CRISTO RAUL. READING HALL THE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE HISTORY OF THE POPES |
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF POPE GREGORY I THE GREAT. A.D. 540 – 604
BOOK
INTRODUCTORY
I.
GREGORY
AND HIS AGE
IF the title “Great”, applied to an historical
personage, may be rightly defined as implying the combination of high moral
purpose with commanding ability, so used as to affect extensively the history
of mankind, such title has not been without cause assigned to the first Pope
Gregory. In all cases favorable circumstances are of course required, that the
result may be actual, not mere potential, greatness. There must be suitable
environments for the development and display of all high and influential life. Gregory
might have lived and died with no renown beyond that of ascetic saintliness,
had not circumstances called him when they did from his monastery to the
highest seat in Christendom; and even there in a less eventful age his great
qualities might not have found their adequate field for exercise. He stands out
on the page of history as a striking instance of a remarkable man, at a
remarkable time, being placed by Providence in a position peculiarly suitable
for the exercise of his powers. The position was not of his own seeking; he
shrank from it; he would fain have declined it altogether; greatness, in the
sense of great estate, was “thrust upon” him; but, when it came, he showed
himself at once worthy of it. And it is to be observed, that, though he sought
it not, yet in one sense he himself "achieved" it, inasmuch as it was
his acknowledged and peculiar fitness that caused all concerned in his
elevation to force its acceptance upon him.
A brief preliminary sketch of the position of the
Church, and especially of the Roman see, in relation to the world at the time
of St. Gregory's accession, and of the causes that had led up to the existing
state of things, will assist our understanding of his field of work.
At the close of the sixth century, when the first
Gregory became pope, Paganism had long virtually disappeared from the Roman
Empire; it was no longer a power to be considered, though it still lingered
extensively, especially in country places, in spite of repression; Christianity
was everywhere maintained and dominant. The emperors too, whether orthodox or
heretical, had long taken a warm interest in church affairs, had summoned
councils, promulgated and enforced their decrees; and, however morally corrupt
society in high places might be, its atmosphere had been impregnated with
theology. The result had been, among other things, a large advance in the
importance of the hierarchy, and especially of the great patriarchal sees; but
at the same time (in the East at least) increasing subservience to the imperial
power, which, while treating prelates with much external respect, had been in
the habit of dictating to them in fact, commanding their elevation or
deposition, and at times trenching more or less even on their spiritual
prerogatives by assuming to itself a kind of priestly power.
The controversies that had been the peculiar feature
of Church history in the preceding centuries had furthered these results. The
need felt for centers of unity and support against the aggressions of heretical
speculation; the importance accruing to bishops, and especially to
metropolitans and patriarchs, to whom in synod and general council the
definition of the faith had been consigned, had enhanced the dignity of the
episcopal order, while, on the other hand, the somewhat imperious attitude of
the emperors in connection with such controversies and councils,—the latter
being convened by their sole authority, controlled by them during their
sittings, and dependent on them for ratification and the enforcement of their
decrees—, had at the same time advanced imperialism. And, further, however
important for all future time were the dogmatic decisions of that age of
conflict, its immediate effects were likely to be demoralizing, as they
certainly were replete with ill blood and discord. When the leaders of the Church
had so long been habitually occupied in bitter controversy, dealing anathemas
against each other, deposing and being deposed, their very councils often
scenes of violence; when Christian communities were divided into parties, often
fighting to bloodshed for rival tenets, or in support of rival bishops; when
salvation had come to be regarded as dependent on accurate definitions of nice
points of mysterious doctrine far more than on charity or holiness of life: the
effects were necessarily disastrous to the peace and morality of the Church at
large. It is to be observed, however, that throughout the period referred to
the see of Rome had occupied a peculiar position, and been much less affected
either by imperial domination or by doctrinal conflict than the patriarchates
of the East. The tendency of events had been in fact to aggrandize
exceptionally, and give a sort of sacred luster to, the occupants of St. Peter’s
chair. With regard to the great controversies that had so embittered and
divided the Church, the West had been comparatively free from them, and the
popes had taken but little part in them; but they had with one or two temporary
exceptions supported uniformly the cause of orthodoxy; they had countenanced
and protected orthodox prelates who had fled to them under persecution; they
had been represented, though not present, in all the general councils held in
the East to define the faith, and had ratified their decrees; they had often
been able to defy emperors who favored heresy with a spirit and success little
known in the more subservient East, and thus advancing their claims to be, as
St. Peter's successors, the unfailing guardians of Apostolical tradition, and
assumed a headship over all the Churches, which though by no means universally
acknowledged, had gained extensive credence.
