Introduction
In the literature
of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, there appears the figure of an intriguing
man who had an exceptional impact on the society of his day. He is
referred to variously as Valdes, Valdesius, Valdensius and Waldo (Valdo),
from the city of Lyons.
References to the
movement he founded ("Waldensians" "the poor of Lyons" "the
Leonese" "the Poor of Lombardy" or simply "the Poor")
appear repeatedly throughout the succeeding centuries of European history. They
are always in the shadows, always under bitter persecution, always hard to
understand, but always seemingly at the cutting edge of reformation ferment.
Historiography
The actions and
views of Waldo are shrouded in shadow, because neither he, nor contemporaries
in his movement ever chronicled their lives. No existing documents
speak of the exact year of his birth, of his youth, or even of the very last
years of his life.1 This
problem is made worse by the fact that the Poor of Lyons themselves desired
to establish an argument for their legitimacy based on antiquity.
In a day when there
was only one legitimate church, the Poor of Lyons felt that they had to answer
the charge that they must be heretics because they were new. Therefore,
they developed the argument that they were the remnant of a movement that
had been resisting the Roman Catholic Church since the time of Constantine's
donation of the western empire to Pope Sylvester in the fourth Century AD.
This claim depended on the spurious documentation for the donation of Constantine,
which both Catholics and Waldensians believed to be authentic at the time
but which is actually without historical support.2
This development
would have been harmless enough, but unfortunately, some early Protestant
historians, writing in the 1600's were also in the market for a claim
to antiquity. They saw the Waldensians as the bridge between themselves
and the Apostles.3 They
were inclined to believe the legends of the Poor of Lyons, and unfortunately
they had possession of the earliest authentic Waldensian manuscripts.
These documents
were compiled with commentary in a history written by Perrin, pastor at Lyons
in the year 1618.4 Perrin's
history was commissioned by the Synod of Dauphiny (which included the now
reformed Waldensian Churches).5 A
few years later, in 1655, John Leger, a Waldensian pastor, compiled another
collection of source material, which eventually wound up in the library of
the University of Cambridge.6 Perrin
and Leger attributed dates to the documents which were far too early. Some
Waldensians documents were dated as early as 1100 AD, (at least 60 years
before the movement began). Other documents from the reformation period
were dated as coming from before the reformation. This had the effect
of portraying the Waldensian movement as reformed in doctrine throughout
their history, whereas in fact they were not reformed until after the reformation.7
In 1875, Alexis
Muston published The Israel of the Alps, which, although critical
of some of the earlier work, such as Perrin's,8 continued
to accept the basic thesis that the Waldensians originated at the time of
Sylvester. Almost every Protestant work done since the time of Muston
in turn has depended on his work until recent times. In fact, studies
carried out by denominations such as the Presbyterians as recently as 1912
have continued to follow this line.9 Catholic
sources are no better. Melia is an example of a Roman Catholic author
as recently as 1870 attempting to deny that religious persecution of the
Waldensians occurred at all.10 In
the same way that John Leger accepted exaggerated accounts of the persecution,
Melia has accepted non-credible Roman Catholic accounts.
It is perhaps not
surprising that study of the Waldensians has become unpopular among scholars
because it is viewed as the province of biased ideologues. For these
reasons, there are few contemporary histories of the Waldensian Movement
that have scholarly credibility.11
Because of these
developments, it is difficult for the average student of history to arrive
at a clear picture of the chronology and development of the movement without
careful comparison of contradictory material. Further, in this case
one must not only compare different authors, but must also ascertain that
they do not depend on each other.
All we have from
the earliest period is a few fragmentary writings from letters, commentaries
and poems which circulated within the group, and a larger body of contemporary
material written by Roman Catholic clerics, all from a hostile point of view. Therefore,
as with so many "heresies" of the medieval period, it is necessary
for the student to read between the lines of detractors' comments to separate
the facts of the situation from the polemical elements in the inquisitorial
literature.
Beginnings
According to one
report from an inquisition prosecution found in Church archives in Carcassonne,
France, the movement known as the "Poor of Lyons" began in about
1170. The document goes on to state that Waldo himself had been a rich
merchant who underwent a religious experience which led him to renounce all
of his wealth, and ". . .observe a life of poverty and evangelical
perfection, as the Apostles."12 This
sort of commitment can hardly be considered unusual during this period of
history. However, Waldo went further:
He arranged for
the Gospels and some other books of the Bible to be translated in common
speech . . . which he read very often, though without understanding their
import. Infatuated with himself, he usurped the prerogatives of the
Apostles by presuming to preach the Gospel in the streets, where he made
many disciples, and involving them, both men and women, in a like presumption
by sending them out, in turn, to preach.
These people, ignorant and illiterate, went about through the
towns, entering houses and even churches, spreading many errors round about.13
Here the heart of
what the Poor were all about as well as the crux of their dispute with the
Roman Church is evident. Gui goes on later,
The principal heresy,
then, of the aforesaid Waldensians was and still remains the contempt for
ecclesiastical power. Excommunicated for this reason and delivered
to Satan, they were precipitated into innumerable errors. . .
The erring followers and sacrilegious masters of this sect hold and teach
that they are not subject to the lord pope or Roman pontiff or to any prelates
of the Roman Church. . ."14
The fact that Waldo
and his followers rejected riches and lived an austere life was not objectionable
to the hierarchy of the Roman Church. The same thing was being done
by tens of thousands all over Europe. Neither do there seem to have
been substantive doctrinal differences at first.
This last point
is important, because the most intriguing aspect of the Poor is precisely
that there was initially no important doctrinal difference. They saw
themselves as Roman Catholics who were carrying the doctrines of Christianity
further than their weaker brethren. They even sent a delegation to
the third Lateran Council in 1179 to obtain Papal approval of their work. There
they were examined by an English friar, Walter Mapes, who in 1184 was in
Rome for the council. He recounts,
We saw Waldensian
men in the Roman Council held by Pope Alexander the Third. They were
simple and unlearned, and were thus called from the name of their founder,
Valdo, who was a citizen of Lyons on the Rhone. They presented to the
Pope a book written in the old Provencal language,15 in
which there were texts and comments of the Psalms, and of many books of the
Old and New Testament.16
Mapes questioned
them at the council along the following lines,
Do you believe in
God the Father? They answered, "We believe." And in God the Son?
They answered "We believe" And in God the Holy Spirit? They answered, "We
believe." And in the mother of Christ? They answered "We believe". . .
At this point the
court broke out in laughter because according to Scholastic Theology, one
could only use the formula "believe in" with reference to the Trinity. After
this conversation, the delegation "withdrew, covered with disgrace," because
they had fallen for a trick question.17 They
were ordered to cease preaching, and obey their bishop.
