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
(f) The Church in Dalmatia.
The Church of Dalmatia was the occasion of
considerable annoyance and anxiety to Gregory throughout the greater part of
his pontificate. The difficulty of communicating with Rome had naturally
loosened the ties which bound the clergy of this region to the Pope, and had
diminished the authority of the Western Patriarch, always somewhat weak in
these parts. The events which have now to be related are important as showing
to what lengths resistance to the Pope might be carried with impunity, and to
what extent even so vigorous a Papal autocrat as Gregory was compelled to make
concessions. These events have also a political significance, inasmuch as they
brought Gregory into more or less of conflict with the Imperial authorities,
and even with the Emperor himself. For this reason I have here devoted a
separate section to the Church of Dalmatia, instead of referring to its affairs
in the course of a general review of the Churches of Illyricum. Gregory’s
relations with these other Churches will be considered apart, in the final
section of this chapter.
The metropolis of Dalmatia at this time was Salona, a
city which once occupied a site near the modern Spalatro.
The metropolitan bishop of Salona was one Natalis, a merry, freehanded
bon-vivant, whose good dinners were notorious. At these convivial gatherings,
it was rumored, the guests were not wearied with recitations from the
Scriptures, customary at episcopal repasts, but secular scandal was discussed,
and racy stories told of absentees. The archbishop himself preferred a jest to
a sermon. He found reading irksome, and gave it up. His episcopal duties he
light-heartedly neglected. He even wished to distribute the property of his
Church among his own relations. Yet he was shrewd enough to conciliate the
favor of the influential persons in his diocese, and his easy good nature and
lavish hospitality made him extremely popular.
It was the misfortune of this gay prelate to be
associated with an archdeacon of a character diametrically opposite to his own.
Honoratus was a rigid moralist, a stern, unbending, and thoroughly disagreeable
kind of man, who looked with extreme disapproval on the frivolities of his
superior, continually made protests, and, when these produced no effect, sent
long complaints about him to the Pope in Rome. Natalis very naturally resented
this surveillance, and for a time there was considerable unpleasantness at
Salona. At length the archbishop devised a scheme for removing his mentor. At
the close of the year 590 he summoned a synod, got Honoratus condemned and
deposed from his archdeaconry, and, to disqualify him forever from regaining
his office, forcibly ordained him to the priesthood.
This cunning device of degrading a man from a position
of power by raising him to a higher rank in the ministry, filled Gregory with
indignation. He wrote at once to Natalis, peremptorily insisting that Honoratus
should be at once restored. If after this their differences remained unsettled,
Natalis was at liberty to send a proctor to Rome to meet Honoratus, and the
Pope promised that he would, in the presence of both, “decide what justice
approves, without respect of persons”. But this communication was ignored by
the archbishop. Accordingly, in March 592, Gregory addressed to him a sterner
letter, pointing out that the disregard he was showing for the laws of the
Church and the commands of the Pope lent a color to the charges brought against
him by the party of Honoratus. If, therefore, after this second admonition, he
neglected to restore the archdeacon and to send a representative to Rome, he
would be deprived of the use of the pallium; if he still persisted in his
disobedience, he would be excommunicated; and if after that, he yet continued
obdurate, he would be deposed. This epistle, which was accompanied by an
address of similar purport to the suffragan bishops of Dalmatia, and by an
appeal to Jobinus the Pretorian Prefect of Illyricum,
urging him not to interfere with the course of justice, produced the desired
effect. Honoratus was restored to his office of archdeacon, and the archbishop
wrote a reply to the accusations brought against himself.
