BOOK I.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE ABBAT
SOME time after his return to Rome in 586, Gregory was
elected Abbat of St. Andrew's Monastery. His predecessor, the Maximianus of the
stormy voyage, doubtless resigned in his favour,
feeling himself unfit to be the superior of one who in knowledge, practical
ability, and personal sanctity was so far beyond him. At all events, Gregory
undertook the government of the community, and his rule, though popular, was
characterized by extreme severity. An authentic anecdote illustrates the
conscientious strictness of the abbat, and at the
same time gives us an insight into the beliefs entertained by Gregory and his
contemporaries concerning the state of purgatory and the efficacy of the
Eucharistic Sacrifice. The story is as follows.
There was in the monastery a certain monk named
Justus, who was skilled in medicine, and had often kindly ministered to Gregory
during his frequent illnesses. This man, having fallen grievously ill, and
believing himself to be on the point of death, confessed to his natural
brother, Copiosus, that he possessed three golden
crowns hidden away in the medicine-chest. Gregory was horrified when he heard
of this, for he considered that to possess money, in contempt of the monastic
law of poverty, was a grave sin. He therefore determined to make a signal
example of the culprit, and sending for Pretiosus the
prior, he said to him, "Go and provide that none of the brethren visit
Justus on his death-bed, nor let any give him a word of comfort. But when his
hour is come, and he asks for the brethren, let his carnal brother tell him
that all the monks detest him for the money which he hid, that so at least in
the hour of death he may have sorrow for his deed, and his sorrow may cleanse
his heart from sin. When he is dead, his body must not be buried with the rest
of the monks, but you must make a grave for him in some dung-hill, and cast in
the body there, and throw on the top the three crowns he left behind him,
crying all together, 'Thy money perish with thee!' and so put earth upon
him." Gregory's orders were obeyed. Justus died in great agony of mind,
and was buried in the way prescribed. And all the good monks were so
excessively scared by his dreadful fate, that they began to turn out from their
cells all manner of worthless little trifles which the Rule permitted them to
keep, fearing lest inadvertently they might be retaining something which would
bring upon them a similar punishment.
Thirty days after the death of Justus the stern abbat began to relent a little. So he sent for Prior Pretiosus, and said to him, It is some time now since our
departed brother has been in fiery torment, and therefore we ought to show him
some charity and try if we can procure his deliverance. Go, then, and for the
next thirty days offer the Sacrifice for him, so that no day pass on which the
Saving Victim be not offered for his forgiveness." The prior, as before,
carried out the abbat’s orders, and meanwhile
Gregory, amid his other cares, forgot about the matter. One night, however, the
spirit of Justus appeared to his brother Copiosus,
and being questioned as to his state, replied, "Hitherto I have been in
sore case, but now it is well with me, for today I received the
communion." Copiosus ran to Gregory in great
joy, and told him what he had seen and heard; and when they compared dates they
discovered that the vision occurred on the thirtieth day on which mass had been
said for the repose of the dead man's soul. "Thus," says Gregory,
"it was clearly evident that the deceased was delivered from his
punishment by means of the Saving Oblation."
To those who do not bear in mind Gregory's belief
respecting future punishment, his conduct on this occasion may well appear
savage and inhuman. But probably none of his contemporaries who heard the story
would have regarded it in this light. For a monk to hoard up money was not
merely a violation of a monastic regulation; it was a violation of a
fundamental principle of monasticism, and showed that the offender had never
truly adopted the spirit of the life he was supposed to lead, and was therefore
deserving of condign punishment both in this world and the next. The energetic
measures taken by Gregory—so men would argue—awakened the remorse of the
culprit, and the sorrow of his dying hours saved him from a sorrow which would
have been eternal. Hence the remarkable comment on the story, attributed in the
Dialogues to Peter, would probably have represented the opinion of most
sixth-century churchmen: "This is indeed a wonderful and extremely
pleasant tale!"
Under Gregory's rule the Monastery of St. Andrew
became renowned as a school of saints. Many men who afterwards became
distinguished were domiciled within its walls; among them Maximianus the future
bishop of Syracuse and Papal Vicar in Sicily, Marinianus who was made
archbishop of Ravenna, Sabinus who became bishop of Gallipoli, and Augustine
the Apostle of England. Of the less important monks the names of two are
preserved to us by Gregory himself, who relates some remarkable visions with
which they were favoured. "There was living with
me in my monastery," he writes in the Dialogues, "a certain brother
named Antonius, who daily with many tears longed for the joys of the heavenly
fatherland. While he meditated upon the Holy Scriptures with the utmost
earnestness and with strong fervour of desire, he
sought to gain from them not words of knowledge, but tears of penitence, that
his soul, roused and inflamed by their holy influence, might leave the things
of earth and soar in contemplation to the heavenly country. To him it was said
in a vision of the night: Make ready and depart, for the Lord hath commanded
thee. And when he answered that he had no means wherewith to make the journey,
he heard at once the reply, 'If thou art thinking of thy sins, they are forgiven
thee.' This he heard once, and while he still trembled with great awe, on
another night he was again admonished in the same words. Then five days later
he was attacked with fever and died, while all the brethren wept and prayed
around him." A similar story is related of a young monk named John, who,
falling sick, beheld in a vision an old man come to him and touch him with a
wand, saying, "Rise up, for thou shalt not die of this sickness; but
prepare thyself, for thou art not long for this world." Though the
physicians had given him up, John recovered, and for two years served God with
great devotion. Then one day, after he had been assisting at the funeral of one
of the brethren, he fancied that he heard his name called from the newly filled
grave. Ten days afterwards he sickened of a fever and departed this life.
The biographer John the Deacon has several stories of
miraculous events which occurred in St. Andrew’s—how a monk who had committed a
theft was tormented by a demon until he confessed; how another, who meditated
flight, was checked by a vision of an old man who set a black dog at him; how a
third, who entertained a similar design, was vexed by a demon whenever he
attempted to enter the oratory; how two monks, who escaped and hid in some
crypts near the Flaminian Gate, were discovered by means of the horses of the
pursuers, who could not be induced to pass the spot. But these events, however
we explain them, did not take place during the period of Gregory's residence;
for the same stories are related by Gregory himself when Pope, and he gives
them on the authority of the abbat of the monastery.
While Gregory occupied himself with matters of
discipline and religious observance, he did not neglect, or allow his monks to
neglect, the study of sacred learning. Much of his own spare time was spent in
meditating on the Holy Scriptures, and he endeavoured to educate his brethren in divine knowledge by delivering a series of informal
lectures, in the course of which he expounded the greater portion of the Old
Testament, viz. the Heptateuch, the Books of Kings, the Prophets, the Book of
Proverbs, and the Song of Solomon. A diligent young student named Claudius took
shorthand notes of these lectures, which he afterwards transcribed in full,
with a view to publication. Gregory, however, finding that his words had been
greatly misrepresented, requested that all the copies should be sent to him for
correction. But if, as seems probable, he intended to revise and publish them,
he never found time to execute his purpose. The extant Commentaries on the
First Book of Kings and on the Song of Solomon can scarcely be by his hand. The
former, at any rate, probably belongs to a much later date, though it is just
possible that the latter was based on the notes of Gregory's lectures taken by
Claudius.
One important literary undertaking, however, Gregory
completed at this time. This was the editing of the lectures on the Book of
Job, which he had delivered in Constantinople. In the dedication, addressed to
his friend Leander of Seville, Gregory gives an interesting account of the
origin and composition of the book. "When I was in Constantinople,"
he writes, "it seemed good to the brethren and to you, my friend, to urge
me to explain the Book of the blessed Job, and to lay open the deep mysteries
it contains, so far as the Truth should inspire me with the power of doing so.