It is easy to see
from this incident that there was no serious issue of doctrine at stake. The
Waldensian dispute then, centered on the issue of authority. It was
the fact that they translated the scriptures, studied them, and "presumed" to
preach what they believed, without reference to the clergy that was unacceptable.18 Melia
declares,
. . .when John a
Bellismanibus, Archbishop of Lyons, about the year 1182 . . .forbade
them both to preach and . . .expelled them from his diocese; no mention was
made of their holding any doctrine at variance with the teaching of the Church:
they were simply expelled because, being laymen and illiterate, . . .
they presumed, against the prohibition of their superiors, to preach, and
exercise an office which was confided to the Apostles and to their successors
only.19
They were arguing
that they could draw insight directly from the pages of their translated
Bibles rather than from the Roman Church.20 As
one of our earliest sources, Alan of Lille put in his chapter entitled, "By
what authority and for what reason it is shown that no one ought to preach
unless he has permission from the Bishop,"
There are certain
heretics. . .called Waldenses, after their heresiarch, who was named
Waldus, who--led by his emotions, not sent by God--founded a new sect and
presumed to preach without the authority of the Bishop, without divine inspiration,
without knowledge, and without literacy. He was an irrational philosopher,
a prophet without a vision, an apostle without a mission, a teacher without
an instructor, and his foolish disciples have led the simple folk astray
in many parts of the world. 21
The Historico-theological
Milieu
Waldo was neither
the first nor the only divergent voice raised inside and outside of the Roman
Catholic Church at this time and place. Europe was aflame with new
religious movements reacting to such things as the struggle of the Papacy
for supremacy, the corrupt practices of local clergy, and the currents of
thought that were flowing into the area as a result of the Crusades.22 The
Albigensians or the Cathari were the leading schizmatic group,23 but
there were many other attacks as well. In 1140 the bishops of France
wrote to the Pope that,
Everywhere in our
cities and villages, not only in our schools but at the street corners, learned
and ignorant, great and small, are discussing the gravest mysteries.24
In the history of
this period we find reference to numerous heretical groups,
-
In
1259 the Flagellants appeared. By a kind of mass contagion
men, women, and children bewailed their sins and many of them marched through
the streets, naked except for loin cloths, crying to God for mercy, and scourging
themselves until the blood ran.25
"They proclaimed complete certainty of salvation to all who should
persevere in flagellation for thirty-three days. Scourging was the one
necessary sacrament. They were condemned in 1349."26
-
The Beguines comprised
a variety of lay groups which seem not to have been confined to any specific
set of forms and to have displayed wide variety. Deanesly says they
were, "the followers of Lambert le Begue, (the Stammerer). . .
devout but unlettered lay people, who set great store on the use of vernacular
scriptures. Lambert's followers were called from his surname, in Dutch,
Beghards, (whence the English word "beggar") in Latin Beguini or
Beguinae." She claims that the early Waldensians joined forces
with groups of Beguinae.27
-
Tanchelm began
to preach in the diocese of Utrecht and early in the twelfth century his
views had fairly wide currency in the Low Countries and the Rhine Valley. He
attacked the entire structure of the Catholic Church, denied the authority
of the Church and of the Pope, and held that at least some of the sacraments
were valueless.
-
Early
in the twelfth century, Peter of Bruys, himself following a strictly
ascetic way of life, rejected the baptism of infants, the Eucharist, church
buildings, ecclesiastical ceremonies, prayers for the dead, and the veneration
of the cross. The Petrobrusians re-baptized those who joined
them, profaned churches, burned crosses, and overthrew altars.
-
Sometimes
classed with Peter of Bruys, but perhaps mistakenly, was Henry of Lausanne. Like
the former he preached in what is now France and in the first half of the
twelfth century. Before his death in 1145 he is said to have attracted
a wide following, called Henricians. He taught that the sacraments
were valid only when administered by priests who led a life of asceticism
and poverty. He condemned the clergy of the day for their love of wealth
and power.28
-
The
Adamists conducted their worship in the nude.29
-
Arnold
of Brescia. . .was earnestly eager to see the Church conform
fully to the Christian ideal. Believing that this could not be so
long as its leaders compromised with the world, he attacked the bishops
for their cupidity, dishonest gains, and frequent irregularity of life
and urged that the clergy renounce all property and political and physical
power. . .in 1155 he was hanged, his body was burned, and his
ashes were thrown into the Tiber. . . .30
-
In
Northern Italy, ". . .the "Pataria" had
some years earlier grown up spontaneously in reaction to an increasing corrupt
and politically oriented clergy." They were apparently the descendants
of the Bogomils, who in turn grew out of the dualistic "Paulicians".31
In addition to these
were numerous lesser movements, of which Latourette admits, "We shall
probably never learn even the names of all of them."32
Even this short
list demonstrates that there were questions being asked at this time, many
of which are strikingly similar to those issues raised by the Poor of Lyons:
- the
question of poverty and asceticism as a means of growth and/or salvation,
- questions about the role of ritual,
- activism of various sorts among the laity,
- questions about the integrity of the clergy.
- questions about interpretation and application of the Bible.33
It is likely that
Waldo and his followers were influenced by some of these movements, although
it is not clear how much. It would be too coincidental to see such
common themes arising apart from any influence whatever. The fact is
that there was a cultural and religious milieu shaping the thinking of this
movement.
For example, we
can place Lyonese poor nuclei in the same area of France as the Cathari,
at a time when the Catharite revolution was at its height.34 Also,
both southern France and northern Italy were hot-beds of dissident zeal during
the very period of the rise of the Waldensians.
On the other hand,
the Neo-Platonic and dualistic aspects of so many of these groups is not
as evident in the teachings of the Waldensians during the earliest period. There
is undoubtedly some platonic asceticism involved in Waldo' renunciation of
wealth. Many of the new groups, including the mendicant orders of monks
were renouncing all wealth at this time, and traveling around as beggars
and preachers.35
It is important
to realize that the reason they did so was not in order to relieve poverty
through a more equitable distribution of goods, but because the suffering
incurred from being poor was good for the soul. The material world
was viewed with suspicion, and anything that served to separate one from
it would bring him/her closer to the Spiritual world, that is, closer to
God.36
Significantly, shortly
after the time of Waldo, Boanaventure would argue that poverty had been Christ's
pattern, carried on for some time by monks such as the Egyptian anchorites, "but
poverty declined after the Donation of Constantine and was not revived until
the thirteenth century with the foundation of religious mendicancy by Francis
and Dominic." This view of history was identical to that
held by the Waldensians.37
Tourn and others
argue that this ascetic ideological base was not the case with the Waldensians. Their
basis for renunciation of wealth was a literalistic application of Lk. 9:3-6,
and Mk. 10:23-27, which are not ascetic. In other words, ". . .one
might say that Waldensian piety was eschatological rather than dualist or
ascetic."38
This may be partially
true for another reason. We find no reference to the monastic literature
anywhere in the early Waldensian literature. The Cistercian
order, which had been organized around 1119 believed that,
. . .the rule (of
St. Benedict) was not merely a guideline or a set of positive laws which
can be dispensed, but rather a species of Divine Law, which like the Commandments
of the Gospel, has to be interpreted, but cannot be changed or dispensed.39
This point of view,
so typical of all of the orders at this time, is absent from early Waldensian
thinking. They based their movement of the authority of the scriptures.40
Another distinction
between the Waldensians and the monastic idealists at this time was the outward
focus of the Poor of Lyons. They were not seeking primarily inner piety,
but aggressive outreach to others.
". . .Waldo's
case was different [than most poverty enthusiasts]. His vow did not
lead him to a monastery and to a life of contemplation and obedience. He
was an ordinary citizen among the poor and was determined to remain so. . .41
"For the Poor the bond of unity lay not in the sacraments but in
their apostolic mission. Christian virtue, then, was in demonstrating
love, and care for the brethren.
"Everyone of them, old and young, men and women, by day and by
night, do not stop their learning and teaching of others."
An inquisitor quotes,
in the same vein, one of the Poor who had been brought before him: "In
our home, women teach as well as men, and one who has been a student for
a week teaches another." 42
Thus the Waldensians
were more activistic and outreaching than sacramental or reflective.43
Perhaps if there
had been more dependence on monastic ideology the later history of the Waldensians
would have been very different. Not long after the time of Waldo, another
new order arose not far from the region of Lombardy under the leadership
of Francis of Assisi. The similarities between these groups is quite
striking.