A.
THE GROWTH OF THE PAPAL CLAIMS.
Political events had also favored the independence and
influence of the Roman see. The removal of the seat of empire from Rome to
Constantinople by Constantine had, from the very commencement of the State's
acknowledgment of Christianity, left the bishops of the old city free from the
depressing domination of a court from which their Eastern rivals continually
suffered. Freedom was further secured, during the periods when there was a
Western as well as an Eastern emperor, by the removal of the residence of the
former under Honorius (AD 404) to Ravenna. Rome itself had, indeed, long before
this removal ceased to be the usual residence of the emperors. Since the
beginning of the reign of Diocletian (277) they had held their court at Milan.
In such circumstances the importance of the popes had,
since the time of Constantine, gone on increasing; to their acknowledged
spiritual position as the occupants of the first see in Christendom, the
representatives of St. Peter, the sole great patriarchs of the West, was added
a temporal position of no mean importance. As the most influential potentates
in the ancient imperial city, supported by the spiritual allegiance of the
West, they had been enabled, though still subjects of the emperors, to hold their
own against them in ecclesiastical matters with success, and were a power which
had to be counted on by the State.
The invasions of the Roman empire by barbarian hordes,
which had been the most important historical event of a century or two before
the time of Gregory, being destined to found a new Europe on the ruins of old
Roman civilization, had further strengthened the Papal power, and opened the
way for its development The most memorable of these invasions,— those which
resulted in the capture of Rome itself—, had been confronted by popes of
singular eminence, who more than any others asserted and advanced the prerogatives
of the Holy See.
Innocent I was pope when (AD 410) Rome fell into the
hands of Alaric the Goth; Leo the Great when Attila the Hun (452) and Genseric
the Vandal (455) were the successive conquerors. Each event, however
notoriously disastrous, left the Church, and the see of Rome, in a higher
position than before. The first accomplished the breaking up and dispersion of
the old Roman families which had been the props of ancient heathenism, and the
demolition of the ancient temples, afterwards left in ruins or converted into churches;
it was regarded as a divine judgment on old heathen, rather than on Christian,
Rome, especially as the Gothic invaders, being Christians though Arians, had
singularly respected places and persons of Christian sanctity: and Innocent,
who had been providentially absent (not through cowardice, but on a mission of
duty,) during the siege and capture, when he returned to the city after the
departure of the invaders, found himself in a position of singular eminence. He
was henceforth without rival the greatest man in Rome; the head and organizer
of a new Christian Rome rising out of the ruins of devastated heathen Rome;
both his character and his conduct during the crisis, and his position
afterwards, enhanced his prestige and his power in proportion as those of the
weak emperor
Honorius, timidly inefficient at Ravenna, had decayed.
Then, when Attila with his heathen Huns seemed to have Italy and Rome at his
feet, it had been neither emperor nor general, but Pope Leo to whom the sole
glory had accrued of checking him in his career of conquest, and, apparently in
a great measure through a feeling of superstitious awe, inducing him to retire.
And when, soon afterwards, the Arian Vandal Genseric devastated Rome, it was
the same great pope who alone obtained some mitigation of the horrors of the
conquest; and when that storm too had passed away, it left the Western Empire
wounded to the death, but the see of Rome with its prestige and its luster
unimpaired.
Only fifteen years after the death of Pope Leo, the
Western Empire expired in Augustulus, and the Herulian Odoacer, and after him
Theodoric the Ostrogoth, both Arian Christians, became rulers in the West.
Under such rule it might have been expected that the head of Western
Catholicity would suffer an eclipse. But it was not so. These princes were
peculiarly tolerant, treated the Catholic clergy, and especially the pope, with
respect, and in no way evinced any desire to interfere in Church affairs, except,
when called upon, to rectify flagrant abuses attending elections to the
popedom. Under this rule it was that Felix III, and his successors for more
than forty years, had been able to defy emperors and patriarchs, in the matter
of Acacius, and to renounce communion with the whole Eastern Church. Under the
same rule Pope Hormisdas had at length dictated his own terms of communion to
the East, and, with the aid of the orthodox Emperor Justin, ended the schism in
a way that was, on the whole, a striking triumph to the Apostolic See.
