccio in the year
1361, reproached him bitterly with the immorality of his writings, but not with
their disloyalty. The compiler of the “Decameron” was never, even in his most
careless days, an unbeliever, and in later life, after his conversion, the
childlike piety of his nature reasserted itself. He eagerly embraced every
opportunity of manifesting his faith, and of warning others against the perusal
of the impure writings, which caused him such deep regret. The dalliance of
former days with the old classic gods was quite at an end, and we have his assurance
that he did not look upon learning as antagonistic to faith, but at the same
time, he would rather renounce the former than the latter. His will also bears
witness to his piety. Boccaccio hereby leaves the most precious of his
possessions, his library, to the Augustinian Friar and Professor of Theology,
Martino da Signa, on condition that he should pray
for his soul; and after Martino's death he desires that the books should become
the property of the monastery of Santo Spirito, and
be always accessible to the monks. He wishes that his last resting place should
be in the Augustinian Church of Santo Spirito, at
Florence, or if death should overtake him at Certaldo,
in the Augustinian Church of Saints Philip and James in that town.
The position taken up by these two founders and pioneers of the
Renaissance in regard to the Church was, therefore, not by any means a hostile
one, and accordingly the attitude of the Popes towards them was throughout
friendly. Boccaccio went three times as Ambassador from the Florentines to the
Papal Court, and was always well received there. All the Popes from Benedict
XII to Gregory XI showed Petrarch the greatest favor, and Clement VI delivered
the great poet from pecuniary embarrassments and procured for him the independence
needed for his intellectual labors. It is, therefore, not correct to look on
the movement, known as the Renaissance, the literary manifestation of which is
Humanism, as, in its origin and its whole scope, directed against the Church.
On the contrary, the true Renaissance, the study of the past in a thoroughly
Christian spirit, was in itself a legitimate intellectual movement, fruitful in
fresh results, alike for secular and spiritual science.
The many-sided and methodical study of the intellectual works of former
days, with its tendency to deliver men's minds from the formalism of the
degenerate scholastic philosophy, and to make them capable of a fresher and
more direct culture of all sciences, especially of philosophy and theology,
could not but be approved from a strictly ecclesiastical point of view. In the
eyes of the Church, everything depended on the method and the aim of the
humanistic studies; for the movement could only be hostile to her, if the old
ecclesiastical methods were forsaken, if classical studies, instead of being
used as means of culture, became their own end, and were employed not to
develop Christian knowledge, but rather to obscure and destroy it.
So long, then, as the absolute truth of Christianity was the standing
ground from which heathen antiquity was apprehended, the Renaissance of
classical literature could only be of service to the Church. For, just as the
ancient world in all its bearings could only be fully manifested to the
spiritual eye, when viewed from the heights of Christianity, so Christian
faith, worship, and life, could not fail to be more amply comprehended,
esteemed, and admired from a clear perception of the analogies and contrasts
furnished by classic heathenism. The conditions imposed by the Popes and other
ecclesiastical dignitaries upon the revived study of antiquity could but serve,
as long as this study was pursued in a right spirit, to promote the interests
of the Church, and these conditions corresponded with the old ecclesiastical
traditions.
Proceeding from the principle that knowledge is in itself a great good,
and that its abuse can never justify its suppression, the Church, ever holding
the just mean, from the first resisted heathen superstition and heathen
immorality, but not the Graeco-Roman intellectual
culture. Following the great Apostle of the Gentiles, who had read the Greek
poets and philosophers, most of the men who carried on his work esteemed and
commended classical studies. When the Emperor Julian endeavored to deprive
Christians of this important means of culture, the most sagacious
representatives of the Church perceived the measure to be inimical and most
dangerous to Christendom. Under the pressure of necessity, books on science
were hastily composed for teaching purposes by Christian authors, but after the
death of Julian the old classics resumed their place.
The danger of a one-sided and exaggerated interest in heathen
literature, regardless of its dark side, was never ignored by Christians. “For
many”, writes even Origen, “it is an evil thing, after they have professed
obedience to the law of God, to hold converse with the Egyptians, that is to
say with heathen knowledge”. And those very Fathers of the Church, who judged
the ancient writers most favorably, were careful from time to time to point out
the errors into which the young may fall in the study of the ancients, and the
perils which may prove their destruction. Efforts were made by a strict
adherence to the approved principles of Christian teaching, and by a careful
choice of teachers, to meet the danger which lurked in classical literature.
Thus, history tells us, did the Church succeed in obviating the perils to moral
and religious life attendant on its perusal. Zealots, indeed, often enough
arose declaring, “In Christ we have the truth, we need no other learning”, and
there were not wanting Christians who abhorred classical learning, as dangerous
and obnoxious to Christian doctrine. But the severity, with which Saint Gregory Nazianzen blames these men, proves this party to have
been neither enlightened nor wholly disinterested. In espousing the cause of
ignorance, they were mainly seeking their own advancement, regardless of the
great interests of science and intellectual culture in Christian society, which
they would have left to perish, if they had got the upper hand. The most
clear-sighted of those who watched over the destinies of the Church, were
always intent on the protection of these interests, as were also the great
majority of the eastern and western Fathers.
“The heathen philosophy”, writes Clement of Alexandria, “is not
deleterious to Christian life, and those who represent it as a school of error
and immorality, calumniate it, for it is light, the image of truth, and a gift
which God has bestowed upon the Greeks; far from harming the truth by empty
delusions, it but gives us another bulwark for the Truth, and, as a sister
science, helps to establish Faith. Philosophy educated the Greeks, as the law
educated the Jews, in order that both might be led to Christ”. “He, therefore,
who neglects the heathen philosophy”, says Clement in another passage, “is like
the fool who would gather grapes without cultivating the vineyard. But as the
heathen mingle truth with falsehood we must borrow wisdom from their
philosophers as we pluck roses from thorns.
In like manner spoke St. Basil, St. Gregory Nazianzen,
St. Augustine, St. Jerome, and other celebrities of the early Church. They all
manifested a clear perception of, and a warm susceptibility for, the beauties
of classical literature. Without closing their eyes to the disadvantages and
dark shadows of heathenism, they also saw the sunshine, the rays of the eternal
light, which beamed forth from these glorious achievements of the human
intellect; they heard the prophetic voices which rose from their midst, and
sought to bring them into unison with the language of Christendom. They
discriminated between the common human element contained in classical
literature, and the heathen element which enfolds it; the latter was to be
rejected, and the former to take its place within the circle of Christian
ideas. They constantly repeated, that everything depends on the manner in which
the heathen classics are read and employed in education. These expressions of
disapprobation are not directed against the classics in themselves, but against
a wrong spirit and a perverted method in their use; they agree in this respect
with St. Amphilochius, who gave the following advice
with regard to the perusal of these works: "Be circumspect in
dealing with them, collect the good that is in them, shun whatever is
dangerous; imitate the wise bee, which rests upon all flowers and sucks only
sweet juices from them." In the same sense, and with true Attic elegance,
St. Basil the Great wrote his celebrated “Discourse to Christian youths, on the
right use of the heathen authors”. In opposition to the unjust attacks which
treated heathen books without exception as vain lies of the Devil, this great
Doctor of the Church, whose fame is still fresh in the Basilian Order, dwells with manifest affection on the value and excellence of classic
studies as a preparation for Christian science. The writings of St. Gregory Nazianzen furnish proof of even greater esteem, love, and
enthusiasm for the literature of the ancients. “It has cost me little”, he says
in one of his discourses, “to give up all the rest: riches, high position,
influence, in short all earthly glory, all the false joys of the world. I
cleave to but one thing, eloquence, and I do not regret having undergone such
toils by land and sea to acquire it”.
The necessity of combining classical culture with Christian education,
henceforth became a tradition in the Church, especially as the scientific
development of the period to which most of the above-mentioned Fathers belong,
has had an enduring influence on the ages which have followed.
Amidst the storms of later times, the Church preserved these glorious
blossoms of ancient culture, and endeavored to turn them to account in the
interest of Christendom. Monasteries, founded and protected by the Popes, while
the genuine spirit of the Church yet lived within them, rendered valuable
service in guarding the intellectual treasures of antiquity. With all their
enthusiasm for classical literature, the true representatives of the Church
were, nevertheless, firmly convinced, that the greatest and most beautiful
things antiquity could show came far short of the glory, the loftiness and
the purity of Christianity. No exaggerated deification of the heathen writers,
but their prudent use in a Christian spirit; no infatuated idolatry of their
form, but the employment of their substance in the interest of morality and
religion, the combination, in short, of classical learning with Christian life this was the aim of the Church.
This utilization for Christian ends of the ancient writers was eminently
fruitful. “The direct use, which the Fathers made of these writings in their
warfare against idolatry and vain philosophy, is obvious. But, Stolberg adds,
who can estimate all that Origen, the Sts. Gregory,
St. Basil, St. Chrysostom and others gained indirectly in the way of culture
and grace, and - more important still - in intellectual energy from the
ancients?”