Both were operating
in the same area at about the same time. Francis was also untrained
in theology. His followers, like the Waldensians, were unlearned. They
lived in voluntary poverty, dressing in course cloth and sandals--exactly
like the Waldensians. They traveled around sometimes and preached,
as the Waldensians did, although the emphasis with the Franciscans was more
on service while that of the Waldensians was more on preaching. Both
were critical of the Roman Church's failure to fully live up to the ideals
of Scripture. Both went to Rome to obtain papal approval for their
orders. And this is where the similarity stops.
Francis did obtain
approval from the Pope, while Waldo did not.44 Thus
the Franciscans were taken into the embrace of the Church. This exempted
them from persecution for the time being, and in fact, Franciscans were often
leaders of the persecution of the Waldensians.
The question of
the relationship of the Waldensians to the other doctrinal currents of that
time is hard to determine exactly. There is no evidence of any influence
from other groups on Waldo himself, until after his condemnation. Earlier,
for instance, he directly denounced the Albigensians' doctrine.45
The most important
point in this is that there was no ideological or theological breakthrough
that occasioned the Waldensian movement.46 Their
existence was not the result of any change in theology, but rather a change
in theopraxy--the Poor of Lyons translated the Bible, and preached it in
their own words.47 Thus,
the Waldensians are an early test case in the area of lay ministry. Their
main sin was to take too literally the Biblical command to, ". . .teach
them to observe all that I commanded you."
Not only did they
refuse to deny the right of the laity to preach and teach, they also allowed
and encouraged women to teach. This had tremendous shock effect on
their culture, at the same time that it probably tapped an hitherto unknown
source of power.48 It
would be easy to underestimate the impact that this feature had on the Europe
of 1170.
It was after their
excommunication that the Poor of Lyons' doctrine became objectionable to
the Roman Catholic Church. More than a hundred years later, it was
said,
Among all the sects,
there is none more pernicious to the Church than that of the leonists, and
for three reasons:
In the first place, because it is one of the most ancient; for some
say that it dates back to the time of Sylvester; others to the time of the
Apostles.
In the second place, because it is the most widespread. There
is hardly a country where it does not exist.
In the third place, because, if other sects strike with horror those
who listen to them, the Leonists, on the contrary, possess a great outward
appearance of piety. As a matter of fact they lead irreproachable lives
before men, and as regards their faith and the articles of their creed, they
are orthodox.
Their one conspicuous fault is, that they blaspheme against the Church
and the clergy, points on which laymen in general are known to be too easily
led away.49
Doctrine before
the reformation
Either in 1184 or
in 1215 the Waldensians were excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church.50 We
know that in 1184 the French bishops who were called to the Council of Verona
included them in the list of "condemned movements." Further,
in 1190 the Bishop of Narbonne pronounced a condemnation for heresy.51
As in the case of
Luther, over 350 years later, the excommunication of Waldo proved to be the
occasion of increased theological polarization. Tourn argues that during
this period, Waldo was influenced by "the Cathari, Pierre de Bruys,
the monk Henri and others."52 From
these schismatics, they heard stiff criticism of the Roman Catholic Church.
For the first time,
the movement began to include radical protest in its views. Clearly,
there was a need to re-define their views on the sacraments, and other features
of ecclesiology, since they no longer had access to these "means of
grace" through the Church. Yet the shift seems to have been minimal,
especially in the area of soteriology. There was still no breakthrough
in the area of salvation by grace. On the other hand, all of the changes
that did occur during this period were in the same direction as later reform
movements.
Adding momentum
to change was the merger with some northern Italian splinter groups. These
groups heard in the preaching of the Poor of Lyons views that they already
held. Latourette says that the Waldensians were ". . .joined
by many of the Humiliati, who had arisen in and near Milan and in that same
year (1184) had come under Papal prohibition. . . They criticized
prayers in Latin on the ground that they were not understood by the people,
and derided church music and the canonical hours."53
These dissidents
were established before the time of Waldo, and tended to have a more communal
ideal in their piety. They probably had the effect of stabilizing a
movement which was devoted to vagrancy by providing centers of agitation
(this also made them easy to locate, and therefore vulnerable). Milan
had such a welcoming attitude that they permitted the Waldensians to build
their own house of prayer. This may have been the only occasion on
which they could openly have such a building for the next 300 years.
The Lombards, as
the North Italian group was called, had many ideas of their own. They
were actually thrown out of the Waldensian movement in 1205 by Waldo, but
later re-joined.
Melia, who argues
that the Waldensians were not Protestant in their doctrine, can be counted
on to refuse all exaggeration in the area of the Poor's evangelical beliefs. He
does admit (and documents each from more than one authentic Waldensian source)
the following listing of their divergent views during the period before the
Hussite revolution.
-
The Church
of God has failed.
-
The Holy
Scriptures alone are sufficient to guide men to Salvation.
-
The blessings
and consecrations practiced in the Church do not confer any particular
sanctity upon the things or persons blessed or consecrated.
-
Catholic
priests. . .have no authority; and the Pope of Rome is the chief of
all heresiarchs.
-
Everyone
has the right to preach publicly the word of God
-
Every
oath is a mortal sin.54
-
Purgatory
is a dream, an invention of the sixth century.
-
The indulgences
of the Church are an invention of covetous Priests.
-
There
is no obligation to fast, nor to keep any holy day, Sunday excepted.
-
The invocation
of Saints cannot be admitted.
-
Every honor
given in the Church to the holy images of paintings, and to the relics
of Saints is to be abolished.
To this list, he
adds doctrines that belong to the period between the Hussite revolt and the
Lutheran Revolution:
-
Auricular
Confession is useless, and. . .it is enough to confess our sins
to God.
-
The definition
of the church is, "the whole of the elect from the beginning of the
world to its end." and that regarding ministries, "the holy Catholic
Church is the congregation of all ministers and people obeying the Divine
will, and by obedience united. . ."
-
It is
necessary to receive the Eucharist under two kinds.55
To these I would
add,
-
The church
and the state should remain as separate authorities.56
- The Eucharist
is to be viewed as a memorial, not as a sacrifice.57
It will be seen
that every one of these doctrines are the natural outgrowth of exclusion
from the Roman Church. It was natural that the Poor of Lyons, feeling
that they had acted out of devotion to God from the beginning, would wonder
whether denial of access to the priestly functions of the Roman Church could
alter their destiny. Especially with the Bible in their own language,
it was natural that they would re-examine these issues, and ultimately deny
Roman Catholic teaching in these areas. Therefore the rejection of
priestly function in the church was probably done in reaction to the action
of the Roman Church, rather than being a native sentiment of the movement.
Regarding the last
point, on the Eucharist, it may be asked how the Waldensians thought they
would obtain salvation, since Roman Catholic doctrine has the grace of God
becoming effective through the sacraments. Here, it seems that no clear
answer is available. Apparently, the worshiper is to do his/her best
to be good, and ask forgiveness from God for the rest. There was also
confession to a "barba" ("uncle" or teacher-leader) and
prayer on behalf of the penitent.58 Unfortunately,
the grace aspect of Huss' teaching seems to have been substantially lost
on the Waldensians.
Given these tenants,
there does not seem to be warrant for referring to "two reformations" as
does Amedo Molnar--the first being the Hussite and the Waldensian movements,
and the second, being the movements of the sixteenth century.59 At
the same time, it must be admitted that these two movements did make a substantial
though incomplete movement back toward the biblical model. The Waldensian
movement was a revolution based on radical ecclesiology, but without substantial
change in soteriology. Their contribution should not be disregarded
any more than the Lutheran and Calvinists, who continued to accept defective
doctrine in the area of eschatology and ecclesiology.
