web counter

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

 

CHAPTER V

GREGORY PATRIARCH OF THE WEST.

HIS RELATIONS WITH OTHER WESTERN CHURCHES

 

 

(e)   The Church in Istria.

In Istria the schism of the Three Chapters continued throughout Gregory's pontificate. It has already been related how Gregory exerted himself in the time of Pelagius to confute the schismatics, and what small success attended his efforts. When he became Pope he determined to try more drastic measures. He dispatched a body of soldiers, under the command of a tribune and an Imperial guardsman, who carried the following summons to Severus, the Patriarch of Aquileia: “The Lord is eager to embrace the man who goes astray and returns to the right path, yet when such a one again deserts the way of truth, His sorrow over the wanderer is greater than His joy over his first conversion. For it is less sinful to be ignorant of the truth than not to abide in it when known. It is one thing to act in error; it is another to sin with knowledge. And we who lately rejoiced at your return to the unity of the Church, are now the more abundantly distressed at your apostasy. Accordingly, we desire you, at the instance of the bearer of these presents, according to the command of our Most Christian and Serene Emperor, to present yourself with your adherents at the threshold of St. Peter, that a synod may be assembled, and a decision reached concerning the matters which are in dispute among you”.

The allusion in the above letter to the Emperor was nothing more than a piece of bluff. Maurice cared nothing about the matter. The Exarch Smaragdus, who had been hot against the schismatics, and had even kidnapped the Patriarch, had been withdrawn, and his successor, Romanus, was strongly opposed to the violent measures which found favor with Gregory and such ardent Catholics as John of Ravenna. Hence the Pope could count on the support neither of the Emperor nor of the Exarch, as indeed speedily became apparent.

The stern summons of the Pope caused much alarm to Severus and his suffragans. Two synods were immediately held—one of the schismatic bishops dwelling in Lombard territory, and the other of those in the Imperial cities on the coast. Each of these assemblies drew up a letter of remonstrance to the Emperor, and Severus, in his individual capacity, added a third. Of these three documents the first alone, subscribed by ten bishops of Venetia and Rhaetia Secunda, has come down to us. It begins with an emphatic assertion of the Catholicity of the bishops subscribing, and also of their loyalty to the Roman Republic, though oppressed by the “grievous yoke of the Gentiles”. The petitioners pleaded that in refusing to condemn the three so-called heretics, they were only upholding the Council of Chalcedon, and obeying the express orders which Pope Vigilius had caused to be circulated through all the provinces. These orders their predecessors had accepted and obeyed, and they themselves did but follow in their foot­steps when they refused to accept the Fifth Council or to communicate with those who did so. The Patriarch Elias, however, on this account had been persecuted by Smaragdus, and so had Severus. And now Pope Gregory had summoned the latter to appear in Rome before himself—a judge who was a party in the case and with whom they held no communion. But the Emperor had rescued Elias; let him now do as much for Severus. Let him grant a truce for the present. Later, when the Lombards were crushed and peace was restored, they would be glad to present themselves at Constantinople and to plead their cause before him; for the Emperors had always shown themselves just arbiters and restorers of peace in the Church. Unless the persecution were stopped and the rights of Aquileia were preserved, their own successors in the Venetian and Rhaetian sees would undoubtedly transfer their allegiance from the loyal Patriarch to the neighbouring Archbishops of Gaul. And it was likely that when ecclesiastical allegiance was transferred, political obedience also would shortly follow.

This representation produced the desired effect. Maurice, if indifferent to the religious aspect of the question, was by no means indifferent to the political consequences involved. He therefore sent off to Gregory a rescript in Latin, ordering him to let the schismatics alone. The document was addressed in grandiloquent style: "In the name of the Lord our God Jesus Christ, the Emperor Caesar Flavius Mauritius Tiberius, Faithful in Christ, the Pacific, Mild, Greatest, Beneficent, Victor of the Alamanni, to the Most Holy Gregory, the Very Blessed Archbishop of the fostering city of Rome, and Patriarch." The Emperor referred to the receipt of the Istrian dispatches, and commanded Gregory, on account of the disturbed condition of Italy, to cause no further trouble to the schismatic bishops for the present. When civil peace was established, ecclesiastical union might be restored. Maurice added a postscript in his own handwriting: “God keep you many years, most holy and blessed Father”.

Gregory had some reason to feel aggrieved at this command. His efforts to uphold the doctrine which the Emperor Justinian had thrust upon the Church were actually being hindered by one of Justinian's own successors. Surely Constantinople was the last place where those who contumaciously refused to accept the Fifth Council ought to have been defended. Moreover, even if the rescript had not, as was alleged, been obtained by liberal bribes to persons of influence at court, yet it was evident that the motives which led to its issue were not ecclesiastical, but purely secular. It was a glaring case of the subordination of religious interests to political expediency. Nevertheless, Gregory dared not disobey so express a mandate. He was obliged to give up for a time all thought of persecution, although he did not cease to importune the Emperor on the matter "with the greatest zeal and freedom." On Severus himself he shortly had an opportunity of taking a rather petty revenge. In 592 the city of Aquileia was devastated by a terrible fire, and a relief fund was started in aid of the sufferers. Even such aggressive Catholics as John of Ravenna were moved to sympathy, and sent contributions; but Gregory refused to give anything. Alms should be given to the faithful, he said, and not to the enemies of the Church, particularly when the latter had been spending money in Constantinople to thwart the purposes of the Apostolic See.