This letter has not been preserved, but its general
contents, which we gather from the Pope's answer, well illustrate the mind and
character of this eccentric man. As an apology it was, to say the least,
extraordinary. In defense of his banquets the archbishop reminded the Pope that
Abraham had feasted the angels, and that Isaac had blessed his son when he had
eaten and drunk. He added that he rejoiced to share the title of “gluttonous
man” with the world's Creator. Then, somewhat inconsistently, he pleaded that
his dinners were given with a view to bestowing charity, and ended by quoting
the words of St. Paul: Let not him which eateth not
judge him that eateth. As regards reading, Natalis
asserted that the pressure of tribulation prevented him from studying, and
cited Matt. x. 19 to prove that this was not, after all, a necessary part of a
bishop's duties. He was, however, so he said, giving attention to exhortation,
and, though he could not claim to be a great preacher like Gregory, yet he had
met with success in bringing heretics back to the Faith. In conclusion, he
asserted that he was perfectly aware of the degrees of ecclesiastical rank, and
trusted that the Pope, on his side, would respect the privileges of the Church
of Salona, which had been handed down and preserved by his predecessors. The
letter ended with an expostulation concerning the threat of excommunication.
The author of this singular document could not be
taken too seriously. So Gregory sent him a rather sarcastic, yet friendly
answer, accepting his excuses, but urging him to greater diligence in the
discharge of his episcopal duties. At the same time, he expressed in the
clearest terms his opinion of the archbishop's disobedience to the Apostolic
See. “After you had received my letters, and those of my predecessor, you
despised our decrees and deprived Honoratus of his proper rank. If any of the
four Patriarchs had done such a thing, his contumacy could not have been passed
over without the gravest scandal. Nevertheless, now that you have learned again
to know your place, I no longer remember the wrong you have done to my
predecessor and myself”.
While acquitting Natalis, Gregory was careful to
accord a like favour to Honoratus. However, the old
disputes had still to be investigated. The archdeacon came to Rome in person,
and the archbishop's proctors were expected daily. While, however, the affair
hung thus in abeyance, in March 593 the news arrived that Archbishop Natalis
was dead.
It needed not Gregory’s penetration to foresee the
probability of a hotly contested election. He wrote at once to Antoninus the
Sub-deacon, who was manager of the little patrimony in Dalmatia, charging him
to see that a fit person was canonically elected without bribery or patronage,
and that his name was sent to Rome for approval before he was consecrated.
Accordingly, by the efforts of Antoninus a section of the electors were
persuaded to nominate Honoratus, and to petition Gregory to confirm their choice.
The Pope, however, knew that this nomination proceeded only from a section, and
was by no means in accordance with the wishes of the majority. He dared not,
therefore, give his confirmation until he should have learnt more. He wrote,
nevertheless, to express his warm approval of the candidate. “We exhort you to
persevere in maintaining the election of Honoratus without any vacillation.
Nothing ought to turn you from him. For as this election is now acknowledged to
be praiseworthy, so, if any one unhappily induces you to abandon it, a heavy
weight will be laid upon your souls, and the stain of faithlessness upon your
reputation”.
These forebodings, as the event showed, were
justified. There was in Salona and Dalmatia a strong party bitterly hostile to
Honoratus. In the first place, there were the friends of Natalis, and all those
who had condemned the archdeacon's conduct or had reason to dread his justice
or his vengeance. The suffragan bishops, again, were opposed to his elevation;
and, what was of great consequence, the officials and chief laymen of the
province were all against him. An archbishop, of course, was a personage of too
much influence for the Imperial Government to regard his election with
indifference. It was of the highest importance for the Proconsul of Dalmatia
that the Bishop of Salona should be a man with whom he could live in harmony.
The genial Natalis had got on well with the officials, and had enjoyed their
support, as is evident from the fact that by his own authority, and without
legal trial or synodical decree, he had banished one of his suffragans and
confiscated his property. And now that Natalis was dead, the Government was
naturally unwilling that any one should be elected whose appointment would
certainly be followed, not only by a reversal of his predecessor's policy, but
also by a rigid investigation of old charges of malpractices, by law-suits, excommunications,
complaints and appeals to Rome, and general disturbance and confusion.