Growth and Reaction
During the thirty
or so years between the excommunication of Waldo and the first major genocidal
crusade against them, the movement spread at an astonishing rate. There
were cells of activity right across southern Europe by the year 1208 when
the crusade against the Albigensians was proclaimed by Innocent III.
In this year there
began a crusade against the Cathari60 akin
to the one that had been going on against the Muslims for some time. This
was the first time the crusade concept had been used against dissidents who
called themselves Christian. "For twenty long years Languedoc
and Provence in France were subjected to a blood bath which not only wiped
out the most advanced culture of the time but introduced into the Church,
and from there throughout the West, the rule that any ideological deviation
must be crushed by force."61
It is important
to remember that this period (1150-1300) were the years of the zenith of
papal temporal power. Innocent III described himself as "set between
God and man, lower than God but higher than man, who judges all and is judged
by no one. . ."62 He
declared that, "the priesthood was as superior to the kingship as the
soul to the body," and he informed the nobles of Tuscany that, "just
as the moon derives its light from the sun . . .so too the
royal power derives the splendor of its dignity from the pontifical authority."63 As
has been the case so often in history, greater political power for the institutional
church has been bad news for Christian minorities.
This was also the
pattern that would characterize Roman Catholic reaction to the Waldensians
for the next 450 years. The history of the Waldensians during this
period is an incredible litany of genocidal disaster. This was the
period of the inquisition in Europe, and it is through the well kept records
of the inquisition that we follow the spread of the Waldensians movement
throughout Europe. Tourn lists some of the major persecutions after
the crusade of 1208:
- We know
that at the beginning of the 14th century there were enough Poor remaining
in France that the inquisitor Jacques Fournier, who later became Pope Benedict
XII, undertook court trials against them.
- The transference
of the papacy to Avignon in the middle of the 14th century was apparently
the signal for a brutal repression against Waldensians in the Dauphine, for
the beleaguered Pope was evidently not disposed to tolerate any expression
of dissidence so near to his exiled see.
- In the
year 1380. . . [a severe] round-up was begun under the inquisitors
Martin of Prague and Peter Zwicker. These two were commissioned to
bring to trial or to force the conversion of Waldensians through much of
Europe.
Their systematic effort began in Bavaria, continuing in the following
year in the region of Erfurt, and in 1392 in the province of Brandenberg. The
inquisitors then proceeded to Stettin, where they held a trial of 400 Waldensians.
Their reports speak of activities in various cities of what are
now Germany, Czechoslovakia and Hungary, and of their success in the city of
Bern, Switzerland, in getting 130 suspects to abjure heresy and return to the
Church's fold. They reported a similar success in Fribourg with some
50 Waldensians.
- . . .in
the latter part of the century the inquisition was resumed in full intensity
under the direction of a Franciscan, Francesco Borelli. So obsessed
was this monk with his pursuit of heretics that it was said that every prison
from Embrun to Avignon was full to overflowing. As a result, Pope Gregory
IX himself had to appeal for alms for the hapless prisoners.
- . . .
in 1450, the inquisitors were sent in to deal with Alpine dissidents. In
that year the whole valley of Luserna was placed under interdiction on the
charge of having resisted the authorities.
- Another
inquisitorial sweep took place in 1475, including interminable court trials
against anyone who failed to cooperate fully in the drive. . . .the
counts of Luserna themselves were. . . charged with being too lenient
toward the Waldensians--for which they were duly warned and subjected to
heavy fines.
- . . .Charles
I at last called for full scale military action against the dissidents, and
was joined, from the French side, by the declaration of a crusade against
the Waldensians which lasted from 1487-89. The latter was directed
by the infamous papal legate, Alberta Cattaneo
. . . There the governor of Savoy, with the full consent of
Charles VIII of France, undertook a veritable and thorough going crusade against
the hapless population. As in other places and times in the Middle
Ages, it was under the patronage of the Pope and organized by his legate
. . .[the village of] Pragelato found itself squarely in the
path of the crusaders, so that it was invaded and sacked in the winter of 1487.
A fate similar to that of Pragelato was in store for the Waldensians in the
valleys of Argentieres and Vallouise. These folk had been consistently
pacifist by tradition, so that they did not resist when the invaders came. The
crusaders then proceeded to level their villages, destroying every trace
of the Waldensians heritage.
- Francis
I. . .in 1545 named the president of Aix's parliament personally to lead
a papal army from Avignon to clear the area entirely of Waldensian presence. The
Luberon folk were suddenly caught in a vise.
. . .The mercenary soldiers engaged for the sweep did not stop until
they had devastated the whole region and obliterated every trace of the Waldensian
villages. A few survivors did manage to escape to Switzerland, but
the lot of all the rest was either death by the sword or life sentences as
galley-slaves on French ships.
- . .
.On June 5, 1561, the town of San Sisto, with its 6,000 inhabitants, was
burned to the ground.
. . .Guardia Piemontese, its neighbor, was likewise destroyed. Prisoners
were burned like torches, sold as slaves to the Moors or condemned to die of
starvation in the dungeons of Cosenza. The massacre reached its height
at Montalto Uffugo on June 11th. On the steps in front of the parish
church, 88 Waldensians were slaughtered one by one, like animals brought
to market.
- If the military
operation lasted only a few weeks, the work of Catholic indoctrination, Jesuit
style, continued for years. The Jesuits were determined to obliterate
every evidence that Waldensians had been present in Calabria. They
almost succeeded, except in one small respect: there is still a hint of the
Provencal language in the daily speech of the inhabitants.64
The list of atrocities
goes on and on, in fact far too long for detailed consideration here.65 The
point that becomes clear is that every effort was made on numerous occasions
to eliminate the Poor of Lyons in the customary way. At various points
this policy was close to final success. Yet, the Waldensian movement
was never eliminated.
Another tactic that
was employed briefly with success by Pope Innocent III was to take advantage
of the differences between Waldo and the Lombards in 1208 to win the Poor
Men back to the Church. Beginning in 1208 he encouraged the formation
and spread of Pauperes Catholici ("Poor Catholics") who under ecclesiastical
direction would follow such of the practices of the Waldenses as the Church
could approve. By this means many who had been attracted by the Poor
Men were held or won back.66
Nevertheless, the
Waldensians continued to grow at a surprising rate. The pattern of
growth appears to have been the result of systematic underground discipleship
and witnessing.
. . .men
and women, great and lesser, day and night do not cease to learn and teach;
the workman who labors all day teaches or learns at night . . .When
someone has been a student seven days, he seeks someone else to teach, as
one curtain pulls another. Whoever excuses himself, saying that he
is not able to learn, they say to him, "Learn but one word each day,
and after a year you will know three hundred, and you will progress."67
Tourn has
a remarkable map showing areas where Waldensians presence can be documented,
reproduced here.68
Map of Europe shows
shaded patches all over western and some of eastern Europe
In 1517 - the very
year of Luther's protest--the Archbishop of Turin made record of a pastoral
visit to the Alpine valleys in which he singled out for concern the ongoing
presence of Waldensian groups practicing their faith.69
Involvement with
the Hussites
When Jon Huss revolted
against the authority of the Roman Catholic Church, it was not another peasant
revolt but a well reasoned attack aimed at the roots of papal authority and
doctrine. Huss was a scholar lecturing at the University of Prague. He
taught that the Bible was the sole authority for faith and practice, and salvation
by faith. He was promised safe conduct to the Council of Constance
to answer for his views, but was seized and burned at the stake anyway. At
this point the population of sections of modern Austria and Chechoslovakia
rose in open revolt.
