Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Metaphor, Authority, and the Moral (2)

Dead, every one of them, and for what? Hundreds of years of criminal lunacy carried out for the sake of personal vanity, for the sake of lust, for greed and glory, and today the world stands aghast, disgusted permanently, sickened by the exploits of the few who corrupted an institution to the core, an infection that rotted the idea beyond redemption in the eyes of the many. So few, and yet the lasting destruction they caused is seen as nearly universal in the eyes of man. These criminals were the Popes of the Catholic Church. They are dead, and they have destroyed the church in the course of their lives.

What do sickening Catholic popes and Protestant reformers in the Middle ages and their push for universal literacy have to do with 21st century jihad? We argue that the lot of them are responsible of the destruction of the concept of universal morality. We argue that the popes are the cause of our current malaise, that the concept of morality is now so vitiated by the evils of the Catholic Church that most people turn in disgust from the very thought of organized religion, from the concept of God, and from the thought of universal morality itself, leaving only ethical behaviour based on contingency and prudence, on opportunism and personality in its place. The collapse of the moral, the destruction of the general view of morality and of the moral of our story as living creatures with a purpose, that is all but destroyed in the minds of men, annihilated by the evils of the few.

Of the Protestant reformers, of Luther and Calvin, we have nothing good to report of them. Religion is disgraced in the eyes of men because of the likes of them. Below we'll look at a brief and simple outline of some Catholic history. It's a mere sketch of part of the history that leads us to today's amoral cultural and emotional nihilism. Why do we live with multiculturalism? Why do we prise philobarbarism? Why do we consider Islam to be the religion of peace? Why do we tolerate evil in its obvious manifestations and find ourselves incapable of discussing it as such? Worse, how do we come to terms with the evil when we have no moral ground to stand on ourselves? How can we condemn evil in others if we are evil ourselves? What makes the life of a man worth more than that of a chicken? And how do we prove anything? What is our authority to do so? What is our moral? Why do we even bother living at all? How can we condemn Islam if we ourselves have nothing better to offer and no authority to object to its evils in the world? Why shouldn't we just give up and die?

We have lost the immediacy of our past moral authority. We can thank the likes of Boniface VIII and Cotton Mather for that. The evils they committed shame the universe of man. No right person can associate with them, and therefore, our morality is shamed and dishonoured beyond redemption. The revulsion we feel is so deep in our minds that we needn't even know the details of these creatures to know we are ashamed. Christianity is seen-- is felt in the soul-- to be evil. And what is left for us?

The Middle Ages in the West, a time known to the general public in the West today as the worst of times, were indeed bad in many respects compared to our lives in our days; but let's get some perspective before we condemn the period as simply a thousand years without a bath. There has to be more, a strain of thought and feeling that is better than what we assume is the total evil of the times.

Looking at our past can show us where we are today. Today, according to me, we are in a mire of secular gnosticism. We cannot fight the evils of Islam if we hate ourselves and our Modernity. We cannot win a fight we feel is worthless. We cannot know the good if we believe there is none. Below we'll see why we have come to our age of moral cynicism and gnostic hatred of morality itself.

In our next post we'll look again more closely at the gnostic fascism of our time. For now, we see Catholicism at its worst.
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The Church in Moral Crisis: Prelude to the Reformation

Though most students would have some knowledge of the great schism between East and West, few are aware of the historical rifts that occurred within the Roman church between the 13th and 15th centuries. Religious life suffered as a consequence of the schism, for "Christendom looked upon the scandal helpless and depressed, and yet impotent to remove it. With two sections of Christendom each declaring the other lost, each cursing and denouncing the other, men soberly asked who was saved" (Flick, 1930: 293). Doubt and confusion caused many to question the legitimacy and true holiness of the church as an institution. In the West, the excesses that affected the church ultimately called for radical reform through that movement which we now identify with the Protestant Reformation.