In a later letter, addressed to “all the bishops of Iberia”, Gregory insisted that the schismatics had no right to regard themselves as martyrs, or to talk about “persecution”. “Persecution, unless endured in a good cause, is unprofitable for salvation. There is no reward for sin, and it is impious to expect it. Recollect Cyprian's [or rather it should be Augustine's] words: Martyrem non facit poena sed causa”.  Nor could the schismatics with any show of reason point to the troubles in Italy, as though they were God’s punishment for the Church's acceptance of the Fifth Council. They should remember the text, Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth. God has shown greater love and approval of Italy, since He has counted her worthy to endure His scourge. Talk of punishment Why, Rome was captured after Vigilius’s condemnation of the Acephali. Was, then, the cause of the Monophysites favoured by Heaven? To remove all remaining doubts, Gregory forwarded to his correspondents the very useful letter which he had composed in the time of Pope Pelagius, recommending them to study it carefully with unbiassed minds. If after that they continued to maintain their damnable opinions, it would be a proof that they surrendered themselves “not to reason, but to obstinacy”.

Meanwhile among the schismatics themselves a reaction appears to have set in, and many individuals or small parties of disaffected persons became reconciled to the Church. Thus in the very first year of his pontificate, Gregory received in Rome a certain Neapolitan named Stephen, who for certain doubts (probably on the question of the Three Chapters) had withdrawn from the communion of the Catholic Church. This man, being convinced of his error, stated that he had several friends in Naples who would be willing to return to orthodoxy, provided that the Pope would take upon his own soul the peril, so that no punishment should fall on them hereafter. Gregory gladly assented, and wrote to the Bishop of Naples to readmit them all, declaring that he himself was willing to bear all the responsibility.

Again, in July 595 two Istrian bishops—Peter of Altino, and Providentius of some see unknown —expressed a wish to confer with Gregory about reunion, provided that they could do so without fear of molestation. And in 599, once more, a large body of schismatics came to Rome and were received into the Church among them being a deputation from the “insula Capritana”. The details of the transactions which took place in connection with the last-named place are involved in some obscurity, but the general course of events seems to have been as follows. The “insula Capreae Histricae provinciae”—probably to be identified with a village named Isola, situated in the neighbourhood of Cittanuova—had been annexed to the episcopal see of Cittanuova, where a Pannonian named John was bishop. After a while, however, John was expelled by violence from the province, and another bishop was consecrated in his place, who, moreover took up his residence, not at Cittanuova, but at Isola. At first the new­comer had some thoughts of returning to the Roman communion, and with that end in view commenced negotiations with the Exarch. But afterwards he changed his mind and reverted to the schism. The Capritans, however, were eager for reunion, and refused to receive their bishop, who thereupon retired to Sicily. Then the Capritans sent a deputation to Rome to announce their return to allegiance, and to request that a new bishop might be ordained. Gregory, however, with his habitual caution, refused to sanction another ordination until an appeal had been made to the exiled prelate in Sicily, who was reported to be once more wavering in his views. The envoys were accordingly sent on to Sicily to interview their former bishop. If the latter was really inclined for reunion, Gregory directed that he should come to Rome, the expenses of his journey being paid; or if he neither wished this nor desired to return to his see, but yet was willing to give a written security that he would remain in communion with the Roman Church, a suitable provision was to be made to enable him to live quietly where he was. In the latter case, however, or in case of his continuing in schism, the Archbishop of Ravenna was to ordain someone to administer the see of Isola, who was moreover to be subject to his metropolitan jurisdiction, “until the Istrian bishops return to the orthodox faith”.

Gregory's activity in this affair seems to have somewhat alarmed the Exarch Callinicus, who wrote to remind him of the Emperor's express injunctions respecting Severus and his associates. Gregory replied that "the order, though itself elicited by false representations, by no means enjoins you to repulse those who are returning to Church unity, but only forbids you at this unsettled time to compel those who are unwilling to return," and he suggested that the whole affair should be reported to Maurice. At the end of the letter he expressed his surprise that Callinicus should have awarded only a slight punishment to his majordomo for his negligence (or, as Gregory suspected, his venality) in allowing the petition of a bishop, who desired to return to the Catholic Church, to fall into the hands of the schismatics. “And yet”, he adds, “I soon blamed myself for being surprised, for where the Lord Justinus gives advice, these heretics cannot be arraigned”. Clearly the Exarch had on his council men who favoured the schism, and were not unwilling to thwart the intentions of the powerful Bishop of Rome.