One new twist in
this revolt was that some fought when attacked by the inevitable papal army. In
the same way that the Paulicians had earlier, they actually fought the Roman
Catholic Church to a standstill in the 1400's. The fortress that they
later formed at Tabor gave one group of them the name Taborites.
When word of this
revolution reached the Waldensians, they reacted with excitement. They
promptly dispatched several "barbas" ("uncles", the term
used by Waldensians for their teachers)70 to
go to Bohemia and learn what was happening. There followed a series
of meetings between leaders of the two groups which led to great benefit
for the Waldensians. They received from the Hussite movement training
in theology which was to prove very helpful to future generations.
As a result, the
barbas during this period were capable of reading theological works in Latin,
of studying mathematics, and knowing enough botany and rudimentary medicine
to permit them to deal with simple diseases. Their activity in ministerial
tasks likewise became more organized, rigorous and systematic than before. A
young Waldensian whose gifts and resolve marked him for service in the community
would be apprenticed to an experienced barba for a period of several years.
After becoming familiar with the various places to visit, learning languages
and studying the Bible more deeply, the young barba would then visit the
different clandestine scholae or underground schools.71
It is also interesting
to note that although the Waldensians had almost always been pacifist, on
one occasion they raised money for the Bohemian war chest. On another occasion,
at Prali, a pitched battle between the local populace and the crusaders ended
by Count Hugo pulling back his troops.72
The Reformation
Tourn states that,
Relentless inquisition,
crusade and pillage had done their efficient work, so that by the end of
the 15th century a veil of silence hung over much of the Waldensian world.73
Yet the Waldensians
still existed. By now, they were almost exclusively concentrated in
the Alpine valleys that had served as their main stronghold all along.
When the reformation
erupted in 1517, the Waldensians were eager to join forces with the new fellow-revolutionists. We
know that as early as the year 1526, a general assembly of Waldensians held
at Laus, in the Chisone valley, was so eager to make personal contact with
the new movement that it made the decision to send a deputation across the
Alps.74
Luther, who so strongly
denounced the Hussites at first, discovered during the Liepzig Disputation
that he agreed with Huss. Later he said "We were all Hussites
without knowing it!"75 Eventually,
he wrote a preface to the Taborite Confession of Faith, in which he referred
to the Hussites as "Waldensians".
No official ties
were forged between the Waldensians and the other Protestant Churches until
1532. In that year, the Synod of Chanforan was held, in which the Waldensians
became a part of the reformed Church based in Geneva. For the Reformed,
Farel led the negotiations, which were troubled, because of the Waldensian
insistence on the separation of church and state, as well as other doctrinal
differences.76 The
Swiss reformers also called on the Waldensians to put an end to confessions,
fasts and "meritorious Sundays," and to introduce an emphasis on
the doctrine of predestination.77
In the same year,
the Geneva Reformers helped the Waldensians do a new translation of the Bible. The
task was entrusted to Olivetan, a relative of Calvin's, who retired secretly
to a village in the Alps to do his work.
The remarkable translation
he produced (for which Calvin himself wrote the Preface) has come to be known
as the "Olivetan Bible," the first of the French Reformation. Printed
in Neuchatel, it was delivered to the Waldensians in 1535.78
Many of their worst
trials, including massacres, were still ahead of them in 1532, but they were
now a part of an international movement. Because they were no longer
alone as an isolated sect, and because their doctrine was essentially reformed,
they pass beyond the scope of this study.
Conclusions
It is questionable
whether the Waldensians ever exceeded 100,000 functional members at any one
time before the Reformation. Yet when one considers that they existed
in some force for almost 350 years before the reformation began, it is evident
that many generations, and therefore many times their total were affected.
No one knows, even
roughly, the total number killed in the persecutions the Waldensians endured,
but the lowest estimates must run into the several tens of thousands. It
is unlikely that any group other than the Anabaptists and Jews can point
to a comparable history of prolonged universal persecution. Their amazing
survival makes them different, than the other schizmatic groups that began
at the same time as well. The crime which precipitated such suffering
was their desire to exercise their birthright in the Body of Christ according
to the New Testament--the practice of their own gifts and ministries
The Waldensian Church
still exists today in several locations.79 Unfortunately,
the fusion with the Reformed Church has not resulted in the rapid ferment
of outreach that once characterized the movement. Nevertheless, the
fact that they remain in existence at all is a strong testimony, and perhaps
a galling reminder to some, that the effort to disenfranchise the laity from
their right to minister will be frustrated by the power of the Holy Spirit
Himself.
Bibliography
Cameron, Euan. The
Reformation of the Heretics: The Waldenses of the Alps, 1480-1580. Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1984.
Comba, Emilio,
D.D. History of the Waldenses of Italy. London: Truslove & Shirley,
1889.
Courtenay, William
J. "The Bible in the Fourteenth Century: Some Observations." Church
History. Vol. 54, No. 2 (Spring 1985): 176-178.
Dawson, Doyne. "Richard
Fitzralph and the Fourteenth--Century Poverty Controversy". Journal
of Ecclesiastical History. Vol. 34, No. 3, (July 1983).
Deansly, Margaret. A
History of the Medieval Church 590- 1500. London: Methuen & Co.
Ltd., 1972.
Goodrich W. E. "The
Cistercian Founders and the Rule:Some Reconsiderations,". Journal
of Ecclesiastical History, Vol. 35, No.3, July 1984.
Latourette, Kenneth
Scott. A History of Christianity Volume I: to A.D. 1500. New York:
Harper & Row Publishers, 1975.
Lochman, Jan Milic. "Not
Just One Reformation: The Waldensian and Hussite Heritage." Reformed
World. Vol. 33, No. 5 (Mar. 75).
Melia, Pius D.D. The
Origin, Persecutions, and Doctrines of the Waldenses. London: James
Toovery, 1870.
Muston, Alexis
D.D. The History of the Waldenses Vol. I& II. Rev. John
Montgomery, translator. London: Blackie & Son, 1875.
Niebuhr, H. Richard,
and Willians, Daniel D. ed. The Ministry In Historical Perspective. New
York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1956.
Reformed World,
Vol. 30,31
Russell, Jeffrey
Burton. Religious Dissent in the Middle Ages. New York: John Wiley & Sons,
1971.
Sheils W. J. ed. Monks,
Hermits and the Ascetic Tradition. London: Basil Blackwell, 1985.
Strong, C. H. A
Brief Sketch of the Waldenses. London: Lawrence, Kansas: J.S.
Boughton Publishing Co., 1893.
Teirney, Brian. The
Crisis of Church and State: 1050-1300. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall,
Inc., 1964.
Presbyterian Board
of Publication and Sabbath-School Work. The Waldenses. Philadelphia:
Presbyterian Board of Publication and Sabbath-School Work, 1912.
Tourn, Giorgio. The
Waldensians: The First 800 Years (1174-1974). Translated from the
Italian by Camillo P. Merlino, Charles W. Arbuthnot, editor. Torino, Italy:
Claudiana Editrice, 1980.Fs
1 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians: The First 800 Years (1174-1974) Translated
from the Italian by Camillo P. Merlino, Charles W. Arbuthnot, Editor (Torino,
Italy: Claudiana Editrice, 1980) p. 5
2 See
the relevant portions of the Donation of Constantine in translation Brian
Teirney, The Crisis of Church and State: 1050-1300, (Englewood
Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1964) p. 21.
3 The
importance attached to this link can be seen in the comment of a later
Presbyterian historian, C.H. Strong, ". . . if it be true
that this once fearfully persecuted people is the true connecting link
between the Apostolic Church and the Protestant Reformation, then our interest
in their history must be greatly hightened. With this view of their
antiquity there could scarcely be an incident concerning them that would
not be magnified into something of importance." C.H. Strong, A
Brief Sketch of the Waldenses, p. 23,24.
