[Archbishop Daniel
Pilarczyk of Cincinnati has
appropriately criticized the attempt to
judge by today's standards those bishops
who in the past routinely reassigned
clerical sexual predators to other
parishes. This article explores whether
our theological tradition points to
standards according to which the bishops
could be held accountable. Drawing
primarily on the theology of the Doctor
of Reform, St. Peter Damian, the study
demonstrates how an improper
understanding of magisterial authority
creates the conditions for scandal, and,
secondly, suggests a strategy for
reestablishing magisterial credibility.]
WITH THE RELEASE OF "A
Report on the Crisis in the Catholic
Church in the United States," the
question of the accountability of
bishops for their decisions has come to
the forefront of contemporary
discussions about the Church. (1) In a
response to the report, Archbishop
Daniel Pilarczyk of Cincinnati tried to
explain why bishops made the decisions
that led to the crisis. First, he
claimed that removing priests who abused
minors from the clerical state or from
ministry was "virtually impossible"
under canon law prior to 2002. (2)
Without the option of removing the
offending priests, Pilarczyk concluded
that bishops had little choice but to
follow the advice of psychologists who
assured that the sex abusers could be
effectively treated. In addition to
psychology and canon law, bishops also
turned to civil attorneys for guidance.
(3) Since bishops did not have today's
knowledge and experience to guide their
decisions, Pilarczyk identified attempts
to judge bishops by today's standards as
the fallacy of "presentism." (4)
Pilarczyk's defense of
episcopal decisions, however, failed to
consider the possibility that the Church
has dealt with this type of crisis in
the past. This leads to the impression
that this is a new problem. If his
account of bishops' decision-making
process is accurate, then it is clear
that magisterial officeholders rarely
consulted Scripture or tradition on the
matter. The reality is that scandals
involving clerical sexuality and the
abuse of minors have emerged
periodically throughout history and
there is a significant amount of
material in our history and theological
tradition addressing the issues
surrounding sexual abuse in the Church.
Some of the worst and most widespread
outbreaks took place in the eleventh,
twelfth, fourteenth, and fifteenth
centuries. During this time, the clergy
were formally exempt from secular or
civil law, which pointedly raised the
issue of how to hold them accountable if
bishops failed to enforce discipline.
Even with these limitations, the Church
has been able to restore discipline in
the past and we have every reason to
hope for a renewed and purified clergy
in the future.
The great medieval
Doctor of Reform, Peter Damian
(1007-1072), determined the root cause
of systemic sexual abuse to be episcopal
laxity resulting from a misunderstanding
of the bishop's office. Instead of
seeing the bishop as a teacher who leads
people by his humble example, whose
authority is based on his service for
the community, and who seeks to persuade
people freely to embrace a Christian
life, a number of medieval bishops
frequently understood their roles as
princes or lords of the Church, whose
office unequivocally demanded obedience,
and who pronounced the moral law by
fiat. For Peter Damian and the medieval
reformers, scandal is the inevitable
result of collapsing teaching authority
into the power to govern. (5) This is a
twofold corruption because it improperly
extends teaching categories such as
infallibility to episcopal decisions and
it subjects the authority of Scripture
and tradition to custom, which was a
category Peter Damian used for local
corruptions of canon law. (6) Nor was
Peter Damian alone in this diagnosis.
Bernard of Clairvaux charged bishops who
had these attitudes with being
rebellious servants, of being teachers
who set themselves up as lords. (7) To
put this in our language, conditions are
ripe for scandal when magisterium is
seen as an unaccountable imperium. (8)
Of course, a good
magister or teacher must do research. If
bishops had consulted both church
history and traditional sources in
addition to canon law and psychology,
they would have found that Peter Damian
had written extensively about problems
associated with clerical sexual abuse.
