READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE RENAISSANCE
CHAPTER XIX
THE EVE OF THE
REFORMATION
As the sixteenth
century opened, Europe was standing unconscious on the brink of a crater
destined to change profoundly by its eruption the course of modern
civilization. The Church had acquired so complete a control over the souls of
men, its venerable antiquity and its majestic organization so filled the
imagination, the services it had rendered seemed to call for such reverential
gratitude, and its acknowledged claim to interpret the will of God to man
rendered obedience so plain a duty, that the continuance of its power appeared
to be an unchanging law of the universe, destined to operate throughout the
limitless future. To understand the combination of forces which rent the
domination of the Church into fragments, we must investigate in detail its
relations with society on the eve of the disruption, and consider how it was
regarded by the men of that day, with their diverse grievances, more or less
justifying revolt. We must here omit from consideration the benefits which the
Church had conferred, and confine our attention to the antagonisms which it
provoked and to the evils for which it was held responsible. The interests and
the motives at work were numerous and complex, some of them dating back for
centuries, others comparatively recent, but all of them growing in intensity
with the development of political institutions and popular intelligence. There
has been a natural tendency to regard the Reformation as solely a religious
movement; but this is an error. In the curious theocracy which dominated the
Middle Ages, secular and spiritual interests became so inextricably
intermingled that it is impossible wholly to disentangle them; but the motives,
both remote and proximate, which led to the Lutheran revolt were largely
secular rather than spiritual. So far, indeed, as concerns our present purpose
we may dismiss the religious changes incident to the Reformation with the
remark that they were not the object sought but the means for attaining that
object. The existing ecclesiastical system was the practical evolution of dogma,
and the overthrow of dogma was the only way to obtain permanent relief from the
intolerable abuses of that system.
In primitive
society the kingly and the priestly functions are commonly united; the Church
and the State are one. Development leads to specialization; the functions are
divided; and the struggle for supremacy, like that between the Brahman and
Kshatriya castes, becomes inevitable. In medieval Europe this struggle was
peculiarly intricate, for, in the conversion of the Barbarians, a strange
religion was imposed by the conquered on the conquerors; and the history of the
relations between Church and State thenceforth becomes a record of the efforts
of the priestly class to acquire domination and of the military class to
maintain its independence. The former gradually won. It had two enormous
advantages, for it virtually monopolized education and culture, and, through
its democratic organization, absorbed an undue share of the vigor and energy of
successive generations by means of the career which it alone offered to those
of lowly birth but lofty ambition. When Charles the Great fostered the Church
as a civilizing agency he was careful to preserve his mastership; but the
anarchy attending the dissolution of his empire enabled the Church to assert
its pretensions, as formulated in the False Decretals, and, when the slow
process of enlightenment again began in the eleventh century, it had a most
advantageous base of operations. With the development of scholastic theology in
the twelfth century, its claims on the obedience of the faithful were reduced
to a system under which the priest became the arbiter of the eternal destiny of
man, a power readily transmuted into control of his worldly fortunes by the use
of excommunication and interdict. During this period, moreover, the
hierarchical organization was strengthened and the claims of the Pope as the
Vicar of Christ and as the supreme and irresponsible head of the Church became
more firmly established through the extension of its jurisdiction, original and
appellate. The first half of the thirteenth century saw the power of these
agencies fully developed, when Raymond of Toulouse was humbled with fleshly
arms, and John of England with spiritual weapons, and when the long rivalry of
the papacy and Empire was virtually ended with the extinction of the House of
Hohenstaufen. The expression of the supremacy thus won is to be found in the
Gloss of Innocent IV on the Decretals and was proclaimed to the world by
Boniface VIII in the bull Unam Sanctam.
This sovereignty
was temporal as well as spiritual. The power of the Pope, as the earthly
representative of God, was illimitable. The official theory, as expressed in
the De Principum Regimine, which passes under the name of St Thomas
Aquinas, declared the temporal jurisdiction of kings to be simply derived from
the authority in trusted by Christ to St Peter and his successors; whence it
followed that the exercise of the royal authority was subject to papal control.
As Matthew of Vendome had already sung :
Papa regit reges,
dominos dominatur, acerbis
Principibus
stabili jure jubere jubet.
The arguments of
Marsiglio of Padua, intended to restore the imperial system of a Church
subordinate to the State, were of some assistance to Louis of Bavaria in his long
struggle with the papacy; but at his death they virtually disappeared from
view. The Councils of Constance and Basel were an effort on the part of the
prelates and princes to limit the papal authority, and if they had succeeded
they would have rendered the Church a constitutional monarchy in place of a
despotism; but the disastrous failure at Basel greatly strengthened papal
absolutism. The superiority of Councils over Popes, though it continued to be
asserted by France in the Pragmatic Sanction of 1438, and from time to time by
Germany, gradually sank into an academic question, and the Popes were finally
able to treat it with contempt. In 1459, at the Congress of Mantua, Pius II, in
his speech to the French envoys, took occasion to assert his irresponsible
supremacy, which could not be limited by general councils and to which all
princes were subject. In his extraordinary letter to Mohammad II, then in the
full flush of his conquests, Pius tempted the Turk to embrace Christianity with
the promise to appoint him Emperor of Greece and of the East, so that what he
had won by force he might enjoy with justice. If the Pope could thus grant
kingdoms, he could also take them away. George Podiebrad, King of Bohemia,
committed the offence of insisting on the terms under which the Hussites had
been reconciled to the Church by the Fathers of Basel; whereupon Pius II in
1464, and Paul II in 1465, summoned him to Rome to stand his trial for heresy;
and the latter, without awaiting the expiration of the term assigned, declared
him deprived of the royal power, released his subjects from their allegiance
and made over his kingdom to Matthias Corvinus of Hungary, with the result of a
long and devastating war. Julius II, in his strife with France, gave the
finishing blow to the little kingdom of Navarre by excommunicating in 1511
those children of perdition Jean d'Albret and his wife Catherine, and
empowering the first comer to seize their dominions, an act of piety for which
the rapacious Ferdinand of Aragon had made all necessary preparations. In the
bull of excommunication Julius formally asserted his plenary power, granted by
God, over all nations and kingdoms; and this claim, amounting to a
quasi-divinity, was sententiously expressed in one of the inscriptions at the
consecration of Alexander VI in 1492-
Caesare magna fuit, nunc Roma est maxima. Sextus
Regnat Alexander:
ille vir, iste Deus.
While it is true
that the extreme exercise of papal authority in making and unmaking Kings was
exceptional, still the unlimited jurisdiction claimed by the Holy See was
irksome in many ways to the sovereigns of Europe and, as time wore on and the
secular authority became consolidated, it was endured with more and more
impatience. There could be no hard and fast line of delimitation between the
spiritual and the temporal, for the two were mutually interdependent, and the
convenient phrase, temporalia ad spiritualia ordinata, was devised to
define those temporal matters, over which, as requisite to the due enjoyment of
the spiritual, the Church claimed exclusive control. Moreover it assumed the
right to determine in doubtful matters the definition of this elastic term and
the secular ruler constantly found himself inconveniently limited in the
exercise of his authority. The tension thence arising was increased by the
happy device of legates and nuncios, by which the Holy See established in every
country a representative whose business it was to exercise supreme spiritual
jurisdiction and to maintain the claims of the Church, resulting in a divided
sovereignty, at times exceedingly galling and even incompatible with a
well-ordered State. Rulers so orthodox as Ferdinand and Isabel asked the great
national council of Seville, in 1478, how they could best prevent the residence
of legates and nuncios who not only carried much gold out of the kingdom but
interfered seriously with the royal pre-eminence. In this they only expressed
the desires of the people; for the Estates of Castile, in 1480, asked the
sovereigns to make some provision with respect to the nuncios who were of no
benefit and only a source of evil.
Another fruitful
source of complaint, on the part not only of the rulers but of the national
Churches, was the gradual extension of the claim of the Holy See to control all
patronage. Innocent III has the credit of first systematically asserting this
claim and exploiting it for the benefit of his cardinals and other officials.
The practice increased and, in 1319, Villani tells us that John XXII assumed to
himself the control of all prebends in every collegiate church, from the sale
of which he gathered immense sums. Finally the assertion was made that the Holy
See owned all benefices and in the rules of the papal Chanceries appear the
prices to be charged for them, whether with or without cure of souls, showing
that the traffic had become an established source of revenue. Even the rights
of lay patrons and founders were disregarded and in the provisions granted by
the popes there was a special clause derogating their claims. Partly this
patronage was used for direct profit, partly it was employed for the benefit of
the cardinals and their retainers, on whom pluralities were heaped with
unstinted hand, and the further refinement was introduced of granting to them
pensions imposed on benefices and monastic foundations. Abbeys, also, were
bestowed in commendam on titular abbots who collected the revenues
through stewards, with little heed to the maintenance of the inmates or the
performance of the offices. In the eager desire to anticipate these profits of
simony, vacancies were not awaited, and rights of succession, under the name of expectatives, were given or sold in advance. The deplorable results of
this spiritual commerce were early apparent and formed the subject of bitter
lamentation and complaint, but to no purpose. In the thirteenth century Bishop
Grosseteste and St Louis assailed it in vigorous terms; in the fourteenth,
Bishop Alvar Pelayo, a penitentiary of John XXII, was equally fearless and
unsparing in his denunciation. In 1385 Charles V of France asserted in an
ordonnance that the Cardinals had absorbed all the preferment in the
kingdom-benefices, abbeys, orphanages, hospitals etc. exacting revenue to the
utmost and leaving the institutions disabled and the fabric to fall into ruin.
At the Council of Siena, in 1423, the French prelates declared that all the
benefices in France were sold by the Curia, so that the churches were reduced
to desolation. In 1475 the Abbot of Abbots of the great Cistercian Order
complained that all the abbeys in France were held in commendam, and
consequently were laid waste. England in self-defense had enacted, in the
fourteenth century, the Statutes of Provisors and Praemunire; while in 1438
France protected herself with the Pragmatic Sanction, but other nations lacked
the strength or the resolution to do likewise and the resultant irritation
continued to grow ominously. In Spain, which refused to throw off the yoke as
late as 1547, the Primate Siliceo of Toledo asserted, in a memorial to Charles
V, that there were then in Rome five or six thousand Spaniards engaged in
bargaining for benefices, “such being, for our sins, the present custom”; and
he added that in every cathedral chapter in the land the majority of canons had
been either hostlers in Home or traders in benefices who scarce knew grammar
enough to read their hours.
In this
absorption of patronage the feature most provocative of friction with the
sovereigns was the claim gradually advanced to nominate bishops; for these
prelates were mostly temporal lords of no little influence, and in the
political schemes of the papacy the character of its nominees might well create
uneasiness in the State. Quarrels over the exercise of this power were of
frequent occurrence. Venice, for instance, which was chronically in open or
concealed hostility to Rome, was very sensitive as to the fidelity of its
acquisitions on the mainland, where a bishop who was the agent of an enemy
might be the source of infinite mischief. Thus, in 1485, there was a struggle
over the vacant see of Padua, in which Venice triumphed by sequestrating other
revenues of Cardinal Michiel, appointed by Innocent VIII. Again, in 1491, a
contest arose over the patriarchate of Aquileia, the primatial see of Venetia,
resulting in the exile of the celebrated humanist Ermolao Barbaro, on whom
Innocent had bestowed it, and the see remained vacant until Alexander VI
accepted Niccolo Donato, the Venetian nominee. In 1505 Julius II refused to
confirm a bishop appointed by the Signoria to the see of Cremona, as he
designed the place for his favorite nephew Galeotto della Rovere; he held out
for two years and finally compromised for a money payment to the Cardinal. So,
when the latter died in 1508, Venice filled his see of Vicenza with Jacopo
Dandolo, while Julius gave it to another nephew, Sisto della Rovere, and the
unseemly contest over the bishopric lasted for years. Matters were scarce
better between the Holy See and its crusader Matthias Corvinus. A serious
breach was occasioned, in 1465, by the effort of Paul II to enforce his claims;
but Matthias took a position so aggressive that finally Sixtus IV conceded the
point and confirmed his appointments. The quarrel was renewed in 1480, over the
see of Modrus, which Sixtus wanted for a retainer of his nephew, Cardinal
Giuliano della Rovere. The King told Sixtus that Hungary, in her customary
spirit, would rather, for a third time, cut herself loose from the Catholic
Church and go over to the infidel than permit the benefices of the land to be
appropriated in violation of the royal right of presentation; but, after
holding out for three years, he submitted. He was more successful, in 1485,
when he gave the archbishopric of Gran to Ippolito d'Este, who was a youth
under age, and when Innocent VIII remonstrated he retorted that the Pope had
granted such favors to many less worthy persons; any person appointed by the
Pope might bear the title, but Ippolito should enjoy the revenues. He carried
his point and, in 1487, Ippolito took possession.