4 Perrin.
-- Histoire des Vaudois et des Albigeois &c., a Geneve, pour Matthieu
Berjon, CIC.ICI.XVIII (1618). Two Vols., usually bound in one;
Dated from Lyons, in Dauphiny, 1 January, 1618. Cited in Alexis Muston,
D.D., The History of the Waldenses Vol. II, p. 398.
5 "In
the `Acts of the Synods of Dauphiny' (Synod held at Grenoble in 1602) we
read, that the pastors of the Embrunois and of the Val Cluson (which was
then included in Dauphiny) were requested to collect "all sorts of
documents bearing on the history of the life, doctrine, and persecutions
of the Albigeois and the Vaudois." Alexis Muston, D.D., The History
of the Waldenses Vol. II, p. 398.
6 The
Waldenses, (Presbyterian Board of Publication and Sabbath-School
Work, 1912) p. 31 The MSS were given to Sir Samuel Moreland, who also
wrote history on them. Both of these authors are roundly refuted
by Pius Melia, D.D., The Origin, Persecutions, and Doctrines of the
Waldenses, (London: James Toovery, 1870).
7 See
below, "Doctrine Before the Reformation."
8 Muston
says of Perrin, "Not only did Perrin fail to make proper use of his
rich materials, but he has even been accused of having employed them unfaithfully," and
of Leger, "Leger is the most diffuse, and one of the most superficial
of all our historians. He owes his importance partly to the epoch in
which he wrote, and to the imposing form of his work. He is often incorrect,
credulous, and carried away by his feeling; but the latter fault was almost
inevitable in a contemporary author, himself the victim of the events which
he records. Alexis Muston, D.D., The History of the Waldenses Vol. II,
399,402.
9 C.H.
Strong, A Brief Sketch of the Waldenses, and The Waldenses,
(Presbyterian Board of Publication and Sabbath-School Work, 1912) p. 29
explains the lack of documentation at several points saying, "The
Waldenses complain, that it has been the cruel policy of their persecutors
to destroy all the historical memorials of their antiquity."
10 Pius
Melia, D.D., The Origin, Persecutions, and Doctrines of the Waldenses,
pp.59-85. "That the principal reason for which the Waldenses
were punished in Piedmont was not precisely their religious belief, but
their having been rebellious against the orders of the Sovereign
and the laws of the country in which they lived. . ." He
goes on to point out that they had killed an officer of the inquisition
in the neighborhood, without speculation as to why they would want to attack
a friendly inquisitor (p. 83).
11 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians is a good history, written from a friendly
but fair point of view. This source takes cognizance of all of the
critical findings that I have been able to locate. Tourn seems to
be very judicious in his use of the sources, rejecting Waldensian legends,
even though he is a Waldensian pastor. He should however, be criticized
for down-playing the influence of dualistic asceticism on Waldensian doctrine,
and perhaps for the use of one source that did not appear in other literature.
12 The
Chronicler was Richard, Monk of Cluny, "Rerum Italicarum Scriptores",
tom.iii, p. 447 et seq. Reprinted in Pius Melia, D.D.,The Origin
Persecutions and Doctrines of the Waldenses, with translation, pp.1-3.
For a clearer but abridged translation, see Giorgio Tourn, The Waldensians,
p. 3,4.
13 Bernard
Gui, Manuel de l'Inquisiteur, Partially reprinted in Giorgio Tourn, The
Waldensians, p. 3,4. For a more complete text of the source in
translation, see Jeffrey Burton Russell, Religious Dissent in the Middle
Ages, (New York: John Wiley & Sons, J1971) pp.42-52. including
methods to use in an inquisitorial session with a Waldensian,
14 Bernard
Gui in Jeffrey Burton Russell, Religious Dissent in the Middle Ages,
p. 44.
15 This
translation was done by priests in Lyons, Bernard Ydros, and Steven de
Ansa who were paid for their work by Waldo. F. Steven de Bellavilla, "Scriptores
Ordinum Praedicatorum," reproduced with translation in Pius Melia,
D.D., The Origin, Persecutions, and Doctrines of the Waldenses,
pp. 9-14. This source says he had met several times the later translator. Writing
in the early 1200's, he would be considered a good source. He describes
the excommunication of the Waldensians, and their practice of changing
disguises frequently (from cobbler to merchant etc.) as they traveled around,
to avoid detection.
16 This
short description by Mapes "De Nugis Curialium," one of the earliest
reference to the Waldensians, is among the manuscripts of the Bodleian
Library (851) at Oxford. Mapes goes on to relate that they were forbidden
to teach, and concludes, "Naked, they follow a naked Christ. Their
beginnings are humble in the extreme, for they have not yet much of a following,
but if we should leave them to their devices they will end by turning all
of us out." Partially reproduced in Giorgio Tourn, The Waldensians p. 14.
17 This
is an example of what was called "ignorance" and "illiteracy" by
Mapes.
18 "Direct
personal experience of God and its propagation through preaching, unless
adapted to the sacramental life of the church, constituted [a] . . .greater
threat: for, carried to its conclusion, it meant nothing less than entirely
renouncing the arbitrament of the church and denying its raison d'etra as
the expression of God's saving will on earth." Jeffrey B. Russell
ed., Religious Dissent in the Middle Ages, p. 105.
19 Pius
Melia, D.D., The Origin, Persecutions, and Doctrines of the Waldenses,
p. 89.
20 Note
the inconsistency in the claim that they were illiterate, yet they translated
the Bible and other books "in common speech". While many
no doubt were illiterate, it is likely that for others, their illiteracy
consisted of inability to read languages other than Provencal.
For an example of the logic used to reject their right to preach,
see F. Moneta, "Venerabilis Patris Monetae Cemonensis Ordinis Praedicatorum
adversus Catharos et Waldenses, Libri quinque", (Rome: Thomas Augustin
Ricchini, 1743) original with translation in Pius Melia, D.D. The Origin
Persecutions and Doctrines of the Waldenses, pp.4-9.
21 Alan
of Lille, Against the Waldensians (1200-1202), partially reprinted in translation
in Jeffrey Burton Russell, Religious Dissent in the Middle Ages,
pp. 52,53.
22 For
instance, the Cathari were widely believed to have been influenced by Manichaen
doctrine, denied by many today. However, they probably were influenced
by the Paulicians and the Bogomils, who were from the Balkan region. So,
Kenneth Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity Volume I: to A.D.
1500, (New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1975) p. 454. Latourette
says, "The Cathari were but one expression of the religious ferment,
chiefly Christian in its forms, which profoundly moved the Latin South
of Europe in these centuries." p. 453.
23 For
a good succinct evaluation of the Catharite heresy, see Jeffrey B. Russell
ed., Religious Dissent in the Middle Ages, (New York: John Wiley & Sons,
1971), pp. 55-76.
24 Quoted
in Emilio Comba, D.D., History of the Waldenses of Italy, (London:
Truslove & Shirley, 1889), p. 16 He adds, "It seemed indeed
as if the foundations of the Church were being upheaved; storms of ideas
and lurid lights were arising on all sides. . .These were intermingled
with new interpretations of the Gospel which were audaciously progressive,
and with opinions, which on the contrary, sought refuge in primitive Christian
tradition against the innovations of Rome." Comba, although
he is a Waldensian pastor, rejects the antiquity of the Waldensians. He
is criticized by c
25 Kenneth
Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity Volume I: to A.D. 1500,
p. 448.