So strong was the feeling against Honoratus, that
Gregory felt himself obliged to yield, though not without addressing an
indignant warning and reproof to the bishops of the province. “As your
characters are so perverted by worldly business that, entirely forgetting the
nature of your sacerdotal dignity and all considerations of heavenly fear, you
endeavor to do, not what will please God, but what pleases yourselves, we have
thought it necessary to write you a special and severe letter, in which, by the
authority of St. Peter, the chief of the Apostles, we charge you to lay hands
on no man for episcopal consecration in the city of Salona without our consent
and permission. If, either of your own free will or by compulsion, you presume
or attempt to act in any way contrary to these directions, we sentence you to
be deprived of the communion of the Lord’s Body and Blood, and in consequence
of your machinations and your willful disobedience to our orders, you will be
excluded from the Divine Mysteries. Nor will he whom you ordain be recognized
as a bishop, for we will have no one inconsiderately ordained whose life is
open to censure”. However, the Pope promised to agree to the ordination of any
fit person who was elected unanimously. One candidate alone was absolutely
excluded—a certain Maximus, an ambitious man of loose morals, who was reported
to be in high favor with the electors. Him Gregory unconditionally refused to
accept. “I have heard much that is bad of him”, he wrote. “If he does not give
up his attempt to gain this higher rank, he must, I think, after full inquiry,
be deprived even of the office which he now holds”.
Maximus, however, was not to be lightly suppressed.
While the party of Honoratus appealed to the Pope, Maximus and his adherents
applied to the Emperor, and a rescript was obtained from Constantinople,
commanding his appointment to the vacant see. The officials of the province and
the suffragan bishops were heavily bribed; and at the close of 593 or the
beginning of 594 the bishop-elect was enthroned by an armed force. Priests,
deacons, and other ecclesiastics who ventured to resist were injuriously treated,
and Antoninus, who had the courage to protest in the name of the Pope, only
saved his life by a precipitate flight. Such, at least, were the reports that
reached Rome—rumors which had doubtless lost nothing in the process of
transmission.
Gregory’s indignation was intense. In Maximus he
refused to recognize a bishop—“for the consecration was performed by men who
were excommunicate”: he was simply “the usurper at Salona”. Nevertheless, even
in the heat of his anger, Gregory did not forget his habitual caution. He
affected to believe that the Emperor had not issued any rescript at all, or
that, if he had really done so, he had been misled by false representations.
“We are not ignorant of the Emperor’s feelings”, wrote the Pope to Maximus. “We
know that he is not in the habit of meddling with matters which concern the
priesthood, lest he should in any way be burdened with our sins”. Hence, until
definite information on this point was forthcoming, Maximus and those who
ordained him were forbidden to discharge any episcopal function or to minister
at the altar. “If you presume to disobey these commands, anathema on you from
God and from St. Peter the chief of the Apostles”.
Maximus, however, strong in the support of the
official party, ventured to set at defiance the Pope’s authority. He cleverly
contrived that Gregory’s letter should not be delivered to him personally, and
when it was posted up in the city he caused it to be publicly torn in pieces.
Moreover, though well aware of his excommunication, he did not hesitate to say
mass as usual. Indeed, he even assumed the offensive, and spread abroad a
scandalous story about Gregory which practically amounted to a charge of murder.
It was affirmed that a certain bishop named Malthus, who had managed the Papal
Patrimony in Dalmatia, and had also been a prominent supporter of Maximus, was
urgently summoned to Rome, where he was thrown into prison and died suddenly
under suspicious circumstances. Of course, no one acquainted with Gregory's
character could believe him capable of being a party to assassination. As he
himself explained the matter, Malchus was brought to trial for
maladministration of the Church property, and condemned; he was taken, after
sentence had been pronounced, to the house of the notary Bonifacius, where he
was treated with respect, but in the night he died suddenly. There can be no
doubt that this explanation accurately represented the facts. Nevertheless, the
death of the bishop at this critical juncture was extremely unfortunate, and
the coincidence excited no slight alarm and suspicion among the Pope's
opponents at Salona.