Spain was still
less patient. Even under so weak a monarch as Henry IV Sixtus failed to secure
for his worthless nephew, Cardinal Piero Riario, the archbishopric of Seville,
which fell vacant in 1473 through the death of Alfonso de Fonseca. Although he
had been regularly appointed the Spaniards refused to receive Riario, and the
see was administered by Pero Gonzalez Mendoza, Bishop of Siguenza, until 1482,
when it was filled by Iñigo Manrique. The stronger and abler Ferdinand of
Aragon was even more recalcitrant. He adopted the most arbitrary measures to
secure the archbishopric of Saragossa for his natural son Alfonso against
Ausias Dezpuch, the nominee of Sixtus IV. Still more decisive was the struggle
in Castile over the see of Cuenca, in 1482, to which Sixtus appointed a Genoese
cousin. Ferdinand and Isabel demanded that Spanish bishoprics should be filled
only with Spaniards of their selection, to which Sixtus replied that all
benefices were in the gift of the Pope and that his power, derived from Christ,
was unlimited. The sovereigns answered by calling home all their subjects
resident at the papal Court and threatening to take steps for the convocation
of a General Council. This brought Sixtus to terms; he sent a special nuncio to
Spain, but they refused to receive him and stood on their dignity until
Cardinal Mendoza, then Archbishop of Toledo, intervened, when, on Sixtus
withdrawing his pretensions, they allowed themselves to be reconciled.
Ferdinand and his successor Charles V displayed the same vigor in resisting the
encroachments of the cardinals when they seized upon vacant abbacies which
happened to belong to the patronage of the Crown. It marks the abasement to
which the Holy Roman Empire had fallen when we hear that Sixtus confirmed to
Frederick III and his son Maximilian a privilege granted by Eugenius IV to
nominate to the sees of Brixen, Trent, Gurk, Triest, Coire, Vienna, and
Wienerisch-Neustadt, adding thereto the presentation to three hundred
benefices.
These cases have
a double interest as illustrating the growing tension between the Holy See and
secular potentates and the increasing disposition to meet its claims with scant
measure of respect. It was constantly arrogating to itself enlarged
prerogatives and the sovereigns were less and less inclined to submission. But,
whether exercised by King or Pope, the distribution of ecclesiastical patronage
had become simple jobbery, to reward dependents or to gain pecuniary or
political advantage, without regard to the character of the incumbent or the
sacred duties of the office. These evils were aggravated by habitual and
extravagant pluralism, of which the Holy See set an example eagerly imitated by
the sovereigns. Bishoprics and benefices were showered upon the Cardinals and
their retainers, and upon the favorites of the Popes in all parts of Europe,
whose revenues were drawn to Rome, to the impoverishment of each locality;
while the functions for which the revenues had been granted remained for the
most part unperformed, to the irritation of the populations. Rodrigo Borgia
(subsequently Alexander VI), created Cardinal in his youth by his uncle
Calixtus III, accumulated benefices to the aggregate of 70,000 ducats a year.
Giuliano della Rovere (Julius II) likewise owed his cardinalate to his uncle
Sixtus IV, who bestowed on him also the archbishopric of Avignon and the
bishoprics of Bologna, Lausanne, Coutances, Viviers, Mende, Ostia, and
Velletri, with the abbeys of Nonantola and Grottaferrata. Another Cardinal
nephew of Sixtus was Piero Riario, who held a crowd of bishoprics yielding him
60,000 ducats a year, which he lavished in shameless excesses, dying deeply in
debt. But this abuse was not confined to Rome. A notable example is that of
Jean, son of Rene II, Duke of Lorraine. Born in 1498, he was in 1501 appointed coadjutor
to his uncle Henri, Bishop of Metz, after whose death in 1505 Jean took
possession in 1508, and held the see until 1529. He then resigned it in favor
of his nephew Nicholas, aged four, but reserved the revenues and right of
resumption in case of death or resignation. In 1517 he became also Bishop of
Toul and in 1518 of Terouanne, besides obtaining the cardinalate. In 1521 he
added the sees of Valence and Die, in 1523 that of Verdun. Then followed the
three archbishoprics of Narbonne, Reims, and Lyons in 1524, 1533 and 1537. In
1536 he obtained the see of Alby, soon afterwards that of Macon, in 1541 that
of Agen, and in 1542 that of Nantes. In addition he held the abbeys of Gorze,
Fecamp, Cluny, Marmoutiers, St Ouen, St Jean de Laon, St Germer, St Medard of
Soissons, and St Mansuy of Toul. The see of Verdun he resigned to his nephew
Nicholas on the same terms as that of Metz and when the latter, in 1548,
abdicated in order to marry Marguerite d'Egmont, he resumed them both. The
archbishopric of Reims he resigned in 1538 in favour of his nephew Charles, and
Lyons he abandoned in 1539. In spite of the enormous revenues derived from
these scandalous pluralities his extravagance kept him always poor and we can
imagine the condition, spiritual and temporal, of the churches and abbeys thus
consigned to the negligence of a worldly prelate whose life was spent in
Courts. It was bad enough when these pluralists employed coadjutors to look
after their numerous prelacies, but worse when they farmed them out to the
highest bidder.
Another
ecclesiastical abuse severely felt by all sovereigns who were jealous of their
jurisdiction and earnest in enforcing justice was the exemption enjoyed by all
ranks of the clergy from the authority of the secular tribunals. They were
justiciable only by the spiritual Courts, which could pronounce no judgments of
blood, and whose leniency towards clerical offenders virtually assured to them
immunity from punishment-an immunity long maintained in English jurisprudence
under the well-known name of Benefit of Clergy. So complete was the freedom of
the priesthood from all responsibility to secular authority that the ingenuity
of the doctors was taxed to find excuses for the banishment of Abiathar by
Solomon. The evil of this consisted not only in the temptation to crime which
it offered to those regularly bred to the Church and performing its functions,
but it attracted to the lower orders of the clergy, which were not bound to
celibacy or debarred from worldly pursuits, numberless criminals and vagabonds,
who were thus enabled to set the officers of justice at defiance. The first
defense of a thief or assassin when arrested was to claim that he belonged to
the Church and to display his tonsure, and the episcopal officials were
vigilant in the defense of these wretches, thus stimulating crime and
grievously impeding the administration of justice. Frequent efforts were made
by the secular authorities to remedy these evils; but the Church resolutely
maintained its prerogatives, provoking quarrels which led to increased
antagonism between the laity and the clergy. The Gravamina of the German
Nation, adopted by the Diet of Nurnberg, in 1522, stated no more than the truth
in asserting that this clerical immunity was responsible for countless cases of
adultery, robbery, coining, arson, homicide, and false-witness committed by
ecclesiastics; and there was peculiar significance in the declaration that,
unless the clergy were subjected to the secular Courts, there was reason to
fear an uprising of the people, for no justice was to be had against a clerical
offender in the spiritual tribunals.
Venice was
peculiarly sensitive as to this interference with social order, and it is well
known how her insistence on her right to enforce the laws on all offenders led
to the prolonged rupture between the Republic and Paul V in the early years of
the seventeenth century. It was a special concession to her when, in 1474,
Sixtus IV admitted that, in view of the numerous clerical counterfeiters and
State criminals, such offenders might be tried by secular process, with the
assistance, however, of the vicar of the Patriarch of Aquileia. The extent of
the abuse is indicated by an order of Leo X, in 1514, to the governor of
Ascoli, authorizing him, for the sake of the peace of the community, to hand
over to the secular courts all criminal married clerks who did not wear
vestment and tonsure. What exasperating use could be made of this clerical
privilege was shown, in 1478, in the Florentine conspiracy of the Pazzi, which
was engineered, with the privity of Sixtus IV, by his nephew Girolamo Riario.
The assassins were two clerics, Stefano da Bagnoni and Antonio Maffei; they
succeeded in killing Giuliano de' Medici and wounding Lorenzo, during the mass,
thus adding sacrilege to murder, while Salviati, Archbishop of Pisa, was
endeavoring to seize the palace of the Signoria. The enraged populace promptly
hanged Salviati, the two assassins were put to death, and Cardinal Raffaelle
Sansoni Riario, another papal nephew, who was suspiciously in Florence as the
guest of the Pazzi, was imprisoned. Sixtus had the effrontery to complain
loudly of the violation of the liberties of the Church and to demand of
Florence satisfaction, including the banishment of Lorenzo. The Cardinal was liberated
after a few weeks, during which he was detained as a hostage for the
Florentines who were in Rome, but this did not appease Sixtus. He laid Florence
under an interdict, which was not observed, and a local Council was assembled
which issued a manifesto denouncing the Pope as a servant of adulterers and a
vicar of Satan and praying God to liberate His Church from a pastor who was a
ravening wolf in sheep's clothing. The pretensions of the Church were evidently
becoming unendurable to the advancing intelligence of the age; it was
forfeiting human respect and there was a dangerous tendency abroad to treat it
as a secular institution devoid of all special claim to reverence.
This was not the
only manner in which the papacy interfered with secular justice, for, towards
the end of the fifteenth century, the papal jurisdiction spread its aegis over
the crimes of the laity as well as of the clergy. Since the early thirteenth
century the papal Penitentiary had been accustomed to administer absolution, in
the forum of conscience, to all applicants. In the fourteenth this came to be a
source of profit to the Curia by reason of the graduated scale of fees demanded
and the imposition of so-called pecuniary penance by which the sinner purchased
pardon of his sins. When the Castilian Inquisition began its operation in 1481,
the New Christians, as the Jewish converts were called, hurried in crowds to
Rome where they had no difficulty in obtaining from the Penitentiary absolution
for whatever heretical crimes they might have committed; and they then claimed
that this exempted them from subsequent inquisitorial prosecution. Even those
who had been condemned were able to procure for a consideration letters setting
aside the sentence and rehabilitating them. It was no part of the policy of
Ferdinand and Isabel to allow impunity to be thus easily gained by the
apostates or to forego the abundant confiscations flowing into the royal
treasury, and therefore they refused to admit that such papal briefs were valid
without the royal approval. Sixtus, on his part, was not content to lose the
lucrative business arising from Spanish intolerance, and, in 1484, by the
constitution Quoniam nonnulli he refuted the assertion that his briefs
were valid only in the forum conscientiae and not in the forum
contentiosum and ordered them to be received as absolute authority in all
Courts, secular as well as ecclesiastical. This was asserting an appellate
jurisdiction over all the criminal tribunals of Christendom, and, through the
notorious venality of the Curia, where these letters of absolution could always
be had for a price, it was a serious blow to the administration of justice
everywhere. Not content with this, the power was delegated to the peripatetic
vendors of indulgences, who thus carried impunity for crime to every man's
door. The St Peter's indulgences, sold by Tetzel and his colleagues, were of
this character and not only released the purchasers from all spiritual
penalties but forbade all secular or criminal prosecution. These monstrous
pretensions were reiterated by Paul III in 1549 and by Julius III in 1550. It
was impossible for secular rulers tamely to submit to this sale of impunity for
crime. In Spain the struggle against it continued with equal obstinacy on each
side, and it was fortunate that the Reformation came to prevent the Holy See
from rendering all justice, human and divine, a commodity to be sold in open
market.
There was another
of the so-called liberties of the Church which brought it into collision with
temporal princes, the exemption from taxation of all ecclesiastical property,
so vigorously proclaimed by Boniface VIII in the bull Clericis laicos.