26 Margaret
Deansly, A History of the Medieval Church 590-1500 (London: Methuen & Co.
Ltd., 1972) p. 219.
27 Margaret
Deansly, A History of the Medieval Church 590-1500 (London: Methuen & Co.
Ltd., 1972) p. 221.
28 Kenneth
Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity Volume I: to A.D. 1500,
p. 449,450.
29 Margaret
Deansly, A History of the Medieval Church 590-1500 (London: Methuen & Co.
Ltd., 1972) p. 219.
30 Kenneth
Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity Volume I, p. 450-451.
31 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 15.
32 Kenneth
Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity Volume I: to A.D. 1500,
p. 449.
33 For
the state of biblical scholarship in the 14th century, see William J. Courtenay, "The
Bible in the Fourteenth Century: Some Observations" in Church
History, Vol. 54 No. 2 (Sp. 1985) pp. 176-187.
34 The
same general area also gave rise to the Cistercians in the 1100's and the
Franciscans and Dominicans in the 1200's-- three of the main orders of
this period. Kenneth Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity
Volume I: to A.D. 1500, p. 453.
35 Biller
identifies distinct orders of "brothers" and "sisters" in
the later fifteenth century Waldensians who like the Barba, traveled and
preached for at least part of their careers (there may have been a later
contemplative phase for the older brothers). Biller shows that the
rite of entry to the brotherhood included the "profession of the three
monastic vows. . .greater strictness [than other mendicant orders]
. . .a requirement of virginity, not just celibacy in a candidate,
automatic expulsion for a sexual lapse, a longer period of probation after
profession of vows, twelve years in one case. . ." Peter
Biller, "Multum Ieiunantes et se Castigantes: Medieval Waldensian
Asceticism" in Monks, Hermits and the Ascetic Tradition: Papers
read at the 1984 Summer Meeting and the 1985 Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical
History Society, (London: Basil Blackwell, 1985) pp. 218,219.
36 See
a concise analysis of Asceticism based on the writings of Augustine in
Henry Chadwick, "The Ascetic Ideal in the History of the Church," in Monks
Hermits and the Ascetic Tradition, pp. 1-23. This period
was formative for the history of asceticism in the church, because the
overwhelming influx of so-called "converts" after Constantine
was threatening to erase the distinction between Christian and pagan. In
the face of social pressure to become Christian, millions were joining
the church without having been converted. Thus, in addition to the
dualistic reasons for asceticism (suspicion of the material world) there
was the effort to put distance between one's self and the nominal Christians
(see pp. 8-9).
37 James
Doyne Dawson, "Richard Fitzralph and the Fourteenth-Century Poverty
Controversy", Journal of Ecclesiastical History, Vol. 34,
#3 (Jul. 1983) p. 317.
38 Eschatological,
because concerned with making it to heaven (see note 38 below). However,
the other ascetic orders also were concerned with making it to heaven. Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 50.
39 W.
E. Goodrich, "The Cistercian Founders and the Rule: Some Reconsiderations," in Journal
of Ecclesiastical History, Vol. 35, No.3 p. 358 (July 1984).
40 Although
Pius Melia claims that, "It is therefore beyond doubt that, before
the time of Luther and Calvin, the Waldenses admitted all the books of
the [Catholic] Bible. . ." (e.g. including the Apocrapha)
the only evidence he gives is the presence of two portions of apocryphal
books in translation in the Cambridge collection of Waldensians mss. Pius
Melia, D. D., The Origin, Persecutions, and Doctrines of the Waldenses,
p. 93,98. However, this conclusion seems unwarranted. The Waldensians
definitely rejected the existence of purgatory during the early period,
and claimed that it was foreign to the scriptures. They also argued
that there was nothing anyone could do once a person died, as can be seen
from the following early record of the Inquisition.
". . .one who does good will go to paradise, and one
who does evil will go to hell and damnation; purgatory does not exist. Indeed,
whoever believes in purgatory is condemned already. Further, charities
after one's death should not be done, for charities after death have no value;
that they do not profit the one who does them if they are not done before death. . ." "Interrogation
of Filippo Regis" at his trial in 1451, published by G. Weitzecker, Processo
di un valdese nell'anno 1451, in Rivista Cristiana IX (1881) pp. 363-67, Partially
reproduced in translation in Giorgio Tourn, The Waldensians, pp. 55,56.
These views would be impossible to argue if the book of II Maccabees
was viewed as canonical. There is no statement in any Waldensian writing
affirming the cannonicity of the Apocrapha. These books, like the writings
of the fathers (which are also found in Waldensian translation) were apparently
used as supplemental material, as indeed they were so viewed by most of the
Roman Catholic Church during this period.
41 The
established orders of monasteries were obtaining great wealth during this
period. See Bainton's insight that when reaching new areas during
a time when currency was worthless, only a self-supporting monastery was
in a position to survive. Later, as land was donated, the serfs were
donated along with it. The monks would accept the serfs, and so became
land major lords. "Altogether they were the most enterprising
businessmen of their day." Roland Bainton, "The Ministry in the
Middle Ages," in The Ministry In Historical Perspective,
H. Richard Niebuhr and Daniel D. Willians, Editors, (New York: Harper & Brothers
Publishers, 1956) pp. 86,87.
42 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 6,21,39.
43 By
the end of the 15th century Biller is able to describe the Waldensian "brothers" as
giving, ". . .a two dimensional picture of the asceticism
of a strict and clandestine mendicant Order." Yet one has to
remember that this was almost 300 years after the movement had begun. One
only has to compare the church in 350 AD to the church in Acts to realize
how much things may have changed in such a long period. Peter Biller, "Multum
Ieiunantes et se Castigantes: Medieval Waldensian Asceticism" in Monks, Hermits
and the Ascetic Tradition, p. 223. When taking confession, "their
penance was heavier than that imposed by the priests in the Church." For
instance, they demanded "fasting one or two days a week for a year
or several years" for excessive love-making with one's wife or husband
(p. 226).
44 The
reason for the rejection of Waldo is given as his ignorance. Yet,
Francis was not rejected. Of course, there were different popes involved,
and the church had the experience of the Waldensians to reflect on at the
time of Francis. I think that the only visible difference of importance
was the fact that Waldo had the Bible translated. Therefore, when
the Poor of Lyons preached, it was with a Bible in their hands in the vernacular. This
was probably a level of authority too threatening to tolerate.
45 Edward
Peters ed., Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe: Documents in Translation,
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1980) p. 140.
46 In
the year 1180, Henri de Marcy, the Pontifical Delegate, was in southern
France to organize a campaign against the Cathari, and there encountered
Waldo. He called on Waldo to sign a statement of adherence to the Roman
Catholic faith, and without hesitation he did so. Giorgio Tourn, The
Waldensians, p. 11.
47 ". . .the
praxis of the primitive church plays a normative role for the Waldensians. . .
it constantly occurs in their theological declarations, next to the reference
to the dominant authority of Scripture. . ." Milic
Lochman, "Not Just One Reformation: The Waldensian and Hussite Heritage." Reformed
World. Vol. 33, No. 5 (Mar. 75) p. 219.
48 Bernard
Abbot Fontis Calidi, Adversus Valdensium Sectam, (Biblioteca Veterum Patrum,
Vol. xxv. p. 1585, 1677) given partially with translation in Pius Melia,
D.D., The Origin, Persecutions, and Doctrines of the Waldenses,
pp. 14-16.
49 Gretser, Contra
Valdensius IV, Given in translation in Emilio Comba, D.D., History
of the Waldenses of Italy, p. 3, 4.