This period of moral decline was instrumental in leading to a Western Schism within Christendom, in which three Popes and anti-Popes concurrently contested control over the See of Peter. The popes refused to convene councils to effect reform, and they failed to bring about reform themselves, rather busying themselves with Italian politics and being patrons of the arts. "Thus the papacy emerged as something between an Italian city-state and a European power, without forgetting at the same time the claim to be the vice-regent of Christ. The pope often could not make up his own mind whether he was the successor of Peter or of Caesar. Such vacillation had much to do with the rise and success... of the Reformation" (Bainton, 1952: 15). By the mid-fifteenth century the Church was in urgent need of drastic reform which, when effected, would have lasting impact on the religious and secular history of Europe.

At the death of Nicholas IV in 1292 there was a deadlock in the sacred college of Cardinals which was to last for twenty-seven months before his successor could be elected. The two ruling factions in Italian politics were represented by the powerful Orsini and Colonna families who vied for control of the Papacy. At this time there were only nine cardinals left in that college, three giving their allegiance to the Orsinis, three to the Colonna family, and three were seemingly independent. Pope Nicholas had been an Orsini and they would not accept the loss of papal control. The Colonnas were determined to take it away from them, and they put pressure on the three remaining independent cardinals who were unwilling to offend either family, both of whom had a history of murder and assassination throughout the streets of Rome.

The cardinals squabbled over who should be elected Pope until the plague came to Rome in early in 1294, forcing them to withdraw to the mountains of Perugia in central Italy, still deadlocked. One of the non-partisan cardinals was Cardinal Gaetani who was considered to be a great canon lawyer. He was a cold, calculating, corpulent man with the determination of an assassin. To break the deadlock in his own insidious way, Gaetani told the senior cardinal present, Latino Malabranca, the Cardinal of Ostia that he had received a prophetic letter from a holy eccentric hermit, Peter of Morone, which predicted the punishment of God upon all of them if a Pope were not soon elected.

Malabranca, who was intensely superstitious, took the forgery which Gaetani had given to him with devout seriousness. On the 5th July 1294, after prayful contemplation, he called the handful of cardinals together and read them the letter which he believed had come from the holy hermit. He became so carried away by his own eloquence and his own convictions that he proposed that the hermit Peter of Morone be elected the next Pope. The deadlock was broken by the logic of demonstrating to Colonna and Orsini alike that neither of them needed to prevent the other from winning.

Neither the Colonnas nor the Orsinis bothered to journey to Abruzzi to meet the new Pope, to kiss his feet as every tradition of the sacred college required. However Cardinal Gaetani did pay his homage, taking with him the King of Naples and an enormous following of ordinary people:

In a bleak cave in the Abruzzi mountains, Gaetani told the holy hermit that he had been made Vicar of Christ on earth. The confused frightened old man, who had never seen so many people in his life, nodded to the statement because Gaetani had bellowed at him from that great height, in those rich and beautiful scarlet robes covering the barrel chest and hogshead belly, commanding that Peter now nod his head to signify his acceptance of God's glory. Emaciated, hardly understanding Latin, much less the condition, Peter accepted the rulership of Christendom filled with mortal terror because he would have to leave his cave. He refused to go to Rome. He would rule from Naples. At Gaetani's suggestion, he chose the name Celestine V. From that day forward, Gaetani served the Pope as his lawyer and soothed him by creating a replica of the hermit's mountain cell in the castle Nuovo, which had become the Lateran palace of Naples (Condon, 1984: 24).

Cardinal Gaetani began systematically to ingratiate himself with Celestine - and finally convinced the confused and befuddled pontiff that God really wanted him to resign from the papacy. Fearing that unless he abdicated he would lose his immortal soul, Celestine agreed, and announced his renunciation to his cardinals. Gaetani was elected to the papacy ten days later as the compromise candidate, consecrated and crowned at St. Peter's in Rome, taking the name of Boniface VIII. His first act as Pope was to order the arrest of Celestine, whom he sentenced to death.