B.
THE THREE CHAPTERS.
The reconquest of Italy for Justinian by Belisarius
(536) had, however, brought about a change in the relation of the popes to the
State, and been followed, in fact, by a period of unusual humiliation to the
papal chair. Religious zeal in high places, combined with principles of
oriental despotism, soon proved a bad exchange for the indifference or the
tolerance of the Arian ruler. The Eastern emperors had long been accustomed to
ecclesiastical domination over the patriarchs and prelates in their own domain,—
domination the more humiliating for the female influence and court intrigues
that too often were elements in its exercise—, and the bishops of Rome were now
to be in like manner treated as vassals. The story is well known of the
reigning pope, Silverius, after the entry of Belisarius into Rome, being peremptorily
summoned to the bedchamber of Antonina, the wife of the general, and the
confidante of the Empress Theodora, who, sitting on her bed with her husband at
her feet, ordered then and there his deposition and banishment. It is well
known too how, after this, Vigilius was, by command of Theodora, uncanonically
made pope by Belisarius, on the understanding that, in return for his elevation
and for a large bribe received, he should profess the Monophysite creed, which
that empress favored. In these transactions Justinian himself was not
personally concerned; but the very fact that they could take place without his
cognizance shows only the more clearly to what degradation the immediate
supremacy of a corrupt court might reduce the Church. He, however, in his own
orthodox way, was also arbitrary enough, and, to whatever extent his
legislation might benefit the clergy, he had no idea of even popes resisting
his imperial will: especially as he himself prided himself on being a
theologian. Having issued in 544, on his own authority, an edict condemning as
heretical the writings (called the Three Chapters) of three deceased prelates,
Theodore of Mopsuesta, Theodoret, and Ibas (though
the two last had been expressly acquitted of heresy by the Council of
Chalcedon), he peremptorily summoned to Constantinople Vigilius, who, along
with the bishops of the West, had refused to join in the condemnation. Thrice,
under pressure and contumelious usage, the unhappy pope complied, and thrice
recanted. The fifth Ecumenical Council (553) which, under the emperor's
dictation, condemned the three Chapters, he not only refused to attend, but
also issued a defense of the writings condemned; but afterwards, in spite of
his protest, accepted its decrees. He cut but a sorry figure throughout: his
commencement was disgraceful; he wavered between independence and subservience
during his subsequent career. His successor Pelagius, though he had previously
with Vigilius defended the three Chapters, also assented after his accession to
their condemnation; for which assent his authority was repudiated by several
Western Churches. Between Pelagius and Gregory came the three popes, John III,
Benedict I, and Pelagius II, whose reigns were singularly obscure and
uneventful.
The blight of imperialism at this time dimmed the lustre of the great Roman see. Events had, however, in the
meantime occurred which, while they greatly increased, in many respects, the
difficulties of Gregory's position, at any rate had again relieved his see from
the pressure of imperial despotism.
The Lombards had already crossed the Alps and gained
possession of Northern Italy: at the time of Gregory's accession they
threatened Rome, while the Emperor at Constantinople was cowed and powerless.
None of the barbarian invaders of Italy have been painted by their
contemporaries in such black colors as the Lombards. Their invasion was worse
than that even of the hideous heathen Huns; for it was not merely that of a
savage army that came and departed; it was the migration of a savage people,
with their wives and families, taking savage possession of the country. Arians
like the Goths, they do not appear to have had their reverence for Christian
sanctities. They are said to have destroyed churches, violated virgins, spread
round them devastation and terror. There may be exaggeration by the writers of
the time, actuated by fear and indignation, of the enormities of their
character and conduct; but such is the picture given of them. It was mainly the
misery and the disorganization caused by them to which we may probably
attribute the then prevalent belief, often expressed by Gregory himself, that
the end of all things was approaching: it was the panic and desperation induced
by their approach that caused all classes at Rome, recognizing in their need
the character of Gregory, to fix on him as the only man for steering the bark
of St. Peter through the storm.