The discourses and treatises of those Fathers of the Church who had
studied the classics, furnish - ample proof that the simplicity of the Faith is
far from being impaired by the ornaments of rhetoric. Their poems, as
amongst others, St. Gregory Nazianzen’s tragedy, “The
Suffering Saviour”, render the conceptions of the
Patristic, as clearly as Dante's immortal poem does those of the scholastic
theology. The efforts of Julian the Apostate to dissolve this Alliance between
Christian faith and Greco-Roman culture are a clear indication of the increase
of strength which Christianity was then deriving from this source.
In regard to the reaction towards antiquity, which was the almost
necessary consequence of a period of decay of classical learning, the attitude
to be adopted by the representatives of the Church was clearly defined. Their
promotion of the newly-revived studies certainly in some sense denoted a breach
with the later Middle Ages, which had unduly repressed the ancient literature,
and, in consequence, fallen into a most complete and deplorable indifference
as, to elegancies of form, but it involved no breach with the Middle Ages as a
whole, far less with Christian antiquity in general.
But this reaction in the Renaissance took a special coloring and
shape from the circumstances of the time in which it occurred. It was a
melancholy period of almost universal corruption and torpor in the life of the
Church, which from the beginning of the fourteenth century had been manifesting
itself in the weakening of the authority of the Pope, the worldliness of the
clergy, the decline of the scholastic philosophy and theology, and the terrible
disorders in political and civil life. The dangerous elements, which no doubt
the ancient literature contained, were presented to a generation intellectually
and physically over-wrought, and in many ways unhealthy. It is no wonder,
therefore, that some of the votaries of the new tendency turned aside into
perilous paths. The beginnings of these defections can already be traced
in Petrarch and Boccaccio, the founders of the Renaissance literature, though
they never themselves forsook the Church.
The contrasts here apparent became more and more marked as time went on.
On the one side the banner of pure heathenism was raised by the fanatics
of the classical ideal. Its followers wished to bring about a radical return to
paganism both in thought and manners. The other side strove to bring the new
element of culture into harmony with the Christian ideal, and the political and
social civilization of the day. These two parties represented the false and the
true, the heathen and the Christian Renaissance.
The latter party, whose judgment was sufficiently free from fanatical
bias to perceive that a reconciliation between existing tendencies would be
more profitable than a breach with the approved principles of Christianity and
the development of more than a thousand years, could alone produce real
intellectual progress. To its adherents the world owes it, that the Renaissance
was saved from bringing about its own destruction.
Not a few Humanists wavered between the two streams. Some sought to find
a happy mean, while others were in youth carried away by the one current, and
in mature age by the other.
No one has better expressed the programme of
the radical heathenizing party than Lorenzo Villa in his book on Pleasure,
published in 1431.
This treatise, in some ways a very remarkable one, is divided into three
dialogues, in which Lionardo Bruni represents the teaching of the Stoics, and Antonio Beccadelli that of the Epicureans, while Niccolò Niccoli maintains the cause of “the true good”. These
personages are well chosen. The grave majestic Bruni had really, as one of his unprinted works proves, endeavoured to effect a union between Christian Ethics and the Stoic philosophy. Antonio Beccadelli, surnamed Panormita from his native city, Palermo, was his direct Antipodes. He was the author of “Hermaphroditus”, a collection of epigrams far surpassing in
obscenity the worst productions of ancient times. Niccolò Niccoli, “the reviver of Greek and Latin literature
in Florence”, was, in a certain sense, a type of the Christian Humanist; his
fundamental principle was, that scientific investigation and Christian
sentiment must go hand in hand. Even from friends such as Poggio and Marsuppini he would not tolerate words of
disrespect for his faith; he detested all materialists and unbelievers. The
errors of his life were atoned for by a most edifying death.
We must not allow ourselves to be deceived by the conclusion of the
Dialogues; their purpose is simply to cast ridicule upon the Stoic morality, as
used by the party of conciliation as a bond of union between heathen and
Christian views, and that with the ulterior aim of casting ridicule on the
moral teaching of the Church.
Cautiously, but yet clearly enough and with seductive skill, the
Epicurean doctrine was put forward as defending a natural right against the
exactions of Christianity. The gist of this doctrine is summed up by Beccadelli, the exponent of Valla’s own views, in the
following sentences: “What has been produced and formed by nature cannot be
otherwise than praiseworthy and holy; Nature is the same, or almost the same as
God”.
It has been remarked by a judge, who is far from severe, that the last
of these propositions, placing the creature on a footing of equality with the
Creator, strikes at the very foundations of Christianity; the first demolishes
those of morality, substituting for virtue pleasure, for the “will or love for
what is good and the hatred of evil”, pleasure, “whose good consists in
gratifications of mind or body, from whatever source derived”.
Beccadelli, the mouthpiece of Valla, further teaches, with perfect consistency,
that the business of man is to enjoy the good things of nature, and this to
their fullest extent. The “gospel of pleasure” demands the gratification of
every sense; it completely ignores the barriers of chastity and honor, and
would have them abolished, where they still exist, as an injustice. No
sense is to be denied its appropriate satisfaction. The individual, says Valla
plainly, may lawfully indulge all his appetites. Adultery is in the natural
order. Indeed, all women ought to be in common. Plato's community of women is
in accordance with nature. Adultery and unchastity are to be eschewed only when danger attends them: otherwise all sensual
pleasure is good.
Pleasure, pleasure, and nothing but pleasure! Sensual pleasure is, in
Valla's eyes, the highest good, and therefore he esteems those nations of
heathen antiquity happy, who raised voluptuousness to the rank of worship. Vice
becomes virtue, and virtue vice. All his indignation is called forth by the
voluntary virginity ever so highly esteemed in Christendom. Continence is a
crime against “kind” nature. “Whoever invented consecrated Virgins”, he said,
“introduced into the State a horrible custom, which ought to be banished to the
furthest ends of the earth”.
This institution has nothing to do with religion; “it is sheer
superstition”. “Of all human things, none is more insufferable than Virginity.
If we were born after the law of nature, it is also a law of nature that we
should in turn beget. If you must have women consecrating their whole lives to
the service of religion, choose married women and, indeed, those whose husbands
are priests. Observe, however, that all the Divinities, with the sole exception
of Minerva, were married, and that Jupiter, so far as in him lay, could not
endure virgins. Those who profess themselves to be consecrated virgins are
either mad, or poor, or avaricious”.
The new Gospel of a life of pleasure, in opposition to the Scriptural
law. “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread”, is indeed put forward
only by way of argument, but this is done in a manner which gives the reader
easily to understand that Valla himself agreed with it.
An able modern historian observes: "It is not surprising that these
discussions earned for Valla the reputation of maintaining pleasure to be the
chief good; that the form of disputation was looked upon as a simple
precaution, and the triumph of Christian Ethics as a mere show of justice. The
poisonous theory of life had been promulgated, it mattered little whether it
was defended or not. Moreover, that which was known of the author's life said
but little for his morality."
Valla was not alarmed by the attacks of theologians on his daring
opinions, for King Alfonso of Naples was his firm protector. On the contrary,
he now betook himself to the realm of theology, and eagerly sought
opportunities of encountering his ecclesiastical opponents. His dialogue on
religious vows, the first of his works to become known in recent times, here
comes under our notice. It is of special interest, as in its pages Valla goes
far beyond the previous attacks of the Humanists on the monastic life. His
predecessors in this field had assailed the externals of the religious state;
they had, under the guise of stories, held up the excesses of individuals to
scorn. Valla, in this work, treats the subject quite differently. His attack is
of a more radical character; he assails the monastic life in itself, combating
the proposition, which has always been upheld by the Church, that by the same
course of moral life, a man bound by religious vows attains higher merit and
gains a greater reward than does one who belongs to no religious order. The
acrimonious remarks in regard to the clerical and monastic states, with which
this book abounds, are of trifling importance in comparison with this, its main
intent and purpose, which strikes at the very root of the religious life in
general.
With equal audacity and venom, Valla turned his arms against the
temporal power of the Papacy, in his pamphlet, “On the falsely credited and
invented Donation of Constantine”. Considerations affecting the genuineness of
this document had been put forward some years previously by the learned
Nicholas of Cusa, in his “Catholic Concordance”; and,
independently of Valla and Cusa, Reginald Pecock, Bishop of Chichester, in
the middle of the fifteenth century, showed by a careful sifting of the
historical evidence the untenable character of this long-credited document. But
Valla, in his work, went a great deal further than these writers. In his hands
the proof that the document was a recent forgery became a violent attack on the
Temporal Power of the Popes. If Constantine's Donation be a forgery of later
times, he concluded, then the Temporal Principality of the Popes falls to ruin,
and the Pope has nothing more urgent to do than to divest himself of the
usurped power. The Pope is all the more bound to do this, because, according to
Valla’s view, all the corruption in the church and all the wars and misfortunes
of Italy are the consequence of this usurpation.