In May 602 Firminus bishop of Trieste was received back into the Catholic communion, and signed the following document, which was delivered to Gregory's representative at Ravenna: “Whenever the eye of the soul which has been darkened by the clouds of error is illuminated by the light from heaven, we must earnestly strive lest the author of schism should again secretly enter into the soul, and with the sword of falsehood shall sever it once more from the root of unity to which it has attached itself. I, therefore, now that I have learnt the nature of that snare which held me in the bonds of schism, of my own accord and of my own free will, after long and careful consideration, have returned, under the guidance of Divine grace, to the unity of the Apostolic See. And lest I should be supposed to be acting disingenuously and insincerely in this matter, I bind myself by an anathema, and under penalty of losing my rank as a bishop, I vow and promise to you, and through you to St. Peter, the chief of the Apostles, and to his Vicar, the most blessed Gregory and his successors, that I will never be persuaded by any one or be induced in any way to return to that schism from which I have been set free by the mercy of our Redeemer, but I will ever remain under all circumstances in the unity of the holy Catholic Church, and in communion with the Roman Pontiff. Therefore I swear by Almighty God and by these four holy Gospels which I hold in my hands, and by the life and genius of our Sovereigns who rule the commonwealth, that I will always faithfully abide in the unity of the Catholic Church, to which by the goodness of God I have returned, and in the communion of the Roman Pontiff. But if—which God forbid—I shall under any pretext or induced by any argument, sever myself from this unity, may I be sentenced to eternal punishment for the sin of perjury, and have my portion in the world to come with the author of schism. This record of my confession and promise I have dictated to my notary and have signed it with my own hand, acting with the consent of the priests, deacons, and clergy, who have urged me to this act of reunion, and who now, following my example of their own free will, are about themselves to sign the document”.

In consequence of his secession, Firminus had to endure much persecution at the hands of his former associates, and Gregory wrote to request the Exarch to protect him. The fact that many of the reconciled bishops went to live at Constantinople or else in Sicily seems to prove that Severus and the schismatic leaders had no more enlightened ideas of tolerance than the Pope himself, and that they were not above using violent measures to keep their party together and hinder those who might otherwise have been willing to return to the communion of the Roman Church.

Gregory, on his side, continued to strain every nerve to break the strength of the schism. Those who had once begun to hesitate found their return facilitated in every way. The Pope invited them, especially the bishops, to come to Rome to discuss with him the points in dispute. He promised them a kindly welcome, and the means of returning to their own homes, even if he failed to convince them. Those who abandoned the schism he helped—if help were needed—to the utmost of his power, and protected them from the enmity of their former associates. They were not required explicitly to give their adherence to the Fifth General Council, but only to sign a document renouncing the schism, similar to that which was given by Firminus. When mere persuasion failed to convince, Gregory sometimes tried the effect of a bribe. Thus, when he heard that the clergy of Como had told the Archbishop of Milan that in a dispute about some property they had not been so well treated by the Roman Church as to be anxious to return to her communion, he wrote: “If the land which they say is unjustly retained by us be really theirs, it shall be restored to them at once, even if they continue in their schism. But if, as we hope, they will return to the Church, we are ready to give up the land to them, whether they have a right to it or not”.

The last argument of coercion by violence Gregory never dared to employ during Maurice's lifetime; but when the Emperor was dead, and Smaragdus, whose zeal had been so conspicuously displayed during his former tenure of office, was once more Exarch, Gregory urged that sterner measures might be adopted? “We hope that the fervor of zeal which you formerly showed in this matter will be kindled to greater heat than ever, and that you will be the more ready to punish and restrain the enemies of God, as the defense of the soul, in the sight of God, is more precious than that of the body. Let the uprightness of faith which is strong within you arm you against those who go astray. Let the body of the Church now rent asunder in your dominions, be restored during your rule to its former wholeness. You will be repaid for your exertions in this matter by Him who is the Author of uprightness and unity. For we trust in God's mercy that our outward enemies will find you the stronger against them, in proportion as the enemies of the true faith find you terrible against themselves through your love to God”.

Before the close of his pontificate, Gregory had the satisfaction of knowing that the schism was greatly weakened.

Every year the reasons which originally seemed to justify it were losing their force, every year the schismatics became more isolated. No fresh converts joined them, and the old leaders were either dying off or returning into Catholic communion. Certainly in the cities of Istria and Northern Italy which were subject to the Lombards, the party of resistance was still vigorous. The Lombard Queen Theudelinda, though on the best of terms with Gregory, could not be persuaded to renounce the schismatic communion; and in this point her trusted friend and councillor, the abbat Secundus, shared and perhaps formed her views. Yet the end was now only a matter of time. About a hundred. years later, at the Synod of Pavia, summoned by King Cunincpert in 698, the last of the schismatics renounced their heresy, and were restored to the unity of the Catholic Church. The harvest was gathered by Pope Sergius the First, but we cannot doubt that the seeds of it were sown by Pope Gregory the Great.

 

CHAPTER V

GREGORY PATRIARCH OF THE WEST.

HIS RELATIONS WITH OTHER WESTERN CHURCHES

(f) THE CHURCH IN DALMATIA