C.
THE RISE OF THE EUROPEAN NATIONS.
Such was the political state of things when St.
Gregory took the helm—a state of things of especial importance in this respect,
that now was the period of transition from the old order to the new; from the
Church under the wing of the old Roman Empire christianized,
to the Church exercising independent sway from Rome over nations of new blood
and new institutions which were forming themselves throughout Europe; from
imperialism to the mediaeval papacy. Gregory lived at a critical time in this
eventful period; a time when the Western empire had just expired and the
Eastern was languishing; and when the new nations were notably gaining power
and position; and it was, humanly speaking, due especially to him that the
system of papal monarchy, already contemplated and prepared for by an Innocent
and a Leo, took definite and lasting form.
At this time many of the Teutonic nations who were
destined to constitute Christian Europe had already been more or less
converted; but all except the Franks had at first or subsequently adopted
Arianism. This important exception was due to Clovis, king of the Salian
Franks, influenced by his queen, Clotilda (a Catholic Burgundian princess), and
by a vow made at the battle of Tolbiacum (Zülpich, A.D. 496), having adopted Catholicism (being
baptized by St. Remigius, bishop of Rheims), and having been followed by his
subjects. Afterwards, owing partly to the example and influence of this
preponderating race, others had also professed orthodoxy: the Burgundians,
under their king, Sigismund (517); the Suevi, under their kings, Carrarich (550-559) and Theodemir (559-569); the Visigoths in Spain, under their king, Reccared,
at the Council of Toledo (589). Since the Ostrogothic kingdom in Upper Italy,
and the Vandalic in Western Africa, had been destroyed under Justinian,
Arianism had also lost its hold in these territories. But the terrible
Lombards, who now occupied a great part of Northern Italy and threatened the
South, were still Arians. Even there, however, it was not long before
Catholicity obtained a footing, through the influence of a Catholic queen, as
will be seen hereafter. Orthodox churches existed in Britain and Ireland,
though in Britain now driven, since the Saxon invasion (449), into the
mountains of Wales, Cornwall, and the north of the island.
With regard to the authority of the Bishop of
Rome—when St. Gregory took the reins—claimed or acknowledged, over the
above-mentioned and other parts of the Christian world, it was of three
kinds:—1st, episcopal; 2ndly, metropolitan; 3rdly, patriarchal.
His episcopate comprised only the city of Rome; as
metropolitan he had oversight of the seven suffragan, afterwards called
cardinal, bishops of the Roman territory, those of Ostia, Portus, Silva
Candida, Sabina, Praeneste, Tusculum, and Albanum; his patriarchate seems to have originally extended
(according to Rufinus, the ecclesiastical historian, writing towards the end of
the fourth century) over the suburban provinces which were under the civil
jurisdiction of the vicarius urbis, including Upper Italy, with the islands of
Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica. But being the only patriarch in the West, he had
in fact claimed and exercised jurisdiction as such beyond these original
limits, including in this way all the four vicariates into which the praefecture of Italy was politically divided; not that of
Rome only, but those also of Northern Italy, with its centre at Milan, Western Illyricum, with its capital at Sirmium,
and Western Africa, with its capital at Carthage.
In the last-named region the popes had indeed in past
times (notably in the time of Cyprian) succeeded very imperfectly in their
assertions of authority; but after the oppressive domination of the Arian
Vandals, the Catholics there, delivered by Justinian's conquest, AD 534,
readily admitted the spiritual suzerainty of Rome.
Eastern Illyricum too, though annexed by the Emperor
Gratian (379), when he divided Illyria, to the Eastern Empire, having during
the Arian disputes belonged to the Western, and having been faithful to the
Nicene faith, had, after the separation, turned itself to Rome rather than to
Constantinople; and the popes Damasus and Siricius had taken advantage of the opportunity to assign to the bishops of Thessalonica
patriarchal jurisdiction over the new praefecture as
vicars of the Roman see. And this relation of East Illyria to Rome had become
afterwards an accomplished fact.