As a cardinal Gaetani had acquired rich cities and adjoining territories - and as Pontiff Boniface continued to amass wealth and power which was to bring him into direct confrontation with the Colonnas, who ruled their territory from the hilltop city of Palestrina, twenty-two miles east of Rome. The Colonnas tried to instigate a revolt against the Pontiff by claiming that Boniface's election was invalid as he had usurped power that rightly belonged to Celestine. At the same time, Stephen Colonna attacked and plundered the Pope's gold which was being sent to Caserta to buy yet another city for the Gaetani dynasty. Boniface, blind with fury, threw two of the Colonna cardinals into prison.

The Colonna offered to return the gold but Boniface wanted not only revenge on Stephen Colonna but also the Colonnas' destruction by installing garrisons inside the Colonna cities. This option was totally unacceptable to the Colonna and the next day, Colonna messengers posted manifestos attacking the legitimacy of Boniface's election all over Rome, leaving one tacked to the high altar of St. Peter's. In response, Boniface issued a papal bull, In Excelso Throno, which charged the two imprisoned Colonna cardinals with heresy, excommunicated them and every member of the family. Boniface then announced a religious crusade against the Colonna, using money from all over Europe which had been intended to finance the Crusades in the Holy Land to buy the Knights Templar to crush the Colonna strongholds. An order went out that the Colonna women and children were to be killed or sold into slavery. With the help of his mercenary army, by 1299 all the Colonna cities had been captured. Palestrina was completely razed to the ground, and the Colonna family went to France in exile where they were given refuge by French nobility.

Boniface's fury turned against the French monarch and he forbade him to tax the French clergy. The French king reacted vehemently, and he in turn forbade the export of all money to the Pope. The king prohibited foreigners from living in France, which excluded members of the curia:

Warming to his task, he called an estates-general to charge the Pope with infidelity, loss of the Holy Land, the murder of Celestine V, heresy, fornication, simony, sodomy, sorcery, and idolatry in a list of twenty-nine charges - all of them the sort employed when some faction wants to rid the Church of a Pope, many of them quite valid. The only weapon Boniface had was the solemn excommunication of the King of France, which would release the French people from their allegiance to the king. The publication of this fatal bull was planned for 8 September, 1303 from Agnani, the Pope's summer palace (Condon, 1984: 26).

The bull had to be stopped at any cost. The king sent 2000 troops into Italy under the leadership of Sciarra Colonna into Italy to storm Agnani, Boniface's family stronghold, with the orders to capture Boniface and bring him to France for judgement. Under treachery, Colonna gained access with his troops and with drawn sword, Colonna found the eighty year old pontiff seated on his throne dressed in his pontifical regalia, with the three-tiered tiara on his head, cross in one hand and keys to St. Peter's in the other. Mockingly, Sciarra Colonna ordered his men to strip Boniface naked. Sciarra pressed the tiara down Boniface's eyes, knocked him down, had his men drag him by the feet across down a granite stairway. He was then thrown into a narrow, dark prison where he was beaten, and as a final indignity Sciarra ordered his soldiers to urinate on him. Two nights later, supporters of the Pontiff were able to repel the French and rescued Boniface. But the ill-treatment meted out to him was too much; in sick and debilitated health, he commenced his journey back to the Vatican which he reached on 18 September. There he was to die twenty-four days later.

One of the more important and telling pronouncements of Pope Boniface VIII had been written to Philip IV of France in 1302. It was named Unam Sanctam and is one of the most extreme and arrogant statements of papal superiority over spiritual and temporal matters and gives us an significant insight into the prevalent model of Church at this time of ecclesial history. Read the following and fascinating extract from Unam Sanctam and reflect on the paradigm of Church that existed at the turn of the 14th century :