And you laid this additional charge upon me, that I should not only unravel the
words of the history in their allegorical sense, but that I should also turn
the allegorical sense into a moral exercise, and (what was still harder) crown
the several meanings with testimonies, and when those testimonies were
difficult to understand, that I should disentangle them also by an additional
explanation. At first I despaired, owing to the difficulty of the work. But
then I raised my hopes to Him who made the tongues of them that cannot speak
eloquent, and who hath marked the undistinguishable brute brayings of an ass with the intelligible measures of human speech. So I took courage,
and though the life of those to whom I was compelled to give my interpretation
was far beyond me, yet I thought it no harm that the leaden pipe should supply
streams of water for the service of men. Whereupon without delay I delivered
the former parts of the book in the presence of the brethren assembled to hear
me, and in the latter part, finding that I had time then at my disposal, I used
dictation. Finally, when I had more time, I corrected and arranged in books all
that had been taken down as I delivered it in lecture, adding much, omitting a
little and leaving some as it was. For when I was giving the second part by
dictation I at the same time carefully considered the style of the first part,
harmonizing the two styles into a consistent whole. I must admit, however, that
I have left the third portion of the work for the most part as I delivered it
by word of mouth, because the brethren, by drawing away my attention to other
things, prevented my correcting it with any degree of exactness."
Respecting the method of his exposition, Gregory
further writes: "You must know that there are some parts which we explain
historically, others we search out by allegory, investigating the symbolical
meaning, in others we open out only moral lessons, allegorically conveyed,
while there are some few which we discuss with special care in all these ways
together, exploring them by a threefold method. For first we lay the
foundations in history; then, by pursuing a symbolical sense, we erect an
intellectual edifice to be a stronghold of faith; and lastly, by the grace of
moral instruction, we as it were paint the fabric with fair colours ... For the Word of God both exercises the understanding of the wise by its
deeper mysteries, and also by its superficial lessons nurses the simple-minded.
It presents openly that wherewith the little ones may be fed; it keeps in
secret that whereby men of loftier range may be wrapped in admiration. It is,
as it were, a kind of river both shallow and deep, in which the lamb may find a
footing and the elephant float at large."
Gregory concludes his dedicatory epistle with an
apology for the style. He pleads that the book was composed when he was labouring under illness. "For many a long year I have
been afflicted with frequent pains in the bowels, and the powers of my stomach
are so broken that I am always in bad health. I also suffer from a constant
succession of slow fevers." These bodily ailments have affected to some
extent his intellectual powers. "For what is the body but the organ of the
mind? However proficient a musician may be, he cannot extract melody from an
instrument which is out of order. Only grating sounds proceed from a cracked
pipe." Not that Gregory troubled himself about an ornate and polished
style. He writes: "I beg that in going through this work you will not look
for the foliage of eloquence, for by the Sacred Oracles commentators are
expressly debarred from the vanity of empty wordiness, in that it is forbidden
to plant a grove in the temple of God. And we all know that when a rank crop
shows stalks that abound in leaves, the grains of the ears are least filled and
swelling. Therefore I have not condescended to observe that art of speaking,
which is conveyed by rules of worldly training, for, as the tenour of this epistle will show, I do not avoid collisions of metacism or confusion of barbarisms, and I despise the observance of the position,
force, or government of prepositions. For I account it very unseemly to submit
the words of the Divine Oracle to the rules of Donatus." With this frank
repudiation of literary elegancies, the austere commentator concludes his
dedication.
The Magna Moralia,
or Exposition of the Book of Job, is a very remarkable work, and a veritable
treasure-house of sixth-century theology and ethic. It is divided into
thirty-five books, and was originally edited in six volumes. The theology
therein expounded will be dealt with at length in the Third Book of the present
biography. Here it is sufficient to say that, as a Commentary in the modern
sense of the term, the Magna Moralia is
well-nigh worthless. Gregory read the Book of Job in Latin, partly according to
the older and partly according to the later version. Of the original language
he knew nothing; of Oriental manners and modes of thought he had no conception.
He never seems to have realized that the book was a poem, or to have made the
slightest allowance for poetical expressions, images, and metaphors. He
understood it all with gross literalness. And yet at the same time beneath the
letter he discovered, or fancied that he discovered, a wealth of esoteric
meaning. As Milman says: "The Book of Job, according to Gregory,
comprehended in itself all natural, all Christian theology, and all morals. It
was at once a true and wonderful history, an allegory containing in its secret
sense the whole theory of the Christian Church and Christian sacraments, and a
moral philosophy applicable to all mankind." In other words, each
paragraph of the book was to Gregory merely a peg on which to hang
disquisitions on all manner of subjects—theological, philosophical, and moral.
The poem was the running text of a series of sermons, many of them very much
off the point.
The form of the book disgusts the modern reader. It is
not the style of writing—the rudeness of which was perhaps exaggerated by
Gregory in his dedication—so much as the endless allegorizing, the twisting of
every word and phrase into a symbol of hidden truth, that is so inexpressibly
wearisome. At the commencement, perhaps, we are interested in the author's
ingenuity of interpretation, as, for example, when he informs us that Job's
seven sons typify the twelve apostles, because expresses the perfection of spiritual
gifts, and is obtained by adding 3 to 4, which numbers when multiplied make 12;
or when we hear that the three daughters represent the weaker multitudes of the
faithful who believe in the Trinity, or the three orders of the Church (the
clergy, the continent, and the married); or when we read that seven thousand
sheep typify the Jews who have been led from the Law to the pastures of Grace.
But when this system is consistently applied through thirty-five books, it soon
becomes intolerable. Hence from the eighth century onwards many attempts have
been made to edit the Morals in the form of Compendia or Epitomes, which should
preserve the most valuable portions of the Commentary in a handy and readable
form. The most celebrated of these epitomes was compiled by Odo of Cluny. Such
compilations, however, have invariably been found more or less unsatisfactory.
But whatever opinion modern students may form of
Gregory's masterpiece, there cannot be the slightest question of its great
popularity from Gregory's time onwards through the Middle Ages. So soon as it
was published it was received with immense enthusiasm. The archbishop of
Ravenna, Marinianus, ordered that portions of it should be publicly read at
Vigils—a proceeding of which Gregory disapproved. "I am not pleased to
hear it," he wrote; "for the book is not a popular one, and with an
uninstructed audience is likely to do more harm than good. Tell Marinianus to
have read instead the Commentaries on the Psalms, which are best adapted for moulding the minds of secular persons to good habits. I do
not wish that in my lifetime anything I may happen to have composed should
become generally known." After Gregory's death, however, this practice was
resumed. The Magna Moralia became a favourite text-book of Christian doctrine. Manuscripts were
multiplied, epitomes compiled; by the twelfth century numerous translations had
been made and circulated, and for the next five or six hundred years the
commentary was regarded as indispensable for every well-furnished theological
library. Nor can we wonder at the success of the work. The Magna Moralia is a mine of theology, and the unambiguous
matter-of-fact way in which the dogmas are dealt with commended it to many who
were unable to follow the subtle reasonings of Augustine. Hence it soon became
a standard authority, and throughout the Middle Ages there was perhaps no work
on theology more generally esteemed or more diligently studied.
