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- SUBJECT: English 243
- TITLE: "The Canterbury Tales: A view of the Medieval Christian Church"
-
- In discussing Chaucer's collection of stories called The Canterbury
- Tales, an interesting picture
- or illustration of the Medieval Christian Church is presented. However,
- while people demanded more
- voice in the affairs of government, the church became corrupt -- this
- corruption also led to a more
- crooked society. Nevertheless, there is no such thing as just church
- history; This is because the
- church can never be studied in isolation, simply because it has always
- related to the social, economic
- and political context of the day. In history then, there is a two way
- process where the church has an
- influence on the rest of society and of course, society influences the
- church. This is naturally because
- it is the people from a society who make up the church....and those same
- people became the
- personalities that created these tales of a pilgrimmage to Canterbury.
-
- The Christianization of Anglo-Saxon England was to take place in a
- relatively short period of time,
- but this was not because of the success of the Augustinian effort. Indeed,
- the early years of this
- mission had an ambivalence which shows in the number of people who hedged
- their bets by
- practicing both Christian and Pagan rites at the same time, and in the
- number of people who
- promptly apostatized when a Christian king died. There is certainly no
- evidence for a large-scale
- conversion of the common people to Christianity at this time. Augustine was
- not the most diplomatic
- of men, and managed to antagonize many people of power and influence in
- Britain, not least among
- them the native British churchmen, who had never been particularly eager to
- save the souls of the
- Anglo-Saxons who had brought such bitter times to their people. In their
- isolation, the British Church
- had maintained older ways of celebrated the major festivals of Christianity,
- and Augustine's effort to
- compel them to conform to modern Roman usage only angered them. When
- Augustine died (some
- time between 604 and 609 AD), then, Christianity had only a precarious hold
- on Anglo-Saxon
- England, a hold which was limited largely to a few in the aristocracy.
- Christianity was to become
- firmly established only as a result of Irish efforts, who from centers in
- Scotland and Northumbria
- made the common people Christian, and established on a firm basis the
- English Church.
- At all levels of society, belief in a god or gods was not a matter of
- choice, it was a matter of fact.
- Atheism was an alien concept (and one dating from the eighteenth century).
- Living in the middle ages,
- one would come into contact with the Church in a number of ways.
-
- First, there were the routine church services, held daily and attended
- at least once a week, and the
- special festivals of Christmas, Easter, baptisms, marriages, etc.. In that
- respect the medieval Church
- was no different to the modern one. Second, there were the tithes that the
- Church collected, usually
- once a year. Tithes were used to feed the parish priest, maintain the fabric
- of the church, and to help
- the poor. Third, the Church fulfilled the functions of a 'civil service' and
- an education system. Schools
- did not exist (and were unnecessary to a largely peasant society), but the
- Church and the government
- needed men who could read and write in English and Latin. The Church trained
- its own men, and these
- went to help in the government: writing letters, keeping accounts and so on.
- The words 'cleric' and
- 'clerk' have the same origin, and every nobleman would have at least one
- priest to act as a secretary.
-
- The power of the Church is often over-emphasized. Certainly, the later
- medieval Church was rich and
- powerful, and that power was often misused - especially in Europe. Bishops
- and archbishops were
- appointed without any training or clerical background, church offices
- changed hands for cash, and so on.
- The authority of the early medieval Church in England was no different to
- that of any other landowner.
- So, the question that haunted medieval man was that of his own salvation.
- The existence of God
- was never questioned and the heart-cry of medieval society was a desire to
- know God and achieve
- intimacy with the divine. Leading a life pleasing to God was the uppermost
- concern, and the wide
- diversity of medieval piety is simply because people answered the question,
- 'How can I best lead a holy
- life?' in so many different ways. Beginning with "The Pardoner's Tale", the
- theme of salvation is truly
- paramount. Chaucer, being one of the most important medieval authors, uses
- this prologue and tale
- to make a statement about buying salvation. The character of the pardoner is
- one of the most
- despicable pilgrims, seemingly "along for the ride" to his next "gig" as the
- seller of relics. "For myn
- entente is nat but for to winne,/ And no thing for correccion of sinne,"
- admits the pardoner in his
- prologue. As a matter of fact, the pardoner is only in it for the money, as
- evident from this passage:
-
- I wol none of the Apostles countrefete:
- I wold have moneye, wolle, cheese, and whete,
- Al were it yiven of the pooreste page,
- Or of the pooreste widwe in a village --
- Al sholde hir children sterve for famine.