While there are many sources on the
subject of the sexual scandals of the
clergy to which one could point from
Gregory the Great (540-604) to Catherine
of Siena (1347-1380) or from medieval
penitentiaries to the decrees of
councils, Peter Damian's treatment of
the relationship between the bishops'
lack of accountability and outbreak of
scandal became foundational for
reformers in the Church. (9)
Ironically, Pope Leo XII
decided in 1823 to name Peter Damian the
Doctor of Reform in order to bolster his
claims that he had the authority to
govern the Church without external
manipulation by secular authorities and
without internal opposition to his
policies. The pope knew Peter Damian was
one of the first theologians to argue
for universal papal jurisdiction. But
because the saint's writings were
sanitized by Catholic scholars, Leo XII
most likely did not know that Peter
Damian had argued that everyone is
subject to correction, including the
pope. Further, he was probably unaware
of Peter Damian's doctrine that lay
persons have a duty to reform members of
the clergy when they fail to reform
themselves in light of divine
revelation. Nonetheless, Peter Damian's
theology was officially designated as
the model for those who wished to reform
the Church by an act of the papal
magisterium.
After providing a brief
biographical sketch of Peter Damian's
life and of his historical context, I
shall explain how he understood the
cause, the effects, and the remedy for
the sexual scandals in the Church of his
day. I then turn to consider his
justification of lay leadership in
reforming even the most prominent
members of the clergy. Finally, I draw
out implications of how his approach to
correcting abuse and scandal could be
applied to the current crisis. (10)
PETER DAMIAN'S LIFE
Born in 1007 in Ravenna,
Peter Damian experienced evil early in
life. According to his medieval
biography, Peter Damian's mother had
willfully withheld food from him so that
he would die and relieve the family of
the burden of having another child to
care for and feed. This was not an
uncommon way of handling unwanted
children, especially in times of famine.
However, it was the mistress of a local
priest who intervened and saved his
life. As a child, he lost both parents
and spent some time being raised by his
siblings. His medieval biographer claims
that he spent some of his childhood with
an abusive older brother, but Peter
Damian never confirms this in his own
writings. Peter Damian did, however,
reminisce warmly about a period of time
that he spent under the care of one of
his older sisters. (11) Finally, his
brother Damian, the archpriest of
Ravenna, took him under his care and saw
to it that he was properly cared for and
educated.
Peter Damian was an
excellent student and eventually became
a master rhetorician at schools in Parma
and Ravenna. To appreciate his work, it
is important to keep in mind that he was
trained as a rhetorician using language
and categories that would have appealed
to eleventh-century sensibilities. As
Jean Leclercq noted, his was an age that
loved powerful language. (12) Though his
language was strong, his goal was to
call people to penance and to reform
their behavior. While it is true that he
wrote some sophisticated theology on
issues such as divine omnipotence, it
would be a mistake to read him as a
philosopher.
Perhaps as a result of
his early experiences of evil, Peter
Damian was increasingly scandalized by
the behavior of the students and
professors at the diocesan cathedral
schools. Town and gown fights, sexual
immorality, simony, and clergymen
jockeying for higher positions were just
some of the behaviors that scandalized
him. In 1035, at the age of 28, Peter
Damian walked away from his promising
career and joined a strict monastic
community at Fonte Avellana. Once he was
in the safe, if austere, environment of
the monastery, he set about the task of
reforming the Church through a series of
widely distributed letters, treatises,
and sermons.
Because of his growing
fame as a preacher and a reformer, Peter
Damian was plucked out of the monastery
and appointed the cardinal bishop of
Ostia in 1057. The reform issues facing
the Church as an institution during his
lifetime were simony, clerical
concubinage, and the sexual immorality
of monks and clergy. Simony, the buying
and selling of sacred things, was a
pervasive sin. He defended the moderate
position that simoniacal and sexually
active clerics could validly perform the
sacraments for others--though their
sacramental acts simply served to
condemn them as vessels fit for
destruction. (13) His most lasting
institutional reform involved the
process of electing the pope. Peter
Damian and several of his fellow
reformers established the system whereby
the cardinals elected the pope in order
to free papal elections from the direct
control by the Roman nobility, the
emperors, and other political powers.
(14)
After several years in
the vanguard of the reforming party of
the Roman Curia, Peter Damian asked to
be relieved of his duties so that he
could return to the eremitical life of
his monastic order. Still he never
abandoned the cause of reform. He was a
man deeply committed to the quiet life
of contemplation even as he played a
large role in international affairs
involving both the Church and the state
until his death in 1072. As a monk, he
was a strong advocate of "the
discipline" or self-flagellation but his
sermons reveal a playfulness and
delightfulness that seem inconsistent
with his harsh ascetical practices and
strident reform rhetoric.