We are compelled, our faith urging us, to believe and to hold - and we do firmly believe and simply confess - that there is one holy catholic and apostolic church, outside of which there is neither salvation nor remission of sins.... Both swords, the spiritual and the material, therefore, are in the power of the church; the one, indeed, to be wielded for the church, the other by the church; the one by the hand of the priest, the other by the hand of kings and knights, but at the will and sufferance of the priest. One sword, moreover, ought to be under the other, and the temporal authority to be subjected to the spiritual. For when the apostle says "there is no power but God, and the powers that are of God are ordained," they would not be ordained unless sword were under sword and the lesser one, as it were, were led by the other to great deeds. Whoever, therefore, resists this power thus ordained by God, resists the ordination of God, unless he makes believe, like the Manichean, that there are two beginnings. This we consider false and heretical,.... Indeed we declare, announce and define, that it is altogther necessary to salvation for every human creature to be subject to the Roman pontiff. The Lateran, Nov. 14, in our 8th year. As a perpetual memorial of this matter. (Ernest F. Henderson, 1912: 435-37).

After Boniface's death, the new Pope, Benedict X, did not last long, dying within ten months of his election. After many months of intense bargaining Bertrand de Got, Archbishop of Bordeaux and a confidant of the king of France, was elected. This Frenchman, who took the name Clement V, was never to set his foot on Italian soil; he was crowned in Lyons in November 1305 and finally in 1309 settled in Avignon which became the papal court from which the Pope and his Curia ruled. Clement was to be succeeded by six French Popes who, at the resolution of the French king, remained in France. For the next sixty-eight years the seat of ecclesial power was to remain in Avignon, not returning to Rome till 1377 during the pontificate of Gregory VI, who died through apparent poisoning.

The Italians were desperate to retain the papacy within Italy, and threatened the lives of the sixteen cardinals gathered in Rome to elect Gregory's successor. Italy had become impoverished since the papacy had moved to Avignon, with monies from about two million tourists going to the French since Clement's election. Feeling under pressure the conclave chose the safest Pope - Archbishop Bartolomeo Prigano of Bari, a Neapolitan who had been vice chancellor at the University of Avignon. Prigano took the name of Urban VI.

His autocratic manner coupled with an unbalanced personality was to lead to his downfall. He proved himself to be highly unpopular and the cardinals, now in safe territory, met and declared the election to be null and void on the ground that they had been coerced into electing him in fear of the violence of the Roman mob:

It seems hard to believe but they elected in his place a brute named
Robert, Cardinal of Geneva - he who was called the Butcher of Cesena because he had ordered his troops to put 3000 women and children to the sword when they objected to the rape of sixty women by his transient soldiers. The Butcher took the name of Clement VII, whereupon Urban VI excommunicated him; then he excommunicated Urban, and the great schism of the Church had begun. There were two Popes who ruled Christendom simultaneously: Urban in Rome, Clement at Avignon. The Cossa family's advocate, Piero Tomacelli, succeeded Urban as Boniface IX (Condon, 1984: 29).

It took considerable monies to keep the bureaucracy of the Church functioning, so Boniface tried to strengthen the Roman Church by selling various ecclesial offices and benefices, particularly special indulgences during Jubilee years. He gained enormous wealth from the Jubilees of 1390 and 1400, and under his pontificate simony reached its great climax through the sale of indulgences. Boniface rapaciously piled tax upon tax, graft upon graft, simony upon simony, taxing the patrons, papal states and properties, and requiring substantial fees from those elected to political or ecclesial office. Everything that was secular or religious was for sale, and ultimately it was out of this worldly environment that urgent calls came for reformation and church renewal.

The REFORMATION of the 15th and 16th CENTURIES

One of the dogmas of the Roman Catholic Church states that the Church is always in a state of renewal (Ecclesia semper reformanda est). From the twelfth century onwards, we note the resurgence of various groups calling for radical changes within the practices of Christian worship. Through your own investigations, you may wish to explore the relationships between them and the established church. In what way did the Cathars, the Albigensians, the Waldensians, and others try to correct the ills of the Church? Why did they fail, and end up condemned by the "official" Church?