The virulence of Valla's denunciations against the “overbearing,
barbarous, tyrannical Priestly domination” has scarcely been surpassed in later
times. “The Popes”, he says, “were always filching away the liberties of the
people, and therefore when opportunity offers the people rise. If at times they
willingly consent to the Papal rule, which may happen when a danger threatens
from some other side, it must not be understood that they have agreed to
continue slaves, never again to free their necks from the yoke, and that their
posterity has no right of settling their own affairs. That would be in the
highest degree unjust. We came of our own free will to you, 0 Pope, and asked
you to govern us; of our own free will we go away from you again, that you may
no longer govern us. If we owe you anything, then make out the debit and credit
account. But you wish to rule over us against our will, as if we were orphans,
although we might perhaps be capable of governing you with greater wisdom. Moreover,
reckon up the injustices, which have so often been inflicted on this State by
you or the magistrates you have appointed. We call God to witness that your
injustice constrains us to rise against you, as Israel of old rose against
Jeroboam. And the injustices of those days, the exaction of heavy tributes, how
trifling were they in comparison with our disasters! Have you enervated our
State? You have. Have you plundered our churches? You have. Have you outraged
matrons and virgins? You have. Have you shed the blood of citizens in our
towns? You have. Shall we bear this? Or shall we, perhaps, because you choose
to take the place of a father, forget that we are children? As a father, 0
Pope, or, if the title suits you better, as a lord, we have called you hither,
and not as an enemy or an executioner. Although the injuries we have suffered
might justify us, we will not imitate your cruelty or your impiety, for we are
Christians. We will not raise the avenging sword against your head, but after
we have dismissed and removed you, we will appoint another father and lord.
Sons are permitted to flee from evil parents who have brought them up, and
shall we not be allowed to flee from you, who are not our real father, but only
a foster-father who has treated us extremely ill? Attend to your priestly
office, and do not set up a throne in the regions of night, thence to thunder
forth and hurl the hissing lightnings against this
and other nations. The forgery of Constantine's gift has become a reason for
the devastation of all Italy. The time has come to stop the evil at its source.
Therefore I say and declare - for if I put my trust in God I will not be afraid o f men - that during the years of my life, not
one true and prudent steward has occupied the Papal Chair. Far from giving food
and bread to the family of God, the Pope declares war against peaceful nations,
and sows discord between States and Princes. The Pope thirsts after foreign
possessions, and exhausts his own. He is what Achilles called Agamemnon, “a king
who devours the people”.
It will be seen that it is Valla, not Machiavelli, who started the
often-repeated assertion that the Popes are to blame for all Italy's
misfortunes. Like the Florentine historian, Valla knows not, or else forgets,
that the Church and her rulers preserved the most valuable elements of the
ancient culture for humanity, civilized the barbarians, and created mediaeval
international law, that the Primate as head of the one Church founded by Christ
must necessarily have fixed his seat in the capital of ancient power and
civilization, and in order perfectly to fulfill his high office, must be a
monarch and not a subject.
As to the important question, in what light the more recent gifts of
territory to the Holy See were to be regarded, Valla proceeds very simply. He
maintains that, being renewals of Constantine's ancient gift, they could not
constitute a new right! The objection that, failing Constantine's document, the
temporal possessions of the Popes rested on the right of prescription, he meets
with the assertion that, in the case of unauthorized dominion over men, the
right of prescription has no existence, and that, even if it had, it would long
since have been forfeited by the tyranny of the Popes. This tyranny was all the
more crying because the exercise of temporal power was quite inconsistent with
the duties of a spiritual Head.
In the above-mentioned pamphlet, which is a caricature of the government
of the Popes, and openly calls the Vicars of Christ “tyrants, thieves, and robbers”,
the author of the “Dialogue on Pleasure” frequently assumes the air of a pious
Christian. He endeavors to speak in an edifying manner of “the loftiness and
grandeur” of the spiritual office of the Popes, and brings forward a number of
quotations from Holy Scripture. In strange contrast with these passages in his
work are the oft-repeated passionate appeals to the Romans, urging them to
revolt against the temporal power of the Holy See. Valla also addresses the
Princes; paints in the darkest colors the grasping ambition of Rome, and
pronounces them to be justified in depriving the Pope of the States of the
Church. He concludes this menacing libel with a formal declaration of war
against the Papacy. “If the Pope refuses”, he says, “to quit the dwelling,
which does not belong to him, and return to his own, and to take refuge from
the angry waves in the haven of his own vocation, I will set about a second
discourse, which will be much more violent than the present one”.
In order to form a correct estimate of Valla’s anti-papal pamphlet, the
circumstances under which it appeared must be taken into consideration.
According to his own account, he wrote it six years after the insurrection of
the Romans against Eugenius IV. This Pope, who, as feudal Lord of Naples,
favored the claims of the House of Anjou, was at the time in open conflict with
King Alfonso, who, on his side, supported the schismatics of Basle. This state of affairs explains how Valla, living under the protection
of the King, could venture thus to declare war against the head of the Church
and the spiritual power. The sincerity of his convictions as to the
unrighteousness of the temporal power of the Holy See soon became apparent.
After the reconciliation of the Neapolitan Monarch with Eugenius IV, he made
every possible effort to enter the Papal service. In a humble letter addressed
to the Pope, whom he had so lately abused as a tyrant, he retracted his former
writings, and expressed his willingness in future to devote himself to the
service of the Apostolic See.
“The treatise regarding Constantine’s grant”, says an author who
occupies almost the same position as Valla, “was the boldest attack on the
temporal power ever ventured on by any reformer; was it then strange that a new
popular tribune - a Stefano Porcaro - should arise?”
In zealously prosecuting the pamphlet the Papacy merely acted in self-defence. Any other Government would have done the
same, for Valla called on the Romans to drive the Pope from Rome, and even
intimated that it would be lawful to kill him. That the ideas, expressed with
such unexampled audacity, fell on a fruitful soil is evidenced by the attempt
of Stefano Porcaro on the life of Nicholas V, and
also by the fact that later on, in the time of Pius II, the Papal Secretary,
Antonio Cortese, brought out an Anti-Valla.
Unfortunately, only a fragment of this unprinted work is preserved in the
Library of the Chapter at Lucca, which also contains another work against Valla
and in defence of the temporal power of the Holy See.
Valla’s audacious attack on Christian morals in his dialogue “On
Pleasure” was far surpassed by Antonio Becradelli Panormita (1471). Repulsive though the subject be, we must
speak of his “Hermaphroditus” or collection of
epigrams, because the spirit of the false Renaissance is here manifested in all
its hideousness. “The Book”, says the Historian of Humanism, “opens a view into
an abyss of iniquity, but wreathes it with the most beautiful flowers of
poetry”. The most horrible crimes of heathen antiquity, crimes whose very name
a Christian cannot utter without reluctance, were here openly glorified. The
poet, in his facile verses, toyed with the worst forms of sensuality, as if
they were the most natural and familiar themes for wit and merriment. “And
moreover, he complacently confessed himself the author of this obscene book,
justified it by the examples of the old Roman poets, and looked down upon the
strict guardians of morality as narrow-minded dullards, incapable of
appreciating the voluptuous graces of the ancient. Cosmo de Medici accepted the
dedication of this loathsome book, which is proved by the countless copies in
the Italian libraries to have had but too wide a circulation.
Beccadelli’s disgraceful work did not, unfortunately, stand alone, for Poggio, Filelfo and Eneas Sylvius Piccolomini have
much to answer for in the way of highly-seasoned anecdotes and adventures. No
writing of the so-called Humanists, however, equals Beccadelli’s collection of epigrams in impurity. The false heathen Renaissance culminates in
this repulsive “Emancipation of the Flesh”, sagaciously characterized by a
modern historian as the forerunner of the great Revolution, which in the
following centuries shook Europe to its centre.
The representatives of the Church, who in later times were often too
indulgent towards the manifold excesses of the Humanists, happily did their
duty on this occasion, and met this “appalling fruit of faith in the
infallibility of the ancients” wit decision. Pope Eugenius IV forbad the
reading o is work under pain of excommunication. Cardinal Cesarini, a zealous friend of Humanism, destroyed it,
wherever he could get possession of it. The most celebrated preachers of the
day, St. Bernardine of Siena and Roberto da Lecce,
earnestly warned their hearers against such vile literature, and burned Beccadelli's Epigrams in the open squares at Milan and
Bologna. Counter publications were also circulated by the ecclesiastical party.
The manuscript of a long indictment against Beccadelli,
composed by the Franciscan, Antonio da Rho, is preserved in the Ambrosian Library at Milan. The Carthusian,
Mariano de Volterra, composed a poem against him, and
the learned Minorite, Alberto da Sarteano,
wrote a letter of warning to the young men of Ferrara, and also a larger work,
with a view of counteracting the influence of this impure poet.
