Chapter 10 - NEW ORDERS OF MONKS; MILITARY ORDERS
In the times of which I have lately been speaking, the monks did
much valuable service to the Church and to the world in general.
It was mostly through their labours that heathen nations were converted
to the Gospel, that their barbarous roughness was tamed, and that
learning, although it had greatly decayed, was not altogether lost.
Often, where monks had built their houses in lonely places, little
clusters of huts grew up round them, and in time these clusters
of huts became large and important towns. Monks were very highly
thought of, and sometimes it was seen that kings and queens would
leave all their worldly grandeur, and would withdraw to spend their
last years under the quiet roof of a monastery. But it was found,
at the same time, that monks were apt to fall away from the strict
rules by which they were bound, so that reforms were continually
needed among them.
As the popes became more powerful, they found the monks valuable
friends and allies, and they gave exemptions to many monasteries;
that is to say, they took it on themselves to set those monasteries
free from the control which the bishops had held over them, so that
the monks of these exempt places did not own any bishop at all,
and would not allow that any one but the pope was over them.
I have already told you of the rule which was drawn up for monks
by St. Benedict of Nursia (p 150). Some other rules were afterwards
made, such as that of Columban, an Irish abbot, who for many years
(AD 589-615) laboured in France, Switzerland, and the north of Italy.
Columban went more into little matters than Benedict had done, and
laid down exact directions in cases where Benedict had left the
abbots of monasteries to settle things as they should think fit.
Thus Columban's rule laid down that any monk who should call anything
his own should receive six strokes, and appointed the same punishment
for everyone who should omit to say "Amen" after the abbot's
blessing, or to make the sign of the cross over his spoon or his
candle; for every one who should talk at meals, or should cough
at the beginning of a psalm. There were ten strokes for striking
the table with a knife, or for spilling beer on it; and for heavier
offenses the punishment sometimes rose as high as two hundred: besides
that, other punishments were used, such as fasting on bread and
water, psalm-singing, humble postures, and long times of silence.
Still, however, Benedict's rule was that by which the greater part
of the Western monks were governed. But, although they were under
the same rule, they had no other connection with each other; each
company of monks stood by itself, having no tie outside its own
walls. There was not as yet, in the West, anything like the society
which St. Pachomius had long before established in Egypt (p 62),
where all the monasteries were supposed to be as so many sisters,
and all owned the mother-monastery as their head. It was not until
the tenth century that anything of this kind was set on foot in
the Western Church.
(1.) In the Year 912, an abbot named Berno founded a new society
at Cluny, in Burgundy. He began with only twelve monks; but by degrees
the fame of Cluny spread, and the pattern which had been set there
was copied far and wide, until at length more than two thousand
monasteries were reckoned as belonging to the "Congregation"
(as it was called) or Order of Cluny; and all these looked up to
the great abbot of the mother-monastery as their chief. The early
abbots of Cluny were very remarkable men, and took a great part
in the affairs both of the Church and of kingdoms: some of them
even refused the popedom; and bishops placed themselves under them,
as simple monks of Cluny, for the sake of their advice and teaching.
The founders of the Cluniac order added many precepts to the rule
or St. Benedict. Thus the monks were required to swallow all the
crumbs of their bread at the end of every meal; and when some of
them showed a wish to escape this duty, they were frightened into
obedience by an awful tale that a monk, when dying, saw at the end
of his bed a great sack of the crumbs which he had left on the table
rising up as a witness against him. The monks were bound to keep
silence at times; and we are told that, rather than break this rule,
one of them allowed his horse to be stolen, and another let himself
be carried off as a prisoner by the Northmen. During these times
of silence they made use of a set of signs, by which they were able
to let each other know what they wanted.
This congregation of Cluny, then, was the first great monkish order
in the West, and others soon followed it. They were mostly very
strict at first--some of them so strict that they not only forbade
all luxury in the monks, but would not allow any fine buildings,
or any handsome furniture in their churches. But in general the
monks soon got over this by saying that, as their buildings and
their services were not for themselves, but for God, their duty
was to honour Him by giving Him of the best that they could.
These orders were known from each other by the difference of their
dress: thus the Benedictines were called Black Monks, the Cistercians
were called White Monks, and at a later time we find mention of
Black Friars, White Friars, Grey Friars, and so forth.
(2.) About the time of Gregory VII, several new orders were founded;
and of these the most famous were the Carthusians and the Cistercians.
As to the beginning of the Carthusian order, a strange story is
told. The founder, Bruno, is said to have been studying at Paris,
where a famous teacher, who had been greatly respected for his piety,
died. As his funeral was on its way to the grave, the corpse suddenly
raised itself from the bier, and uttered the words, "By God's
righteous judgement I am accused!" All who were around were
struck with horror, and the burial was put off until the next day.