THE HISTORICAL CONTEXT
Peter Damian is the
officially designated Doctor of Reform
but he could just as easily have been
honored as the Doctor of Discipline. His
interest in discipline extended from the
life of the individual believer to the
enforcement of ecclesiastical laws. Many
of the abuses he worked to correct
resulted from the lack of order in the
collections of canon law. Without any
uniform standards of canon law, bishops
were able to rule their dioceses
absolutely as they personally saw fit.
(15) Because they tended to treat the
Church as their own property, many
bishops did not succeed in maintaining
ecclesiastical discipline. (16) Since
the vast majority of them had bought
their offices, it is not surprising that
they would see the Church as a form of
investment.
The idea of the Church
as a community had almost disappeared.
(17) One of the key goals of the
reformers was to root out simony and to
recover a more communal understanding of
the Church. Whereas prohibitions against
simony were recognized to carry the
force of tradition, the reformers were
attempting to move people away from
local customs. Additionally, they had to
contend with the traditional status of
the secular laws stemming from the
proprietary church system established by
Charlemagne and his heirs. Under this
system, ecclesiastical positions were
related to benefices associated with
particular churches, dioceses, and
abbeys. These benefices provided income
to support the work of the monks and the
clergy as well as resources for poor
relief, but it was often the local
nobility who held the right to install
someone into a benefice. What had
started as a means to provide income to
the clergy had gradually led people to
see churches as buildings that could be
either owned or leased in the same way
as a mill or an orchard. (18) The
resulting sense of entitlement, both on
the part of the laity who held the
rights to the benefices and the men
installed into these positions, paved
the way for more serious abuses.
The most serious of
these abuses often concerned clerical
sexuality. Like simony, the
ecclesiastical laws calling for clerical
celibacy had for centuries been well
established in the Western Church.
Nonetheless, a significant number of the
clergy in Europe were cohabitating. This
state of affairs was possible because
the culture placed little value on
celibacy and cohabitation was an
accepted institution in society. (19)
Women who were sexual partners did not
have the rights and protections granted
to married women and were totally at the
mercy of their clerical patrons. Both
Roman law and Germanic custom favored
personal property for women and in many
places it was customary for a wife to
have control over her dowry and
inheritance. (20) In a society that had
no status or protections for landless
and unmarried women, the imbalance of
power between the clerics and their
unmarried partners led to much abuse;
but most of the people who objected to
clerical cohabitation were not concerned
about the treatment of these women.
Most of the reformers
were principally interested in ritual
purity. The prohibitions against
clerical marriage had originated out of
concerns surrounding the purity of the
priest or bishop, who was expected to
abstain from sexual intercourse before
performing his liturgical duties.
Another concern was that many of these
clerics had found ways to steal the
communal property of the Church in order
to provide land for their illegitimate
children. Even so, there was little
discussion of the need to make the
clergy personally more devout or to
demand better pastoral care for the
laity. (21) Peter Damian's efforts
against clerical cohabitation shifted
over time as he began to move beyond
ritual concerns to seeing the inherent
abuse of power involved in these
relationships.
The worst problem with
clerical sexuality was the priests and
bishops who were seducing or compelling
boys and adolescents to submit to
sodomy. This was true even though a
number of clergy had women sexual
partners. Today, such behavior would be
identified as molestation of children or
minors. There were also problems
involving coerced and consensual sexual
acts between clergy and adult men as
well. The medieval writers focused on
sexual acts and not on tendencies,
desires, or identity issues related to
sexual orientation. (22)
Throughout his ministry,
Peter Damian attacked all forms of
sexual abuse committed by the clergy,
but he found the leadership in the
Church unwilling to face the problem.