The sensation caused by this vile book was so great that even Poggio, who was certainly by no means over-particular in
such matters, advised Beccadelli in future to choose
graver subjects, inasmuch as “Christian poets are not allowed the license
enjoyed by the heathen”. Beccadelli had the insolence
to defend himself against this slight reproof, which was not very seriously
meant, by an appeal to the authority of the ancients. A great many “learned,
worthy, holy Greeks and Romans had”, he said, “sung of such things; and yet the
works of Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, Juvenal, Martial, Virgil, and Ovid
were universally read; the very Prince of Philosophers, Plato himself, had
written wanton verses”. Beccadelli then gives a list
of Greek philosophers and statesmen, who had indulged in writings of this
description, and yet been virtuous. Similarly in his epigrams he had been
careful to declare, that although his writings were immodest his life was
spotless. If Beccadelli really believed what he said,
daily experience should have taught him another lesson. The horrible crimes
which had been the curse or the ancient world, and which were the theme of his
elegant verses, raged like a moral pestilence in his time in the larger towns
of Italy, especially among the higher classes of society. Florence, Siena, and
Naples were described as the chief seats of these excesses; in Siena, indeed,
in the beginning of the fifteenth century, it had been found necessary, as in
ancient Rome, to legislate against the prevailing celibacy of men. Lucca and
Venice also bore an evil name in regard to the prevalence of those vices, which
had no small share in bringing about the downfall of Greece.
The corrupting effects of the false, profligate Humanism represented by
Valla and Beccadelli made themselves felt to an
alarming extent in the province of religion, as well as in that of ethics. The
enthusiasm for everything connected with the ancient world was carried to such
an excess, that the forms of antiquity alone were held to be beautiful, and its
ideas alone to be true. The ancient literature came to be looked upon as
capable of satisfying every spiritual need, and as sufficing for the perfection
of humanity. Accordingly its admirers sought to resuscitate ancient life as a
whole, and that, the life of the period of the decadence with which alone they
were acquainted. Grave deviations from Christian modes of thought and conduct
were the necessary consequences of such opinions.
In the beginning of the fifteenth century Cino da Rinuccini brought forward a list of serious
charges against the adherents of the false Renaissance. “They praise Cicero’s
work De Officiis”, he says, “but they ignore the duty
of controlling their passions and regulating their life according to the rules
of true Christian chastity. They are devoid of all family affection, they
despise the holy institution of marriage, and live without rule. They avoid all
labor for the State - either by word or action - saying that he who serves the
community serves nobody. As to theology, they give undue praise to Varro’s
works, and secretly prefer them to the Fathers of the Church. They even presume
to assert that the heathen gods had a more real existence than the God of the
Christian religion, and they will not remember the wonders wrought by the
saints”.
There may be, perhaps, some exaggeration in these charges, but it cannot
be denied, that enthusiastic admiration for the ancients exercised a most
deleterious influence on the Christian conscience and life of the
representatives of the false Renaissance. Even Petrarch lamented the fact, that
to confess the Christian faith and esteem it higher than the heathen philosophy
was called stupidity and ignorance, and that people went so far as even to deem
literary culture incompatible with faith.
It is recorded of the celebrated Florentine Statesman, Rinaldo degli Albizzi,
that he held a disputation with a physician versed in philosophy, on the
question whether science is in opposition to Christian faith. Like Pietro Pomponazzo, a century
later, Albizzi maintained the affirmative, supporting
his opinion by quotations from Aristotle. Carlo Marsuppini,
of Arezzo, the State Chancellor of the Florentine Republic, openly manifested a
great contempt for Christianity and an unbounded admiration for the heathen
religion. He adhered to these sentiments to the end, and a contemporary says,
"He died without confession or Communion, and not as a good Christian.
Few, however, went to such lengths; most of these men, when the reality
of death drew near, abandoned their empty speculations, and a penitent return
to the dogmas of the faith took the place of their former vagaries. Even such
men as Codro Urceo and
Machiavelli, before their end, sought the aid of the Church, from which their
lives and opinions had estranged them, and whose graces and blessings their
writings had contemned; they died after making their confession, fortified with
the consolations of religion.
The adherents of the false Renaissance, with scarcely an exception,
were, during life, indifferent to religion. They looked on their classical
studies, their ancient philosophy, and the faith of the Church as two distinct
worlds, which had no point of contact. From considerations of worldly prudence
or convenience they still professed themselves Catholics, while in their hearts
they were more or less alienated from the Church. In many cases, indeed, the
very foundations of faith and morals were undermined by the triumph of false
Humanism. The literary men and artists of this school lived in their ideal
world of classic dreams; theirs was a proud and isolated existence. The real
world of social and, yet more, that of moral and religious life, with its
needs, its struggles, and its sacrifices, was far too common and too burdensome
for their notice; and they only condescended to take part in it, in so far as
was necessary in order to bring themselves into view and to share in its
advantages.
Overweening self-esteem was a characteristic of all these men;
they never thought themselves sufficiently appreciated. Some of them, as
for example, Filelfo, cherished a fixed idea that
they were the geniuses of their age, and that the whole world must give way to
them because they spoke Greek and wrote Latin with elegance. Notwithstanding
all the Stoical phrases, which adorned their discourses and writings, these
Humanists were fond of money and good cheer, desirous of honor and admiration,
eager to find favor with the rich and noble, quarrelsome amongst themselves,
ready for any intrigue, calumny, or baseness, that would serve to ruin a rival.
Poggio Bracciolini may be taken as a genuine representative of
this false Humanism. This gifted writer, “the most fortunate discoverer the
world has ever known in the field of literature”, is, as a man, one of the most
repulsive figures of the period. Almost all the vices of the profligate
Renaissance are to be found combined in his person, and it would be hard to say
whether his slanderous disposition or the gross immorality of his life is most
worthy of condemnation.
Notwithstanding occasional expressions of another kind in his writings,
there can be no doubt that Poggio’s point of view was
more heathen than Christian. Christianity and the Church were entirely outside
his sphere. To quote the words of the biographer of Eneas Sylvius Piccolomini, “he was such a worshipper of
heathen antiquity, that he would certainly have given away all the treasures of
dogmatic theology for a new discourse of Cicero”. A remarkable example of his
heathen, or rather indifferent, state of mind is furnished by his well-known
letter to the Council of Constance on the occasion of the burning of Jerome of
Prague. Poggio speaks with the greatest enthusiasm of
Jerome, from which, however, it is not to be inferred that he approved of his
opinions. On the contrary, the conception of a martyr to any faith was as
foreign to the mind of this follower of the false Renaissance as to that of a
heretic. The thing which he admired in Jerome was of a very different kind. The
courage with which this man met death reminded him of Cato, and of Mutius Scevola, and he considered
the eloquence of his address to the Council as approaching that of the
ancients. The decision of the ecclesiastical authority is scarcely noticed by Poggio; he only regrets that so noble an intellect should
have turned to heresy; “If”, he adds, “the accusations brought against him are
true”. This doubt is, however, disposed of by the cool observation, “it is not
my business to judge of the matter; I contented myself with the opinion of
those who are considered wiser than I am”.
Almost all the writings of Poggio are
offensively obscene and coarse. The worst in this respect, after his
“Facetiae”, are his shameless and immoral letter on the license which prevailed
at the baths of Zurich, and his libels on Filelfo and
Valla. “Like the lowest boy out of the streets”, says the historian of
Humanism, “Poggio assails his adversary with the
coarsest abuse and the basest calumny”. He accuses these two Humanists of every
kind of turpitude, and the greater part of the work is unfit for translation.
The impression produced is a strange one, when a writer, whose own life
was so far from respectable sets himself up as a censor of the depraved morals
of the monks and clergy. (In his 55th year of age Poggio left the woman with whom he had hitherto lived, and who had borne him fourteen
children, to marry a young girl of good family). Poggio cannot find words sufficiently stinging with which to brand the hypocrisy,
cupidity, ignorance, arrogance, and immorality of the clergy. The monks,
however, are everywhere the especial object of his sarcasm, often, indeed, in
discourses, letters, and treatises, where such sentiments might least have been
looked for. Violent attacks upon them are to be found, as in his dialogues on
Avarice and on Human misery, and in his book against hypocrites. “There are
monks”, he says, “who call themselves mendicant friars, but it seems rather
that they bring others to beggary, being themselves idle and living by the
sweat of other men. Some of these assume the name of Observantines.
I do not know what good all these can be said to do; I only know that most who
call themselves Minorite and Observantines are rude peasants and idle mercenaries, who aim not at holiness of life, but at
escaping from work”. Even in their preaching, according to Poggio,
the object of the monks is not the healing of sick souls, but the applause of
the simple folk whom they entertain with buffooneries. They indulge their
boorish loquacity without restraint, and are often more like apes than
preachers.
In order to understand how unjustifiable is this caricature of the
monks, we must remember that the Religious Orders gave to Italy in the
fifteenth century a line of preachers whose devotion to their calling and whose
power and earnestness have, even after the lapse of ages, commanded the esteem
of those who differ from them. The limits of this work do not permit us to
enter into a detailed account of all the brilliant and truly popular orators
who produced the remarkable and copious pulpit literature of the age of the
Renaissance. The most celebrated preachers of the Franciscan Order were St. Bernardine of Siena, (d.1444), Alberto da Sarteano (d.1450), St. Jacopo della Marca (d.14761), St. John Capistran (d.1456), Antonio di Rimini (about 1450), Silvestro di
Siena (about 1450), Giovanni di Prato (about 1455), Antonio di Bitonto (d.1459), Roberto da Lecce (d.1483), Antonio di
Vercelli (d.1483).