Although, under pressure from Philip the Fair, this declaration was annulled by
the Council of Vienne, the principle remained unaffected. The piety of
successive generations had brought so large a portion of the wealth of Europe
-estimated at fully one-third- into the hands of the Church, that the secular
power was becoming more and more disinclined to exempt it from the burdens of
the State. Under Paul II (1464-71) the endeavors of Venice and of Florence to
subject such property to taxation were the cause of serious and prolonged
difficulties with Rome. In fact, the relations between the papacy and the
sovereigns of Europe were becoming more and more strained in every way, as the
transformation took place from the feudal institutions of the Middle Ages to
the monarchical absolutism of the modern era. The nationalities were becoming
organized, save in Germany, with a consciousness of unity that they had never
before possessed and with new aims and aspirations necessitating settled lines
of policy. Less and less they felt themselves mere portions of the great
Christian commonwealth under the supreme guidance of the Vicar of Christ, and
less and less were they inclined to submit to his commands or to permit his
interference with their affairs. In 1464 Louis XI forbade the publication of
papal bulls until they should be submitted to him and receive the royal
exequatur. Spain followed his example and this became the settled policy of all
sovereigns able to assert their independence.
The
incompatibility between the papal pretensions and the royal prerogative was
intensified not only by the development of the monarchies but by the increasing
secularization of the Holy See. It had long been weighted down by its
territorial possessions which led it to subordinate its spiritual duties to its
acquisitive ambition. When, about 1280, Nicholas III offered the cardinalate to
the Blessed John of Parma, he refused it, saying that he could give good
counsel if there was any one to listen to him; but that in Rome salvation of
souls was of small account in comparison with wars and intrigues. So it had
been and so it continued to be. The fatal necessity of defending the Patrimony
of St Peter against the assaults of unscrupulous neighbors and the even more
fatal eagerness to extend its boundaries governed the papal policy to the
virtual exclusion of loftier aims. Even the transfer to Avignon did not serve
to release the Holy See from these chains which bound it to the earth, as was
seen in the atrocious war waged by Clement V to gain Ferrara, in the long
contest of John XXII with the Visconti, and in the bloody subjugation of
revolted communities by Cardinal Albornoz as legate of Urban V. The earlier
half of the fifteenth century was occupied with the Great Schism and the
struggle between the papacy and the General Councils; but, on the final and
triumphant assertion of papal absolutism, the Popes became to all intents and
purposes mere secular princes, to whom religion was purely an instrument for
supplementing territorial weakness in the attainment of worldly ends.
Religion was, in
fact, a source of no little strength, increasing the value of the papacy as an
ally and its power as an enemy. Among the transalpine nations, at least, there
was still enough reverence felt for the Vicar of Christ to render open rupture
undesirable. Then there remained the sentence of excommunication and interdict,
a force in reserve always to be borne in mind by hostile States. There was also
the supreme authority to bind and to loose, whereby a Pope could always release
himself from inconvenient agreements and was absolved from observing any
compacts, while, if the conscience of an ally chanced to be tender, it could be
relieved in the same manner. Still more important was the inexhaustible source
of revenue derived from the headship of the Church and the power of the
keys-the levying of annates and tithes and the sale of dispensations,
absolutions and indulgences. These were exploited in every way that ingenuity
could suggest, draining Europe of its substance for the maintenance of papal
armies and fleets and of a Court unrivalled in its sumptuous magnificence,
until the Holy See was everywhere regarded with detestation. It was this
temporal sovereignty which rendered possible the existence of such a succession
of pontiffs as disgraced the end of the fifteenth and commencement of the
sixteenth century, such careers as those of Alexander VI and Cesare Borgia,
such a catastrophe as the sack of Rome in 1527. Even before these evils had
grown to such appalling magnitude, Dante had expressed the opinion of all
thoughtful men in deploring the results which had followed the so-called
Donation of Constantine. By the middle of the fifteenth century Lorenzo Valla,
in his demonstration of the fraud, assumed that the corruption of the Church
and the wars which desolated Italy were its direct consequence, and few more
eloquent and powerful indictments of the papacy are to be found than the bold
utterances in which he warned the Holy See that princes and peoples could not
much longer endure its tyranny and wickedness. Remonstrances and warnings were
in vain; the papacy became more and more secularized, and, as the pressure grew
more inexorable, men asked themselves why, if the headship of St Peter were
founded on Christ's injunction to feed His sheep, St Peter’s successor employed
that headship rather to shear and slaughter.
Papal history, in
fact, as soon as the Holy See had vindicated its supremacy over general
councils, becomes purely a political history of diplomatic intrigues, of
alliances made and broken, of military enterprises. In following it no one
would conclude, from internal evidence, that the papacy represented interests
higher than those of any other petty Italian prince, or that it claimed to be
the incarnation of a faith divinely revealed to ensure peace on earth and
goodwill to man, save when, occasionally in a papal letter, an unctuous
expression is employed to shroud some peculiarly objectionable design. The
result of this, even in the hands of a man like Pius II, not wholly without
loftier impulses, is seen in his complaint, March 12, 1462, to the Milanese
envoy. All the States of Italy, he said, were hostile, save Naples and Milan,
in both of which the existing governments were precarious; his own subjects
were always on the brink of revolt, and many of his Cardinals were on the side
of France, which was threatening him with a Council and was ready to provoke a
schism unless he would abandon Ferdinand of Naples for Rene of Anjou. France,
moreover, dragged Spain and Burgundy with her, while Germany was equally
unfriendly. The powerful Archbishop of Mainz was hostile and was supported by
most of the princes, who were offended at the papal relations with the
powerless Frederick III, and he, again, was at war with the King of Hungary,
while the King of Bohemia was half a heretic. The position was no better under
his successor, Paul II, who, at his death in 1471, left the Holy See without a
friend in Italy; everywhere it was regarded with hatred and distrust. Under
Sixtus IV there was no improvement; and, in 1490, Innocent VIII threatened to
leave Italy and find a refuge elsewhere. He had not a friend or an ally; the
treasury was exhausted; the barons of the Patrimony were rebellious; and
Ferdinand of Naples openly talked of entering Rome, lance in rest, to teach the
Pope to do justice. The Church had conquered heresy, it had overcome schism,
there was no question of faith to distract men’s minds, yet this was the
antagonistic position which the Head of Christendom had forced upon the nations
whose allegiance it claimed.
Selfish
policy of the Popes.
During the
half-century preceding the Reformation there was constant shifting of scene;
enemies were converted into allies and allies into enemies, but the spirit of
the papacy remained the same, and, whatever might be the political combination
of the moment, the Christian nations at large regarded it as a possible enemy,
whose friendship was not to be trusted, for it was always fighting for its own
hand, or rather, as the increasing nepotism of successive pontiffs ruled its
policy, for the aggrandizement of worthless scions of the papal stock, such as
Girolamo Riario or Franceschetto Cibo or Cesare Borgia. Julius II, it is true,
was less addicted to nepotism, and made and broke treaties and waged war for
the enlargement of the papal territories, producing on the awakening
intelligence of Europe the impression which Erasmus condenses in such a way as
to show how threatening was the spirit evoked by the secularization of the Holy
See. In the Encomium Mortae, written in 1510, he describes the spiritual
and material weapons employed by the Popes, against those who, at the
instigation of the devil, seek to nibble at the Patrimony of St Peter, fighting
not only with bulls of excommunication but with fire and sword, to the shedding
of much Christian blood, and believing themselves to be defending the Church
against her enemies, as if she could have any worse enemies than impious
pontiffs. Leo X followed with a pale imitation of the policy of Alexander VI,
his object being the advancement of the Medici family and the preservation of
the papal dominions in the fierce strife between France and Spain. To him the
papacy was a personal possession out of which the possessor was expected to
make the most, religion being an entirely subordinate affair. His conception of
his duties is condensed in the burst of exultation attributed to him on his
election, “Let us enjoy the papacy since God has given it to us!”
Under the
circumstances the Holy See could inspire neither respect nor confidence.
Universal distrust was the rule between the States, and the papacy was merely a
State whose pretensions to care for the general welfare of Christendom were
recognized as diplomatic hypocrisy. When, in 1462, Pius II took the desperate
step of resolving to lead in person the proposed Crusade, he explained that
this was the only way to convince Europe of his sincerity. When he levied a
tithe, he said, for the war with the infidel, appeal was made to a future
Council; when he issued indulgences he was accused of greed; whatever was done
was attributed to the desire to raise money, and no one trusted the papal word;
like a bankrupt trader, he was without credit. This distrust of the papacy with
regard to its financial devices for the prosecution of the war with the Turk
was universally entertained, and it lent a sharper edge to the dissatisfaction
of those called upon to contribute. At the Diet of Frankfort in 1454 and at the
Congress of Mantua in 1459, the overwhelming danger to Europe from the Turkish
advance failed to stimulate the princes to action; for they asserted that the papal
purpose was to get their money, and not to fight the infidel. In this some
injustice was done to Calixtus III and Pius II who at heart were earnest in the
crusading spirit, but it was justified in the case of their successors. Men saw
large sums raised ostensibly for that object by tithes on ecclesiastical
revenues, and by the innumerable crusading indulgences which were preached
wherever the secular authorities would permit, while no effective measures were
adopted to oppose the Turk. It is true that in 1480 the capture of Otranto
caused a panic throughout Italy which forced the Italian States to unite for
its recovery; but scarce was this accomplished, in 1481, when Sixtus IV, in
alliance with Venice, plunged into a war with Naples, and, after he had been
forced to make peace, turned his arms against his ally and gave 50,000 ducats
to equip a fleet against the Republic, ducats probably supplied by the
crusading indulgence which he had just published.
Such had in fact
been the papal practice, since in the thirteenth century Gregory IX had
proclaimed that the home interests of the Holy See were more important than the
defense of the Holy Land and that crusading money could be more advantageously
expended in Italy than in Palestine. There was no scruple about applying to the
needs of the moment money derived from any source whatever and, in spite of the
large amounts raised under the pretext of crusades which never started, the
extravagance of the papal Court and its military enterprises left it almost always
poor. Popes and Cardinals rivaled each other in the sumptuousness of their
buildings. Never were religious solemnities and public functions performed with
such profuse magnificence, nor was greater liberality exercised in the
encouragement of art and literature. Paul II had a sedia gestatoria built for the Christmas ceremonies of 1466 which was an artistic wonder,
costing, according to popular report, more than a palace. Yet this Pope so
managed his finances that on his death, in 1471, he left behind him an enormous
treasure in money and jewels and costly works of antique art; we hear of pearls
inventoried at 300,000 ducats, the gold and jewels of two tiaras appraised at
300,000 more, and other precious stones and ornaments at 1,000,000. All this
was wasted by Sixtus IV on his worthless kindred and on the wars in which he
was involved for their benefit; and he left the treasury deeply in debt. His
successor, Innocent VIII, was equally reckless and was always in straits for
money, though his son, Franceschetto Cibo, could coolly lose in a single night
14,000 ducats to Cardinal Riario, and in another 8000 to Cardinal Balue. The
pontificate of Alexander VI was notorious for the splendor of its banquets and
public solemnities, as well as for the enormous sums consumed in the ambitious
enterprises of Cesare Borgia. Julius II lavished money without stint on his
wars as well as on architecture and art; yet he left 200,000 ducats in the
treasury besides jewels and regalia to a large amount. The careless magnificence
of Leo X, his schemes for the aggrandizement of his family, and his patronage
of art and letters, soon exhausted this reserve as well as all available
sources of revenue; he was always in need of money and employed ruinous
expedients to raise it; when he died he left nothing but debts, through which
his nearest friends were ruined, and a treasury so empty that at his funeral
the candles used were those which had already seen service at the obsequies of
Cardinal Riario. When we consider that this lavish and unceasing expenditure,
incurred to gratify the ambition and vanity of successive Vicars of Christ, was
ultimately drawn from the toil of the peasantry of Europe, and that probably
the larger part of the sums thus exacted disappeared in the handling before the
residue reached Rome, we can understand the incessant complaints of the
oppressed populations, and the hatred which was silently stored up to await the
time of explosion. Thus, we may reasonably conclude that in its essence the
Reformation was due more largely to financial than to religious considerations.
The terrible indictment of the papacy which Ulrich von Hütten addressed to Leo
X, December 1, 1517, contains not a word about faith or doctrine; the whole
gravamen consists in the abuse of power-the spoliations, the exactions, the
oppression, the sale of dispensations and pardons, the fraudulent devices
whereby the wealth of Germany was cunningly transferred to Rome, and the
stirring up of strife among Christians in order to defend or to extend the Patrimony
of St Peter.
