登陆注册
19303400000021

第21章

At last Hildebrand received the reward of his great services,--"a reward," says Stephen, "which he had long contemplated, but which, with self-controlling policy, he had so long declined." In the year 1073 Hildebrand became Gregory VII., and his memorable pontificate began as a reformer of the abuses of his age, and the intrepid defender of that unlimited and absolute despotism which inthralled not merely the princes of Europe, but the mind of Christendom itself. It was he who not only proclaimed the liberties of the people against nobles, and made the Church an asylum for misery and oppression, but who realized the idea that the Church was the mother of spiritual principles, and that the spiritual authority should be raised over all temporal power.

In the great crises of States and Empires deliverers seem to be raised up by Divine Providence to restore peace and order, and maintain the first condition of society, or extricate nations from overwhelming calamities. Thus Charlemagne appeared at the right time to prevent the overthrow of Europe by new waves of barbaric invasion. Thus William the Silent preserved the nationality of Holland, and Gustavus Adolphus gave religious liberty to Germany when persecution was apparently successful. Thus Richelieu undermined feudalism in France, and established absolutism as one of the needed forces of his turbulent age, even as Napoleon gave law and order to France when distracted by the anarchism of a revolution which did not comprehend the liberty which was invoked.

So Hildebrand was raised up to establish the only government which could rescue Europe from the rapacities of feudal nobles, and establish law and order in the hands of the most enlightened class;so that, like Peter the Great, he looms up as a reformer as well as a despot. He appears in a double light.

Now you ask: "What were his reforms, and what were his schemes of aggrandizement, for which we honor him while we denounce him?" We cannot see the reforms he attempted without glancing at the enormous evils which stared him in the face.

Society in Europe, in the eleventh century, was nearly as dark and degraded as it was on the fall of the Merovingian dynasty. In some respects it had reached the lowest depth of wretchedness which the Middle Ages ever saw. Never had the clergy been more worldly or devoted to temporal things. They had not the piety of the fourth century, nor the intelligence of the sixteenth century; they were powerful and wealthy, but had grown corrupt. Monastic institutions covered the face of Europe, but the monks had sadly departed from the virtues which partially redeemed the miseries that succeeded the fall of the Roman Empire. The lives of the clergy, regular and secular, still compared favorably with the lives of the feudal nobility, who had, in addition to other vices, the vices of robbers and bandits. But still the clergy had fallen far from the high standard of earlier ages. Monasteries sought to be independent of all foreign control and of episcopal jurisdiction. They had been enormously enriched by princes and barons, and they owned, with the other clergy, half the lands of Europe, and more than half its silver and gold. The monks fattened on all the luxuries which then were known; they neglected the rules of their order and lived in idleness,--spending their time in the chase, or in taverns and brothels. Hardly a great scholar or theologian had arisen among them since the Patristic age, with the exception of a few schoolmen like Anselm and Peter Lombard. Saint Bernard had not yet appeared to reform the Benedictines, nor Dominic and Saint Francis to found new orders. Gluttony and idleness were perhaps the characteristic vices of the great body of the monks, who numbered over one hundred thousand. Hunting and hawking were the most innocent of their amusements. They have been accused of drinking toasts in honor of the Devil, and celebrating Mass in a state of intoxication. "Not one in a thousand," says Hallam, "could address to one another a common letter of salutation." They were a walking libel on everything sacred. Read the account of their banquets in the annals which have come down to us of the tenth and eleventh centuries, when convents were so numerous and rich. If Dugdale is to be credited, their gluttony exceeded that of any previous or succeeding age. Their cupidity, their drunken revels, their infamous haunts, their disgusting coarseness, their hypocrisy, ignorance, selfishness, and superstition were notorious. Yet the monks were not worse than the secular clergy, high and low.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 云烟纷飞