In his celebrated work on the Renaissance, Burckhardt admirably
describes the meaning of these Italian preachers of penance. “There was”, he
says, “no prejudice stronger than that which existed against the mendicant
friars; the preachers overcame it. The supercilious Humanists criticized and
mocked; when the preachers raised their voices they were entirely forgotten”.
With his usual sagacity, this scholar remarks that the men, who bore within
them this mighty fervor and this religious vocation, were, in the north, of a
mystical and contemplative stamp, and in the south, expansive, practical, and
imbued with the national taste for eloquence. And here we may mention that St. Bernardine of Siena is said to have studied oratory from
the ancient models, and that Alberto da Sarteano, one
of his most distinguished disciples and followers, certainly did so.
Too little attention has as yet been bestowed on the action of these
preachers of penance, who were highly esteemed and sought after by the people,
and even by worldly-minded princes, and zealously supported by the Popes,
especially by Eugenius IV and Nicholas V. When the History of Preaching in
Italy at the period of the Renaissance is written, it will be seen that the
free and fervent exercise of this office is one of the most cheering signs, in
an age clouded with many (lark shadows. It became evident that a new spirit had
begun to stir in ecclesiastical life. Many proofs are before us that in Italy
and in the other countries of Christendom the words of censure and warning were
not spoken in vain. No age, perhaps, offers such striking scenes in the
conversion of all classes of the people, of whole towns and provinces, as does
that, whose wounds were so fearlessly laid bare by Saints Vincent Ferrer, Bernardino of Siena, John Capistran,
and by Savonarola.
“An age”, as a modern historian observes, “which thus perceives and acknowledges
its faults, is certainly not among the worst of ages. If in the individual the
recognition of a fault is the first step to amendment, it cannot be otherwise
in regard to whole classes of men, to nations, and to the Church itself. No one
who bestows even a superficial glance on the literature of the period, can deny
that this recognition existed in the Church in the time of the Renaissance. The
first and most essential step towards amendment had been taken, and there was
well grounded hope that further energetic measures would follow”.
From this point of view, the general unfavorable judgment of the
religious and moral condition of the Renaissance period may be essentially
modified. At all events, as the first German authority on Italian history has
lately observed, it is a mistake to suppose from the numerous testimonies of
Pagan tendencies furnished by the Italian Humanists, that these were absolutely
general. This gifted nation - and this is especially true of Florence, the
intellectual home of the Renaissance - still retained its warm religious
feeling in the midst of all party struggles, excommunications, and external
conflicts. The numerous confraternities of laymen, to which high and low
belonged, kept all classes in constant and salutary contact with the Church
which had never ceased to be national, as did also the mystery plays, in which,
until the end of the fifteenth century, distinguished poets and poetesses took
part. Thus the religious dispositions of the people held many things together,
which threatened to fall to pieces, and explains much that would otherwise be
difficult of solution; it was often very touchingly manifested. When Gregory
XI, the last of the Avignon Popes; laid an interdict upon Florence, crowds of
citizens used to assemble in the evenings before the images of the Madonna, at
the corners of the streets, and endeavor by their prayers and hymns to make up
for the cessation of public worship. Vespasiano da Bisticci, in his life of Eugenius IV, relates that when the
Pope, during his sojourn in Florence, blessed the people from a balcony erected
in front of the church of Sta. Maria Novella, the whole of the wide square and
the adjoining streets resounded with sighs and prayers; it seemed as if our
Lord Himself, rather than His Vicar, was speaking. In 1450, when Nicholas V
celebrated the restoration of peace to the Church by the publication of a
Jubilee, a general migration to the Eternal city took place; eye-witnesses
compared the bands of pilgrims to the flight of starlings, or the march of
myriads of ants. In the year 1483, the Sienese consecrated their city to the Mother of God, and in 1495, at the instigation of
Savonarola, the Florentines proclaimed Christ their King.
The magnificent gifts, by which the pomp and dignity of religious
worship were maintained, the countless works of Christian art, and the
innumerable and admirably organized charitable foundations, also bear testimony
to the continuance of “heartfelt piety and ardent faith” in the Italy of the
fifteenth century.
Side by side with these evidences of religious feeling in the Italian
people, the age of the Renaissance certainly exhibits alarming tokens of moral
decay; sensuality and license reigned, especially among the higher classes.
Statistics on this subject, however, are so incomplete, that a certain
estimate of the actual moral condition of the age or a trustworthy comparison with
later times is impossible.
But if those days were full of failings and sins of every kind, the
Church was not wanting in glorious manifestations, through which the source of
her higher life revealed itself. Striking contrasts - deep shadows on the one
hand, and most consoling gleams of sunshine on the other - are the special
characteristics of this period. If the historian of the Church of the fifteenth
century meets with many unworthy prelates and bishops, he also meets, in every
part of Christendom, with an immense number of men distinguished for their
virtue, piety, and learning, not a few of whom have been by the solemn voice of
the Church raised to her altars. Limiting ourselves to the most remarkable
individuals, and to the period of which we are about to treat, we will mention
only the saints and holy men and women given by Italy to the Church.
The first of this glorious company is St. Bernardine of Siena, of the Order of Minorites, whose eloquence
won for him the titles of trumpet of Heaven and fountain of knowledge, and whom
Nicholas V canonized about the middle of the century. Around him are grouped
his holy brothers in religion: Saints John Capistran,
Jacopo della Marca, and
Catherine of Bologna, a Sister of the same Order (d.1463). Among the Blessed of
the Franciscan Order are Tommaso Bellaci (d. 1447), Gabriele Ferretti (d.1456), Arcangelo di Calatafimi (d.1460),
Antonio di Stronconio (d.1471), Pacifico di Ceredano (d.1482), Pietro di Moliano (d.1490), Angelo di Chivasso in Piedmont (d.1496), Angelina di Marsciano (d.1435),
Angela Caterina (d.1448), Angela Felice (d.1457), Serafina di Pesaro (d.1478), Eustochia Calafata (d. 1491),
etc.
The Dominican Order was yet richer in saints and holy persons. Blessed
Lorenzo da Ripafratta (d.1457) laboured in Tuscany, and under his direction the apostolic St. Antoninus (d.1459) grew up to be a pattern of self-sacrificing charity, and the glorious
talent of Fra Angelico da Fiesole (d.1455) soared heavenward, leading men's
hearts to the Eternal by the language of art, as the mystics had done by their
writings. St. Antoninus, whose unexampled zeal was
displayed in Florence, the very centre of the
Renaissance, had for his disciples Blessed Antonio Neyrot of Ripoli (d.1460) and Costanzio di Fabriano d.1481). Blessed Giovanni Dominici (d.1420) and Pietro Geremia da Palermo (d.1452) were celebrated preachers and
reformers. Then follow Blessed Antonio ab Ecclesia
(d.1458), Bartolomeo de Cerveriis d. 1466), Matteo Carrieri (d.1471), Andrea da Peschiera (d.1480), the Apostle
of the Valteline, the recently beatified Cristoforo da Milano (d. 1484), Bernardo Scammaca (d.1486), Sebastiano Maggi
da Brescia (d. 1494), and Giovanni Licci, who died in
1511, at the extraordinary age of one hundred and fifteen. The Dominicaness, Chiara Gambacorti (d.1420), had held communication with the greatest saint of the later medival period, St. Catherine of Siena; and, together with
Princess Margaret of Savoy (d.1407), also a Dominicaness,
was subsequently beatified. In the Order of St. Augustine we have to mention
the following who have been beatified: Andrea, who died at Montereale in 1479, Antonio Turriani (d.1494), Rita of Cascia (d. 1456), Cristina Visconti (d.1458), Elena
Valentino du Udine (d. 1458), and Caterina da Pallanza (d.1478). Blessed Angelo Mazzinghi de Agostino (d.1438) belonged to the Carmelite Order;
that of the Gesuati had Giovanni Travelli da Tossignano (d. 1446), the Celestines,
Giovanni Bassand (d.1455); and the Regular Canons the
Holy Patriarch of Venice, St. Lorenzo Giustiniani (d.1456). Blessed Angelo Masaccio (d.1458) was of the Camaldolese Order, and finally the great Cardinal Bishop of Bologna, Albergati (d.1443), was a Carthusian. St. Frances (d.1440), the foundress of the Oblates, was working in Rome. The labours of another founder, St. Francis of Paula (b.1416,
d. 1507), belong in part to the period before us. These names, to which many
more might easily be added, furnish the most striking proof of the vitality of
religion in Italy at the time of the Renaissance. Such fruits do not ripen on
trees which are decayed and rotten to the core.
Though it is an error to consider all ranks of Italian society in the
fifteenth century as tainted with the spirit of Paganism, we must admit that
the baneful element in the Renaissance took fearful hold on the upper classes.
How, indeed, could it be otherwise? The seductive doctrines of Epicurus, and
the frivolous, worldly wisdom of the Rome of Augustus, were far more attractive
than Christian morality. To a pleasure-loving and corrupt generation, the vain
mythology of heathenism was infinitely more congenial than the Gospel of a
crucified Saviour, and the religion of self-denial
and continence. Many ecclesiastical dignitaries also unhappily show undue favor
to the false Humanism. Startling as this may at first sight appear, it is by no
means difficult to account for it.