- Nay, I drinke licour of the vine
- And have a joly wenche in every town.
-
- In his tale, the Pardoner slips into his role as the holiest of holies and
- speaks of the dire
- consequences of gluttony, gambling, and lechery. He cites Attila the Hun
- with, "Looke Attila, the
- grete conquerour,/ Deide in his sleep with shame and dishonour,/ Bleeding at
- his nose in
- dronkenesse". The personification of the deadly sins, along with his story
- of the three greedy
- men that eventually perish at the hands of their sin is a distinct medieval
- device. The comic twist that
- Chaucer adds to the device, though, is that the Pardoner in himself is as
- the personification of sin, as is
- evident from the passages of his prologue. At the conclusion of his tale,
- the Pardoner asks, "Allas,
- mankinde, how may it bitide/ That to thy Creatour which that thee wroughte,/
- And with his precious
- herte blood boughte,/ Thou art so fals and unkinde, allas?". He then goes on
- to offer each
- pilgrim a place...for a price, of course.
-
- The Pardoner's place in Chaucer's idea of redemption becomes evident in
- the epilogue of the tale.
- After offering the host the first pardon ("For he is most envoluped in
- sinne" and, supposedly, the
- equivalent of Chaucer), the host berates the pardoner, saying, "I wolde I
- hadde thy coilons in
- myn hond,/ In stede of relikes or of saintuarye./ Lat cutte him of". By
- this, the idea of the
- pardoner as the most important man on the pilgrimage is brought to fruition
- and Chaucer makes the
- main point of this tale: Salvation is not for sale. Another example of the
- medieval obsession with
- redemption.
-
- However, some did not accept this and questioned the church -- It was
- what they wanted other
- than "a holy life with a Old-Testament God"; That style of thinking
- evenually lead to a "more gentle,
- mother-figure" as a goddess -- The Cult of the Virgin. The eminent question
- then becomes, "Why
- would people change from a long-lasting, Old-Testament God to a mother-like
- goddess ? The answer
- is simply because they thought their "new found Goddess" would never be as
- harsh on people as the
- often criticized male like aspect of God. In both current Catholicism and
- that of the medieval period,
- Mary is worshipped with more fervor than even God or Jesus. Church after
- church was (and still is)
- erected in her name. Her likeness graced statues and stained glass with as
- much frequency as Jesus'
- bloody head. The worship of Mary is fervent, institutionalized, and approved
- of by the Christian church.
- Is she not a goddess? Mary simply took the place of the female aspects of
- the spirit that were once
- worshipped as Roman or Anglo-Saxon goddesses.
-
- The medieval period, stretching approximately from the late seventh
- century to the early sixteenth,
- was bound together under one constant--Roman Catholic Christianity. But
- beneath this "curtain of
- Christianity" many legends were being formed and passed down, as old pagan
- traditions became
- assimilated into a newly Christian society. The two religious forms were
- becoming intertwined. They
- seemed at this time to be tolerant of each other, not entirely distinct. A
- peoples habits and thought
- processes are not easily changed, and being that the Anglo-Saxons of Britain
- were not Christians until
- the mid-600's, a period of transition can be expected . At least, a
- fascination with their pagan ancestors
- existed, at most, the practice of the old ways. Examples of a fascination
- with magic, worshipping more
- than one god-like figure, and a continuing love for worshipping goddesses,
- exist in many texts written in
- this period. Yet, this does not mean that every village had a sorceress in
- their midst, but literature
- usually reflects the society within which it emerges. At the time of The
- Canterbury Tales, many of a
- people who were Christians officially, politically, and in most cases at
- heart, saw that there were elements
- of paganism and sorcery which is tolerated and respected. The society in
- which Chaucer writes these
- stories is Christian as well, politically and spiritually--could it be that
- they tolerated and respected
- paganism and magic? Perhaps the separation of the two is not necessary and
- was not complete at this
- point in time.
