A USEFUL HISTORICAL SUMMARY OF THE PERIOD AND ITS IDEALS
History professor C. H. Lawrence wrote in the Preface to the First Edition (1984) of this book: “This book has grown out of the experience of many years spent endeavoring to explain to students the presence and function of monasteries in the medieval world… it seemed to me that there was use for a short study that traced the Growth of the Western monastic tradition as a whole in its social context, from its origins in late antiquity do to the later Middle Ages. This unifying purpose is my justification for the title. For although I have included the friars, they were not, properly speaking, monks, nor were the Brethren of the Common Life of the members of other fringe groups that figure in the later chapters. But the Mendicant Orders and the other religious movements of the later Middle Ages were nevertheless offshoots of the same monastic tradition and would be unintelligible without reference to it.”
He adds in the Preface to the Second [1989] Edition, “In this edition I have tried to incorporate… some of the new work that was not available to me when the first edition went to press. Besides this, retirement from the frenetic distractions that afflict all universities in these times has given me the chance to deal at length with some themes in which I have long had a special interest, such as the relationship of the monasteries to the world of the schoolmen.”
He begins, “Christian monasticism made its earliest appearance in Egypt and Palestine towards the end of the third century. In its primitive form it was a way of life adopted by solitaries, or anchorites, living in the desert. The word ‘monk’ itself derives from the Greek word ‘monos’ meaning alone: monks were people who had withdrawn from society to pursue the spiritual life in solitude… Some monks, the greater number in fact, lived in organized communities of their own kind; but the first in time were the hermits… For the most part these people were not clergy but lay Christians, who had migrated into the solitude from the urban society of late antiquity. Writers on the subject… have claimed that the first Christian anchorites were refugees who sought safety in the desert from the persecution launched against the Church by the imperial government under Decius and Diocletian. Others have argued that the movement resulted from the softening of the moral fiber of the Christian community after Constantine had given peace to the Church in 313. Seen from this angle, the asceticism of the desert solitaries represented a reaction by choicer spirits against the laxer standards and the careerism that crept into the Church once imperial approval had given it respectability and brought it endowments; the advent or large numbers of merely nominal Christians … drove those who were more deeply committed to the religious life to separate themselves from their congregations.” (Pg. 1-2)
He summarizes, “by the fifth century… the ascetical tradition of the Eastern desert had been transmitted to the West… The writings of Cassian ha provided the Western ascetical movement with a theology. But it was not until the sixth century that the first treatises appeared which offered a coherent plan for a monastic community. The earliest of these were the Rules composed by St. Benedict…? (Pg. 17)
He explains, “As with all monastic benefaction, the primary motive was that of safeguarding the soul of the benefactor and the souls of his relatives. Medieval rulers shared with their people current doctrinal assumptions about the economy of salvation. And these assumptions included the ideas of vicarious merit and the need to make satisfaction or reparation for sin. The merit that accrued to an individual through prayer and good works could be applied to other people, and not only to living people, but also to the dead. This concept plays a crucial role in medieval religious practice. To found and endow a community of monks was to ensure a donor an unceasing fund of intercession and sacrifice which would avail hi and his relatives both in lie and after death.” (Pg. 69)
He notes, “It was to Cluny that men looked for spiritual leadership and religious inspiration… Cluny stands in the tenth century for the restoration of Benedictine monastic life, largely as it had been understood… a century earlier. As a house that waw dedicated to reviving strict observance of the Rule, Cluny was not unique… it also had important contemporaries.” (Pg. 86)
He states, “If the monastic library was stocked with scholastic treatises and copies of the ‘Sentences’ [of Peter Lombard] for private study, in public reading at least, the emphasis is upon edification rather than intellectual nourishment. In a sense, the new learning of the schools, by clarifying the distinction between the natural and the supernatural, between nature and grace, had sharpened the line of demarcation between the cloister and the world.” (Pg. 146)
He recounts, “The appeal … to the remote pat was central to the strategy of the Gregorian Reform. It was the avowed aim of the Gregorian party to restore what they conceived to be the discipline and order of the primitive Church. To this end the papal Curia set scholars to work to search libraries and archives for early sources of canon law, and new collections were produced containing ‘the ancient law’---the law that governed the Church of the early centuries.” (Pg. 149-150)
He reports, “Citeaux, and the order that sprang from it, was the outcome of the same restless search for a simpler and more secluded form of ascetical life that found expression in other new orders in the eleventh century. Like similar movements, it began as a reaction against the corporate wealth, worldly involvements, and surfeited liturgical ritualism of the Carolingian monastic tradition. The founders of Citeaux set out to create a monastery in which the pristine observance of the Benedictine Rule would be restored. As they conceived it, poverty and isolation were integral features of this observance… the order that evolved out of their effort eclipsed all its rivals in the vigor of its growth, the number of it recruits, and the brilliance of its reputation.” (Pg. 174)
He adds, “Before the end of the thirteenth century, much that was distinctive in the Cistercian vocation had been lost. In its heyday it had summoned the aristocracy and the intellectual elite of Europe to a new spiritual adventure. But the compromises that followed in the train of wealth and influence made the voice less compelling. A new European intelligentsia was emerging, and it looked to other forms of religious life for the fulfillment of its ideals.” (Pg. 202)
He explains, “Of all new forms of monastic lire that emerged from the religious ferment of the twelfth century none was more paradoxical than that of the Military Orders. These were orders of knights, dedicated to fighting the infidel, who were also fully professed monks. They looked like a contradiction in terms… How could fighting and killing with carnal weapons be reconciled with the Gospel of peace and love?... The reconciliation of these incomparable occupations in the orders of fighting monks can only be understood in the context of the crusading movement from which they sprang.” (Pg. 206)
He acknowledges, “The nunneries of the early Middle Ages not only offered women the chance to pursue the ascetical life; they attracted endowments because they performed an important social role in providing a haven for the daughters and widows of the aristocracy for whom no suitable marriage could be found. The women who entered them, and the families that placed them there, expected them to enjoy the society of their own kind. They were thus aristocratic and socially exclusive communities.” (Pg. 216)
He notes, “The orders of mendicant friars which appeared early in the thirteenth century represented a new departure, a radical breakaway of the past… their rejection of property and reliance upon begging to support themselves were only the outward signs of a more fundamental change of spirit…. Preachng and ministering to the people was their raison d’etre… Assurance of salvation need no longer be sought by flight from the human hive… [One] cold fulfill the demands of the Christian life by sanctifying the humdrum duties and tasks of their estate…” (Pg. 238)
He concludes, “The crisis of the fifteenth century was not a terminal disease… monasticism survived by undergoing an exterior and interior transformation… a Rule designed for monks in late antiquity or in the twelfth century would not be applicable in very detail to recruits of a later age, whose intellectual and psychological formation was very different.” (Pg. 288)
This is a fine history that will be of keen interest to those studying this period.