In every way the
revenues thus enjoyed and squandered by the Curia were scandalous and
oppressive. To begin with, the cost of their collection was enormous. The
accounts of the papal agent for first-fruits in Hungary, for the year 1320,
show that of 1913 florins collected only 732 reached the papal treasury. With a
more thorough organization in later periods the returns were better; but when
the device was adopted of employing bankers to collect the proceeds of annates
and indulgences, the share allotted to those who conducted the business and
made advances, was ruinously large. In the contract for the fateful St Peter's
indulgence with the Fuggers of Augsburg, their portion of the receipts was to
be fifty per cent. Even worse was it when these revenues were farmed out, for
the banker who depended for his profits on the extent of his sales or
collections was not likely to be overnice in his methods, nor to exercise much
restraint over his agents. Europe was overrun with pardon-sellers who had
purchased letters empowering them to sell indulgences, whether of a general
character or for some church or hospital; and for centuries their lies, their
frauds, their exactions, and their filthy living were the cause of the
bitterest and most indignant complaints
Even more
demoralizing were the revenues derived from the sale of countless dispensations
for marriage within the prohibited degrees, for the holding of pluralities, for
the numerous kinds of “irregularities” and other breaches of the canon law; so
that its prescriptions might almost seem to have been framed for the purpose of
enabling the Holy See to profit by their violation. Not less destructive to
morals were the absolutions, which amounted to a sale of pardons for sin of
every description, as though the Decalogue had been enacted for this very
purpose. There was also a thriving business done in the composition for unjust
gains, whereby fraudulent traders, usurers, robbers, and other malefactors, on
paying to the Church a portion of their illegal acquisitions, were released
from the obligation of making restitution. In every way the power of the keys
and the treasure of the merits of Christ were exploited, without any regard for
moral consequences.
Deplorable as was
this effacement of the standards of right and wrong, all these were at least
voluntary payments which perhaps rather predisposed the thoughtless in favor of
the Church who so benignantly exercised her powers to relieve the weakness of
human nature. It was otherwise however with the traffic in benefices and expectatives which filled the parishes and chapters with unworthy incumbents, not only
neglectful of their sacred duties but seeking to recoup themselves for their
expenditure by exactions from their subjects. A standing grievance was the
exaction of the annates, which, since their regulation by Boniface IX and the
fruitless effort of the Council of Basel to abolish them, continued to be the
source of bitter complaint. They consisted of a portion, usually computed at
one-half, of the estimated revenue of a benefice, worth twenty-five florins or
more, collected on every change of incumbents. Thus the archbishopric of Rouen
was taxed at 12,000 florins and the little see of Grenoble at 300; the great
abbacy of Saint Denis at 6000 and the little Saint Ciprian of Poitiers at 33,
while all parish cures in France were rated uniformly at 24 ducats, equivalent
to about 30 florins. As though these burdens were not enough, pensions on
benefices and religious houses were lavishly granted to the favorites of Popes
and Cardinals; for the Pope was master of all Church property and was limited
in its distribution by nothing but his own discretion. Thus the people on whom
these burdens ultimately fell were taught to hate the clergy as the clergy hated
the Holy See. Of all its oppressions, however, that which excited the fiercest
clerical antagonism was the power which it exercised of demanding a tithe of
all ecclesiastical revenues whenever money was needed, under the pretext,
generally, of carrying on the war with the infidel. As early as 1240, Gregory
IX called for a twentieth to aid him in his struggle with Frederick II, and his
Legate at the Council of Senlis forced the French Bishops to give their assent;
but St Louis interposed and forbade it. Nevertheless, Franciscan emissaries
were sent to collect it under threats of excommunication, causing, as St Louis
declared, so great a hatred of the Holy See that only the strenuous exercise of
the royal power kept the Gallican Church in the Roman obedience. He
subsequently took measures to protect it from these exactions without the royal
assent, but Germany was defenseless and the papal demands were here the source
of bitter exasperation and resistance. When in 1354 his Italian wars caused
Innocent VI to impose a tithe on the German clergy, the whole Church of the
Empire rose in indignation, and was ready to resort to any extremity of
opposition. Frederick, Bishop of Ratisbon, seized the papal collector, and
confined him in a castle, while the papal Nuncio, the Bishop of Cavaillon, with
his assistant, narrowly escaped an ambush set for his life. A similar storm was
aroused when, in 1372, Gregory XI repeated the levy; the clergy of Mainz bound
themselves by a solemn mutual agreement not to pay it, while Frederick,
Archbishop of Cologne, pledged his assistance to his clergy in their refusal to
submit. Despite this resistance, the papacy prevailed, but, with the decline of
respect for the Holy See in the second half of the fifteenth century, it was
not always able to enforce its demands. When at the Congress of Mantua, in
1459, Pius II levied a tithe for his crusade, the German princes refused to
allow it to be collected and he prudently shrank from the issue. In 1487,
Innocent VIII repeated the attempt, but the German clergy protested so
energetically that he was forced to abandon his intention. When, in 1500,
Alexander VI adopted the same expedient, Henry VII permitted the collection in
England; but the French clergy refused to pay. They were consequently excommunicated;
whereupon they asked the University of Paris whether the excommunication was
valid and, on receiving a negative answer, quietly continued to perform their sacred functions. The University, in fact, had long paid little respect to
papal utterances. When Eugenius IV and Nicholas V ordered the prosecution as
heretics of those who taught the doctrines of John of Poilly respecting the
validity of confessions to Mendicant Friars, the University denounced the bulls
as surreptitious and not to be obeyed; and this position it held persistently
until the Holy See was obliged to give way. There evidently were ample causes
of dissension in the Church between its head and its members and the tension
continued to increase.
An even more
potent, because more constant, source of antagonism was the venality of the
Curia and its pitiless exactions from the multitudes who were obliged to have
recourse to it. This had always been the case since the Holy See had succeeded
in concentrating in itself the supreme jurisdiction, original and appellate, so
that all questions concerning the spirituality could be brought before it. At
the Council of St Baseul, in 992, Arnoul of Orleans unhesitatingly denounced
Rome as a place where justice was put up to auction for the highest bidder; and
similar complaints continue through the Middle Ages with ever-increasing
vehemence, as its sphere of operations widened and its system became more
intricate and more perfect. As Dietrich of Nieheim says, it was a gulf which
swallowed everything, a sea into which all rivers poured without its
overflowing, and happy was he who could escape its clutches without being
stripped. Even Aeneas Sylvius, before he attained the papacy, had no scruple in
asserting that everything was for sale in Rome and that nothing was to be had
there without money. The enormous business concentrated in the holy city from
every corner of Christendom required a vast army of officials who were
supported by fees and whose numbers were multiplied oppressively, especially after
Boniface IX had introduced the sale of offices as a financial expedient. Thus,
in 1487, when Sixtus IV desired to redeem his tiara and jewels, pledged for a
loan of 100,000 ducats, he increased his secretaries from six to twenty-four
and required each to pay 2600 florins for the office. In 1503, to raise funds
for Cesare Borgia, Alexander VI created eighty new offices and sold them for
760 ducats apiece. Julius II formed a “college” of a hundred and one scriveners
of papal briefs, in return for which they paid him 74,000 ducats. Leo X
appointed sixty chamberlains and a hundred and forty squires, with certain
perquisites for which the former paid him 90,000 ducats and the latter 112,000.
Places thus paid for were personal property, transferable by sale; and Leo X
levied a commission of five per cent, on such transactions, and then made over
the proceeds to Cardinal Tarlato, a retainer of the Medici family. Burchard
tells us that in 1483 he bought the mastership of ceremonies from his
predecessor Patrizzi for 450 ducats, which covered all expenses, and that in
1505 he vainly offered Julius II 2000 for a vacant scrivenership; but soon
afterwards he bought the succession to an abbreviatorship for 2040. As Burchard
was still master of ceremonies and Bishop of Orta it is evident that this was
simply an investment for the fees of an office which carried with it no duties.
The whole
machinery was thus manifestly devised for the purpose of levying as large a tax
as possible on the multitudes whose necessities brought them to the Curia, and
its rapacity was proverbial. The hands through which every document passed were
multiplied to an incredible degree and each one levied his share upon it.
Besides, there were heavy charges which do not appear in the rules of the Chancery
and which doubtless enured to the benefit of the papal Camera, so that the
official tax-tables bear but a slender proportion to the actual cost of briefs
to suitors. Thus certain briefs obtained for the city of Cologne, in 1393, of
which the charge, according to the tables, was eleven and a half florins, cost
when delivered 266, and, in 1423, some similar privileges for the abbey of St
Albans were paid for at forty times the amount provided in the tables. Thus the
army of officials constituting the Curia not only cost nothing to the Holy See,
but brought in revenue; and its exactions rendered it an object of execration
throughout Christendom.
Simony.
The
administration of justice was provocative of even greater detestation. The
business flowing in from every part of Europe was necessarily enormous, and the
effort seems to have been not to expedite, but to prolong it, and to render it
as costly as possible to the pleader. We hear incidentally of a suit between
the Teutonic Order and the clergy of Riga, concerning the somewhat trivial
question whether the latter were privileged to wear the vestments of the Order,
in the course of which, in 1430, the agent of the Order writes from Rome that
he had already expended on it 14,000 ducats, and that 6000 more would be
required to bring it to a conclusion. The sale of benefices and expectatives was in itself a most lucrative source of profit to the Roman Courts; for, in
the magnitude and complexity of the business, mistakes, accidental or
otherwise, were frequent, leading to conflicting claims which could be
adjudicated only in Rome. The Gallican Church, assembled at the Council of
Bourges, in 1438, declared that this was the cause of innumerable suits and
contentions between the servants of God; that quarrels and hatreds were
excited, the greed of pluralities was stimulated, the money of the kingdom was
exhausted; pleaders, forced to have recourse to the Roman Courts, were reduced
to poverty, and rightful claims were set aside in favor of those whose greater
cunning or larger means enabled them to profit through the frauds rendered
possible by the complexities of the papal graces. France protected herself by
the Pragmatic Sanction, until its final abrogation, in 1516, by the Concordat
between Francis I and Leo X excited intense dissatisfaction and was one of the
causes which favored the rapid spread of the Lutheran heresy there. Germany had
not been so fortunate, and among the grievances presented, in 1510, to the
Emperor Maximilian was enumerated the granting of expectatives without number,
and often the same to several persons, as giving rise to daily law-suits; so
that the money laid out in the purchase and that expended in the suit were
alike lost, and it became a proverb that whoever obtained an expectative from
Rome ought to lay aside with it one or two hundred gold pieces to be expended
in rendering it effective. Another of the grievances was that cases, which
ought to have been decided at home where there were good and upright judges,
were carried without distinction to Rome. There was, in fact, no confidence
felt in the notoriously venal Roman Courts, and their very name was an
abomination in Germany.
The pressing
necessities of the papacy had found another source of relief which did not bear
so directly on the nations but was an expedient fatally degrading to the
dignity and character of the Holy See. This was the sale of the highest office
in the Church next to the papacy itself : the red hat of the cardinalate. The
reputation of the Sacred College was already rapidly deteriorating through the
nepotism of the Pontiffs, who thrust their kinsmen into it irrespective of
fitness, or yielded to the pressure of monarchs and appointed their unworthy
favorites in order to secure some temporary political advantage. Thus its
decadence and secularization were rapid through the second half of the
fifteenth century; but a lower depth was reached when, in 1500, Alexander VI
created twelve Cardinals from whose appointment Cesare Borgia secured the sum
of 120,000 ducats, and whose character may readily be surmised. In 1503, with
the same object, nine more were appointed and again Cesare obtained between
120,000 and 130,000 ducats. Even Julius II, in his creation of Cardinals in
April, 1511, did not scruple to make some of them pay heavily for the promotion
and in this he was imitated by Leo X in 1517, on the notorious occasion of the
swamping of the Sacred College. It was only a step from this to the purchase of
the papacy itself, and both Alexander VI and Julius II obtained the pontificate
by bribery. So commonly known, indeed, was the venality of the Sacred College
that, at the death of Innocent VIII, in 1492, Charles VIII was currently
reported to have deposited 200,000 ducats and Genoa 100,000 in a Roman bank in
order to secure the election of Giuliano della Rovere; but Rodrigo Borgia
carried off the prize. Under a similar conviction, when, in 1511, Julius II was
thought to be on his death-bed, and the Emperor Maximilian conceived the idea
of securing his own election to the expected vacancy, his first step was to try
to obtain a loan of 200,000 or 300,000 ducats from the Fuggers’ bank on the
security of his jewels and insignia. That Maximilian should have entertained
such a project is a significant illustration of the complete secularization of
the Holy See.