In the first place we must consider the wide-spread worldliness among
the clergy, which was a result of the Avignon period of the Papacy, and the
subsequent confusion of the schism. Secondly, Humanism soon became such a power
that a struggle with it under existing circumstances would have been very
hazardous. The chief reason, however, that the Church and the false Renaissance
did not come into open conflict, was the extreme care taken by almost all the
adherents of this school to avoid any collision with the ecclesiastical authorities.
The race of dilettanti and free-thinkers looked upon the doctrinal teaching of
the Church as a thing quite apart from their sphere. If in their writings they
invoked the heathen gods, and advocated the principles of the ancient
philosophers, they also took pains from time to time to profess their
submission to the Creeds, and were skilful in
throwing a veil over the antagonism between the two. However vigilant the
rulers of the Church might be, it was often very hard to determine when this
toying with heathenism became really reprehensible.
The strange medley of heathen and Christian words, ideas, and thought
that prevailed in the age of the Renaissance is notorious. The Church
authorities were not severe on transgressions of this kind; and as far as
literature was concerned, there can be no doubt that their leniency was
thoroughly justified. If the Humanists, in their horror of sinning against
Ciceronian Latinity, endeavored to express Christian ideas in antique phrases,
the fashion was certainly an absurd, rather than a dangerous, one. “What need”,
says Voigt, with reason, “to cry out, if a lively orator should introduce a
Roman asseveration into his discourse. Who would charge him with polytheism,
if, instead of calling on the one God, he should on some occasion say: 'Ye
Gods!' Or if a poet, instead of imploring Divine grace, should beg the favor of
Apollo and the Muses, who would accuse him of idolatry?”. Accordingly, when Ciriaco of Ancona chose Mercury
for his patron saint, and on his departure from Delos addressed a written
prayer to him, his contemporaries were not the least scandalized, but contented
themselves with laughing at his enthusiasm, and singing of him as “the new
Mercury”, and “immortal as his Mercury”. The indulgence, which the
ecclesiastical authorities showed towards the false Renaissance, is
intelligible enough, if we remember that its obviously dangerous tendencies had
much to counterbalance them.
From the beginning, the true Christian Renaissance existed side by side
with the false. Its followers were equally enthusiastic in their admiration for
the treasures of antiquity, and they recognized in the classics a most perfect
means of intellectual culture, but they also clearly perceived the danger
attendant on the revival of the old literature, especially under the circumstances
of the time. Far from relentlessly sacrificing to heathenism that Christianity,
which had permeated the very life of the people, they deemed that safety lay in
the conciliation of the new element of culture with its eternal truths; and in
this opinion they had the support of Dante, and were in accord with Petrarch's
highest aspirations. They were justly alarmed at the radical tendency, which
aimed at doing away with all existing sanctions and influences. They saw with
dismay that all national and religious traditions were threatened, and that
therefore a salutary result from the movement was very doubtful. The programme of these men, the most clear-sighted and
sober-minded of the Humanists, was the maintenance of religious and national
traditions, the study of the ancients in a Christian and national spirit, the
reconciliation of the Renaissance with Christianity.
The chief representatives of the Christian Renaissance were Giannozzo Manetti, Ambrogio Traversari, Lionardo Bruni, Gregorio Carraro, Francesco Barbaro, Maffeo Vegio, Vittorino da Feltre, and Tommaso Parentuceli, afterwards known as Pope Nicholas V.
Giannozzo Manetti (1396-1459), the friend of Pope
Eugenius IV and Pope Nicholas V, was most deeply convinced of the truth of the
Christian Religion. This noble-minded and distinguished scholar used to say
that the Christian Faith is no mere opinion, but an absolute certainty, that
the teaching of the Church is as true as an axiom in mathematics. However much
occupied Manetti might be, he never went to work
without first having heard Mass. He placed all his learning at the service of
the Church, and although a layman, was well versed in theology and literature,
and translated the New Testament and the Psalms. He had studied three books so
indefatigably, that he may be almost said to have known them by heart; these
were the Epistles of St. Paul, St. Augustine’s City of God, and the Ethics of
Aristotle. Manetti was the first, and, for a long
time, the only Humanist in Italy, who turned his attention to the Oriental
languages. To defend the cause of Christian truth, he learned Hebrew and began
to write a work against the Jews, whom he meant to combat with their own
weapons. This great scholar was a man of exemplary life; his friend and
biographer, Vespasiano da Bisticci,
affirms that, during an intercourse of forty years, he had never heard an
untruth, an oath, nor a curse, from his lips.
Manetti’s teacher was the pious Ambrogio Traversari, General of the Camaldolese Order from 1431, a man whom the Protestant historian, Meiners,
declares to have been a model of purity and holiness; a superior, admirable for
his strictness and prudent gentleness; an author of great industry and
learning, and an ambassador whose talents, courage, and statesmanship won for
him a high position amongst the most distinguished of his contemporaries. This
eminent scholar was the first to introduce Humanist influences into the
ecclesiastical sphere. A mixed assembly of clerics and laymen, the elite of the
Florentine literary world, used to meet in his convent of Santa Maria degli Angeli, to hear him lecture
on the Greek and Latin languages and literature, and explain philosophical and
theological questions. The biographer of Lorenzo de Medici speaks
enthusiastically of those days when a brilliant intellectual radiance shone
forth from this convent, enlightening the dwellings of the Florentine
patricians and, through them, the whole world. “Never”, he says, “was there
seen among clerics and laymen so much real and solid learning devoted to the
Church and State, while also ministering to the charm of daily life and the
promotion of good morals”. Tommaso Parentucelli, who had witnessed this Florentine literary
life, which, although not faultless, was on the whole so rich and noble, was
unable, even when he had attained the highest dignity in Christendom to create
in Rome anything that could compare with it.
Traversari’s unceasing labors in the reform of his Order, and all the harassing
toils attendant on his office as Papal Envoy, never interfered with his
interest in Greek and Roman literature. Notwithstanding the heavy pressure of
necessary business, he contrived to find time to ransack libraries for rare
manuscripts and copy them, to visit literary celebrities, to investigate ecclesiastical
and heathen antiquities, and by various letters to promote the study of
science. His learned works relate chiefly to the Greek writers of the Church,
and he was undoubtedly the first authority on the subject and the possessor of
the richest collection of books. In his scrupulous conscientiousness, Traversari thought the translation of profane authors
unsuitable to his office. Nevertheless, at the request of his friend, Cosmo de
Medici, he consented to translate Diogenes Laertes on the Lives of the
Philosophers, consoling himself with the thought that this work might serve the
interests of the Christian religion, “inasmuch as when the doctrines of the
heathen philosophy are better known, the superiority of Christianity will be
the more clearly understood”.
The celebrated Lionardo Bruni (1369-1444), Apostolic Secretary under Innocent VII, Gregory XII, Alexander V
and John XXIII, and afterwards Chancellor of the Republic of Florence, was also
sincerely attached to the Church. His love for the classical did not hinder him
from recommending “sacred studies”, which, from their very nature, must be the
sweetest of “sweet toils”. What a contrast there is between Valla and this good
man, who, though not himself a monk, esteemed the religious life, and refused
to support a monk who wished to leave his convent. Bruni was greatly looked up to, and people came from all parts to see him; a Spaniard
even went so far as to fall on his knees before him. When this noble scholar
departed this life on the 9th March, 1444, the Priors determined to pay him
extraordinary honor; his corpse was clad in dark silk, and on his breast lay
the History of Florence, as the richest gift of the Chancellor to, the
Republic. Manetti pronounced the funeral oration, and
crowned the dead with the laurel of the poet and the scholar, “as an immortal
testimony to his wonderful wisdom and his surpassing eloquence”. He was then
buried in Santa Croce, where an epitaph composed by Marsuppini,
and a monument sculptured by Bernardo Rossellino,
mark his resting place.
Among the Christian Humanists we must reckon Gregorio Carrara, the highly cultured kinsman of Pope Gregory XII,
and Francesco Barbaro, who, like him, belonged to a
patrician family of Venice. Barbaro enjoyed the
friendship of almost all the learned Italians of his day, and was, by family
tradition and personal feeling, devoted to the cause of the Church. In the
negotiations with the Councils of Basle and of Florence he sought, with equal
zeal, to promote the interests of the Papal power, and to provide for the
spiritual wants of his clients. He furnishes a remarkable example of the union
of the Humanist and ecclesiastical tendencies in an age when the latter had
begun to lose its power.
Maffeo Vegio (1407-1458), the worthy explorer of the ancient
Christian monuments of Rome, must not be passed over. That “tender and eloquent
book”, the Confessions of St. Augustine, made a deep impression on his mind, as
also on that of Petrarch. It brought about Vegio's complete conversion, and induced him to devote himself entirely to
ecclesiastical literature. Without transcribing the splendid list of his works,
we must mention his widely-read book on Education, inasmuch as it represents an
endeavor to combine the wisdom of the Classics with the Bible and the teaching
of the Church. He strongly recommends the work of Virgil, Sallust, and
Quintilian, as means of culture, but objects to the Elegiacs on account of
their indecency, and would have the comic authors reserved for the perusal of
grown-up men. In the time of Eugenius IV, Vegio came
to Rome, where he filled the offices of Datary, Abbreviator, and Canon of St.