-
- Not only was magic a pagan tradition that persisted throughout the
- Middle Ages..another tradition,
- changing at the time, reflected the transition from worshipping the unseen
- forces in the world as many
- gods, to one, omnipotent God. Although the people were Christians, they took
- the separation of spiritual
- powers far beyond the creation the Trinity. The specific powers or emphasis
- given to each saint
- carries on even into today's Catholic tradition. The medieval period may
- have had some of this
- (although many of the saints were not even born yet...) but in their
- literature, many immortal and
- powerful creatures are found. This form of Paganism existed in Britain of
- the Middle ages, full of
- spiritual beings, full of magic, alive with heavenly power existing on
- Earth. It has been the nature of the
- Christian men in power through the ages to, for fear, deny their people the
- knowledge of the un-Christian
- richness in their ancestry, and so the traditions that were not masked as
- Christian are lost to students
- of Christian history and literature. But it seems this period had not seen
- such extensive discrimination.
- The two ways of the world were not quite so separate then, and matters of
- the occult were not yet
- labeled as evil. This again implies that perhaps the two forms of religious
- thought do not have to be
- completely separate. There are strong similarities for them to coincide and
- complement each
- other, and for an entire people trying to make the Christian transition,
- maybe this complementing was
- necessary. However, the age of forceful patriarchy and witch-burning would
- not come about for several
- hundred years.
-
- Each new way of leading a "holy life" was thought to be progressively
- more acceptable to God
- by its proponents than the ones that had gone before. Such 'new ways' were
- normally inspired by a
- desire to break away from the corruption and worldliness which was percieved
- in the older or more
- established forms of Godly living. These new ways often became corrupt
- themselves and over time
- breakaways from them were hailed as a newer and more perfect way of
- following God. This
- roller-coaster ride of corruption and reform is basically the story of
- popular medieval religion as man
- battled to define and discover what it really meant to be a Christian.
- In an effort to escape persecution, but to also flee the evil, prevalent in
- the world and to seek God
- free from many ' worldly ' distractions, monks began to assemble as
- communities of Christians . These
- communities, although they had little organization, were regarded as
- possessing the best Christian life
- by having a solitary, ascetic, celibate existence where the ' world ' had
- been totally renounced and had
- been entirely replaced with heavenly contemplation. These ' new ' martyrs
- were usually just called
- monks: theirs was a life of daily martyrdom as they constantly died to self
- and lived totally for God.
- The monks paid particular veneration to the physical remains of the martyrs
- (relics) and were therefore
- connected to the martyrs who they replaced. The rise of ascetic monasticism
- and relic worship however
- was quite controversial -- Both the worship of relics and ascetic
- monasticism however became
- mainstays of this Medieval religion, and the idea that monks were a new form
- of martyr persisted
- over time. Both monks as well as martyrs were looked upon as holy men.
-
- In relating this solitary world to readers, there is also a monk in
- Chaucer's work -- He is someone
- who combined godliness and worldliness into a profitable and comfortable
- living. He was the
- outrider or the person in charge of the outlying property....which lead him
- to enjoy hunting, fine foods,
- and owning several horses. Monks renounced all their worldly belongings and
- by taking vows of poverty,
- chastity and obedience, joined a community of monks. Their lives were spent
- in communal worship,
- devotional reading, prayer and manual labour all under the authority of the
- abbot of the monastic house.
- Particular monks often had particular jobs- the cellarer or the infirmarer
- for example, and these like every aspect of monastic life were laid down in
- the 'Rule'. Monks were nearly always of noble extraction (one
- had to have wealth in order to give it up) but could also be given to the
- monastery as children (called
- oblates) to be brought up as monks.