Meanwhile the embittered relations between Gregory and
Maximus were causing some anxiety to the Imperial officials. It is true they
still sided with “the usurper”. To them he was the lawful Bishop of Salona,
elected by the majority of the clergy and people, and consecrated by the
bishops of the province with the consent of the Imperial Government.
Nevertheless, they clearly saw that a dispute with the Pope could not fail to
be productive of great discord and disunion throughout the province, and this
they were anxious at any cost to avoid. Efforts were accordingly made to bring
about a reconciliation. Distinguished persons wrote to Gregory to intercede for
the archbishop. Marcellus, the judicial assessor, and afterwards Proconsul of
Dalmatia, one of the chief supporters of Maximus, begged the Pope to pass over
his conduct. Julian, the Scribo, sent a testimonial
to his popularity "both with the palace and the people." And Maurice
himself, while charging Maximus to go to Rome and make his peace, commanded
Gregory to overlook the irregularity of his consecration, and to receive him
with respect as the lawful Metropolitan of Dalmatia.
Gregory was placed in a very difficult position by
this mandate of the Emperor, but he acted with adroitness and spirit. He
professed himself perfectly willing to forgive, at Maurice’s request, any
slight or insult which had been put upon himself, but he declared that he had
no power to condone any sin which had been committed against God. “In obedience
to the injunction of my Most Religious Lord, I have forgiven Maximus his
presumption in setting at naught myself and my representative at his ordination.
I have forgiven him as completely as though he had been ordained by my
authority. But his other transgressions, to wit, the bodily sins of which I
have been informed, his election by bribery, his presumption in celebrating
mass when excommunicated, I cannot, for God's sake, pass over without inquiry.
It is my wish and my prayer to God that he may be found to have committed none
of these sins, and that so the matter may be concluded without danger to my
soul. But before the investigation has taken place, my Most Serene Sovereign
has expressly charged me to receive him, when he comes, with honor. It is
indeed a grievous thing that honor should be paid to a man charged with so many
great crimes, before his case has been examined and discussed. And if the
affairs of bishops committed to my charge are to be settled by patronage at the
court of my Most Religious Sovereign, woe is me! Of what use am I in the
Church? Yet that my bishops despise me and appeal from me to secular judges, I
render thanks to Almighty God, and consider their doing so a punishment for my
sins. This, however, I say briefly—I will wait a little longer, and then, if he
still delays coming to me, I will not fail to exercise canonical severity
against him”. Thus Gregory refused, even at the Emperor’s command,
to surrender any of the rights of the Apostolic See. “I am ready to die”, he
had written to his responsalis at
Constantinople, “rather than allow the Church of the Apostle St. Peter to
degenerate in my days. You know my character. I am long-suffering, but when I
have once made up my mind to submit no longer, I face every danger with joy”.
In September 595 the Pope sent a peremptory order to
Maximus to present himself in Rome, and stand his trial on the counts above
mentioned. But “the usurper”, whether from timidity or from consciousness of
guilt, was determined not to quit Dalmatia. Another rescript, therefore, was
obtained from the Emperor, directing that the charges should be investigated at
Salona. Here, however, as everybody knew, it was impossible to procure an
impartial trial; and so Gregory, in January 596, once again summoned the archbishop
to present himself in Rome at the expiration of thirty days, urging him to
arrange that no difficulties should be placed in the way of his journey by the
civil or military authorities of the province, and giving him a guarantee that
the charges should be fairly investigated in accordance with the canons of the
Church, by the help of St. Peter, chief of the Apostles, and under the guidance
of God. At the same time, in a separate letter, Gregory assured the clergy and
people of Salona that he bore no personal grudge against Maximus, but only
desired to act canonically, and he begged them to use their influence to compel
the archbishop to come to Rome. He could not refrain, however, from expressing
his indignation that only two of the clergy—Honoratus and a bishop Paulinus—had
had the strength of mind to abstain from communion with Maximus, though he
admitted that he had heard that some had been compelled by force to communicate
against their will. “You ought to have had respect to your Orders”, he writes,
“and to have considered him whom the Apostolic See rejected, as rejected
indeed”. A similar letter was dispatched a few months later to the inhabitants
of Jadera, who had communicated with the pretender. “With my whole heart
earnestly and entirely I pity you”, writes the Pope. “With the love of a father
I adjure and exhort you to abstain every one of you from this unlawful
communion, and altogether avoid those whom the Apostolic See does not receive,
lest the very thing which might bring you salvation should lead to your
condemnation in the presence of the Eternal Judge”.