Under such
influences it is no wonder that Rome had become a center of corruption whence
infection was radiated throughout Christendom. In the middle of the fourteenth
century Petrarch exhausts his rhetoric in describing the abominations of the
papal city of Avignon, where everything was vile; and the return of the Curia
to Rome transferred to that city the supremacy in wickedness. In 1499 the
Venetian ambassador describes it as the sewer of the world, and Machiavelli asserts
that through its example all devotion and all religion had perished in Italy.
In 1490 it numbered 6000 public women-an enormous proportion for a population
not exceeding 100,000. The story is well known, how Cardinal Borgia who, as
Vice-Chancellor, openly sold pardons for crime, when reproved for this,
replied, that God desires not the death of sinners but that they should pay and
live. If the Diary of Infessura is suspect on account of his partisanship, that
of Burchard is unimpeachable, and his placid recital of the events passing
under his eyes presents to us a society too depraved to take shame at its own
wickedness. The public marriage, he says, of the daughters of Innocent VIII and
Alexander VI set the fashion for the clergy to have children, and they
diligently followed it; for all, from the highest to the lowest, kept
concubines, while the monasteries were brothels. The official conscience was
illustrated in the Hospital of San Giovanni in Laterano where the confessor,
when he found that a patient had money, would notify the physician, who
thereupon would administer a deadly dose and the two would seize and divide the
spoils. Had the physician contented himself with this industry, he might have
escaped detection ; but he varied it by going into the streets every morning
and shooting with a cross-bow people whose pockets he then emptied, for which
he was duly hanged (May 27, 1500). The foulness of the debaucheries in which
Alexander VI emulated the worst excesses of the pagan empire was possible only
in a social condition of utter corruption; and, as a knowledge of the facts
filtered through the consciousness of Europe, contempt was added to the
detestation so generally entertained for the Holy See. This was ominously
expressed, in 1501, in a letter to Alexander VI from a knight and two
men-at-arms who had despoiled the convent of Weissenburg and had disregarded
the consequent excommunication. Under the canon law this rendered them suspect
of heresy, for which they were summoned to Rome to answer for their faith. They
replied in a tone of unconcealed irony; the journey, they say, is too long, so
they send a profession of faith, including a promise of obedience to a Pope
honestly elected who has not sullied the Holy See with immoralities and
scandals.
In fact, one of
the most urgent symptoms of the necessity of a new order of things was the
complete divorce between religion and morality. There was abundant zeal in
debating minute points of faith, but little in evoking from it an exemplary
standard of life -as Pius II said of the Conventual Franciscans: they were
generally excellent theologians but gave themselves little trouble about
virtue. The sacerdotal system, developed by the dialectics of the Schoolmen,
had constructed a routine of external observances through which salvation was
to be gained not so much by abstinence from sin as by its pardon through the
intervention of the priest, whose supernatural powers were in no way impaired
by the scandals of his daily life. Except within the pale of the pagan
Renaissance, never was there a livelier dread of future punishment, but this
punishment was to be escaped, not by amendment but by confession, absolution,
and indulgences. This frame of mind is exemplified by the condottiere Vitelozzo
Vitelli who, when after a life steeped in crime, he was suddenly strangled by
Cesare Borgia, in 1502, felt no more poignant regret than that he could not
obtain absolution from the Pope-and that Pope was Alexander VI. Society was
thoroughly corrupt, perhaps less so in the lower than in the higher classes,
but no one can read the Lenten sermons of the preachers of the time, even with
full allowance for rhetorical exaggeration, without recognizing that the world
has rarely seen a more debased standard of morality than that which prevailed
in Italy in the closing years of the Middle Ages. Yet at the same time never
were there greater outward manifestations of devotional zeal. A man like San
Giovanni Capistrano could scarce walk the streets of a city without an armed
guard to preserve his life from the surging crowds eager to secure a rag of his
garments as a relic or to carry away some odour of his holiness by touching him
with a stick. Venice, which cared little for an interdict, offered in vain ten
thousand ducats, in 1455, for a seamless coat of Christ. Siena and Perugia went
to war over the wedding-ring of the Virgin. At no period was there greater
faith in the thaumaturgic virtue of images and saintly relics; never were
religious solemnities so gorgeously celebrated ; never were processions so
magnificent or so numerously attended; never were fashionable shrines so
largely thronged by pilgrims. In his Encheiridion Milltis Christiani,
written in 1502 and approved by Adrian VI, then head of the University of
Louvain, Erasmus had the boldness to protest against this new kind of Judaism
which placed its reliance on observances, like magic rites, which drew men away
from Christ; and again, in 1519, in a letter to Cardinal Albrecht of Mainz, he
declared that religion was degenerating into a more than Judaic formalism of
ceremonies, and that there must be a change.
A priesthood
trained in this formalism, which had practically replaced the ethical values of
Christianity, secure that its supernatural attributes were unaffected by the most
flagitious life, and selected by such methods as were practiced by the Curia
and imitated by the prelates, could not be expected to rise above the standards
of the community. Rather, indeed, were the influences, to which the clergy were
exposed, adapted to depress them below the average. They were clothed with
virtually irresponsible power over their subjects, they were free from the
restraints of secular law, and they were condemned to celibacy in times when no
man was expected to be continent. For three hundred years it had been the
constant complaint that the people were contaminated by their pastors and the
complaint continued. After the death of Calixtus III, in 1458, the Cardinals
about to enter the Conclave were told in the address made to them by Domenico
de Domenichi, Bishop of Torcello: “The morals of the clergy are corrupt, they
have become an offence to the laity, all discipline is lost. From day to day
the respect for the Church diminishes; the power of her censures is almost
gone”. In 1519, Briconnet, Bishop of Meaux, in his diocesan synod, did not
shrink from describing the Church as a stronghold of vice, a city of refuge
from transgression, where one could live in safety, free from all fear of
punishment. The antagonism towards the priesthood, thus aroused among the
people, was indicated in the career of Hans Böheim, a wandering musician, who
settled in Niklashausen, where he announced revelations from the Virgin. She
instructed him to proclaim to her people that she could no longer endure the
pride, the avarice, and the lust of the priesthood and that the world would be
destroyed because of their wickedness unless they should speedily amend their
ways. Tithes and tribute should be purely voluntary; tolls and customs dues and
game-preserving should be abolished; Rome had no claim to the primacy of the
Church; purgatory was a figment and he had power to rescue souls from hell. The
fame of the inspired preacher spread far and wide between the Rhineland and
Meissen; crowds from all quarters flocked to hear him and he frequently
addressed assemblages rated at twenty or thirty thousand souls who brought him
rich offerings. In 1476 Rudolf Bishop of Würzburg put an end to this dangerous
propaganda by seizing and burning the prophet, but belief in him continued
until Diether of Mainz placed an interdict on the church of Niklashausen in
order to check the concourse of pilgrims who persisted in visiting it.
Perhaps the most
complete and instructive presentation which we have of the opinions and
aspirations of the medieval populations is embodied in the ample series of the
Spanish Cortes published by the Real Academia de la Historia. In the
petitions or cahiers of these representative bodies we find an uninterrupted
expression of hostility towards the Church, unrelieved by any recognition of
services, whether as the guardian of religious truth or as the mediator between
God and man. To the Castilian of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries it was
simply an engine of oppression, an instrument through which rapacious men could
satisfy their greed and inflict misery on the people by its exactions and its
constantly encroaching jurisdiction, enforced through unrestricted power of
excommunication. Bitter were the reiterated complaints of the immunity which it
afforded to criminals, and there was constant irritation at clerical exemption
from public duties and burdens. In short, it seems to have been regarded as a
public enemy, and the slight respect in which it was held is amply evidenced in
the repeated complaints of the spoliation of churches which were robbed of
their sacred vessels, apparently without compunction.
Popular
attacks on the priests.
The popular
literature of the period similarly reflects this mingled contempt and hatred
for the priesthood. The Franciscan Thomas Murner, who subsequently was one of
the most savage opponents of Luther, in the curious rhymed sermons which, in
1512, he preached in Frankfort-on-the-Main, and which, under the names of the
Schelmenzunft and the Narrenbeschweerung, had a wide popularity, is never tired
of dwelling on the scandals of all classes of the clergy, from bishops to monks
and nuns. All are worldly, rapacious, and sensual. When the lay lord has shorn
the sheep, the priest comes and fairly disembowels it, the begging friar
follows and gets what he can and then the pardoner. If a bishop is in want of
money he sends around his fiscal among the parish priests to extort payment for
the privilege of keeping their concubines. In the nunneries the sister who has
the most children is made the abbess. If Christ were on earth today He would be
betrayed, and Judas would be reckoned an honest man. The devil is really the
ruler of the Church, whose prelates perform his works; they are too ignorant to
discharge their duties and require coadjutors, it would be well for them could
they likewise have substitutes in hell. The wolf preached and sang mass so as
to gather the geese around him, and then seized and ate them; so it is with
prelate and priest who promise all things and pretend to care for souls until
they get their benefices, when they devour their flocks. The immense applause
with which these attacks on the abuses of the Church were everywhere received,
and others of a similar character in Eulenspiegel, Sebastian Brant’s Narrenschiff,
Johann Faber’s Tractatus de Ruine Ecclesie Planctu, and the Encomium
Moriae of Erasmus, their translation into many languages and wide
circulation throughout Europe, show how thoroughly they responded to the
popular feeling, how dangerously the Church had forfeited the respect of the
masses, and how deeply rooted was the aversion which it had inspired. The
priests hated Rome for her ceaseless exactions and the people hated the priests
with perhaps even better reason. So bitter was this dislike that, in 1502,
Erasmus tells us that among laymen to call a man a cleric or a priest or a monk
was an unpardonable insult.
This antagonism
was fostered by the pulpit, which, until the invention of printing and the
diffusion of education, was the only channel of access to the masses. Neglected
by the bishops, involved in worldly cares and indulgence, and by the parish
priests, too ignorant and too indolent to employ it, the duty of preaching
fell, for the most part, to volunteers who, like Thomas Murner, were usually
Mendicant Friars and consequently hostile to the secular clergy. Their
influence on public opinion was great. With coarse and vigorous eloquence they
attacked abuses of all kinds, whether in Church or State, and with an almost
incredible hardihood they aroused the people to a sense of their wrongs. A
favorite topic was the contrast between the misery of the lower classes and the
luxury of the prelates, their hawks and hounds, their splendid retinues and the
lavish adornment of their female companions. The licentiousness of the clergy
was not spared, according to one of them the wealth of the Church only serves
as a pair of bellows to kindle the fires of lust. The earliest of these bold
demagogues of whom we have authentic details was Foulques de Neuilly, who, in
the closing years of the twelfth century, traversed France, calling the people
to repentance and listened to by immense crowds. He was especially severe on
the vices of the clergy, and it is related of him that at Lisieux, to silence
him, they threw him into prison and loaded him with chains; but his saintliness
had won for him thaumaturgic power, and he walked forth unharmed. Thomas
Connecte, a Carmelite of Britanny, was another wandering preacher who produced
an immense impression wherever he went, and we are told that his invectives
against the priesthood won him especial applause; but when, in 1432, he went to
Rome to lash the vices of the Curia he was speedily found to be a heretic and
he perished at the stake. Although St Bonaventura deprecated, on account of the
scandals and quarrels which it provoked, the Mendicant preachers’ habit of
attacking the corruption of the priesthood, it was ever a favorite topic; and
the preaching of such men as Olivier Maillard, Geiler von Kaisersberg, Guillaume
Pepin, Jean Cleree, Michel Menot, and a host of others, unquestionably
contributed largely to stimulate the irresistible impulse which finally
insisted on reform. With the invention of printing their eloquence reached
larger audiences; for their sermons were collected and printed and received a
wide circulation.
The
Councils, Julius II and reform.