His words of warning to Pope Nicholas II
possess an unmistakable resonance:
Indeed, in our day the
genuine custom of the Roman Church seems
to be observed in this way, that
regarding other practices of
ecclesiastical discipline, a proper
investigation is held; but a prudent
silence is maintained concerning
clerical sexuality for fear of insults
from the laity (saecularium). But this
is something that badly needs
correction, so that precisely what all
the people are complaining about should
not be hushed up in council by the
leaders of the Church.... Therefore,
because of the ignominy involved, I do
not see how something that is everywhere
publicly discussed can be suppressed at
the synod, so that not only the
offenders be properly branded with
infamy, but also those whose duty it is
to punish them be found guilty. (23)
He goes on to say that
when the law was enforced in these
matters, it was not enforced
impartially. "For we indeed punish the
acts of impurity performed by priests in
the minor ranks," he complained, "but
with bishops, we pay our reverence with
silent tolerance, which is totally
absurd." (24)
When the clergy failed
to reform themselves, Peter Damian
believed it was the duty of the laity to
discipline the clergy. Although he was
completely in step with the papal policy
of his day, deacon Hildebrand, who had
been one of Peter Damian's colleagues,
would eventually work to erode the idea
that the laity could or should take any
initiative to reform the Church. (25)
Even so, Peter Damian's collaborative
model of reform involving the laity,
religious, and clergy was widely read
and distributed throughout the Middle
Ages. He recognized that clerical
sexuality was an abuse of power
analogous to the abuse of power inherent
in incest.
SPIRITUAL INCEST
In 1049, Peter Damian
wrote his first treatise on sexual abuse
among the clergy and forwarded a copy of
it to Pope Leo IX. He judged the problem
as resulting from a lack of discipline
in the Church. In this letter, he
reminded Leo that the mission of the
Church was cura animarum and warned that
laxity on the part of bishops was
leading people to destruction.
Initially, Peter Damian framed his
attack on clerical sexuality in terms of
ritual purity, canon law, and abuse of
power. While this first attempt to
address the issues surrounding clerical
sexuality concentrated on priests and
bishops who were using the power of
their offices to sexually abuse boys and
young men, he also highlighted the
abuses of power associated with clerical
cohabitation.
Peter Damian condemned
acts of sodomy among the clergy and with
the laity, which he described as a
pervasive problem in the Church of his
day. "Unless immediate effort be exerted
by the Apostolic See," he warned, "there
is little doubt that even if one wished
to curb this unbridled evil, he could
not check the momentum of its progress."
(26) Peter Damian explained that boys
and adolescents who entered into the
lower ranks of the clergy found
themselves "enslaved under the iron rule
of Satanic tyranny" because they were
commanded or seduced into performing
sexual acts such as masturbation, mutual
masturbation, anal intercourse, and
intercourse between the thighs. (27)
Peter Damian admitted
that there is a distinction between one
who pleasures himself and one who
involves others in a sinful act. He
complained that many bishops would only
depose priests who had committed acts of
anal intercourse. (28) His own list of
punishable acts included solitary
masturbation. (29) All four of the
sexual acts he listed were in the
eleventh century related to questions
surrounding ritual purity.
When he first embarked
on his career as a reformer, Peter
Damian, like many of his contemporaries,
did not believe that sacramental or the
ministerial acts performed by impure
priests and bishops were valid. Thus he
concluded that the failure to discipline
men who fell into any kind of impurity,
which could include nonsexual sins such
as simony, dragged entire communities
into the depths of sin. Since such men
were supposed to act as intercessors for
their community, he argued they could
not perform this duty effectively. Peter
Damian asked Pope Leo: "Therefore, if
one is embarrassed to act as intercessor
with a man with whom he is not at all
acquainted, how can one dare to act as
an intercessor for the people before God
if, in view of his life, he knows that
he is not on friendly terms with the
grace of God?" (30)
Peter Damian was worried
that God would not accept sacrifices
from impure hands, and this called into
question the validity of Masses
celebrated by impure clerics. (31)
Despite the fact that the eminent
scholar of monasticism Jean Leclercq
argued that Peter Damian never changed
his theological doctrine, it can be
shown that Damian did abandon his
earlier position. (32) He shifted his
thinking in this regard as he became
more familiar with both the
controversies of Augustine and Gregory
the Great against the Donatists who
denied the validity of the sacramental
acts performed by clergy involved in
serious and public sins. When Peter
Damian began to recognize the pastoral
implications of such a position, he
reformulated his theology. He came to
see that the people of God could not be
dependent on the personal morality,
holiness, or quality of their clerics
because they could not know such things
with certainty. This would have placed
an impossible burden on the members of
the Church. (33)
Peter Damian shifted the
argument away from sacramental concerns
and toward the questions of Church
governance and discipline. He claimed
that bishops were stimulating the growth
of sexual abuse in the Church by failing
to maintain proper order through the use
of discipline. He reasoned that, because
a sexually active cleric was more afraid
to be despised by men than to be judged
by God, they would do anything to avoid
losing their clerical identities. When a
cleric realized that he would not lose
his status, Peter Damian argued that he
would continue with his illicit acts.