It is probably to this period of Gregory's life that
we must refer the celebrated incident of the meeting with the English
slave-boys in the Roman market-place. In our remote island of the northern sea
much fighting had been going on. Aella, king of Northumbrian Deira, had been
struggling successfully to establish his supremacy over the neighbouring Bernicians. In these wars many captives had been
taken on both sides, who, according to the usage of the country, were either
killed or sold into slavery. Thus it chanced that sometime between the years
586 and 588, some English boys, subjects of Aella—three in number, according to
the Canterbury tradition—were publicly offered for sale by some Jew merchant in
the market-place at Rome. It happened that on that day Abbat Gregory, with a
few of his monks, was passing through the Forum, and was struck with admiration
on beholding the white skin and golden hair of the handsome slaves. He stopped
and asked the slave-dealer whence they came. The Jew replied that they had been
brought from Britain, where all the people had fair complexions like them. On
further interrogation he added that they were pagans. Gregory sighed deeply and
exclaimed, “Alas alas! that beings with such bright
faces should be slaves of the prince of darkness! that with outward form so
lovely the mind should be sick and void of inward grace!”. Then followed the
famous dialogue.
“What is the name of their nation?”
“Angles”.
“Good”, quoth the abbat, “they have the faces of angels, and should be
co-heirs with the angels in heaven. From what province do they come?”
“From Deira”.
“Deira I Yea, verily; they shall be saved from God's
ire, and called to the mercy of Christ. How call you the king of that country?”
“Aella”.
“Then must Alleluia be sung in Aella's land”.
The punning abbat returned
to his monastery. But the affair did not end in mere word-play. The bright
faces of the English lads haunted him, and at length he formed the resolution
of leading a mission himself into their distant unknown country. He went,
therefore, to Pelagius, and earnestly entreated him to sanction the
undertaking. The Pope was reluctant, but gave his consent; and so one morning,
with the utmost secrecy, Gregory, accompanied by a few monks, stole out of the
gate of Rome and set forward on his long journey to the north. It was not
fated, however, that Gregory should himself set foot in Britain. On the third
day after his departure the little band halted for a rest. The monks disposed
themselves for a quiet siesta, and Gregory, withdrawing a little apart, took
out a roll of the Scriptures and began to read. Suddenly a grasshopper alighted
on the open page, and this trifling incident appeared to the abbat to be a Heaven-sent omen. "Ecce locusta!"
he exclaimed. "That means, ‘Loco sta’. Know, my friends,
that we shall not be allowed to proceed on this journey." Almost as he
spoke messengers arrived in hot haste from Pope Pelagius, with imperative
orders to Gregory to return without delay. It seems that the people of Rome had
taken the departure of their favourite very ill. As
soon as they heard of it they flocked in great excitement to the Lateran, and
began to upbraid the Pope with terrible cries: "Ah, Apostolic, what hast
thou done? Thou hast offended Peter. Thou hast destroyed Rome." Terrified,
Pelagius at once despatched messengers to recall the
people's idol, ordering them, if necessary, even to use force to bring him
back. But Gregory, when he read the Pope's letter, made no attempt to rebel,
and returned quietly to the city which was to be henceforth his home. Nevertheless,
he did not forget the English. He treasured up his missionary design until he
could put it into execution at a later date and by other hands.
THE QUESTION OF THE THREE CHAPTERS
During these years Gregory was occupied with many
things besides the care of his monastery. He was the right-hand man of Pope
Pelagius, who had frequent occasion to consult him on ecclesiastical matters.
He seems also to have served his master in the capacity of secretary, just as
Jerome and Prosper served respectively Damasus and Leo. At any rate, we have
Paul's authority for stating that he was the writer of an important letter sent
in Pelagius's name to the Istrian schismatics; and it seems fairly certain
that, in this controversy at any rate, Gregory took a considerable share.
This Schism of the Three Chapters had been for some
years a source of trouble to the Roman Church, and it continued to be a thorn
in the side of the Papacy during the greater part of Gregory's own pontificate.
Its origin is somewhat obscure, but if we may believe Liberatus, it was a
development of an Origenistic dispute, complicated by
the personal jealousies of rival churchmen. Its formal commencement, however,
was with an edict published by Justinian in 543 or 544, which, in the last
three sections or chapters, condemned the person and writings of Theodore,
bishop of Mopsuestia, the writings of Theodoret,
bishop of Cyrrhus, "which he published in defence of the heretic Nestorius against the holy faith and
the first holy synod of Ephesus and St. Cyril and his twelve chapters,"
and lastly "the impious letter which Ibas is alleged to have written to
Maris, the Persian heretic." This edict, intended to conciliate the
Monophysites by anathematizing those who seemed tainted with Nestorian
opinions, greatly scandalized the orthodox. For although the opinions of
Theodore were notoriously erroneous, and although the writings of Theodoret and
Ibas unquestionably bore a Nestorian complexion, yet the Fathers of Chalcedon
had restored Theodoret to his see without exacting from him a retractation of
his writings against Cyril, and had actually accepted the letter of Ibas as a
proof of the writer's orthodoxy, and caused it to be formally entered in the
minutes of the Council. Hence Justinian's unprovoked attack upon these bishops
appeared to many to be nothing less than an assault on the authority of the
Fourth General Council itself.
(It must be remembered that in the West the Fourth
Council was held in peculiar honour, as being the one
Ecumenical Council in which Western influence, as represented by the Pope, had
been distinctly predominant. At Nicaea the Pope had been hardly named, at
Constantinople he was not even represented, at Ephesus the vehemence and
ability of Cyril threw all others into the shade. But at Chalcedon the legates
of Leo were prominent in the discussions, and his Tome was received with
enthusiastic acclamation as the exposition of the orthodox creed.
"Such," cried all the bishops, "was the teaching of the
Apostles; Peter hath spoken by Leo." The attack on the Fourth Council
-implied in the condemnation of Theodoret and Ibas, who had been then received
as orthodox- naturally was particularly objectionable to the bishops of the
West, especially as, through their general ignorance of Greek, they were unable
to appreciate the subtle points of doctrine which were brought into dispute).
I need not trace in detail the history of the
miserable controversy which ensued on the publication of this unfortunate
edict. A mere outline will be sufficient. The West rose in revolt. In Italy,
Gaul, Illyricum, and particularly in Africa, the cry was raised that the Fourth
Council was being overthrown. The clamour and
excitement were tremendous. Even Pope Vigilius, great as were his obligations
to the Emperor, dared not append his signature to the odious document, which
was regarded in Rome as an outrage upon the Catholic Faith. Justinian was for
the moment baffled: then he determined to carry through his purpose in another
way, and summoned the Pope to Constantinople.
Vigilius arrived in the Imperial city in January, 547.
He was met at the gate by the Emperor, who kissed him with great demonstration
of affection, and even melted into tears. A great concourse escorted the Pope
through the colonnaded streets, chanting the antiphon, “Ecce advenit dominator dominus”; and in the great Church of St.
Sophia the Patriarch Mennas celebrated in his
presence the sacred service of the mass. Vigilius, despite these compliments,
remained firm for a while, refused to sign the anathemas, and even dared to
excommunicate Mennas. But he could not long resist
the pressure put upon him, and so, after deliberating with some Western bishops
who were in the capital, he published, in April, 548, a Iudicatum, in which, while declaring his adhesion to
the Fourth General Council, he nevertheless launched a solemn anathema against
the person and writings of Theodore, and the writings of Theodoret and Ibas.
This was the first recantation of Vigilius.
The effect of this document was startling. The Western
Church was thrown into convulsions. Datius of Milan, whom Vigilius had
consulted on the case, openly expressed his indignation. Facundus, bishop of Hermiana in Africa, posted home from Constantinople with
the news, which was everywhere received with horror. Two even of Vigilius's own
clergy named Rusticus and Sebastian, who had at first welcomed the Pope's
decision, now joined in the general outcry. Illyricum mutinied, and a synod at
Carthage in 549 formally excommunicated the renegade Pontiff. Vigilius, and
even Justinian, recognized that in the excited state of feeling throughout the
West, it was imperative that some concessions should be made. A secret treaty
was accordingly arranged between the Pope and the Emperor, by which the former
was permitted to withdraw his declaration on condition of promising to do all
in his power in future to procure the condemnation of the Three Chapters.
