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Letter to Harold “Hoot” and Annie Gibson cont.
There is no denying that in the 1400's there were problems in the Church in
Europe. The concept of the nation-state was developing as well as the concept of
the divine right of kings. These are important ideas. In the middle ages, there
were no “countries” as such, in Europe. There was
CHRISTENDOM.
The
German barbarians (my ancestors) had swept into the Western Roman Empire around
400AD. At that time the Romans had been Christian for almost two centuries. Rome
thought of itself as the Christian Empire. Admittedly, the emperors had moved
their capital to the town of Byzantium, around 340AD. They called it New Rome,
but everybody called it Constantinople, “Constantine’s town.” Sadly, today you
can’t go back to Constantinople because now it’s Istanbul. So the Emperors moved
east, but the bishop of Rome, acknowledged by ALL Christians as the head Bishop
of the Universal Church, stayed in Rome and maintained his political
independence from the Roman state. Thus in the years from 400 to1400 there were
two forces to be reckoned with : Pope and Emperor. The popes gradually took over
the civil administration of central Italy and bishops everywhere took on more
and more functions of the state, such as the maintenance of public safety and
the care of the poor.
Then came my people, the barbarians. The barbarians didn’t want to destroy the
Roman empire. They wanted to join it. What wasn’t to like? The Romans had indoor
plumbing. They bathed. They weren’t covered with fleas and they drank wine! And
who doesn’t like Italian food? The invading barbarians just wanted peace: a
piece of the Roman Empire. And to get it they were happy to swear allegiance to
the Emperor in Constantinople, and just go on pretending that they were a new
kind of Roman, though they still mostly drank beer.
There were problems however. The barbarians
governed themselves differently. They had a system by which soldiers swore
allegiance to a military leader or tribal chief and that leader in turn swore
allegiance to a king. Romans had a long history of written laws with a
combination of elected and appointed rulers. This presented no real problem. The
barbarian kings just swore allegiance to the emperor in Constantinople and then
did as they pleased.
Another, perhaps larger problem was that the
Romans were Catholics who believed that Jesus was God and man and that God was a
unity of love called the Trinity. The barbarians were
Arians, who believed that Jesus
was not really divine. God was a lone ranger who sort of adopted Jesus. The
Roman Bishops defended their Catholic congregations from these new overlords,
and eventually the barbarian overlords became Catholic and settled in for the
next 1,000 years to rule their Roman and Catholic subjects.
Thus was born the Middle ages, a collection of
dukedoms and squires and knights and feudal oaths all loosely held together by
kings and all swearing allegiance to an emperor, first the one in Byzantium and
then one in Aachen Germany called Charlemagne. His descendants quibbled ever
after as to who would be elected the Holy Roman Emperor. (WAKE UP!!! THIS
PART’S IMPORTANT. I MEAN THE BIT ABOUT ELECTING THE EMPEROR.)
It was hard to tell where the Church left off and the State began, because it
was all a big banquet called CHRISTENDOM. The task was to fight off the Mongols
and the Muslims who wanted to destroy Christendom. The Muslims eventually did
destroy the Christian heartland around North Africa, Spain, Egypt, Turkey,
Syria, Iraq, and the Holy Land. By 1400, the Eastern Roman Empire held on by a
thread in Greece and Western Turkey and only Western Europe was Christian and of
the ancient Christian lands of the Mediterranean only Northern Italy, Greece and
France remained Christian. Christianity looked like it was finished. Only the
northern barbarians were Christian, and the Russians and the other Slavic
countries, but Russia and Eastern Europe had been overrun by the Golden Horde,
who were Muslims.
In Europe ,
things went from bad to worse. The papacy, as I’ve mentioned was a wreck which
no one took seriously, the clergy had been decimated by the plague, as had
society in general and there weren’t enough peasants to work the land. The cost
of labor skyrocketed, and the old feudal system that had kept Europe fairly
stable for a almost a thousand years collapsed.
Wycliffe and
Hus went around condemning
clerical corruption, and unfortunately they had a point. Wycliffe’s followers
were called the Lollards and
they did a whole lot more than just point out the corruption of the post-black
death clergy. They and Wycliffe denied the papacy, monasticism and the
sacrificial nature of the Mass. They taught predestination and an early form of
“Bible Only” (Sola Scriptura) In short, they were Lutherans a hundred
years before Luther. Their idea ideas spread in particular in Bohemia, which was
at that time part of central Germany.
“How does one get from England to Bohemia? ” I am sure you are asking. Simple:
Anne of Bohemia who came to England at the end of January 1381 to become the
wife of Richard II
(1367-1400). Anne was instrumental in spreading Wycliffe's teachings because the
Bohemians who came with her to England introduced his writings to Jan Hus who
spread them in Bohemia and the adjacent areas of Germany. Just to demonstrate
the mess, it is interesting to note that Anne's brother,
King
Wenceslaus got involved in the squabble between the Roman pope and the
Avignon anti-pope. All this is bad enough, but there was one more thing that put
the frosting on the cake.
Wycliffe wanted the state to take over Church properties in England. Well, that
sounds reasonable. Remember the clergy were corrupt! (Some certainly were, many
more weren’t. It was the monks with their land holdings and incomes who
maintained the schools, the hospitals, the soup kitchens, the shelters for the
poor, the orphanages, and rented land to poor peasants at a minimal fee saving
them from aristocratic vultures who treated them as slaves.) Wycliffe attacked
the clergy and taught that the king is above the pope, in temporal matters and
that the collection of annates (a type of fee paid to the pope) and indulgences
were simony. He also taught that good government required that the Church be
without political influence. (Sounds like the ACLU, no?) Wycliffe would have
been in big trouble, had he not found a protector in
John
of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, 1340 – 1399 who was acting as ruler at this
time. Duke John ran England and really liked some of Wycliffe’s ideas. The king
should run things, not the bishops. After all, kings and dukes and
generalissimos and Chicago aldermen and mayors really have the people’s best
interest at heart.
Remember that the old feudal system had collapsed, and kings and nations were
emerging. Instead of Christendom, the emperors and the popes, you now had France
and England and Aragon and Castile. The little duchies and squires that made up
Europe were about to become nations with divinely appointed kings who wanted no
pope or bishop to tell them what to do. Without a pope to excommunicate them or
depose them, they would go to war with each other for the next 500 years, until
Europe exhausted herself and her Christian culture in that holocaust of the
First and Second World Wars in which at least One Hundred Million people died,
all told, and in which it seems that Europe herself has died. The final
ingredients in this witch’s brew: Johannes Gutenberg’s printing press (about
1450) and that irrepressible German monk, Father Martin Luther (1483 –1546). To
be continued....
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