50 Melia
says, "The Waldenses were condemned, in fact, by Pope Lucius III.,
at a Council held in Verona, in the presence of many Bishops and of the
Emperor Frederick, in the year 1184, with these words: `By Apostolical
Authority, and by means of this Constitution, we do condemn every heresy,
whatever name it bears, and principally the Catharites and the Patherines,
and those who, with a wrong name, call themselves, with Deception, the Humbled
or the Poor of Lyons.'" Pius Melia, D.D., The Origin, Persecutions,
and Doctrines of the Waldenses, p. 16. Likewise, Margaret Deansly, A
History of the Medieval Church 590-1500 (London: Methuen & Co.
Ltd., 1972) p. 221. But Tourn says that this was only a prohibition
of their preaching. He says that they were not definitively condemned
for heresy until the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215. Giorgio Tourn, The
Waldensians, p. 232.
51 The
reason given was "obstinacy." Giorgio Tourn, The Waldensians,
p. 12.
52 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 12. See also Deansly, ""Margaret
Deansly, A History of the Medieval Church 590-1500 (London: Methuen & Co.
Ltd., 1972) p. 221
53 Kenneth
Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity Volume I: to A.D. 1500,
p. 452. Tourn adds that the Waldensians struck a chord with the tone
of northern Italian piety. The Pateria were very receptive to the
Waldensians in this region. They also met some of the followers of
Arnold of Brescia, the disciple of Abelard, who had travelled all over
Europe making the acquaintance of various dissident groups and had even
started a popular movement in Rome. It was Arnold who first advanced
the notion of a complete separation between religious and political powers." Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, pp. 15,16. It is in the addition
of the North Italian dissidents that the Waldensians could claim some pre-existence. There
had been resistance to Papal claims in this area for some time, but it
was not based on evangelical doctrine, as some protestant writers assert.
54 This
tenant led to added persecution in a day when fealty oaths were the basis
of society. The Waldensians were outside the law, because they refused
to swear allegiance to anyone. Some Inquisitors claimed that they
were allowed to swear a limited number of oaths under torture in order
to save themselves and others. Bernard Gui, "Manuel de l'Inquisiteur",
in Jeffrey Burton Russell, Religious Dissent in the Middle Ages,
pp. 51,52.
55 Pius
Melia, D.D., The Origin, Persecutions, and Doctrines of the Waldenses,
pp. 101-129. This section of Melia's book has been copied for
viewing at Xenos Fellowship office. It not only cites several original
Waldensian and inquisitorial documents for each point in the original and
in translation, but in addition, each doctrine mentioned is answered from
the Roman Catholic point of view. Melia cites the scriptural and "de
fide" documents with references that set forth the Roman
Catholic position on each point. Such a defense is unusual and hard
to find, especially in such condensed form.
56 According
to Tourn, ". . .in Waldensian thinking one cardinal point
had stood out from the beginning: an insistence on a clear separation between
the civil power and the exercise of religion. . ." Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 70. This idea seems to also underlie
numerous claims by inquisitors that the Waldensians rejected the authority
of all earthly princes. It is likely that they were actually rejecting
the right of secular rulers to lead pogroms supposedly based on religion.
57 A
typical witness to this view is Raymond de Costa's description of a Waldensian
eucharist, ". . .bless, in the name of the Father, Son and
Holy Spirit, this bread, this fish, [a distinctive Waldensians addition]
and this wine, not as a sacrifice and offering, but as a simple commemoration
of the most holy supper which Jesus Christ our Lord instituted. .
.," From the "Testimony of Raymond de Costa at his trial in 1320," published
by J. Duvernoy, Le Registre d'Inquisition de Jacques Fournier, Toulouse,
1965. partially reproduced in Giorgio Tourn, The Waldensians,
p. 41,42.
58 Tourn
says, "The fact, for instance, that any true believer could administer
the sacrament of the Lord's Supper indicates that the hierarchical structure
of the Church with its sacerdotal power had been overcome." Yet it
is not clear what went in its place. Giorgio Tourn, The Waldensians,
p. 50, 51. One of the statements in a document called, "Waldo's
statement of Faith", dated by Tourn 1180 is, "We believe also
that anyone in this age who keeps to a proper life, giving alms and doing
other good works from his own possessions and observing the precepts from
the Lord, can be saved." p. 14. This author was unable to confirm
the authenticity of this source.
59 So
also, Jan Milic Lochman, "Not Just One Reformation: The Waldensian
and Hussite Heritage," in Reformed World, Vol. 33 No. 5
(Mar. 75) p.220.
60 The
Cathari were called Albigensians because their main city was Albi in southern
France.
61 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 18. Not everyone agreed with coercion. Genoa
and Piacenza, for instance, refused to include in their legislation any
laws against the heretics; Cremora advertised itself as a kind of free
zone for any escapees from the crusade of 1208. (p. 26).
62 "Sermon
on the consecration of a pope", in Brian Teirney, The Crisis of
Church and State: 1050-1300, pp. 131,132.
63 Documented
in Brian Teirney, The Crisis of Church and State: 1050-1300, p.
128.
64 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 36, 46 52 63, 64, 65 88-91.
65 The
list is too long in some cases. Protestant authors have been accused
of exaggerating the purges, and there are accounts that seem to take morbid
delight in the sins of the Roman Catholic Church at the expense of truth.
66 Kenneth
Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity Volume I: to A.D. 1500,
p. 452.
67 "The
Passau Anonymous: On the origins of Heresy and the Sect of the Waldensians," in
Edward Peters, Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe, p. 150-153.
68 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 61. He also warns that not
all references to Waldensians are to be believed, "heretical tendencies
of every sort were called `Waldensian.' One remembers that Joan of
Arc was condemned for her `Waldensianism.' In the Index of the Flemish
Church, Waldensian meant a mysterious character, close to the world of
witches and sorcerers, worshipers of the devil and practitioners of black
magic. Fascination with this view has rewarded us with verbal accounts
by inquisitors and also some remarkable miniatures by Flemish artists,
such as those picturing Waldensians flying on brooms or participating in
the nightly excursions and dances of witches." p. 40, 41 He
also produces a plate of one of the broom flying pictures on after p. 46.
69 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 66.
70 The
practice of calling their leaders "uncles" stemmed from the desire
to literally obey the command in the gospels to "call no man father.
. .[or] teacher" (Mt. 23:8-10), and because the term was deceptive
and helped keep secret who their leaders were.
71 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 59,60.
72 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 64,65. There were also other incidents
of violence, though few in number. ". . . the Waldensians
assassinated the inquisitors Peter of Verona and Conrad of Marburg; we
know also that not a few priests in Bohemia who were caught up in the repression
there came to the same end."(p. 48).
73 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 64
74 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 69
75 Quoted
in Jan Milic Lochman, "Not Just One Reformation: The Waldensian and
Hussite Heritage." Reformed World. Vol. 33, No. 5 (Mar. 75)
p. 221.
76 Cameron
thinks that this Synod was not an orderly meeting as Tourn suggests, but
a series of discussions between various clusters of Waldensians and Reformed
over a period of time, perhaps punctuated by one major meeting. Unfortunately,
based on the documents he analyses, it is hard to understand his point. He
admits that such a meeting did occur, and that the outcome was as claims,
but he refers to it as the "The myth of Chanforan." Euan
Cameron, The Reformation of the Heretics: The Waldenses of the Alps,
1480-1580, (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) pp.138-144.
77 The
Waldensians agreed. Giorgio Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 70-73.
78 Giorgio
Tourn, The Waldensians, p. 73.
79 See
their reports from the River Platte along with some commentary on their
organization and makeup in Reformed World, Vol.30,31.
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