Peter’s, and finally became an Augustinian Canon. He died in 1458, and was
buried in Sant Agostino, in
the very chapel where, thanks to his efforts, the bones of St. Monica had found
a fitting place of rest, when brought from Ostia in 1430. Vegio’s pure life and piety were honored beyond the limits of his own order. An
enthusiastic notice of him is to be found among the writings of the Florentine Vespasiano da Bisticci.
The most attractive and amiable of the representatives of the Christian
Renaissance is Vittorino da Feltre,
the greatest Italian Pedagogue of his age. “He was one of those men who devote
their whole being to the end for which their capacities and knowledge specially
fit them”.
The honor of having introduced this excellent man “to his proper sphere
of work” belongs to the Marquess Gian Francesco Gonzaga, who summoned him to Mantua in 1425, to take charge of the
education of his children and direct the court school. Vittorino began his labors by a thorough cleansing of the Casa Giocosa,
the new educational Institution, which was pleasantly situated on the borders
of the lake of Mantua. At his command the gold and silver plate, the
superfluous servants, vanished, and order and noble simplicity took the place
of pomp and show. The hours of study were punctually observed, but they were
constantly varied by bodily exercise and recreation in the open air. Vittorino encouraged his pupils to expose themselves to
cold and heat, to wind and rain, for he believed that a soft and idle life was
the origin of many maladies; but there was nothing of Spartan harshness in the
education, and individual idiosyncrasies were sufficiently respected. In the
fine season he used to take his pupils on long excursions to Verona, to the
Lake of Garda, and into the Alps. In regard to decency and good manners, Vittorino was rigid; swearing and blasphemy were always
punished, even if the offender were one of the Princes. Corporal punishments
were reserved for the worst cases; in general the penalties inflicted were of
the nature of disgrace. The moral and religious conduct of the scholars was
most carefully watched over, for Vittorino held that
true learning is inseparable from religion and virtue. A bad man, he used to
say, can never be a perfect scholar, far less a good orator.
His method of teaching was simple and concise; he guarded carefully
against the evil subtleties of the day. "I want to teach them to
think," he said, "not to split hairs." The classics naturally
formed the groundwork of higher education, but with a careful selection fitted
for the young. Mathematical Science, Logic, and Metaphysics, were not
neglected; special attention was devoted to composition, and every
encouragement given to originality. Vittorino was
always ready to help those, who were backward in their studies. Early in the
morning he was among his scholars, and when all around had betaken themselves
to rest, he worked on with individual boys. “Probably”, to use the words of a
modern author, “he world had never before seen such a schoolmaster, who was
content to be a schoolmaster and nothing else, because in this calling he
recognized a lofty mission; one who, just because he sought nothing great for
himself, found all the richer reward in the results of his labor”. When a monk
asked permission from Pope Eugenius IV to enter Vittorino’s Institution, the Pontiff answered, “Go, my son. We willingly give you up to the
most holy of living men”.
Vittorino’s fame was widely spread; eager disciples flocked around him from far and
near, even from France, Germany, and the Netherlands. Many of these youths were
poor, and such were received by the good man with particular affection; they were
not only freely instructed, but also fed, lodged, clothed, and provided with
books at his expense, and his generosity often extended even to their families.
For these scholars, whom he received for the love of God (per l'amore di Dio), he founded a
special institution in association with the Princes' School. Here he lived like
a father in his family, giving to it all he possessed, for his own wants were
very easily satisfied. It is no wonder that the scholars looked up to such a
master with love and respect. Federigo da Montefeltro, Duke of Urbino, one
of the noblest among them, a man distinguished by his courage, cultivation, and
large-mindedness, placed Vittorino’s portrait in his
palace with the inscription: “In honor of his saintly master, Vittorino da Feltre, who by word
and example instructed him in all human excellence, Federigo places this here”.
The secret of this great schoolmaster’s immense influence is to be found
principally in his religious and moral qualities, his disinterestedness, his humility
and simplicity, and the charm of his virginal purity. All his contemporaries
speak with respect of his piety. Vespasiano da Bisticci says that "he daily recited the Divine Office
like a priest; he strictly observed the Fasts of the Church, and insisted on
his scholars doing the same. He said grace before and after meals like a
priest, constantly approached the sacraments, and accustomed his scholars to go
monthly to confession to the Observantine Fathers. He
also wished them to hear Holy Mass every day; his house was a very sanctuary of
good morals. Vittorino’s example shows that a good
man may be immersed in classical studies, without making shipwreck of his
faith. His liberality equaled his piety; no monk or beggar, who sought his aid,
was sent empty away. Notwithstanding his unremitting labors as a teacher and
educator, he always found time to visit widows and orphans, the poor, the sick,
and even prisoners, and wherever he went, he bore with him comfort,
instruction, and help. It was said of him, that the only people who received
nothing from him were those, whose needs were unknown to him. Almsgiving on so
large a scale would not have been possible, but for the generous support of the Marquess of Mantua and some of his wealthy scholars.
All that he received from them was given away to alleviate the sufferings of
his fellow men. When he died on the 2nd February, 1446, at the age of
sixty-nine, his property was so deeply in debt, that his heirs declined the
inheritance, and the corpse had to be buried at the Prince's expense. He left
instructions that no monument should be raised to his memory.
The position occupied by the representatives of the Christian
Renaissance in relation to the ancient world was the only true one, and they
have in some degree solved the problem how justly to appreciate antiquity.
Their enthusiasm for the intellectual treasures of the past never went
so far as to endanger their devotion to the Christian religion. Unlike the
extreme Humanists, they held fast the principle, that the works of the heathens
are to be judged by a Christian standard. They saw the danger of so idealizing
the moral and religious teaching of Heathenism, as to make it appear that by
its means alone the highest end of life could be attained, thus ignoring the
necessity of Christian doctrines and morality, of remission of sin and grace
from on high. In the light of Christianity alone can the ancient world be fully
and justly estimated, for the pagan ideal of humanity, as exhibited in its
heroes and divinities, is not, as a modern philosopher justly observes, a full
or complete one. It is but a shadowy outline, wanting the color and life which
something higher must supply - a fragmentary form, which has yet to find its
complement in a more perfect whole. This higher Image of human perfection is
the Incarnate Son of God, the Prototype of all creatures; no creation of fancy
or product of human reason, but the Truth and the Life Itself. The ideals of
Greece grow pale before this Form, and only vanity and folly could ever turn
from It to them. This folly was perpetrated by the adherents of the false
Renaissance, by those Humanists who, instead of ascending from the Greek Poets
and Philosophers to Christ, turned their backs on the glory of Christianity to
borrow their ideal from the genius of Greece.
The twofold character of the Italian Renaissance renders it extremely
difficult justly to weigh its good and evil in relation to the Church and to
religion. A sweeping judgment in such cases would generally be a rash one, even
were the notices of the individuals concerned less scanty than those which are
before us; here, as elsewhere, human penetration is baffled in the endeavor to
appreciate all its bearings.
A modern Historian has forcibly remarked that every genuine advance
of knowledge must in itself be of advantage to religion and to the Church,
inasmuch as Truth, Science, and Art are alike daughters of heaven. From this
point of view we must contemplate the encouragement given by ecclesiastics to
the revival of classical literature. A distinction should evidently here be
drawn between the two schools of the Renaissance, and judgment pronounced
accordingly. Those members of the Church, who promoted the heathen view, acted
wrongly, and were, if we look at their conduct with a view to the interests of
the Church, blameworthy. Impartial inquiry will, however, lead us to temper
this blame by a consideration of all the attendant circumstances, and to bear
in mind the difficulty of avoiding the abuse, to which the ancient literature,
like all other good things of the intellect, is liable.
The common impression that the dangerous tendencies of the Renaissance
were not recognized by the Church is very erroneous. On the contrary, from the
beginning, men were never wanting, who raised their voices against the deadly
poison of the false Humanism. One of the first in Italy to indicate its
pernicious influence on education was the Dominican Giovanni Dominici. This preacher, who labored ardently for the
reformation of his Order, enjoyed the favor of Pope Innocent VII, and was
raised to the purple by Gregory XII. In his celebrated Treatise on the order
and discipline of Family Life, written very early in the 15th century, he
denounces, with all the energy of his ardent nature, the system “which lets
youth and even childhood become heathen rather than Christian; which teaches
the names of Jupiter and Saturn, of Venus and Cybele rather than those of God
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost; which poisons minds that are still
tender and powerless by sacrifice to the false Gods, and brings up wayward nature
in the lap of unbelief”.
In yet stronger terms does Giovanni Dominici express himself in a writing which has but recently been brought to light, and
which is dedicated in courteous language to the celebrated Chancellor of
Florence, Coluccio Salutato.