But then, as the mourners were again moving toward the grave, the
dead man rose up a second time, and groaned out, "By God's
righteous judgement I am judged!" Again the service was put
off; but on the third day, the general awe was raised to a height
by his lifting up his head and saying, "By God's righteous
judgment I am condemned!" And it is said that on this discovery
as to the real state of a man who had been so highly honoured for
his supposed goodness, Bruno was so struck by a feeling of the hollowness
of all earthly judgment that he resolved to hide himself in a desert.
I have given this story as a sample of the strange tales which
have been told and believed; but not a word of it is really true,
and Bruno's reasons for withdrawing from the world were of quite
a different kind. It is, however, true that he did withdraw into
a wild and lonely place, which is now known as the Great Chartreuse,
among rough and awful rocks, near Grenoble, and there an extremely
severe rule was laid down for the monks of his order (AD 1084).
They were to wear goatskins next to the flesh, and their dress was
altogether to be of the coarsest and roughest sort. On three days
of each week their food was bread and water; on the other days they
were allowed some vegetables; but even their highest fare on holidays
was cheese and fish, and they never tasted meat at all. Once a week
they submitted to be flogged, after confessing their sins. They
spoke on Sundays and festivals only, and were not allowed to use
signs like the Cluniacs. It is to be said, to the credit of the
Carthusians, that, although their order grew rich and built splendid
monasteries and churches, they always kept to their hard way of
living, more faithfully, perhaps, than any other order.
(3.) The Cistercian order, which I have mentioned, was founded
by Robert of Molesme (AD 1098), and took its name from its chief
monastery, Citeaux, or, in Latin, Cistercium, The rule was very
strict. From the middle of September to Easter they were to eat
but one meal daily. Their monasteries were not to be built in towns,
but in lonely places. They were to shun pomp and pride in all things.
Their services were to be plain and simple, without any fine music.
Their vestments and all the furniture of their churches were to
be coarse and without ornament. No paintings, nor sculptures, nor
stained glass were allowed. The ordinary dress of the monks was
to be white.
At first it seemed as if the hardness of the Cistercian rule prevented
people from joining. But the third abbot of Citeaux, an Englishman
named Stephen Harding, when he was distressed at the slow progress
of the order, was comforted by a vision in which he saw a multitude
washing their white robes in a fountain; and very soon the vision
seemed to be fulfilled. In 1113 Bernard (of whom we shall hear more
presently) entered the monastery of Citeaux, and by-and-by the order
spread so wonderfully that it equalled the Cluniac congregation
in the number of houses belonging to it. These were not only connected
together like the Cluniac monasteries, but had a new kind of tie
in the general chapters, which were held every year. For these general
chapters every abbot of the order was required to appear at Citeaux,
to which they all looked up as their mother. Those who were in the
nearer countries were bound to attend every year; those who were
further off, once in three, or five, or seven years, according to
distance. Thus the smaller houses were allowed to have a share in
the management of the whole; and the plan was afterwards imitated
by Carthusians and other orders.
(4.) I need not mention any more of the societies of monks which
began about the same time, but I must not omit to say that the Crusades
gave rise to what are called "military orders", of which
the first and most famous were the Templars and the Hospitallers,
or Knights of St. John.
These orders were governed by rules which were much like those
of the monks; but the members of them were knights, who undertook
to defend the Holy Land against the unbelievers. The Hospitallers
were at first connected with a hospital which had been founded at
Jerusalem for the benefit of pilgrims by some Italian merchants,
and took its name from St. John, an archbishop of Alexandria, who
was called the Almsgiver. They had a black dress, with a white cross
on the breast, and, from having been at first employed in nursing
the sick and relieving the poor, they became warriors who fought
against the Mussulmans.
The Templars, who wore a white dress, with a red cross on the breast,
were even more famous as soldiers than the Hospitallers. The knights
of both these orders were bound by their rules to remain unmarried,
to be regular and frequent in their religious exercises, to live
plainly, to devote themselves to the defence of the Christian faith
and of the Holy Land; and for the sake of this work emperors, kings,
and other wealthy persons bestowed lands and other gifts on them,
so that they had large estates in all the countries of Europe. But
as they grew rich, they forgot their vows of poverty and humility,
and, although they kept up their character for bravery, they were
generally disliked for their pride and insolence.
We shall see by-and-by how it was that the order of the Temple
came to ruin. But the Hospitallers lasted longer. When the Christians
were driven out of the Holy Land, the knights of this order removed
first to Cyprus, then to Rhodes: and, last of all, to Malta, where
they continued even until quite late times.
Other military orders were founded after the pattern of the Templars
and the Hospitallers. The most famous of them were the Teutonic
(or German) knights, who fought the heathens on the shores of the
Baltic Sea, and got possession of a large country, which afterwards
became the kingdom of Prussia; and the order of St. James, which
belonged to Spain, and there carried on a continual war with the
Mahometan Moors, whose settlement in that country has already been
mentioned (p 170).
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