That a reform of
the Church in its head and its members was necessary had long been generally
conceded. For more than a century Europe had been clamoring for it. For this it
had gathered its learning and piety at Constance, 1414-18; the Curia had
skillfully eluded the demand and the assembly delegated the task to future
Councils which, by the decree Frequens, it decreed should be convoked at
regular intervals of seven years. In obedience to this decree a Council met at
Pavia and Siena in 1423-4, where the effort was again made and again
frustrated. When the term came around in 1431 and the Church, assembled at
Basel, determined not to be balked again, the resolute energy of the reformers
speedily caused a rupture with the papacy, and the Basilian canons,
aimed at some of the more crying abuses, were steadfastly ignored. The
responsibility thus devolved upon the papacy, which had rendered abortive the
efforts of the Councils and, after its bitter experience at Basel, had
successfully resisted the constantly recurring demands for the enforcement of
the decree Frequens. To meet this responsibility successive Popes, from
Martin V to Leo X, issued reformatory decrees, the promulgation and
non-observance of which only served as an acknowledgment of the evil and of the
impossibility of its correction.
At length, in
1511, the schismatic Council of Pisa, held by the disaffected Cardinals under
the auspices of Louis XII, forced the hand of Julius II, and to checkmate it he
issued a summons for a General Council to assemble in Rome, April 19, 1512, to
resist the schism, to reform the morals of laity and clergy, to bring about
peace between Christian princes and to prosecute the War with the Turk. Not
much was to be hoped of a Council held in Rome under papal presidency; but
Europe took the project seriously. The instructions of the Spanish delegates
ordered them to labor especially for the reformation of the Curia; for the chief
objection of the infidels to Christianity arose from the public and execrable
wickedness of Rome, for which the Pope was accountable. It was apparently to
forestall action that, in March, 1512, Julius appointed a commission of eight
Cardinals to reform the Curia and its officials and, on March 30, he issued a
bull reducing the heavy burden of fees and other exactions. The Fifth Council
of the Lateran assembled a little later than the time appointed, and its
earlier sessions were devoted to obliterating the traces of the schism and
attacking the Pragmatic Sanction of France. Julius died, February 21, 1513, and
to his successor, Leo X, was transferred the management of the Council. To him
Gianfrancesco Pico addressed a memorial recapitulating the evils to be
redressed. The worship of God, he said, was neglected; the churches were held
by pimps and catamites; the nunneries were dens of prostitution; justice was a
matter of hatred or favor; piety was lost in superstition; the priesthood was
bought and sold; the revenues of the Church ministered only to the vilest
excesses, and the people were repelled from religion by the example of their
pastors. The Council made at least a show of attacking these evils. On May 3,
1514, it approved a papal decree which, if enforced, would have cured a small
portion of the abuses; but all subsequent efforts were blocked by quarrels
between the different classes to be reformed. The Council sat until March,
1517, and the disappointment arising from its dissolution, without accomplishing
anything of the long-desired reform, may well have contributed to the eagerness
with which the Lutheran revolt was soon afterwards hailed ; for thoughtful men
everywhere must have been convinced that nothing short of revolution could put
an end to corruption so inexpugnably established. It was the emphatic testimony
of interested observers that the Roman Curia, in its immovable adherence to its
evil ways, was the real cause of the uprising. The papal nuncio Aleander,
writing from the Diet of Worms in 1521, says that the priests are foremost in
the revolt, not for Luther's sake but because through him they can gratify
their long-cherished hatred of Rome; nine Germans out of ten are for Luther,
and the tenth man longs for the destruction of the Roman Curia. Cardinal
Albrecht of Mainz, about the same time, wrote to Pope Leo that it was rare to
find a man who favored the clergy, while a large portion of the priests were
for Luther, and the majority were afraid to stand forth in support of the Roman
Church, so deep was the hatred felt for the Curia and the papal decrees. When
Dr Eck found that his disputatious zeal was a failure, he told Paul III that
the heresy had arisen from the abuses of the Curia, that it had spread in
consequence of the immorality of the clergy, and that it could only be checked
by reform. Adrian VI, in his instructions to his legate at the Diet of Nürnberg
in 1522, admitted the abominations habitual to the Holy See and promised their
removal, but added that it would be a work of time; for the evil was too
complex and too deeply rooted for a speedy cure. Meanwhile he demanded the
execution of the papal sentence against Luther without awaiting the promised
reform; but the German princes replied that this would simply cause rebellion,
for the people would then despair of amendment.
While thus the
primary cause of the Reformation is to be sought in the all-pervading
corruption of the Church and its oppressive exercise of its supernatural
prerogatives, there were other factors conducing to the explosion. Sufficient
provocation had long existed, and since the failure at Basel no reasonable man
could continue to anticipate relief from conciliar action. The shackles which
for centuries had bound the human intellect had to be loosened, before there
could be a popular movement of volume sufficient to break with the traditions
of the past and boldly tempt the dangers of a new and untried career for
humanity. The old reverence for authority had to be weakened, the sense of
intellectual independence had to be awakened and the spirit of enquiry and of
more or less scientific investigation had to be created, before pious and
devout men could reach the root of the abuses which caused so much indignation,
and could deny the authenticity of the apostolical deposit on which had been
erected the venerable and imposing structure of Scholastic Theology and papal
autocracy.
Influence
of the New Learning.
It was the New
Learning and the humanistic movement which supplied the impulse necessary for
this, and they found conditions singularly favorable for their work. The Church
had triumphed so completely over her enemies that the engines of repression had
been neglected and had grown rusty, while the Popes were so engrossed in their
secular schemes and ambition that they had little thought to waste on the
possible tendencies of the fashionable learning which they patronized. Thus
there came an atmosphere of free thought, strangely at variance with the rigid
dogmatism of the theologians, and even in theology there was a certain latitude
of discussion permissible, for the Tridentine decrees had not yet formulated
into articles of faith the results of the debates of the Schoolmen since the
twelfth century. It is a remarkable proof of the prevailing laxity that
Nicholas V commissioned Gianozzo Manetti to make a new translation of the Bible
from the original Hebrew and Greek, thus showing that the Vulgate was regarded
as insufficient and that it enjoyed no such authority as that attributed to it
at Trent. In view of this laxity it is not surprising that in Italy the New
Learning assumed various fantastic shapes of belief, the cult of the Genius of
Rome by Pomponio Leto and his Academy, the Platonism of Marsiglio Ficino, the
practical denial of immortality by Pomponazzi, and the modified Averrhoism of
Agostino Nifo. So long as the profits of the Curia or the authority of the Pope
remained undisputed there was little disposition to trouble the dreamers and
speculators. Savonarola declares, with some rhetorical exaggeration, that
culture had supplanted religion in the minds of those to whom the destinies of
Christianity were confided, until they lost belief in God, celebrated feasts of
the devil, and made a jest of the sacred mysteries. In the polite Court circles
of Leo X, we are told, a man was scarce accounted as cultured and well-bred
unless he cherished a certain amount of heretical opinion; and after Luther’s
doctrines had become rigidly defined Melanchthon is said to have looked back
with a sigh to the days before the Reformation as to a time when there was
freedom of thought. It is true that there was occasional spasmodic repression.
Pico della Mirandola, because of thirteen heretical propositions among the nine
hundred which he offered to defend in 1487, was obliged to fly to Spain and to
make his peace by submission; but, as a rule, the humanists were allowed to air
their fancies in peace. When the disputations of the schools on the question of
the future life became overbold and created scandal, the Lateran Council, in 1513,
forbade the teaching of Averrhoism and of the mortality of the soul; but it did
so in terms which placed little restraint on philosophers who shielded
themselves behind a perfunctory declaration of submission to the judgment of
the Church.
In the intellectual
ferment at work throughout Europe, it was, however, impossible that many devout
Christians should not be led to question details in the theology on which the
Schoolmen had erected the structure of sacerdotal supremacy. Gregor Heimburg
was a layman who devoted his life to asserting the superiority of the secular
power to the ecclesiastical, lending the aid of his learning and eloquence to
the anti-papal side of all the controversies which raged from the time of the
Council of Basel until he died in 1472, absolved at last from the
excommunication which he had richly earned. In 1479 the errors of Pedro de
Osma, a professor of Salamanca, were condemned by the Council of Alcala; they
consisted in denying the efficacy of indulgences, the divine origin and
necessity of confession, and the infallibility and irresponsible autocracy of
the papacy. The same year witnessed the trial at Mainz, by the Cologne
inquisitor, of Johann Rucherath of Wesel, a professor in the University of
Erfurt and one of the most distinguished theologians of Germany. Erfurt was
noted for its humanism and for its adherence to the doctrine of the superiority
of councils over popes, and Johann Rucherath had been uttering his heretical
opinions for many years without opposition. He would probably have been allowed
to continue in peace until the end but for the mortal quarrel between the
Realists and the Nominalists and the desire of the Dominican Thomists to
silence a Nominalist leader. He rejected the authority of tradition and of the
Fathers; he carried predestination to a point which stripped the Church of its
power over salvation and he even struck the word Filioque from the Creed. He
was of course condemned and forced to recant; but the contemporary reporter of
the trial apparently considers that his only serious error was the one
concerning the procession of the Holy Ghost, and he cites various men of
learning who held that most of the condemned articles could be maintained. More
fortunate was Johann Wessel of Groningen, a prominent theological teacher who
entertained heretical notions as to confession, absolution, and purgatory, and
denied that the Pope could grant indulgences, for God deals directly with
man-doctrines as revolutionary as those of Luther-yet he was allowed to die
peacefully in 1489, held in great honor by the community. Still more
significant of the spiritual unrest of the period was a Sorbonnigue, or thesis
for the doctorate, presented to the University of Paris, in 1485, by a priest
named Jean Laillier, whose audacity reduced the hierarchy, including the pope,
to simple priesthood and rejected confession, absolution, indulgences, fasting,
the obligation of celibacy, and the authority of tradition. The extreme
difficulty encountered in procuring the condemnation of these dangerous
heresies, which finally required the intervention of Innocent VIII, is a
noteworthy symptom of the time, and equally so is the fact that the Bishop of
Meaux, selected by Innocent as one of the judges in the case, was at that
moment under censure by the University for reviving the condemned doctrine of
the insufficiency of the sacraments in polluted hands. In 1498, an Observantine
Friar named Jean Vitrier, in sermons at Tournay, went even further and taught
that it was a mortal sin to listen to the mass of a concubinary priest. He also
rejected the intercession of saints, and asserted that pardons and indulgences
were the offspring of hell and the money paid for them was employed in the
maintenance of brothels. The Tournay authorities were apparently powerless, and
referred these utterances to the University of Paris, which extracted from them
sixteen heretical propositions; but it does not appear that the audacious
preacher was punished. It was still more ominous of the future when men were
found ready to endure martyrdom in denial of the highest mysteries of the
faith, as when, in 1491, Jean Langlois, priest of St Crispin in Paris, while
celebrating mass, cast the consecrated elements on the floor and trampled on
them, giving as a reason that the body and blood of Christ were not in them and
persisting in his error to the stake. Similar was the obstinacy of Aymon Picard
in 1503, who at the feast of St Louis in the Sainte Chapelle snatched the host
from the celebrant and dashed it on the floor, for he, too, refused to recant
and was burnt.
To what extent
humanism was responsible for these heresies it would not be easy now to
determine, save in so far as it had stimulated the spirit of enquiry and
destroyed the reverence for authority. These influences are plainly observable
in the career of Jacques Lefevre d'Etaples, the precursor of the Reformation in
France, who commenced as a student of philosophy and, in 1492, visited Italy to
sit at the feet of Marsiglio Ficino, Hermolao Barbaro, Pico della Mirandola,
and Angelo Poliziano, but who, when he turned to the study of Scripture,
expressed the pious wish that the profane classical writings should be burnt
rather than be placed in the hands of youth. His Commentary on the Pauline
Epistles, printed in 1512, was the first example of casting aside the
scholastic exegesis for a treatment in which tradition was rejected and the
freedom of individual judgment was exercised as a matter of right. This led him
to a number of conclusions which Luther only reached gradually in the
disputations forced upon him in defence of his first step; but this protest
against the established sacerdotalism brought no persecution on Lefevre until
the progress of the Reformation in Germany aroused the authorities to the
danger lurking in such utterances, when the Sorbonne, in 1521, had no
difficulty in defining twenty-five heretical propositions in the Commentaries.
Proceedings were commenced against him, but he was saved by the favor of
Francis I and Marguerite of Navarre.