In Gaul also, while still under imperial rule, the
popes had long exercised spiritual authority. Disputes having arisen between
the bishops of Aries and Vienne, Pope Zozimus had, as
early as A.D. 417, assigned metropolitan rights to the former, making the
bishop of Aries vicar of the Apostolic See, as the bishop of Thessalonica had
been made in Illyria. Subsequent popes had maintained this arrangement, though
not always without resistance on the part of the Gallican bishops. Further,
beyond any limits that can be definitely assigned, the influence of the bishops
of Rome extended.
At whatever date their claim to a sort of jurisdiction
over the whole Church Catholic, as successors of the Prince of the Apostles,
began, and however unknown such authority might be in more primitive times, the
claim had long been made. Synodical decrees and imperial edicts had been used
to support such extended jurisdiction. The Western council of Sardica (347) had
accorded to the then pope, Julius, the power of sending judges to hear on the
spot the appeals of condemned bishops, at any rate throughout the West; and the
successors of Julius had quoted the canons of this council erroneously as those
of Nice, and as empowering the popes in perpetuity to summon cases from all
parts to be heard at Rome.
Further, during the ecclesiastical disputes in Gaul
about the jurisdiction of Arles in the time of Pope Leo I, the Emperor
Valentinian had made a law constituting the pope supreme head of the whole
Western Church, with power to summon bishops from all parts to abide his
judgments. In the East (except in the case of bishops courting the support of
Rome against oppression) such claims had indeed been ever resisted, but even
there the preeminence, as distinct from the jurisdiction, of the see of old
Rome, was recognized.
And elsewhere, though with varying degrees of
independence, the barbaric conquerors of Europe naturally regarded with
peculiar reverence the prelate of the old Eternal City, the one great Western
patriarch, the representative (as they had been taught) of the Prince of the
Apostles, to whom the keys of the kingdom of heaven had been committed. With
what watchfulness and judgment Gregory cultivated, as he had opportunity, the
ground thus being prepared for the future harvest, as well as reformed and
consolidated the part of the Church already under his fuller sway, will appear
as his life goes on.
D.
THE RISE OF MONASTICISM.
For an understanding of the religious tone of the age
of Gregory, as well as that of his own character, the rise and prevalence of
monasticism must be taken into account. The system, having been introduced in
the fourth century from the East, which was its original home, into the West,
and having been encouraged and upheld from its outset by such distinguished men
as St. Athanasius, St. Jerome, St. Ambrose, and St. Augustine, soon made
extraordinary progress through the whole of Western Christendom, and had become
universally recognized as that of the highest Christian life.
While it had doubtless afforded scope for many saintly
aspirations for which the turmoil and vices of ordinary society were often too
little favorable, it had also fostered much fanaticism and credulity. It had
withdrawn from direct service to their fellow-men hosts of devotees, who saw
the only sure road to heaven in seclusion, excessive fasting, and
self-inflicted pain, and who often proved themselves capable of wild fanatical
violence; it had peopled the deserts, in the imagination of men, with miraculous
visitations, ministering angels, and multitudes of assaulting devils; it had
also encouraged a number of roving idlers, who covered idleness and sometimes
sensuality with the cloak of saintliness; but, on the other hand, it had
offered to many a field for purity and undisturbed devotion, combined in many
cases with manual industry and charitable deeds; and it had impressed the
corrupt society of the age with the sense of there being higher aims for man
than eating and drinking, worldly ambition and enjoyment.
A new impulse and form had now been quite recently
given to the system by Benedict of Nursia (born 480),
who, by way of reforming the abuses and disorder into which it had fallen, had
founded the great Benedictine order, and established (AD 529) his famous
Monastery on Monte Cassino. The principles of monasticism, and the influence of
this great reformer, had taken deep hold on the mind of Gregory, affecting his
whole character and modes of thought. The first monk who had ascended the papal
chair, he remained one in heart throughout his life; while, both in his actions
and his writings, he did much towards advancing the system, and especially
towards giving a fixed and permanent form to the conceptions about the
spiritual world—the mythology (so to speak) of mediaeval Christendom—which,
springing mainly from the imaginations and visions of secluded enthusiasts,
passed into the general creed of men.