Gregory’s persistence soon began to take effect.
Whatever may have been thought of the fitness of Maximus for the episcopal
office, no religious person at Salona could fail to feel the scandal and the
peril of the schism in which he was involved. Many, no doubt, may have been
originally inclined to maintain their right of electing their bishop without
interference from Rome. But this liberty Gregory was now perfectly willing to
concede. All that he claimed was the right to see that in the election the laws
of God and the Church were not disregarded. And the reasonableness of such a
claim could not be denied. Hence public feeling began to veer round to the
Pope’s side. First, in the beginning of 597, Sabinian bishop of Jadera (Zara),
braving the intrigues of the archbishop against him both in Dalmatia and at
Constantinople, made his submission to Gregory, abstained from communicating
with Maximus or mentioning his name at mass, and retired temporally into a
monastery to do penance for his fault. A considerable number of bishops seem to
have followed his example. Then again, in the same year, the Exarch Romanus,
who was ill disposed towards the Pope, died, and was succeeded by Callinicus,
who was on friendly terms with the Holy See. But most important of all was the
conversion of Marcellus, now become Proconsul of Dalmatia, and his anxiety to
be readmitted to the Pope's favour. “We have received
the letter of your Greatness”, Gregory wrote to him, “in which you say that you
have incurred our displeasure, and are therefore anxious to make satisfaction
and regain our favor. And, indeed, things are reported of your Greatness which
certainly ought never to have been done by a believer. All men say that you are
the cause of all the mischief in the affair of Maximus. The spoliation of the
Church, the loss of many souls, the audacity of his unheard-of presumption, had
their beginning in you. As you seek our favor, therefore, you must make a
fitting satisfaction for these sins to our Redeemer, with all earnestness of mind
and with tears. For if satisfaction is not made to Him, what can our
forgiveness and favour possibly avail? While you are
still involved in the ruin of the presumptuous and the defense of the
transgressors, we do not see what atonement you can make to God or man. Then,
and then only, may your Greatness feel certain that you are making such atonement,
when you bring back the wandering to the right way and the proud to the law of
humility. If that is done, you may feel sure that you will receive the favor
both of God and of man”.
From this time, while Callinicus kept pressing the
Pope to soften the terms of the submission, Marcellus exerted all his influence
to induce Maximus to submit. “The usurper’s” position, indeed, had become
serious, and his friends began to take alarm. Anxious letters from them poured
into Rome, testimonials in the archbishop’s favor, assurances of his sincere
desire for forgiveness, and his dread of the Pope's displeasure. It seems that
Maximus was now thoroughly frightened and quite inclined to yield. On one
point, however, he stood firm— nothing would induce him to take his trial at
Rome. At last a compromise was agreed upon. Maximus was to be tried on the
charges of having committed sins disqualifying him for the episcopate, of
having procured his election by bribery, and of having celebrated mass when
excommunicate. The trial, however, was to be held, not at Rome, but at Ravenna;
and it was to be conducted, not by Gregory, but by Archbishop Marinianus, whose
sentence the Pope agreed to confirm. Further, if the accused distrusted the
Metropolitan of Ravenna as too much under the influence of Rome, Constantius of
Milan was to be invited to act as his assessor.