There were other
humanists, less spiritual than Lefevre, who exercised enormous influence in
breaking down reverence for tradition and authority and asserting the right of
private judgment, without giving in their adhesion to the Reformation. They had
a narrow and a perilous path to tread. Wilibald Pirckheimer was no Lutheran,
but his name stood first on the list of those selected for excommunication by
Eck when he returned from Rome as the bearer of the portentous bull Exsurge
Domine. More fortunate was the foremost humanist, Erasmus, whose unrivalled
intellect rendered him a power to be courted by Popes and princes, though he
was secretly held responsible as the primary cause of the revolt. In 1522
Adrian VI adjured him to come to the rescue of the bark of the Church,
struggling in the tempest sent by God in consequence mainly of the sins of the
clergy, and assured him that this was a province reserved to him by God. Yet,
in 1527, Edward Lee, then English ambassador to Spain and subsequently
Archbishop of York, drew up a list of twenty-one heresies extracted from the
writings of Erasmus, ranging from Arianism to the repudiation of indulgences,
the veneration of saints, pilgrimages, and relics. At this very moment,
however, Erasmus, frightened at the violence of the reformers, was writing to
Pirckheimer that he held the authority of the Church so high that at her
bidding he would accept Arianism and Pelagianism, for the words of Christ were
not of themselves sufficient for him.
Luther himself
had in some sort a humanistic pedigree. The Franciscan Paul Scriptoris,
professor at Tübingen, learned in Greek and mathematics, used confidentially to
predict that a reformation was at hand in which the Church would be forced to
reject the scholastic theology and return to the simplicity of primitive
belief, but when he permitted these views to find expression in his sermons the
chapter of his Order took steps to discipline him, and he fled, in 1502, to
Italy where he died. He was the teacher of Johann von Staupitz, Conrad Pellican,
and others subsequently prominent in the movement; Staupitz became the Vicar of
Luther's Augustinian Order and was warmly esteemed by the Elector Frederick of
Saxony; so that he was enabled to afford to Luther efficient protection during
the earlier years of the revolt. He was a humanist, strongly imbued with the
views of the German mystics of the fourteenth century, and all mysticism is, in
its essence, incompatible with sacerdotalism. In his Nachfolgung des Sterbens
Jew Christi, printed in 1515, he denied, like Erasmus, the efficacy of external
observances, condemning the doctrine as a kind of Judaism. In 1516, at
Nürnberg, he preached a series of sermons warning against reliance on
confession, for justification comes alone from the grace of God. These were
greeted with immense applause; they were printed in both Latin and German and a
Sodalitas Staujntiana was organized, embracing many of the leading citizens,
among whom Albrecht Dürer was numbered. The next year at Munich he inculcated
the same doctrines with equal success and he embodied his views in the work Von
der Liebe Gottes, dedicated to the Duchess Kunigunda of Bavaria, of which four
editions were speedily exhausted, showing the receptivity of the popular mind
for anti-sacerdotal teachings. It was some time before Luther advanced as far
as Staupitz had already done, and then it was largely through the study of the
fourteenth century mystics and Staupitz’s work On the love of God.
The
Narrenschiff.
There was no
product of humanistic literature, however, which so aided in paving the way for
the Reformation as the Narrenschiff, or Ship of Fools, the work of a layman,
Sebastian Brant, chancellor (city clerk) of Strassburg. Countless editions and
numerous translations of this work, first printed at Basel in 1494, showed how
exactly it responded to the popular tendencies, and how wide and lasting was
its influence. One of the foremost preachers of the day, Geiler von
Kaisersberg, used its several chapters or sections as texts for a series of
sermons at Strassburg, in 1498, and the opinions of the poet lost none of their
significance in the expositions of the preacher. The work forms a singularly
instructive document for the intellectual and moral history of the period.
Brant satirizes all the follies and weaknesses of man; those of the clergy are
of course included and, though no special attention is devoted to them, the
manner in which they are handled shows how completely the priesthood had
forfeited popular respect. But the important feature of the work is the deep
moral earnestness which pervades its jest and satire; man is exhorted never to
lose sight of his salvation and the future life is represented as the goal to
which his efforts are to be directed. With all this, the Church is never
referred to as the means through which the pardon of sin and the grace of God
are to be attained; confession is alluded to in passing once or twice, but not
the intercession of the Virgin and saints and there is no intimation that the
offices of the Church are essential. The lesson is taught that man deals
directly with God and is responsible to Him alone. Most significant is the
remark that many a mass is celebrated which had better have been left unsung
for God does not accept a sacrifice sinfully offered in sin. Wisdom is the one
thing for which man should strive, wisdom being obedience to God and a virtuous
life, while the examples cited are almost exclusively drawn from classic
paganism (Hercules, Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, Penelope, Virgil) though the
references to Scripture show adequate acquaintance with Holy Writ. As the
embodiment of humanistic teaching through which Germany, unlike Italy, aspired
to moral elevation as well as to classical training, the Narrenschijf holds the
highest place alike for comprehensiveness and effectiveness.
It is not to be
supposed that these influences were allowed to develop without protest or
opposition. The battle between humanism and obscurantism had been fought out in
Italy, in the middle of the fifteenth century, in the strife between Lorenzo
Valla and the Mendicant Friars backed by the Inquisition. In Germany the
struggle took place, in the second decade of the sixteenth century, over
Reuchlin, on the occasion of his protesting against Pfefferkorn’s measures for
the destruction of objectionable Hebrew books. It arrayed the opposing forces
in internecine conflict, and all the culture of Europe was ranged on the side
of the scholar who was threatened with prosecution by the Inquisition. The New
Learning recognized the danger to which it was exposed and its disciples found
themselves unconsciously organizing for self-defense and for attack. Religious
dogma was not really involved; but the authority of the Schools was at stake,
and the power to silence by persecution an adversary who could not be overcome
in argument. The bitterness on both sides was intense and victory seemed to
perch alternately on the opposing banners; but the quarrel virtually sank out
of sight in the larger issues raised by the opening years of the Reformation.
Technically the obscurantists triumphed, but it was a Pyrrhic victory; for the
discussion had done its work and incidentally it had given occasion for
blighting ridicule of the trivialities of the Schools and the stupid ignorance
of the Schoolmen in the Epistolae Obscurorum Virorum, 1514, a production
that largely contributed to the popular contempt in which the ancient system
was beginning to be held.
The whole of this
movement had been rendered possible by the invention of printing, which
facilitated so enormously the diffusion of intelligence, which enabled public
opinion to form and express itself and which, by bringing into communication
minds of similar ways of thinking, afforded opportunity for combined action.
When we are told that bibliographers enumerate thirteen German versions of the
Bible anterior to Luther's and that repeated editions of these were called for,
we can measure not only the religious earnestness of the people but the degree
in which it was stimulated by the process which brought the Scriptures within
reach of the multitude. Cochlaeus complains that when Luther’s translation of
the New Testament appeared, in 1522, every one sought it without distinction of
age or station, and they speedily acquired such familiarity with it that they
audaciously disputed with doctors of theology and regarded it as the fountain
of all truth. Tradition and scholastic dogma had under such circumstances small
chance of reverence. When therefore, on October 31, 1517, Luther's fateful
theses were hung on the church-door at Wittenberg, they were, as he tells us,
known in a fortnight throughout Germany; and in a month they had reached Rome
and were being read in every school and convent in Europe, a result manifestly
impossible without the aid of the printing-press. The reformers took full
advantage of the opportunities which it afforded, and, for the most part, they
had the sympathies of the printers themselves. The assertion of the Epistolae
Obscurorum Virorum
Sed in domo
Frobenii
Sunt multi pravi
haeretici
Is doubtless true
of all the great printing offices. It was a standing grievance with the
papalists that the printers eagerly printed and circulated everything on the
Lutheran side, while the Catholics had difficulty in bringing their works before
the public, and had to defray the cost themselves; but this is doubtless rather
attributable to the fact that there was a steady demand for the one and not for
the other.
It had not taken
the Church long to recognize the potential dangers of the printing-press. In
1479, Sixtus IV empowered the University of Cologne to proceed with censures
against the printers, purchasers, and readers of heretical books. In 1486,
Berthold, Archbishop of Mainz, endeavored to establish a crude censorship over
translations into the vernacular. Alexander VI, in 1501, took a more
comprehensive step, reciting that many books and tracts were printed containing
various errors and perverted doctrines, wherefore in future no book was to be
printed without preliminary examination and license, while all existing books
were to be inspected and those not approved were to be surrendered. The fifth
Lateran Council adopted, with but one dissenting voice, a decree laid before it
by Leo X constituting the Bishop and Inquisitor of each diocese a board of
censors of all books: printers disregarding their commands were visited with
excommunication, suspension from business and a fine of a hundred ducats
applicable to the fabric of St Peter's. In obedience to this, Cardinal Albrecht
of Mainz, in 1517, appointed his vicar, Paul, Bishop of Ascalon, and Dr Jodocus
Trutvetter as Inquisitors and Censors of the Press. These measures, which were
the precursors of the Index, were in vain. When, in 1521, Charles V, in the
Edict of Worms, ordered all Luther's books to be surrendered and burnt,
Cochlaeus tells us that they were only the more eagerly sought for and brought
better prices.
The dissemination
of the Scriptures and the propagation of the anti-sacerdotal views of the
humanists naturally led to questioning the conclusions of scholastic theology
and to increased impatience of the papal autocracy, these being regarded as the
source of the evils so generally and so grievously felt. The new teachings
found a wide and receptive audience, fully prepared to carry them to their
ultimate conclusions, in the numberless associations, partly literary and
artistic, partly religious, which existed throughout the Teutonic lands. In the
Netherlands there were everywhere to be found “Chambers of Rhetoric”, exercising
a powerful influence on public opinion, and these had long been hostile to the
clergy whose vices were a favorite subject of their ballads and rondels, their
moralities and farces. Less popular, but still dangerously influential, were
the so-called Academies which sprang up all over Germany with the Revival of
Learning, and which cherished tendencies adverse to the dogmas of the Church
and to her practical use of those dogmas. In 1520, Aleander includes among the
worst enemies of the papacy the grumbling race of grammarians and poets which
swarmed everywhere throughout the land. There were also numerous more or less
secret societies and associations, entertaining various opinions, but all
heretical to a greater or less degree. These were partly the representatives of
mysticism which, since the days of Master Eckart and Tauler, had never ceased
to flourish in Germany; partly they were the survivors of Waldensianism, so
pitilessly persecuted yet never suppressed. Zwingli, Oecolampadius, Bucer, and
other leaders of the reform had received their early impressions in these
associations, and the sudden outburst of Anabaptism shows how numerous were the
dissidents from Rome who were not prepared to accept the limitations of the
Lutheran creed. The Anabaptists, moreover, were but a portion of these
Evangelicals, as they styled themselves; for adult baptism was not a feature of
their original tenets, and when it was adopted as a doctrine it led to a
division in their ranks. The influence of art as well as of literature in
stimulating opposition to Rome is seen in the number of artists belonging to
the Evangelical bodies. When, in 1524, the Lutherans, under the lead of
Osiander, obtained control in Nürnberg, the heretics whom they arrested
included Georg Pencz, Barthel and Sebald Behem, Ludwig Krug, and others. By
Luther as well as by Rome Albrecht Dürer was accounted a heretic.
The
papacy and Germany.
The combination
of all these factors rendered an explosion inevitable, and Germany was
predestined to be its scene. The ground was better prepared for it there than
elsewhere, by the deeper moral and religious earnestness of the people and by
the tendencies of the academies and associations with which society was
honeycombed. In obedience to these influences the humanistic movement had not
been pagan and aesthetic as in Italy, but had addressed itself to the higher
emotions and had sought to train the conscience of the individual to recognize
his direct responsibility to God and to his fellows. But more potent than all this
were the forces arising from the political system of Germany and its relations
with the Holy See. The Teutonic spirit of independence had early found
expression in the Sachsenspiegel and Sächsische Weichbild - the laws and
customs of Northern Germany - which were resolutely maintained in spite of
repeated papal condemnation. Thus not only did the Church inspire there less
awe than elsewhere in Europe, but throughout the Middle Ages there had been
special causes of antagonism actively at work.