The age saw the introduction of the Inquisition, which acted as a protective arm ensuring the supremacy and purity of the 'official' teachings against the radicalism of these primitive reformers. It is interesting to note that Augustine in the 4th century had approved the use of torture in specific cases where the salvation of souls was concerned. His rationale was based on the premise that if secular powers used torture for mere temporal gains, then how more justified would the church be to use brutality for the sake of salvation! Such also was the rationale used by the founders of the most infamous of the Church's agencies of control. Through the establishment of the Inquisition, at the dawn of the Reformation the Church protected its own temporal and spiritual supremacy.

They all lived in the same epoch of the 15th and 16th century, and through their inventive genius, courage and political skill they were to make a unique and lasting impact on the spiritual, geographical, scientific, as well as political and ecclesial horizons of their time. You may wish to explore the state of leadership in church and state at this time: the debauchery of the Borgias culminating in the reign of the profligate Pope Alexander VI; the conquests and concerns of the warrior Pope, Julius II (who somehow has won strange exoneration in history through his patronage of Michaelangelo), the iron-willed Pontiffs of the Counter-Reformation, Paul IV, Pius IV, and Pius V. It was a time when Italians monopolized European banking, and money transformed values, ecclesial and secular, even celebrated in medieval poetry:

Money makes the man, Money makes the stupid pass for bright... Money buys the pleasure-giving women, Money keeps the soul in bliss, The world and fortune being ruled by it, Which even opens, if you want, the doors of paradise. So wise he seems to me who piles up What more than any other virtue Conquers gloom and leavens the whole spirit (Lauro Martines, 1979: 83).

Below I have indicated the key personalities that influenced political and ecclesial history events during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It was also a period of headstrong political leadership unafraid to challenge the power of the Rome weakened by inept and corrupt leadership. Some, like Henry VIII (1509-1547) and Elizabeth I (1558-1603), stood in heretical opposition to Rome for a variety of personal as well as political motives. Others, like Philip II (1555-1598), Ferdinand I (1556-1564) and Christian III (1536-1559), allied themselves to Rome against the voices of Reformation. By 1565 Europe was to be rent by cataclysmic religious wars costing the lives of hundreds of thousands, tearing the religious and political harmony of Europe apart.

The age of Reformation had begun with a promise of new hope and new vision - and this is still reflected in the middle years of Erasmus of Rotterdam. Yet this period of history belongs to three men of diverse personality, religious conviction, and action: Martin Luther (1483-1546), Zwingli (1484-1556) and Calvin (1509-1564). Through their work and efforts, the history of the church was to take a direction which ultimately was to witness the political disintegration of the bilateral duality of church and state.

Although every school child has learnt that: "In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue" and discovered the New World, not too many children have learnt that it was also the same year in which the infamous Borgia Pope, Alexander VI, ascended the papal throne.

http://dlibrary.acu.edu.au/staffhome/yukoszarycz/ecc/MOD6.HTML
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The Catholic Church destroyed the concepts of morality and of universal religion for many people in our day. We live in a state of horror and cynicism. We have become gnostics. We have become so because of literacy. We have lost our souls because of Tyndale and Gutenberg. Thank God for it! Atheists can now find a true path to morality of universal authority through metaphors previously unimagined.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Really, Dag.

You idealized human reason in your posting on the poetry and literature of the Athenians a few days ago. Now you have lost your soul because of the literacy brought about by Gutenberg?

The path of atheistic Lenin and Stalin led to a morality of death and tyranny, slavery and repression. Is that what you're looking for?

You're thanking God for atheistic morality?

Dag said...

Thanking God for atheistic morality would be, on the face of it, incoherent; so I must mean something else entirely or I am incoherent.

If I felt any sympathy for Lenin and Stalin in their dystopian pursuits I wouldn't write the things I do, so I must guess I have something else in mind.