A Council was now summoned to deliberate further on
the matter, but the Western bishops refused to attend. The unhappy Vigilius was
more than ever embarrassed; for he could scarcely resist by himself the
combined authority of Emperor and synod, whereas, if he joined with the Easterns in condemning the Three Chapters, he would
inevitably lose the allegiance of the West. For the moment, however, he was
rescued from his difficult position by the impatience of Justinian, who,
wearied out with delays and objections, issued in 551, on his own plenary
authority, a second edict, condemning in strong terms the Three Chapters and
all their upholders.
Such an edict was, of course, a flagrant infringement
of the rights of the Church to determine matters of faith, and even the Eastern
bishops appear to have been indignant. Vigilius, summoning all his courage,
called a synod in the Palace of Placidia, at which the assembled bishops
protested against the Emperor's action, condemned the edict and all who
received it, and ordered its removal from all churches and public places where
it might be posted. Immediately afterwards Vigilius deposed Theodore Ascidas, bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia, for venturing to
celebrate mass in a church where the edict was exhibited, and temporarily
excommunicated the Patriarch Mennas and certain other
bishops, because they countenanced Theodore and imitated his contumacy. These
sentences, however, were not published for the present, but were held in
reserve. After this, Vigilius, feeling that he had offended the Emperor beyond
hope of pardon, fled for asylum to the Basilica of St. Peter. Nor had he
miscalculated the extent of Justinian's resentment. In a short time the Praetor
arrived at the church with orders to arrest him; but Vigilius, who was a
corpulent man, refused to leave, and wound his arms tightly round a pillar of
the altar. Then ensued a disgraceful scene.
The soldiers entered the church with drawn swords, and
those whose business it was to make the arrest endeavoured to drag away the suppliant by brute force. Some seized his hair and beard,
others pulled at his legs. Vigilius, in an agony of fear, clung desperately to
the pillar, which broke in the struggle, and the heavy altar would have fallen
and crushed him had not some clergy run forward and held it up. Finally the
Pope's pertinacity triumphed, and the Praetor retired to get further
instructions.
Justinian now sent to Vigilius a deputation of nobles,
who were commissioned to assure him of his personal safety if he would quit the
basilica, but who threatened to drag him away by violence in case he refused.
The humiliated Pontiff thought it best to accept the terms offered. After
exacting from the envoys a solemn oath both by word of mouth and in writing
that no evil should befall him, he left his sanctuary and took up his residence
in the Palace of Placidia. Very soon, however, he again had reason to tremble
for his safety. The palace was filled with men-at-arms, sentries were placed at
all the doors, and the shouts of soldiers patrolling the passages terrified the
Pope even in his bed-chamber. Again and again he reminded the ambassadors of
their safe conduct, and bound them by fresh oaths of protection, but in spite
of the fair assurances he received, his situation grew daily more alarming. The
Pope was in deadly terror of assassination, and at last his fears became so
intolerable that he determined to flee once more into asylum. On the 23rd of
December, 551, he managed to squeeze his great body through a little hole in
the palace wall, and, under cover of darkness, got safe away to the sacred and
inviolable sanctuary of St. Euphemia in Chalcedon.
Here Vigilius was in comparative safety. Even
Justinian dared not offer violence in that celebrated shrine. About a month
later, however, on the 28th of January, he sent again the former envoys, to
persuade the Pope to accept a safe conduct and leave the building. But Vigilius
repelled their overtures, saying, "I have fled to this basilica for no
pecuniary or private reason, but only to end a scandal to the Church, which for
our sins was known to the whole world. If, therefore, that peace which our Most
Religious Emperor in his uncle's time granted to the Church be now restored, I
need no oaths, but will come forth at once. If it be not, I still require no
oaths, for I am determined never to leave this basilica unless the scandal be
cut off from God's Church." He reminded the ambassadors of what had been
done by the synod in the Palace of Placidia at the time of the publication of
the edict of 551, and he hinted that if any violence was offered to himself,
the sentences passed on Theodore and the rest would at once be made public.
Finally he sent a message to the Emperor, warning him not to communicate with
the persons under the ban. The ambassadors then departed.
Three days afterwards Peter the Referendarius carried to Vigilius an unsigned letter, "so full of outrageous falsehoods
and insults" that the Pope refused to believe the messenger's assurance
that it came from Justinian himself. He replied to it, however, in an “Encyclica” addressed to the whole Church, in which he
professed to give a simple and straightforward account of the controversy, and
of the events which induced him to take refuge in the Church of St. Euphemia.
The dispute now languished for some months. Vigilius
remained secluded in his asylum. Some of the leaders died, among them Datius of
Milan and the Patriarch Mennas. The edict remained
posted, and the West continued in sullen opposition. At last Justinian, weary
of the deadlock, came to terms with the Pope. He withdrew the edict, and
consented to reserve the whole question of the Three Chapters for the decision
of a General Council, which was immediately summoned.
On the 5th of May, in the year 553, the Fifth General
Council met in the south gallery of the Church of St. Sophia. Unfortunately,
the bishops of the West, awed by the fate of Vigilius, were afraid to put in an
appearance; so that of the hundred and sixty-five prelates assembled there were
only twenty-six who occupied Western sees. This numerical minority alarmed
Vigilius, who clearly perceived that he would be outvoted in the Council.
Hence, although he had promised to be present at the deliberations, he now
excused himself, first pleading illness and afterwards alleging as his reason
the immense majority of the Easterners. He promised, however, to set down his
views in writing, and send them to the Emperor. After several attempts had been
made to persuade the Pope to change his purpose, and much time had been wasted
in futile negotiations, the Council proceeded to business without him. The
result of its deliberations was, of course, a foregone conclusion. The edict of
Justinian was adopted, the three disputed articles were approved, and the soul
of Theodore, together with the writings of Theodoret and Ibas, were
anathematized amid the acclamations of the assembled Fathers. Meanwhile
Vigilius issued a manifesto of his own. Conjointly with sixteen Western bishops,
he published a “Constitutum”, in which he made a
formal protest against the Council, condemned the supporters of the disputed
articles, and anathematized all who should in future agitate the question, or
publish or teach anything contrary to the opinions expressed in the Constitutum. In short, the Papal decision was that
the entire subject should be dropped, and the three suspected heretics left in
peace. This was the second recantation of Vigilius, or, more strictly, the
recantation of the recantation embodied in the Iudicatum.
This insult was more than Justinian could endure.
Vigilius was seized and banished to Proconnessus, a
dreary rock near the western end of the Sea of Marmora; and here the
unfortunate Pope, abandoned by all his friends, fell a prey to the horrors of
despair. He heard alarming rumours that they were
preparing to elect a new bishop in Rome, and that his own name was to be struck
out of the diptychs. His friends, one and all, seemed to have deserted him, and
his physical health was shattered by the painful disease of the stone. After
six months of extreme misery he felt that he could suffer thus no longer. On
the 8th of December, 553, he sent a letter of submission to the Patriarch
Eutychius. Hitherto, he wrote, he had been deluded by the devil's arts, but now
"Christ our God, who is the True Light which the darkness comprehendeth not, has removed all confusion from our mind,
and recalled the whole world and the Church to peace." He had gone more
carefully than before into the question of the Three Chapters, and a close
study of the Fathers had convinced him that his former opinions were mistaken.