Bishops who refused to depose sexually
active clerics, he concluded, were
providing these men with opportunities
to prey on the people under their care.
(34)
Why did bishops behave
thus? Damian suggested that they were
motivated by a shortage of men who were
able to celebrate divine services, which
he identified as perverse thinking. He
argued that it was better to leave the
ecclesiastical office empty rather than
to install the wrong person into it.
Peter Damian reminded the bishops to
consider that even in recent history,
there had been extended periods of time
when the Apostolic See of Rome had
remained vacant until the right
candidate could be installed. (35) An
unworthy man who is arrogant enough to
presume a position of honor in the
Church, he explained, will not be the
sort of person who would provide good
pastoral care by observing the
commandments and by practicing the
disciplines prescribed for clerics. (36)
Convinced that the
destructive plague of sexual abuse was
raging throughout the Church because of
the lack of episcopal leadership, Peter
Damian offered the following admonition
to the bishops of his day:
Listen, you do-nothing
superiors of clerics and priests.
Listen, and even though you feel sure of
yourselves, tremble at the thought that
you are partners in the guilt of others;
those, I mean, who wink at the sins of
their subjects that need correction and
who by ill-considered silence allow them
license to sin. Listen, I say, and be
shrewd enough to understand that all of
you alike "are deserving of death, that
is, not only those who do such things,
but also they who approve those who
practice them" (Romans 1:32). (37)
He went on to explain
that bishops who did not correct their
clergy were just as guilty as priests
who were seducing boys and adolescents.
Even worse, Peter Damian wrote that
there were bishops who were sexually
abusing their own clergy as well. These
men would either seduce or compel the
priests under their jurisdiction to
engage in sexual actions. In order to
avoid scandal, bishops would then either
confess to these poor men or have them
confess to him, so that they would be
bound by the seal of confession from
revealing what had happened. (38)
Drawing on the spousal
model for the relationship between the
bishop and the Church, Peter Damian
charged bishops with a kind of spiritual
incest. If the bishop is the husband and
the Church is the bride, then he argued
that all who are reborn in the Church
could appropriately be called the
bishop's children. In fact he used this
image as a way of talking about piety,
based on an analogy to the relationship
between parents and children. (39) He
also extended this metaphor to anyone
who had pastoral duties and authority
over others in the Church. Even
godfathers who abused their
relationships with their goddaughters by
engaging in sexual relations with them
were guilty of spiritual incest. (40)
Whereas a father who
betrayed his relationship of power and
trust with his children by sexually
molesting them was subject to
excommunication and exile under the
canon and civil laws, Peter Damian
argued that bishops who betrayed their
spiritual children deserved a harsher
punishment. (41) His reason for the
harsher sentence was that the betrayal
involved in spiritual incest ran deeper
than familial incest. Even if the bishop
never personally committed such a deed,
Peter Damian concluded he was still
guilty of the crime of spiritual incest
if he allowed his clergy to sexually
abuse boys, young men, mistresses, and
even prostitutes.
Damian exhorted Pope Leo
IX to enforce the canons of church law
on the scandalous matter of priests
seducing boys and young men. The law
clearly prescribed the following
penance:
Any cleric or monk who
seduces young men (adolescentium) or
boys (parvulorum), or who is apprehended
in kissing or in any shameful situation,
shall be publicly flogged and shall lose
his clerical tonsure. Thus shorn, he
shall be disgraced by spitting into his
face, bound in iron chains, wasted by
six months of close confinement, and for
three days each week put on barley bread
given him toward evening. Following this
period, he shall spend a further six
months living in a small segregated
courtyard in the custody of a spiritual
elder, kept busy with manual labor and
prayer, subjected to vigils and prayers,
forced to walk at all times in the
company of two spiritual brothers, never
again allowed to associate with young
men for purposes of improper
conversation or advice. (42)
In other words, such men
were supposed to be confined to
monasteries where they could be
supervised for the rest of their lives.