Its primary object was to warn him against being seduced by the charms of the
false Renaissance; but at the same time, it aimed at protecting youth in
general from the questionable elements contained in the classic literature, and
at counteracting its perversion and misuse. The Dominican condemns those, who
give themselves up with blind and deluded zeal to heathen learning, and are
thus led to depreciate the Christian Religion. Looking at the subject from an
ascetic point of view, he is at times blind to the ancient literature. In his
horror at the new heathenism, which was rising before his eyes, he is even
betrayed into the utterance of such paradoxes as, that it is more useful to a
Christian to plough the ground than to study the heathen authors Exaggerations
of this kind provoked exaggerations from the opposite party, and in this way it
became more and more difficult, if not absolutely impossible, to arrive at a
clear understanding in regard to the proper use of the ancient classics.
The Franciscans, as well as the Dominicans, distinguished themselves by
their opposition to the Humanists, or Poets, to use the name by which they were
commonly called. It cannot be denied that most of these men were full of holy
zeal for the interests of Christianity, and that their courageous efforts were
of real advantage to the Church, at a time when many other dignitaries, from a
spirit of worldliness, favored the false Humanist tendencies. Still, it is much
to be regretted that the majority of the opponents of the Poets went a great
deal too far. Correctly to understand the position, we must bear in mind the
furious attacks on the Religious Orders and their scholastic teaching by Poggio, Filelfo, and other
elegant and well-known Humanist authors. The new movement had gained strength
so fast, that the monks were left almost defenseless against the ribaldry of
these men. Further, the alarming errors and excesses of the extreme admirers of
antiquity justified the worst apprehensions for the future. Consequently, most
of those, who withstood the false Renaissance, lost sight of the fact that
these errors had their origin, not in the revival of classical studies, but in
their abuse, and in the deplorable social, political, and ecclesiastical
conditions of the times. Corrupt intellectual elements, struggling for complete
emancipation, had gathered round the banner of the Renaissance, and they often
led the great Humanist movement into crooked paths. Thus it came to pass, that
the larger number of the monks, in their zeal, overlooked the distinction
between the true and the false Renaissance, and made Humanism in general
responsible for the excesses of the most extreme of its votaries. Against such
attacks the Humanists could most justly appeal to the works of St. Jerome, St.
Augustine; St. Ambrose, St. Cyprian, and other Fathers of the Church, which are
full of quotations from the Poets and of classical reminiscences. The monks
often waged war in a very unskillful manner, as, for instance, when they
treated Valla's attacks on Priscianus and the mediaeval
grammarians as heretical.
The partial and short-sighted view, which condemned the whole
Renaissance movement as dangerous to faith and morals, cannot be considered as
that of the Church. At this time, as throughout the whole of the Middle Ages,
she showed herself to be the Patroness of all wholesome intellectual progress,
the Protectress of all true culture and civilization.
She accorded the greatest possible liberty to the adherents of the Renaissance,
a liberty which can hardly be comprehended by an age, which has lost the unity
of the Faith. Once only in the period of which we are about to treat, did the
Head of the Church directly attack the false Renaissance, and this censure was
called forth by a shameless eulogy of heathen vices, which the Pope, as the
chief guardian of morals, could not pass over in silence.
Otherwise the Church gave liberal encouragement to Humanist studies,
fully endorsing the beautiful words of Clement of Alexandria, that the learning
of the heathens, as far as it contains good, is not to be considered heathen,
but a gift of God. And, indeed, the speedy degeneracy of the Renaissance in
Italy was not the fault of the ancient literature, but rather of its abuse.
That the many irreconcilable enemies of the Renaissance, who are to be found in
the Religious Orders, are not the true representatives of the Church, is
evident from the fact that the greater number of the Popes adopted a very
different attitude towards the new movement!
The friendly, relations which existed between the Popes and the two
founders of the Renaissance literature, Petrarch and Boccaccio, have already
been mentioned; these relations were not impaired by the passionate language,
used by these two great writers in denouncing the corruptions which had made
their way into ecclesiastical affairs during the Avignon period. No less than
five times was Petrarch invited to fill the office of Apostolic Secretary, but
the poet could not make up his mind to undertake the charge, fearing that it
would compel him to give up literature, his special vocation. But he gladly
employed himself, at the desire of the learned Pope Clement VI, in the
collection of early manuscripts of Cicero's works for the Papal Library. When
the tidings of the death of Petrarch, whom he had once invited to Avignon by an
autograph letter, reached Pope Gregory XI, he commissioned Guillaume de Noellet, Cardinal Vicar of the Church in Italy, to make
diligent inquiries after his writings and to have good copies made for him,
especially of the Africa, the Eclogues, Epistles, Invectives, and the beautiful
work, On the Solitary Life.
Gregory XI, whom a modern writer has justly characterized as the best of
the Avignon Popes, showed a notable interest in the half-forgotten heritage
from the ancient world. When he heard that a copy of Pompeius Trogus had been discovered at Vercelli, he at once
sent a letter to the Bishop of that city, desiring him immediately to look
after this book and to have it conveyed to the Papal Court by a trusty
messenger. A few days later the same Pope charged a Canon of Paris to make
researches in the Sorbonne Library regarding several works of Cicero's, to have
them transcribed as soon as possible by competent persons and to send the
copies to him at Avignon. It might, at first sight, have seemed likely that the
storms which burst over the Papacy after the death of Gregory XI would have
deterred the Popes from showing favor to the Renaissance, which was now
asserting its power in the realm of literature, and yet it was actually at this
very period that a great number of the Humanists found admission into the Roman
Court. A closer study of this time, in connection with which the previous years
of the residence of the Popes at Avignon must also be considered, will bring to
light the causes of the gradual and, in some respects, hazardous influx of
Humanism into the Papal Court. A review of the History of the Popes from the
beginning of the Exile to Avignon until the end of the great Schism seems all
the more necessary, as without an intimate acquaintance with this period of
peril to the Papacy, the latter course of events cannot he understood.
In the progress of the following work we shall show that the Renaissance
gradually took root in Rome under Martin V and Eugenius IV; that Albergati, Cesarini, and Capranica, the most distinguished among the wearers of the
purple in the fifteenth century, encouraged Humanism in its best tendencies;
that the sojourn of Eugenius IV in Florence, and the General Council held
there, produced marked effects in the same direction; until at last, in the
person of Nicholas V, a man mounted the Throne of St. Peter, who, full of
confidence in the power of Christian Science ventured to put himself at the
head of this great intellectual movement. This circumstance was the beginning
of a new epoch in the history of the Papacy, as well as in that of science and
art, an epoch which reached its climax in the reigns of Julius II and Leo X.
It has often been said that the Renaissance itself ascended the papal
Throne with Nicholas V, yet it must not be forgotten that this great pontiff
was throughout on the side of the genuine and Christian Renaissance. The
founder of the Vatican Library, like Fra Angelico whom he employed to paint his
study in that Palace, knew how to reconcile his admiration for the intellectual
treasures of the past with the claims of the Christian religion: he could honor
both, Cicero and St. Augustine, and could appreciate the grandeur and beauty of
heathen antiquity without being thereby led to forget Christianity.
The leading idea of Nicholas V was to make the Capital of Christendom
the Capital also of classical literature and the centre of science and art. The realization of this noble project was, however, attended
with many difficulties and great dangers. If Nicholas V overlooked or
underestimated the perils which threatened ecclesiastical interests from the
side of the heathen and revolutionary Renaissance, this is the only error that
can be laid to his charge. His aim was essentially lofty and noble and worthy
of the Papacy. The fearlessness of this large-hearted man, in face of the
dangers of the movement - "a fearlessness which has in it something
imposing" -strikes us all the more forcibly, when we consider the power
and influence which the Renaissance had at this time attained in Italy. The
attempt to assume its guidance was a great deed, and one worthy of the
successor of the Gregories and Innocents.
To make the promotion of the Renaissance by the Holy See a matter of
indiscriminate reproach, betrays total ignorance of the subject. For, deep and
widespread as was the intellectual movement, excited by the resuscitation of
the antique, it involved no serious danger to Christian civilization, but
rather was an occasion of new activity and energy, as long as the unity and
purity of the Christian faith were maintained unimpaired under the authority of
the Church and her head. If in later days, in consequence of the undue
influence obtained by the heathen Renaissance, a very different development
ensued; if the intellectual wealth, won by the revived study of the past, was
turned to vile purposes, Nicholas V, whose motives were of the highest and
purest, cannot be held responsible. On the contrary, it is to the glory of the
Papacy that, even in regard to the great Renaissance movement, it manifested at
magnanimous and all-embracing comprehensiveness which is a portion of its
inheritance. As long as dogma was untouched, Nicholas V and his like-minded
successors allowed the movement the most ample scope; the founder of the
Vatican Library had no foreboding of the mischief which the satire of the
Humanists was preparing. The whole tenor of his pure life testifies that his
words proceeded from an upright heart, when he earnestly exhorted the Cardinals
assembled around his death-bed to follow the path he had chosen in laboring for
the welfare of the Church, the Bark of Peter, which, by the wonderful guidance
of God, has ever been delivered out of all storms.
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