-
- Hindsight has blurred our vision of the Medieval monk and the result is
- that the modern Christian
- mindset has condemned him for his selfish escapism from the world and for
- his apparent neglect of those
- who needed Christ outside of the cloister. The Medieval mindset was very
- different. The monastery was
- an integral part of the local community -- it probably owned most of the
- farming land in the area- and the
- fortunes of the people in any area were bound up with the spirituality of
- its monastic house. The monks
- were on the front line of the spiritual battle-it was they who did battle in
- prayer for their community, who
- warded off devils and demons and who prayed tirelessly for the salvation of
- the souls of those in their
- community. Rather than being the cowards of Christianity unable to take the
- strain of living a Christian
- life in the real world, the monks were like spiritual stormtroopers
- interceeding for an area against its
- supernatural enemies in mudh the same way as a local lord in his castle
- protected an area against its
- physical enemies. The people gave gifts to both lord and abbot in return for
- a service.
-
- The Pardoner also represents the tradition of faith -- in respect to
- the church of his time. The Pardoner is
- representative of the seamy side of the corrupt church and a broken or
- twisted (if you will) faith. The
- faith of a bureaucracy, which is what the church had become. The Pardoner
- was a church official who
- had the authority to forgive those who had sinned by selling pardons and
- indulgences to them. Although,
- the Pardoner was a church official, he was clearly in the "church" business
- for economic reasons. The
- Pardoner, a devious and somewhat dubious individual had one goal: Get the
- most money for pardons by
- almost any means of coercion necessary. A twisted and ironic mind, has
- basically defined himself through
- his work for a similarly corrupt church. In contrast, the Plowman has
- nothing but a seemingly
- uncomplicated and untwisted faith. The Plowman has the faith of a poor
- farmer, uncomplicated by the
- bureaucracy of the church. The Pardoner is probably on this journey because
- he is being required to go
- by the church or he sees some sort of economic gain from this voyage, most
- likely from selling
- forgiveness to the other pilgrims. The Plowman on the other hand is probably
- on this voyage because of
- his sincerity and faith in its purpose.
-
- While this was the story of religion at 'grass-roots' level, at the
- organisational and hierarchical level,
- the church developed along a different line. It became more organized, more
- bureaucratic, more legal,
- more centralized and basically more powerful on a European scale. This
- process was spearheaded
- by the papacy and reached its pinnacle under Pope Innocent III in the early
- 13th Century. He embodied
- what became known as the 'papal monarchy' - a situation where the popes
- literally were kings in their
- own world. The relative importance of spiritual and secular power in the
- world was a constant question in
- the middle ages with both secular emperors and kings, and the popes
- asserting their claims to rule by
- divine authority with God's commands for God's people proceeding out of
- their mouths. The power of the
- church is hard to exaggerate: its economic and political influence was huge,
- as its wealth, movements
- like the crusades, and even the number of churches that exist from this
- period truly show its greatness.
- By the early 10th century, a strange malaise seems to have entered the
- English church. There are
- comments from this time of a decline in learning among churchmen and an
- increase in a love for
- things of this earthly world. Even more of these lax standards had begun a
- decline in the power structure
- of the church which included a decrease in acceptable behavior amongst
- churchmen and a growing use
- of church institutions by lay people as a means of evading taxes.
-
- Christianity affected all men in Europe at every level and in every way.
- Such distances however, led
- to much diversity and the shaping of Medieval religion into a land of
- contrasts. One can also see how
- man's feelings of extreme sinfulness and desire for God are quite evident
- in these tales.
- Still, we are told that history repeats itself because nobody listens to it,
- but more realistically
- history repeats itself because man is essentially the same from one
- generation to the next. He has
- the same aspirations, fears and flaws; yet the way that these are expressed
- differs from age to age.
- This is why each period of history is different. The fact that man is the
- same yet different is what
- makes the study of the people who formed the medieval church directly
- applicable to Christians' lives and experiences today.
-
-