Chapter 6 - STATE OF THE PAPACY (AD 891-1046)
All this time the papacy was in a very sad condition. Popes were
set up and put down continually, and some of them were put to death
by their enemies. The body of one pope named Formosus, after it
had been some years in the grave, was taken up by order of one of
his successors (Stephen VI),was dressed out in the full robes of
office, and placed in the papal chair; and then the dead pope was
tried and condemned for some offence against the laws of the Church.
It was declared that the clergy whom he had ordained were not to
be reckoned as clergy; his corpse was stripped of the papal robes;
the fingers which he had been accustomed to raise in blessing were
cut off; and the body, after having been dragged about the city,
was thrown into the Tiber (AD 896).
Otho the Great, who has been mentioned as emperor, turned out a
young pope, John XII, who was charged with all sorts of bad conduct
(AD 963); and that emperor's grandson, Otho III, put in two popes,
one after another (AD 996, 999). The second of these popes was a
very learned and clever Frenchman, named Gerbert, who as pope took
the name of Sylvester II. He had studied under the Arabs in Spain
(for in some kinds of learning the Arabs were then far beyond the
Christians); and it was he who first taught Christians to use the
Arabic figures (such as 1, 2, and 3) instead of the Roman letters
or figures (such as I, II, and III). He also made a famous clock;
and on account of his skill in such things people supposed him to
be a sorcerer, and told strange stories about him. Thus it is said
that he made a brazen head, which answered "Yes" and "No"
to questions. Gerbert asked his head where he should die, and supposed
from the answer that it was to be in the city of Jerusalem. But
one day as he was at service in one of the Roman churches which
is called "Holy Cross in Jerusalem," he was taken very
ill; and then he understood that that church was the Jerusalem in
which he was to die. We need not believe such stories; but yet it
is well to know about them, because they show what people were disposed
to believe in the time when the stories were made.
The troubles of the papacy continued, and at one time there were
no fewer than three popes, each of whom had one of the three chief
churches of Rome, and gave himself out for the only true pope. But
this state of things was such a scandal that the emperor, Henry
III, was invited from Germany to put an end to it, and for this
purpose he held a council at Sutri, not far from Rome, in 1046.
Two of the popes were set aside, and the third, Gregory VI, who
was the best of the three, was drawn to confess that he had given
money to get his office, because he wished to use the power of the
papacy to bring about some kind of reform. But on this he was told
that he had been guilty of simony--a sin which takes its name from
Simon the sorcerer, in the Acts of the Apostles (ch viii.), and
which means the buying of spiritual things with money. This had
never struck Gregory before; but when told of it by the council
he had no choice but to lay aside his papal robes, and the emperor
put one of his own German bishops into the papacy.
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