But in the end the trial was never held. Perhaps
Marinianus thought better of Maximus than Gregory had done, perhaps he allowed
himself to be persuaded by the Exarch. At any rate, on his suggestion, the Pope
agreed to a milder course. Maximus was ordered to do penance for having
celebrated mass when excommunicate, and to purge himself on oath of the other
charges. So in July 599 the Metropolitan of Dalmatia lay for three hours on the
bare stones in the streets of Ravenna, crying out, “Peccavi Deo et beatissimo Papae Gregorio!”. Then the Exarch Callinicus,
Castorius a chartulary of the Roman Church, and
Archbishop Marinianus raised him from the ground, and led him to the tomb of
the blessed Apollinaris, where he took oath that he was guiltless of the crimes
laid to his charge. After this there was handed to him a letter from Pope
Gregory, readmitting him to communion, and bidding him send a messenger to
receive the pallium according to custom.
Thus ended the affair of Maximus with the triumph of
the Holy See. Gregory had no further trouble with the Church in Dalmatia. The
archbishop himself seems to have reformed his ways. But he evidently found that
his coveted bishopric was not, after all, a bed of roses. The last of the
Salona letters was written by Gregory in July 600, to comfort his old opponent,
who had asked for his advice and sympathy in his troubles.
“When our common son, the presbyter Veteranus, arrived in Rome, he found me so ill with the
gout that I was quite unable myself to reply to your letter. With regard to the
Slaves, who threaten to invade your province, I am greatly grieved and
disquieted. I am grieved because I suffer when you suffer; and I am disquieted
because they have already begun to pass through Istria into Italy. With regard
to Julian the Scribo, I know not what to say, since I
see on all sides that our sins are so visited upon us, that at the same time we
are harassed by the Gentiles without and by the Governors within. Do not,
however, grieve too much at this; for those who come after us will see yet
worse times, and will think our age happy in comparison with theirs. But so far
as you can, my brother, you must resist, these men on behalf of the poor and
oppressed. Even if you fail in your effort, Almighty God is satisfied with the
intention, which He Himself has put into the mind. For it is written: Rescue
them that are drawn unto death, and forbear not to deliver them that are ready
to be slain. And if you say, I have not strength enough, He knows
who looks into the heart. In everything you do strive to appease Him who looks
into the heart. Fail not to do everything that can win His favor. For human
wrath and human favor are as smoke, which a puff of wind bears away and
disperses. Feel assured that no one can please both God and evil men. In
proportion as you find that you have displeased evil men, in the same
proportion you may consider that you have pleased God. At the same time, you
should be temperate in your defense of the poor, lest, if you act too rigidly,
men should think that you are puffed up with a young man's pride. In protecting
the oppressed, we ought rather to act in such a manner that, while the weak
feel that they are protected by us, the oppressors, though evilly inclined
towards us, may have difficulty in finding anything in our conduct to blame.
With respect to the Frontinianists, I trust you will
be very careful, and will continue your exertions to recall them to the bosom
of the Holy Church. If any of them wish to come to me to be reasoned with, let
them first swear that after such reasoning they will not allow their people to
continue in their errors. Then your Holiness may promise them that they shall
suffer no ill treatment from me, and that I will reason with them. If they
recognize the truth, let them receive it; if they do not, I will send them away
unharmed. If, however, any of them wish to come to me to complain of you, do
nothing to detain them. If they come to me they will either receive
satisfaction, or else you may feel sure that they will never see their country
again”.
Evidently Rome was a dangerous place for
schismatics and malcontents to visit, unless protected by a safe conduct.
Perhaps, after all, Maximus was well-advised when he refused so obstinately to
stand his trial there.
CHAPTER V. GREGORY PATRIARCH OF THE WEST.(G) THE OTHER CHURCHES OF ILLIYRICUM
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