He was therefore ready to retract those opinions, following the example of
Augustine, who was not ashamed to recant his errors. He now condemned Theodore
and his writings, the writings of Theodoret and Ibas, together with all such
persons as should hereafter venture to defend them, and he pronounced his own
previous definitions in favour of the heretics to be
null and void, and the decrees of the Fifth General Council to be true and
binding. This informal submission was followed by another document—the third
and last recantation of Vigilius. In this last Constitutum the
vacillating Pope retracted his previous pronouncements, confirmed the decrees
of the Fifth General Council, and finally condemned the Three Chapters. In
reward for his complacence he was recalled to Constantinople, and after a while
permitted to leave for Italy. He died, however, at Syracuse, on the 7th of
June, 555.
Unfortunately, the submission of Vigilius did not end
the dispute. The bishops of the West still hesitated to accept the decrees of
the Fifth General Council. Even in Italy itself, in the provinces of Tuscany,
Liguria, Venetia, and Istria, there was much disaffection. The Archbishop of
Milan and the Patriarch of Aquileia openly withdrew from communion with the
Roman See.
Pope Pelagius the First, as we have elsewhere noticed,
made a strenuous effort to restore the broken unity. He wrote a joint letter to
seven bishops of Tuscany, reproving them for their disloyalty to the See of St.
Peter, and quoting Augustine's dictum that "Such as are out of communion
with the bishops of the Apostolical Sees are in a state of schism." He
emphatically asserted his personal adherence to the decrees of the Four General
Councils and to the Tome of Leo; and, without direct allusion to the Fifth
Council, he urged his correspondents to return into unity with the Roman
Church, and invited them, if they still had scruples, to come to Rome and
satisfy themselves as to his orthodoxy in a personal interview. A similar
letter was published, addressed "to the whole People of God," and a
third and more explicit statement was sent to Childebert, king of the Franks.
Nor did Pelagius disdain to call in the help of the secular arm. He wrote in
pressing terms to Narses, maintaining the lawfulness of coercing schismatics,
and praying him to employ force to bring the recalcitrant bishops to obedience.
But there is no evidence that the Patrician made any attempt to act upon the
Pope's exhortation.
In Northern Italy the Lombard invasion did more than
the letters of Pelagius to abate the schism. The conquered part of the country
passed, to a great extent, beyond the sphere of Papal influence, while in the
unconquered part a common hatred of the Arian invaders drew the Catholic clergy
together. Thus in Tuscany and Liguria, though there was still some smouldering discontent, yet the bitterness of the schism
died away. In the peninsula of Istria, however, which, together with the
coast-line of Venetia, was still reckoned an Imperial province, the feud
continued. For a time, indeed, it slumbered. Paulinus, the Patriarch of
Aquileia, on the coming of the Lombards, removed to the island of Grado, at the
mouth of the Isonzo, where he died about 570. His successor, Probinus, occupied the see only for some months. Elias, who
followed him, may possibly have begun by courting the friendship of the Bishop
of Rome. At any rate, there is some documentary evidence (though its
authenticity is open to suspicion) that in 579 Pelagius the Second gave his
sanction to the transference of the metropolis of the province from Aquileia to
Grado, now called "New Aquileia"; and this he would certainly not
have done had the Patriarch maintained to the full towards him his former
animosity.
A mere cessation of hostilities, however—even granting
that it occurred—did not satisfy this Pope. He was determined, if possible, to
reduce the Istrians to complete submission, and to wrest from them a formal
condemnation of the Three Chapters. Accordingly—probably in 585—Pelagius
addressed an earnest letter, gentle and persuasive in tone, to Elias and the
bishops of Istria, entreating them not to sever themselves any longer from the
unity of the Holy Church. Not a word was said about the Fifth Council, the real
cause of the dispute; but the Pope protested in strong and explicit language
his complete adherence to the decrees of the Four General Councils and the Tome
of Leo, and then argued that, as the schismatical bishops had no reason to doubt the sincerity or purity of his faith, they were
bound to return to the bosom of the Church, knowing that those who were severed
from the peace and unity of the Church were severed from Christ Himself. They
were reminded that the faith of Peter can never be shaken or changed. If they
still entertained any doubts as to the Pope's real views, they should send some
of their number to Rome, and those who came would be received with kindness and
permitted to return whenever they liked.
Elias and the Istrian bishops sent back neither
submission nor defence. They replied merely with a
formal definition of their position and a sharp attack on the Papal policy
respecting the Three Chapters, going so far as to hint at an anathema against
the Pope himself. Pelagius, notwithstanding this provocation, did not lose his
temper. In a second letter, written in the same mild strain as the former, he
dwelt still more strongly on the evils of schism, replied to some of their
objections, sent them the genuine records of the Councils copied from the
archives of the Roman See, and entreated them not to incur any longer the
danger of separation from the Universal Church on account of disputes of such
trifling importance, but to send instructed persons as deputies to Rome, or, if
they feared the length and danger of such a journey, to Ravenna, whither he
offered to send representatives of his own to meet them.
This second letter had no better effect than the
former. The Istrian bishops refused to meet Pelagius either at Rome or at
Ravenna. They clung obstinately to their position that the condemnation of the
Three Chapters was a condemnation of the Council of Chalcedon, and this
deliberate opinion they laid before the Pope, with scarcely any attempt, so he
complains, either to justify their own view or to meet his arguments. Meanwhile
Gregory the Apocrisiarius had returned from Constantinople, and to him Pelagius
now entrusted the further conduct of the dispute. The stern deacon, with his
immense veneration for the Roman See and his detestation of schism,
strengthened by his observation of ecclesiastical conditions in the East, was
not disposed to treat leniently what he regarded as nothing less than sinful
contumacy. The tone of the "very useful letter" which he composed and
sent in the name of Pelagius to the Istrian bishops, is very different from
that of the two former epistles. As mildness had been found ineffectual,
Gregory endeavoured to bring his opponents to a
better disposition by severity. He sternly upbraided them for their
self-opinionated obstinacy, and then proceeded to deal at considerable length
with the old arguments.
The main object of the treatise is to show that the
condemnation of the Three Chapters in no way impugned the authority of Leo or
of the Council of Chalcedon. First, in the case of Leo, this is proved by a
series of extracts from the letters of that Pope, which show that he only
confirmed by his authority the decrees of the Council on points of doctrine.
Everything else, even if approved by his representatives at the Council, might
(according to Leo himself) still be called in question at a future time, and
indeed he had actually annulled several decrees referring to private or
personal matters. By doing this, he restricted the authority of the Council to
the definition of the Faith: to that alone the assent of the Apostolic See was
pledged. But, Gregory went on to argue, the case of Theodoret and Ibas received
into communion by the Council, clearly belonged to the category of private and
personal concerns; and such matters, according to Leo himself, might at any
time be reconsidered. With reference to this argument, we may observe that
Leo's limitation of his assent to the decrees on doctrine was made in view of
the canon in honour of the see of Constantinople.
Gregory's attempt to apply this reservation to the case in hand is a piece of
somewhat doubtful casuistry.
Secondly, Gregory tried to show that the condemnation
of the Three Chapters was in strict accordance with the Definition of Faith
promulgated by the Council of Chalcedon. If that Council had really approved
all the writings of Theodoret and Ibas, and consequently of Theodore, with whom
the two others were in agreement, it would have set itself in opposition to the
Council of Ephesus. But the Fathers of Chalcedon and the schismatical bishops themselves accepted the Council of Ephesus, and therefore implicitly
condemned all that was in opposition to it. Moreover, the Fifth Council did not
condemn all Theodoret's writings, but only such as
were tainted with Nestorianism and directed against Cyril; and these Theodoret
himself had implicitly condemned when he anathematized Nestorius.
The argument that it is wrong to condemn the person of
a dead man (Theodore) who had died in the communion of the Church, is met by
quotations from Augustine and from the acts of the First Council of Ephesus.