And though I do love the Athenian approach to the mind and morals, I don't think I'm going so far as to condemn literacy like Plato does, nor do I think I'm suggesting that literacy per se is a bad thing: I want to argue that it has lead us to a fork in the road that we would not otherwise be at, and from here, after this course of history, we must decide where to go from here and by what means. I look at it as the fall from the garden, as it were, this knowledge I, at least, am able to have thanks to the work of those who made literacy available to the working classes and kings rather than to only a small group of monks. Now we generally can learn and think, and with that comes the responsibilty to ourselves and the world to do something with it that might be of benefit to all. But it's a two edged sword: what good we might do could also be wrong. But we do not live in ignorance, and because of it, because we are now not ignorant, we have personal reponsiblities to do more than we would otherwise. What might that be?

Anonymous said...

Dag, there is no neutral ground that human reason lives in. The presuppositions we hold dictate our conclusions.

Our conclusions spring out of our view of the world and our understanding of to whom or what our authority is. Our authority is either ourselves or God. The conclusions you spoke of will spring out of the authority that is acknowledged. I assume that is where you were going with your posting on authority.

Most of people in the world see themselves as their own authority. They decide what is true or not and their desires, lusts, selfishness are what rule them. This is what leads to wars, to injustice,hate. The popes you wrote about did not speak for the God of the Bible; they spoke for their own selfishness and sin and used the political power they had to crush and destroy for their own ends.

Tyndale did not offer his life as a sacrifice for the literacy of the masses - he died for his determination to make the Bible available to all, knowing that freedom, morality, unchanging truth come from the salvation and redemption of God through Christ.

Luther may have had many faults, but he realized that salvation was through faith alone in God, and that popery and its accompanying slavery was not the message of the Scriptures. He said, "here I stand, I can do no other" when he was on trial for his beliefs. You read that in the biography of Luther in the R. Bainton book you referenced.

The personal responsibilities for those who believe in the God of the Bible are to live as salt and light through the knowledge of Him. But God is the one that knows the end from the beginning and is sovereign over all. My job is to love those around me and to speak the truth in love. If I am killed for it, so be it. I trust God.

Do I do enough? No. But I try. More than anything I trust the God of the Bible to work things out according to his plan, and not my expectations or desires.

The Bible is replete with passages of those who ask why the evil flourish and the righteous suffer. This is not a new problem. If our authority is this God, we can only live in uncertain dependency on Him. As Paul said to the Athenians, in the New Testament, "The God who made the world and everything in it is the Lord of heaven and earth and does not live in temples built by hands. And he is not served by human hands, as if he needed anything, because he himself gives all men life and breath and everything else. From one man he made every nation of men, that they should inhabit the whole earth; and he determined the times set for them and the exact places where they should live. God did this so that men would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from each one of us. 'For in him we live and move and have our being.' As some of your own poets have said, 'We are his offspring.'

"Therefore since we are God's offspring, we should not think that the divine being is like gold or silver or stone—an image made by man's design and skill. In the past God overlooked such ignorance, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent. For he has set a day when he will judge the world with justice by the man he has appointed. He has given proof of this to all men by raising him from the dead."

Dag said...

Mara, you made excellent points, put them well, cited interesting and relevant sources, came up with some of the best comments I've seen here so far; and yet, I'm unconvinced that we've reached any conclusion at all. That is the best hope I can hope for: that we contuinue to look for the best.

I hope I've been clear in these two posts on religion that we require a Reformation, not so much of our religions but of our societies. We live in societies that believe in nothing at all. That is the atheism I rebel against. I haven't meant to criticise another's religion or lack of, my point was to show the history of the Church and the Reformation to show how we as the West have come to beilieve in nothing, our religions having failed us and having lost their authority to the point that man is atomic and amoral and lost even to the point that Islam is an acceptable moral stance.

If you will, I'll continue for this day and the next to outline my idea of where we came from and where we are. Why cultural and moral relativism? cultural relativism? appeasement? pacifism? dhimmitude?

It is a matter of faith in the end, I think, but that's not enough for many, if not most. Then what? I urge a reformation of our collective moral. Maybe I can make this clear. If I fail, please challenge my writing, and I'll do what I can to address your considerations.

Mara, thanks for writng.