With regard to the general moral condition of
Christian society, it is usual, and not without reason, to represent it very
unfavorably. The grossly corrupt civilization of the Roman empire had
undoubtedly been an unpropitious field for the ameliorating influences of
Christianity. The records of the preceding centuries of Christian imperialism
leave on the mind a painful impression of religion taking the form of violent
zeal for rival tenets rather than of charity and holiness; of vice and cruelty
in Christian emperors and their surroundings; of intrigue and corruption in
high places; of ambitious and violent prelates; of bloody conflicts between
rival religious parties; of general corruption and disorder. The picture is not
relieved when we turn to what is told us of the barbaric nations who had
received the Gospel. There, however, it was not to be expected that its
softening and sanctifying influences would be immediate or rapid; and we may be
less surprised in reading of prevalent immorality and violence.
Of the monks, too, the theory of whose vocation was
the attainment of a higher sanctity, and many of whom had doubtless taken to
seclusion as a refuge from prevailing evils,—of them, too, we hear at times no
flattering account from contemporary writers. We find evidence on the one hand
of wild fanaticism, on the other (in the West especially) of indolence and
mendicancy. The frequent decrees of synods against monastic irregularities are
in themselves signs of a state of things that called for continual correction;
and it was, in fact, the disorganization of the system that caused St. Benedict
to attempt reform by the introduction of his rule, which provided, among other
things, for a year's probation of novices, for continuance under regular
discipline of such as were finally admitted, and the division of their time
into fixed periods for devotion, study, and labor. The tone of some monastic
communities before his reform may be gathered from an incident of his earlier
life. While living as a hermit, he was invited by some neighboring monks whose
abbacy was vacant to accept the post. He did so after warning them that he
would not be able to endure their manners; but before long returned to his
solitude on finding that, offended by his strictness, they were attempting to
poison him.
Those, however, draw a hasty and erroneous conclusion
who, from the generally black colors of the picture presented to us by the
records of the time, would infer the absence of true Christian life from either
the cloister or society at large. Common history deals with striking and
prominent events, with characters and acts that come to the top and make a
noise in their day; and these, in times of conflict and disorganization, are
apt to be of the violent, and often atrocious order.
The quiet, unobtrusive virtues, those which it is the
peculiar function of the Gospel to foster and to invest with dignity, may all
the time be flourishing beneath the unobtrusive surface, and doing their silent
work. History, occupied with more stirring topics, may pass them by; they lie
outside the scope of satirists; divines, “vexed with the filthy conversation of
the wicked”, and intent on reproving sin, may depreciate them in their day, or
leave scant notice of them in their writings; such evidences of them as do
remain in the contemporary literature that has come down may not be perceived
by ordinary readers, struck more by the eventful and the thrilling: but that
the principles of a genuine Christianity were by no means so rare as has been
sometimes supposed; that the dews of grace watered many a region, fruitful of
piety and active charity, protesting against, rebuking, and mitigating the
evils of the time, may be concluded, not only from such principles being openly
preached and acknowledged by all in theory, but also from notices that have
been preserved of saintly persons and saintly deeds.
St. Benedict was not the first monk of his age who had
striven after holiness; he could not have gained the influence he did, had he
not represented a class of devotees with aspirations corresponding to his own.
St. Gregory and his family, which seems to have consisted of excellent
Christians, were but specimens of what probably existed more widely than has
been by some supposed, though he himself, through his talents and
opportunities, towered above his age. His correspondence also shows that there
were not a few who sympathized with him in his genuine piety, and responded to
his appeals to their charity. And, again, with respect to the Christian nations
of barbaric origin, it may be observed that even Gibbon, little inclined in
general to overrate the benefits of the Gospel, owns its effects for good upon
them, both in softening their existing barbarism, and in being pregnant with
results in the future.
Nor can we contemplate the zealous and successful work
of missionaries among these nations without recognizing large wells of living
water in the churches that sent them forth. So much it has seemed true and just
to say with regard to the religion and morality of the age preceding that of
Gregory and that in which he worked, which there may have been a tendency in
some quarters to depreciate unduly. Whether or not the religion of the period
wore in all respects the complexion which we in our day most approve—whether or
not it was tinged with error, credulity, and superstition—is not the question
that has been before us. Genuine faith and genuine religion may at times assume
distorted or even grotesque forms: the things themselves retain their true
nature in spite of form.
BOOK INTRODUCTORY.II.BIRTH AND PARENTAGE.
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