The unwillingness of Vigilius to condemn the Three Chapters, and the ill
treatment he suffered before consenting to it, are skillfully urged as proofs
of his earnestness and sincerity. Vigilius and the Western bishops, from their
ignorance of Greek, were at first unacquainted with the errors contained in the
suspected writings, and they would condemn nothing till they were really
convinced that it ought to be condemned. Their very hesitation was, therefore,
a reason for accepting more readily their ultimate decision. The Latin bishops
never varied in their adherence to the right faith; the only point on which for
a time they were doubtful was whether certain writings of Theodore, Theodoret,
and Ibas were in opposition to that faith or not. There was, consequently, on
their part a change of language, but never of principle—a change with regard to
persons, but never with regard to doctrines. Hence there was no reason at all
for bringing a charge of inconsistency against that Holy See, which the whole
Church humbly venerated in the person of St. Peter, its founder.
It would have been difficult to draw up a more
skillful defence of Roman orthodoxy, or a clearer
statement of the arguments for reunion. To impartial people, no doubt, it might
have seemed clear that no one who sincerely adopted the Councils of Ephesus and
Chalcedon, could with any show of reason defend all the writings of Theodore,
Theodoret, and Ibas. At the same time, such persons might easily have been
convinced that the question in dispute was far too petty to fight about when
the unity of the Church was at stake. But in the case of the Istrian bishops, a
feeling of personal bitterness hindered a settlement. Gregory's arguments made
no impression. The bishops continued staunch in their belief that Pope Vigilius
and the Emperor Justinian had alike behaved badly, that the decrees of the
Fifth Council were intended to impair the authority of the Fourth, and that the
Latin bishops were only induced to give their assent to them by violence. Hence
the schism continued.
The argument of violence which had formerly proved so
successful in the case of Vigilius was now in turn resorted to by the champions
of orthodoxy. About 588 the Exarch Smaragdus sailed to Grado, seized Severus
(who had succeeded Elias as patriarch) and three other bishops, John of Parenzo, Severus of Trieste, and Vindemius of Cissa, and carried them off to Ravenna. After being detained there for a
year, exposed the while to every kind of insult and ill treatment, they were at
last induced to communicate with John, bishop of Ravenna, who acknowledged the
authority of the Fifth Council and was in communion with the Pope. They were
then permitted to return home; but when they arrived they found that neither
the people nor the other bishops of the province would hold communion with
them. After a short interval, however, a synod was held at Marano, and there
the Patriarch publicly confessed that he had done wrong in communicating with
the bishop of Ravenna. Perhaps he did this the more readily since his persecutor,
Smaragdus, had become insane and been removed from his government. At any rate,
after his confession, Severus was restored to communion, and became once more
the leader of a schism which seemed as far off as ever from any termination.
Gregory's subsequent dealings with the schismatics in the time of his
pontificate will be described in a later chapter.
THE PESTILENCE OF THE YEAR 589 AD
The year 589 was signalized by great disasters and
calamities throughout the length and breadth of the Empire. In the East the
Persians defeated the Roman troops and captured Martyropolis,
while the Slaves, who had been quiet for a while, made a devastating raid into
Thrace. A great portion of the city of Antioch was laid in ruins by a terrific
earthquake, and sixty thousand lives were lost. The venerable sanctuary of the
Mother of God was destroyed, together with the bishop's palace, the bishop
himself escaping death by a miracle. In Italy there was an extraordinary
inundation. Throughout Venetia, Liguria, and the north, the streams and
mountain-torrents overflowed. Houses and farms were washed away by the
tumultuous waters, and thousands of men and animals were drowned. The great
post-roads were badly injured by the floods, while many of the lesser tracks
were entirely obliterated. In Verona the river Adige rose, and threw down a
portion of the city walls. The Church of San Zenone was surrounded by the water,
which swelled up as high as the topmost line of windows just below the roof;
but it is said that, though the doors were open, and the flood blocked them on
the outside like a solid wall, not a drop penetrated the basilica. This miracle
of the flood took place in October. Two months later a large part of Verona was
destroyed by fire.
In Rome the Tiber overflowed its banks, and a portion
of the city was inundated: several ancient buildings—situated presumably on the
Campus Martius—were thrown down, and the granaries of the Church were
destroyed, with all their store of corn. In the channel of the river, it is
recorded, an innumerable multitude of serpents and a dragon of great size were
borne past the city to the sea, where they were choked in the salt waves, and
polluted all the shores with their putrefying bodies.
One consequence of this inundation was that the
pestilence, which during the last fifty years had been devastating Europe at
intervals, now broke out in Italy with exceptional fury. This dreadful scourge
appears to have originated in Egypt, to have passed thence eastwards over Syria
and Persia, and so to have entered Europe, spreading from the coast-line
inland. It was remarkable alike for the rapidity of its working, the great
mortality it produced, and the utter inability of the physicians to cope with
it. Its main characteristics are known to us from the classical descriptions of
Thucydides, Procopius, and Boccaccio, from which it appears to have combined
"the features of several modern diseases in one," having, for
instance, "symptoms in common with typhus fever and with the more
malignant forms of measles and small-pox." Gibbon's account of the malady,
based on that of Procopius, is worth repeating. The majority of the sufferers,
he says, "in their beds, in the streets, in their usual occupations, were
surprised by a slight fever; so slight, indeed, that neither the pulse nor the colour of the patient gave any signs of the approaching
danger. The same, the next, or the succeeding day, it was declared by the
swelling of the glands, particularly those of the groin, of the arm-pits, and
under the ear; and when these buboes or tumours were
opened, they were found to contain a coal, or black substance, of the size of a
lentil. If they came to a just swelling and suppuration, the patient was saved
by this kind and natural discharge of the morbid humour.
But if they continued hard and dry, a mortification quickly ensued, and the
fifth day was commonly the term of his life. The fever was often accompanied
with lethargy or delirium; the bodies of the sick were covered with black
pustules or carbuncles, the symptoms of immediate death; and in constitutions
too feeble to produce an eruption, the vomiting of blood was followed by a
mortification of the bowels. To pregnant women the plague was generally mortal;
yet one infant was drawn alive from his dead mother, and three mothers survived
the loss of their infected foetuses. Youth was the
most perilous season, and the female sex was less susceptible than the male;
but every rank and profession were attacked with indiscriminate rage, and many
of those who escaped were deprived of the use of their speech, without being
secure from a return of the disorder."
Among the most distressing features of the malady were
the visions and hallucinations which distracted the frenzied imagination of the
sufferers. Men fancied that they saw ghastly spectres stalking through the streets and striking with their hands those who were
destined to die. Ineffaceable marks appeared upon the houses or the clothes of
the doomed persons, and the arrows of divine wrath were seen visibly darting
down on them from heaven. The air resounded with the braying of unseen
trumpets, and the voices of the dead were heard calling their friends to join
them. Those who experienced these phantasms sickened and died, not always
immediately but generally within three or four days. Certain who had been
brought to the point of death, but had subsequently recovered, related strange
visions which they had witnessed in their sickness. A soldier, for instance,
who had lain for some time to all appearance lifeless, imagined that his soul
left the body and came to a black, smoky river, which emitted an intolerable
stench, and which was spanned by the bridge of the dead. On the further side of
the stream were pleasant meadows fragrant with flowers, amid which were
companies of men apparelled in white. Many separate
mansions were also there, all shining with brightness and light, and there was
one house being built especially magnificent, the bricks whereof appeared to be
of gold; but whose it was he knew not. On the banks of the river also were
certain houses, but some of them were touched by the noisome vapour which rose from the ditch. Now, the dead who desired
to cross the bridge were subject to the following trial. If a wicked man
attempted to go over, he fell down into the dark and foul-smelling waters; but
those who were just and unhindered by sin passed over easily to the pleasant
places beyond. As the dreamer watched he beheld Peter, the merciless steward of
the Pope, thrust into the most filthy place, where he was bound down by a great
weight of iron in punishment for his former cruelty; a certain presbyter whom
he knew, however, crossed the bridge with great security, inasmuch as his life
had been good and upright. After the presbyter, one Stephen, a smith, assayed
to go over, but his foot slipped and he hung half on, half off the bridge. Then
certain frightful men rose out of the river and tried to drag him downwards by
the legs, but somo others in white robes and with
beautiful faces strove to carry him up by the arms. And while the good and evil
spirits contended together over Stephen, the soul of the dreaming soldier
returned to his body, so that he never knew the end of the matter.