    云烟纷飞

    那一片天空,片片的羽毛飘舞,朦胧的看不清颜色。那一滴泪珠,点点的淡紫环绕,优雅的转过身离去。她说,最爱的是姐姐,最想保护的是姐姐。可是,总是有许多的悲哀,深埋心底。她说,不能够让姐姐担心。再回首时,失去的已经太多,忘记了那么多的所有,纵然想要逃避也不能够……
  • 红楼元春之爱在有情天

    红楼元春之爱在有情天

    谁都道黛玉葬花哭魂,宝玉多情无奈,谁能解元春之青春年华?女主有幸穿越到红楼时空,落在了为救主而落水的元春身上。从此展开了一段爱恨情仇,她将香消玉陨,还是情归何处。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 恶魔殿下的冷魅酷公主

    恶魔殿下的冷魅酷公主

    看恶魔殿下如何抢夺他的冷魅酷公主。。。。。。
  • 家长教育孩子时的30个怎么办

    家长教育孩子时的30个怎么办

    本书深刻分析了孩子行为反常、不听话现象的种种原因,论述了教育孩子的科学理念,对孩子行为反常、不听话的多种表现、招数进行了全方位地透视,为父母正确地应对孩子反常行为,提出了各种实用而有效的对策与技巧。
  • 仲夏夜之秋:我们正值青春

    仲夏夜之秋:我们正值青春

    那一年,仲夏夜带着点点燥热与悸动,他们相遇,年少的誓言是否只是童言无忌?欧阳晨曦,世界的宠儿,暗夜的帝,却命运多舛,一生为情所困。亲情、爱情、友情......她都曾拥有过,可醒来终究是浮生梦一场......再充满梦幻的仲夏也有醒来的一天,再好的青春也有被耗光的一刻,到那个时候,是谁在陪她度过寒冷的冬天,是谁带她回忆那正值青春的时光?
  • 追爱

    追爱

    花心是苏亦喻的痛恨,有钱是苏亦喻的厌恶,美男?她不稀罕。她想要的只是一个普通的对自己好的男人,可是因为手机却惹来了一个牛皮糖似的美男、有钱、花心三位一体的极品男人,一个追、一个躲,却终究躲不过命运的安排,躲不过自己的心,躲不过某人死都要追到她的决心。
  • 超级修炼辅助系统

    超级修炼辅助系统

    摘要:原本一个地球上面的普通人“秦风”,携带着一款修炼系统来到了异世界,从此之后,在修炼系统的帮助之下秦风开始了逆战天下,转战苍穹。强大的武技、武器在这大千宇宙展示着无尽的光辉。倾国倾城的美女为他魂牵梦绕,强者希望成为他的手下而大打出手。所有精彩尽在超级修炼辅助系统?
  • 中国狮:一座城市崛起的30年记忆

    中国狮:一座城市崛起的30年记忆

    本书不仅讲述了一座小城经济奇迹背后的秘密,更可以看做是一次探讨城市品质与经济发展关系的尝试。有什么样的水土,就有什么样的人群;有什么样的人群,就有什么样的区域未来。书不是一本简单的城市回忆录,它第一次站在国家的视野和更久远的时空坐标中,结合改革开放30年的中国变迁,对一座城市的发展历史和文化基因进行了系统的梳理和总结,讲述了石狮人所特有的人文精神。或许以石狮为代表的闽南是这样一块土壤,它以自身为支点聚焦了两个巨大无比的文化扇面,一面是博大精深的中原文明,另一面则是广阔无边的海洋文明,数百年来,正是这两种不同特质文明的千百次撞击与交融,终于铸就了闽南所特有的魂魄与传奇,而这场传奇只是刚刚开始。
  • 商女妖娆,霸主夫君请休妻

    商女妖娆,霸主夫君请休妻

    一朝穿越,她重生为商人之女。似乎挣钱成了她的消遣。消遣的余时,她和他开始了一段荡人心肠的爱情曲谱。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 白千恋晨

    白千恋晨

    四年前,我站在跑道上,你那天看着我样子,我想告诉你,你是我最美好的遇见。可我只能看着你的背影说再见。