If Italy had
suffered bitterly from the Tedeschi, Germany had no less reason to hate the
papacy. The fatal curse of the so-called Holy Roman Empire hung over both
lands. It gave the Emperor a valid right to the suzerainty of the peninsula; it
gave the papacy a traditional claim to confirm at its discretion the election
of an Emperor. Conflicting and incompatible pretensions rendered impossible a
permanent truce between the representatives of Charlemagne and St Peter. Since
the age of Gregory VII the consistent policy of Rome had been to cripple the
Empire by fomenting internal dissension and rendering impossible the evolution
of a strong and centralized government, such as elsewhere in Europe was
gradually overcoming the centrifugal forces of feudalism. This policy had been
successful and Germany had become a mere geographical expression, a congeries
of sovereign princes, petty and great, owning allegiance to an Emperor whose
dignity was scarce more than a primacy of honor and whose actual power was to
be measured by that of his ancestral territories. The result of this was that
Germany lay exposed defenseless to the rapacity and oppression of the Roman
Curia. Its multitudinous sovereigns had vindicated their independence at the
cost of depriving themselves of the strength to be derived from centralized
union. Germany was the ordinary resource of a Pope in financial straits,
through the exaction of a tithe, the raising of the annates, or the issue in
unstinted volume of the treasure of the merits of Christ in the form of an
unremitting stream of indulgences which sucked up as with a sponge the savings
of the people. Nor could any steady opposition be offered to the absorption of
the ecclesiastical patronage by the Curia, through which benefices were sold or
bestowed on the cardinals or their creatures, and no limits could be set on
appeals to the Holy See which enlarged its jurisdiction and impoverished
pleaders by involving them in interminable and ruinous litigation in the venal
Roman Courts.
It was in vain
that in 1438 the Roman King Albert II endeavored to emulate Charles VII of
France by proclaiming a Pragmatic Sanction defining the limits of papal
authority. He died the next year and was followed by the feeble Frederick III,
during whose long reign of fifty-three years the imperial authority was reduced
to a shadow. It was probably to procure a promise of papal coronation that, in
1448, he agreed to a Concordat under which the reservation of benefices to the
Pope, as made by John XXII and Benedict XII, was assured; the election of
bishops was subjected to papal confirmation with the privilege of substituting
a better candidate by advice of the Sacred College; canonries and other
benefices falling vacant during the six uneven months were conceded to the Pope
and a promise was made that the annates should be moderate and be payable in
installments during two years. This was a triumph of Italian diplomacy, for the
leaven of Basel was still working in Germany, and the Basilian anti-Pope, Felix
V, was endeavoring to secure recognition. But Aeneas Sylvius notified Nicholas
V that this was only a truce, not a permanent peace, and that the utmost skill
would be required to avert a rupture, for there were dangerous times ahead and
currents under the surface that would call for careful piloting.
Advantageous as
the Concordat was to Rome, the Curia could not be restrained to its observance
and, in 1455, the three Spiritual Electors of Mainz, Trier, and Cologne, united
in complaint of its violation. With other bishops and princes of the Empire
they bound themselves to resist a tithe demanded by Calixtus III and to send
his pardoners back across the Alps with empty purses; they agitated for the
enforcement of the canons of Constance and Basel and urged Frederick III to
proclaim a Pragmatic Sanction. Various assemblies were held during the next two
years to promote these objects and, in 1457, Dr Martin Meyer, Chancellor of the
Archbishop of Mainz, in a letter to Aeneas Sylvius, bitterly complained of the
papal exactions, whereby Germany was drained of its gold and that nation which,
by its valor, had won the Roman Empire and had been the mistress of the world
was reduced to want and servitude, to grief and squalor. Calixtus met the
German complaints with a serene consciousness of the weakness of his
adversaries. To the prelates he wrote threatening them with punishment,
spiritual and temporal. To Frederick he admitted that mistakes might have been
made in the pressure of business but there had been no intentional violation of
the Concordat. It was true that the Holy See was supreme and was not to be
fettered by the terms of any agreement; but still, out of liberality and love
of peace and affection for the person of the Emperor, the compact should be
observed. No one must dare to oppose the Roman Church; if Germany thought it
had reason to complain it could appeal to him. The result corresponded to the
expectations of Calixtus; the confederates suspected their leader, Archbishop
Dietrich of Mainz, of desiring to sell them; and after some further agitation
in 1458 the movement fell to pieces.
It was promptly
followed by another of even more dangerous aspect. Dietrich of Mainz died, May
6, 1459, and was succeeded by Diether von Isenburg. Pius II, then Aeneas
Sylvius, had negotiated the Concordat of 1448 which stipulated that annates
should be moderate and be payable by installments, yet he refused to confirm
Diether except on condition that he would satisfy the demands of the Camera for
his annates. Diether’s envoys agreed, and the cost of the confirmation was
fixed at 20,550 gulden, to be advanced on the spot by Roman bankers. These
accordingly paid the shares of the Pope, the Cardinals, and the lower
officials, taking from them receipts which bore that they would refund the
money in case Diether failed to meet the obligations given by his agents. He
claimed that the amount was largely in excess of all precedent, repudiated the
agreement, and disregarded the consequent excommunication. The result of this
scandalous transaction was a series of disturbances which kept Germany in
turmoil for three years. Leagues were formed to replace Frederick III by George
Podiebrad, and to adopt as the laws of the land the Basilian canons, one of
which abrogated the annates. Gregor Heimburg was sent to France to arrange for
common action against the Holy See, and there seemed to be a prospect that
Germany at last might assert its independence of the Curia. But the papal
agents with profuse promises detached one member of the alliance after another,
and finally Diether was left alone. He offered submission, but Pius secretly
sent to Adolf of Nassau, one of the Canons of Mainz, a brief appointing him
Archbishop and removing Diether. This led to a bloody war between the rivals
until, in October, 1463, they reached a compromise, Adolf retaining the title
and conceding to Diether a portion of the territory. Thus the papacy triumphed
through its habitual policy of dividing and conquering. There could be no
successful resistance to oppression by alliances in which every member felt
that he might at any moment be abandoned by his allies. Yet this fruitless
contest has special interest in the fact that Diether issued, May 30, 1462, a
manifesto calling upon all German princes to take to heart the example of
injustice and oppression of which they might be the next victims, and this
manifesto, we are told, was printed by Gutenberg, an omen of the aid which the
new art was to render in the struggle with Rome.
Even more bitter
was the conflict, lasting from 1457 to 1464, between Sigismund Duke of Tyrol
and Cardinal Nicholas of Cusa, as Bishop of Brixen, arising from his
praiseworthy attempt to reform his clergy. In this struggle Sigismund had the
support of both clergy and people and was able to disregard the interdicts
freely launched upon the land, as well as to resist the Swiss whom Pius II
induced to take up arms against him. He held out bravely, and the matter was
finally settled by an agreement in which he asked for pardon and absolution,
thus saving the honor of the Holy See.
If this was a
drawn battle between the secular power and the Church, it did not lessen the
effect of the triumphs which the Curia had won in the contests with the great
Archbishops of Mainz. Unsuccessful resistance leads to fresh aggression and it
is not to be supposed that Rome failed to make the most of her victories over
the German Church. At the great assembly of the clergy at Coblenz, in 1479,
there were countless complaints of the Holy See, chiefly directed against its
violations of the Concordat, its unlawful taxation, the privileges granted to
the Mendicant Orders, and the numerous exemptions. It was doubtless this
demonstration that led, in 1480, to the negotiation of an agreement between
Sixtus IV and the Emperor Frederick, in which the latter was pledged to keep
Germany obedient to the Pope, while the Pope was to sustain the Emperor with
the free use of censures. This meant encouragement to fresh aggressions; and
the indignation of the clergy found expression in the grievances presented, in
1510, to the Emperor-Elect Maximilian. They asserted with scant ceremony that
the papacy could be restrained by no agreements or conventions, seeing that it
granted, for the benefit of the vilest persons, dispensations, suspensions,
revocations, and other devices for nullifying its promises and evading its
wholesome regulations; the elections of prelates were set aside; the right of
choosing provosts, which many Chapters had purchased with heavy payments, was
disregarded; the greater benefices and dignities were bestowed on the Cardinals
and Prothonotaries of the Curia; expectatives were granted without
number, giving rise to ruinous litigation; annates were exacted promptly and
mercilessly and sometimes more was extorted than was due; the cure of souls was
committed by Rome to those fitted rather to take charge of mules than of men;
in order to raise money, new indulgences were issued, with suspension of the
old, the laity being thus made to murmur against the clergy; tithes were
exacted under the pretext of war against the Turks, yet 110 expeditions were
sent forth; and cases which should be tried at home were carried without
distinction to Rome. Maximilian was seriously considering a plan for releasing
Germany from the yoke of the Curia, and for preventing the transfer to Rome of
the large sums which Julius II was employing to his special detriment; he
thought of the withdrawal of the annates and of the appointment of a permanent
legate, who should be a German and exercise a general jurisdiction. But Jacob
Wimpheling, who was consulted by the Emperor-Elect, while expressing himself
vigorously as to the suffering of Germany from the Curia, thought it wiser to
endure in the hope of amendment than to risk a schism. Amendment, however, in
obedience to any internal impulse, was out of the question. The Lateran Council
met, deliberated, and dissolved without offering to the most sanguine the
slightest rational expectation of relief. The only resource lay in revolution,
and Germany was ready for the signal. In 1521 the Nuncio Aleander writes that,
five years before he had mentioned to Pope Leo his dread of a German uprising,
he had heard from many Germans that they were only waiting for some fool to
open his mouth against Rome.
If Germany was
thus the predestined scene of the outbreak, it was also the land in which the
chances of success were the greatest. The very political condition which
baffled all attempts at self-protection likewise barred the way to the
suppression of the movement. A single prince, like the Elector Frederick of
Saxony, could protect it in its infancy. As the revolt made progress other
princes could join it, whether moved by religious considerations, or by way of
maintaining the allegiance of their subjects, or in order to seize the
temporalities and pious foundations, or, like Albrecht of Brandenburg, to found
a principality and a dynasty. We need not here enquire too closely into the
motives of which the League of Schmalkalden was the outcome, and may content
ourselves with pointing to the fact that even Charles V was, in spite of the
victory of Mühlberg, powerless to restore the imperial supremacy or to impose
his will on the Protestant States.
The progress of
the Reformation, and still more so that of the Counter-Reformation, lie outside
the limits of the present chapter; but it may be concluded by a few words
suggesting why the abuses which, in the sixteenth century, could only be cured
by rending the Church in twain, have to so large an extent disappeared since
the Reformation, leading many enthusiasts to feel regret that the venerable
ecclesiastical structure was not purified from within, that reform was not
adopted in place of schism.
The abuses under
which Christendom groaned were too inveterate, too firmly entrenched, and too
profitable to be removed by any but the sternest and sharpest remedies. The
task was too great even for papal omnipotence. The attempt of Adrian VI had
broken down. In 1555, the future Cardinal Seripando, in announcing to the
Bishop of Fiesole the death of Marcellus II, who, in his short pontificate of
twenty-two days, had manifested a resolute determination to correct abuses,
says that perhaps God, in thus bringing reform so near and then destroying all
hope of it, has wished to show that it is not to be the work of human hands and
is not to come in the way expected by us, but in some way that we have not been
able to conjecture. In truth the slow operation was required of causes for the
most part external. So long as the Roman Church held the monopoly of salvation
it inevitably followed the practice of all monopolies in exacting all that the
market would yield in obtaining the maximum of power and wealth. When northern
Europe had definitely seceded, and a large proportion of the rest of the
Continent was trembling in the balance, when what was lost could not be
regained and a strenuous effort was required to save the remainder, the Church
at length recognized that she stood face to face with a permanent competitor,
whose rivalry could only be met by her casting off the burdens that impeded her
in the struggle. To this the Council of Trent contributed something, and the
stern purpose of Pius V, followed at intervals by other pontiffs, still more.
The permanent supremacy of Spain in Italy checked the aspirations of the Holy See
towards enlarging its temporal dominions. The chief source of cause of advance,
however, is the action of the secular princes who sustained the cause of the
Church during a century of religious wars. The Reformation had emancipated
their power as well as the spirit of Protestantism. If the Church required
their support she must yield to their exigencies; she could no longer claim to
decide peremptorily and without appeal as to the boundary-line between the
spiritual and the temporal authority in the dominions of each of them; and she
could no longer shield her criminals from their justice. Together with the
progress of the Reformation, a phase of absolute monarchy had developed itself
through which the European nations passed, and the enforcement of the regalia
put an end to a large part of the grievances which had caused the Church of the
fifteenth century to be so fiercely hated. Whether or not the populations were
benefited by the change of masters, the Church was no longer responsible; and
for the loss of her temporal authority and the final secularization of her
temporalities she has found recompense tenfold in the renewed vigor of her
spiritual vitality.
HISTORY OF THE RENAISSANCE
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