Again, in Gregory's own monastery there was a boy
named Theodore, who had always been incorrigibly bad. "He could not bear
that any one should speak a word to him for the welfare of his soul. He would
neither do nor listen to anything that was good. With oaths, with angry words,
with scornful laughter, he used to protest that he would never adopt the habit
of the holy life." This youth, being stricken with the plague, and being
seemingly at the last gasp, called out suddenly to the brethren who were
praying round his bed, "Depart, depart! I am given over to a dragon to be
devoured, and he cannot devour me because you are here. He has already
swallowed my head; let him alone, that he may not torture me longer, but may do
what he has to do. If I am given up to be devoured by him, why should you cause
me the suffering of this delay?" The frightened monks said, "What
meanest thou, brother? Sign thyself with the sign of the cross." But he
with terrible cries replied, "I wish to sign myself, but cannot. I am
fettered by the coils of the dragon." The monks thereupon threw themselves
on the ground, and redoubled their prayers; and in a little while the sick boy
suddenly cried out, "Thank God, the dragon to whom I was given up has
fled, for he could not abide your prayers. Pray now for my sins, because I am
ready to be converted and to quit the secular life entirely." In the end
the youth recovered, and thenceforward, says Gregory, "with his whole
heart he turned to God."
The mortality in Rome was appalling, and the state of
the city, which doubtless resembled that of Constantinople during the
visitation of 542, must have been terrible. Men lay dying and dead in their
deserted houses, without a friend to soothe their last moments or to attend to
their burial. To inter each body separately was impossible. Waggon-loads
of corpses were conveyed from the city night by night, and flung promiscuously
into deep pits outside the walls. All business was of course at a standstill,
traffic ceased, and in the streets and piazzas the few passengers slunk along
furtively, avoiding one another. The churches alone were crammed with dense
throngs of panic-stricken citizens, and thus became centres from which infection spread. Some persons went insane with terror, and
performed strange antics in their madness; a few in despair flung themselves
into wild orges of vice; many shut themselves up in
their houses and refused to hold communication with any, until the plague
pushed in behind the barricaded doors, and they fled out headlong, they knew
not whither. A heavy stillness brooded over the city, broken only by the groans
and shrieks of the dying, the subdued chant of Misereres, and the rumble of the
death-waggons. All the skill of the physicians could
do nothing to abate the malady.
To add to the general consternation, Pope Pelagius
sickened of the plague and died on the 8th of February, in the year 590. The
choice of his successor lay with the clergy and people of Rome, the
confirmation of their choice with the Emperor. Without any hesitation, the
Romans elected the popular Abbat of St. Andrew's.
In peaceful times the supreme dignity in the Western
Church, with its magnificence and wealth and influence, had often been the
object of long intrigues and fierce struggles even to bloodshed, but in the
hour of suffering and danger there were few men who were willing to undertake
the office, and fewer still who were capable of administering it. At a crisis
like the present it was generally felt that a man of no ordinary abilities was
needed. The Pope who was to pilot the Roman Church through the gathering difficulties
and perils must be a man of high character and attainments, a spiritual guide
in whom the people could trust, a resolute defender of the rights and
pretensions of the Roman See against the encroachments of the Imperial
Government and the rivalry of the Patriarchs of Constantinople. He must be a
skillful administrator, to manage the vast revenues of the Papacy, on which a
large part of the Roman people depended for subsistence. He must be a
courageous patriot, to watch with unsleeping vigilance over the safety of the
city, to infuse some spirit of resistance into the scanty band of soldiers half
mutinous for want of pay, and into the frightened populace who cowered behind
the walls. He must be a statesman, finally, who could understand the policy and
command the respect both of the Exarch and of the Lombard princes, and one
whose personal influence and authority might even induce the Emperor to pay
attention to the necessities of the ancient capital of his Empire. Of all the
Roman ecclesiastics only one at this time seemed to possess these
qualifications. By his high character and noble birth, by the reputation he had
acquired among all classes as administrator, as monk, as ambassador, as
confidential adviser to the late Pope, Gregory, in the opinion of all but
himself, was marked out for the post of supreme honour and peril. Clergy and people—a poverty-stricken, plague-stricken throng—flocked
to the monastery on the Caelian, and with loud cries commanded him to ascend
the chair of Peter.
In spite of the unanimity and enthusiasm of the
Romans, Gregory shrank from the proposed honour. He
knew that, when once engaged in the anxious work of the pontificate, he would
lose forever the blessings of the secluded life which he so highly prized. He
feared, moreover, that he would prove unequal to the task that was laid upon
him, and that he would even suffer in personal character from the distracting
influence of worldly cares and anxieties. He therefore resisted the
importunities of his fellow-citizens, and actually wrote to the Emperor
Maurice, earnestly entreating him not to confirm the election. This letter,
however, was intercepted by Germanus, Prefect of the City, who substituted in
its stead the formal document of the election. Meanwhile, until a reply should
be brought from Constantinople, Gregory—probably in conjunction with the Archpresbyter, the Archdeacon, and the Chief of the
Notaries—was entrusted with the administration of the vacant see.
The plague continued to rage. Gregory worked
indefatigably to check its progress, but without result. At length he
determined to appeal to the people to make a special act of contrition, that
the wrath of God, signified by this awful pestilence, might be turned away. He
ascended the ambo in the Basilica of St. John Lateran, and there, amid a
breathless silence of the people, he preached a sermon, which has fortunately
been preserved:
“We ought, my beloved brethren, to have feared the
chastisements of God before they came, but let us at all events fear them now
that they have come and we have felt them. Let sorrow open the way for us to
conversion. Let the punishments we already suffer break up the hardness of our
hearts, for as the prophet bears us witness: The sword reacheth unto the soul. Behold, all the people are
smitten with the sword of God's wrath, and men are laid low in sudden
destruction. There is no interval of weakness before death; death leaves no
time for the slow process of decay. Before the sufferer can turn to penitential
mourning, he is gone. Think in what plight that man appears before the strict
Judge who has had no time to bewail his evil deeds. The inhabitants are taken
away; they fall, not one by one, but all together. Houses are left empty,
parents see their children buried, their heirs go before them to the grave. Let
us then, each one of us, flee for refuge to penitential mourning, while we have
time to weep, before the blow falls. Let us summon up before the eyes of the
mind the sins we have committed, let us bewail whatever we have done
amiss, let us come before His face with confession, and as the
prophet admonisheth us, let us lift up our
hearts with our hands to God. To lift up our hearts with our hands to God
is to heighten the earnestness of our prayers by the merit of good works. He
gives, He surely gives us confidence in our fear, who cries to us by His
prophet: I have no pleasure in the death of a sinner, but that the
wicked turn, from his way and live. Let no one despair for the greatness of
his iniquities. The inveterate sins of the Ninevites were purged away by three
days of penitence, and the converted robber earned the reward of life in the
very moment of his death. Therefore let us change our hearts, and let us feel
sure that we have already received what we ask for. The Judge is more quickly
swayed by prayer, if the suppliant corrects his evil life. While, then, the
stroke of such grievous punishment is still impending, let us persist in
importunate prayers. That importunity which displeases men is pleasing in the
judgment of the Truth; for the good and merciful God desires that pardon should
be claimed from Him by prayer, because He desires not to be angry with us
according to our deserts; for so He saith by the Psalmist: Call upon Me
in the time of trouble; so will I hear thee, and thou shalt praise Me. He
who thus urges men to call upon Him is a witness unto Himself that He will have
mercy upon those who call upon Him. Therefore, my beloved brethren, with
contrite hearts and amended lives, with devout minds and with tears, let us
assemble at early dawn on the fourth day of the week in a sevenfold litany, in
the order to be hereafter given, so that when the strict Judge sees that we
punish our faults ourselves, He may refrain from passing the sentence of
condemnation, now ready to be pronounced against us”.
The order of the procession is then indicated. “Let
the clergy set out from the Church of SS. Cosmas and Damian the Martyrs, with
the priests of the Sixth Region. Let all the abbats with their monks set out from the Church of SS. Gervasius and Protasius the
Martyrs, with the priests of the Fourth Region. Let all the abbesses with their
congregations set out from the Church of SS. Marcellinus and Peter the Martyrs,
with the priests of the First Region; the children from the Church of SS. John
and Paul the Martyrs, with the priests of the Second Region ; the laymen from
the Church of St. Stephen the Protomartyr, with the priests of the Seventh
Region; the widows from the Church of St. Euphemia, with the priests of the
Fifth Region; the married women from the Church of St. Clement the Martyr, with
the priests of the Third Region. Let us go forth from each of these churches
with prayers and tears; let us meet together at the Basilica of the Blessed
Mary ever Virgin, Mother of our Lord God Jesus Christ; and let us there
persevere in supplications to the Lord, with weeping and groaning, that we may
be deemed worthy to receive pardon for our sins”.
So in the dim twilight of the spring morning—it was
the 25th of April, according to a tradition which dates back to the seventh
century—the great procession started. Pale-faced, emaciated, and clad in
deepest mourning, the people moved slowly through the desolate streets towards
the great basilica on the Esquiline. As the seven trains of priests and
mourners wound through the city scarcely a sound was heard save the tramp of
feet, and sobs and cries for mercy, and over all the doleful chant of the Kyrie
Eleison, deepening in fervour as one person after
another dropped plague-stricken from the ranks. For Death kept step with the
moving crowds, and, according to the report of a deacon of Tours, who was an
eye-witness, in the space of a single hour no less than eighty men fell down and
died. Thus at length the Church of the Mother of God was reached, and here
again Gregory addressed to the people an earnest exhortation to prayer and
penitence, promising that if they would have faith the pestilence should cease.
With this famous procession is connected a beautiful
legend, which, though traced back to a date earlier than the tenth century, is
not found in writing till the thirteenth. According to the tradition, Gregory
is represented at the head of a great train of penitents, crossing the Bridge
of Hadrian on his way to St. Peter's. Before his eyes, about a bowshot beyond
the Aurelian Gate, rose dazzling in the sunshine the Mausoleum of Hadrian—a
high square structure of Parian marble, surmounted by two circular buildings
with colonnades, and crowned with a conical cupola and the famous bronze fircone, now in the garden of the Vatican. Though the Tomb
of Hadrian had been sadly battered during the Gothic wars, and had lost those
masterworks of Pheidias and Praxiteles which had once adorned its colonnades,
it was still, as in Procopius’s time, “a memorable sight” and a splendid
monument of the nation’s history. As Gregory and his penitents paused before
it, they beheld on the summit the Archangel Michael, in the act of restoring to
its sheath a flaming sword, in token that the plague was about to cease. From
this legend the mausoleum, since the tenth century, has been called by the name
of the Castle of the Angel, and for many hundreds of years a figure of an angel
has crowned its summit. Four of these statues have at different times been
destroyed, the fifth and present one, cast in bronze by Wenschefeld,
was set in position during the pontificate of Benedict the Fourteenth. It
should be added that one curious relic connected with this legend is still to
be seen in the Capitoline Museum. This is an altar dedicated to Isis by someone
who had returned safely from a journey, which accordingly bears the
conventional emblem of two footprints. The altar at one time stood in the
Church of the Aracoeli, and the footprints—described
by Philip de Winghe as those of a “puer quinquennis”—were long
believed by Roman Christians to be those of the angel seen by Gregory on the
summit of Hadrian's Tomb.
Another story of the procession, but less ancient, is
found in the notice of Gregory in the Legenda Aurea. Caxton thus
quaintly translates the words of the original: “And because the mortality
ceased not, he (i.e. Gregory) ordained a procession, in which he
did do bear an image of our Lady, which, as is said, St. Luke the Evangelist
made, which was a good painter, he had carved it and painted after the likeness
of the glorious Virgin Mary. And anon the mortality ceased, and the air became
pure and clear, and above the image was heard a voice that sung this anthem:
‘Regina coeli laetare’,
etc., and St. Gregory put thereto, ‘Ora pro nobis, deum rogamus, alleluia’.” In memory of this alleged event
the great processions from S. Marco were always accustomed to strike up the
antiphon “Regina coeli” when they came to the Bridge
of Hadrian.
At length, towards the end of August, after the Roman
See had been vacant for more than six months, the ratification of Gregory's
election came from Constantinople. The long delay must probably be attributed
to the difficulties of communication in the disturbed state of Italy. At any
rate, it was not due to any unwillingness on the Emperor's part to sanction the
elevation of the celebrated deacon, whose election seems to have given the
greatest satisfaction at the Byzantine court. Gregory himself, however, was
panic-stricken at the news. He sought to hide himself, and, according to a
legend which grew up soon after his death, he actually succeeded in escaping
from the city, though the gates were guarded, being conveyed out secretly in a
basket of merchandise. For three days he remained concealed in a forest cave,
but on the third night, in answer to the prayer and fasting of the people, his
retreat was revealed by a column of light from heaven. This story, however, can
scarcely be historical. It is certainly true, as we know from Gregory himself,
that he wished to avoid the dignity thus thrust upon him, and even meditated
going into hiding. But his project of flight was never carried out. “While he
was preparing for flight and concealment”, so writes his contemporary, Gregory
of Tours, “he was seized and carried off and dragged to the Basilica of St.
Peter, and there, having been consecrated to the Pontifical office, was given
as a Pope to the city”. The event took place on the 3rd day of September, in
the year of our Lord 590.
I may close this chapter with the confession of faith
which Gregory made in public at the Fisherman's tomb on the day of his
consecration.
“I believe in One God, Almighty, the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost, three Persons, one Substance: the Father unbegotten, the
Son begotten, but the Holy Spirit, neither begotten nor unbegotten, but
coeternal with and proceeding from the Father and the Son. I acknowledge the
only-begotten Son, consubstantial with the Father, and born of the Father
without time; Maker of all things visible and invisible, Light of Light, Very
God of Very God, the Brightness of His glory, the Image of His Substance: Who remaining
the Word before all ages was made perfect Man at the end of the ages, and was
conceived of the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, and took upon Him our
nature without sin: and He was crucified under Pontius Pilate and was buried,
and on the third day He rose again from the dead, and on the fortieth day He
ascended into heaven, and He sitteth at the right
hand of the Father. From thence He shall come to judge the quick and the dead,
and He shall set before all eyes all the secrets of every heart, and He shall
give to the righteous the eternal rewards of the heavenly kingdom, but to the
wicked the punishment of everlasting fire, and He shall renew the world by fire
at the resurrection of the flesh. I acknowledge one Faith, one Baptism, one
Apostolic and Universal Church in which alone sins can be forgiven in the Name
of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost”.