Since these sins require such a
degrading, public penance, Peter Damian
argued that they were grounds for
deposing men from holy orders because
canon law forbade men who had to perform
public penance from assuming
ecclesiastical offices. (43)
Leo IX was not moved by
Peter Damian's arguments. He informed
him that he did not believe clerics who
had seduced boys and young men to commit
acts of mutual masturbation and other
sexual acts should be automatically
deposed. In the name of acting humanely,
Leo argued that these men could retain
their offices as long as they had not
engaged in such behavior for long
periods of time or with many people. The
pope did concede, however, that any
cleric who had engaged in anal
intercourse should be deposed. (44)
As far as Peter Damian
was concerned, any sexual act by a
member of the clergy with others,
including contractual sex with
prostitutes, was a form of sexual abuse
that demonstrated the offender was unfit
for holding a priestly office. This was
true because of the imbalance of power
and social standing between the
participants. He was more concerned
about the spiritual impact that it had
on their victims, who were being seduced
into mortal sin. He knew that he could
not hope to raise these other issues
with the pope and bishops if they were
unwilling to act against clerics who
were essentially raping boys. So Peter
Damian continued to work for reform in
other areas and waited until Rome was
more receptive to his reasoning before
again raising the issue of sexual abuse.
After Peter Damian had
become a cardinal bishop, he returned in
1039 to the issue again and vented his
frustration at a man whom he had helped
to be elected pope. Writing to Pope
Nicholas II, he made the following
warning about bishops who had either
participated in the sexual abuse of
someone or who had tolerated it in their
jurisdiction:
The day will come, and
that certainly, or rather the night,
when this impurity of yours will be
turned into pitch on which the
everlasting fire will feed, never to be
extinguished in your very being; and
with never-ending flames this fire will
devour you, flesh and bones. (45)
Then he shifted his
attention to Nicholas II and admonished
him to remember that he would be subject
to divine punishment for his inertia in
failing to discipline his subjects, the
bishops. (46)
Even when the laws
concerning clerical sexuality were being
enforced, Peter Damian complained that
they were not being applied impartially.
Those who held the higher offices of
bishop and archbishop were able to
escape punishment and even criticism for
their sins. He argued that this way of
enforcing the Church's discipline stood
proper order on its head. The pope and
the archbishops should imitate the way
the Lord himself imposes discipline on
his people. He appealed to the examples
of Phinehas and Eli, two Old Testament
priests, in order to show proper
discipline and to illustrate the
consequences of laxity.
PHINEHAS AND ELI
Phinehas represented,
argued Peter Damian, how metropolitans
should act in enforcing the laws of the
Church; Eli represented how the
metropolitan bishops were acting.
Phinehas was a priest who found one of
the most prominent Israelite chiefs
having illicit sex with a Midianite
princess. As Peter Damian told the
story, Phinehas seized a spear and,
before all of the people, transfixed the
pair through their genitals. Though many
Israelite men were having sexual
relations with pagan women in the
worship of Baal, Peter Damian explained
that Phinehas struck down only the most
prominent and socially Elite offenders.
This action demonstrated that the laws
would be enforced to the rest of the
people. Certainly, it cooled their
ardor. (47)
From this example, Peter
Damian formulated the principle that the
sins of more highly placed people must
be more vigorously prosecuted than those
of the anonymous and powerless. He
argued that Phinehas was simply
imitating the way that God punishes
sinners. Peter Damian wrote:
This is why the Lord
himself, while the whole Israelite
people were no less guilty of this
crime, was silent regarding commoners,
but vented his fury in condign
punishment only on their leaders. "And
the Lord was angry and said to Moses,
'Take all of the leaders of the people
and hang them on gallows in the full
light of day, that the fury of my anger
may turn away from Israel'" (Numbers
25.4). (48)
Thus the eminent must be
punished more harshly and more publicly
both to set an example and to turn away
God's wrath. Whereas this example fit in
well with Peter Damian's rhetorical
style, it was a bit too gruesome and too
graphic for later reformers. His use of
Eli as an example of laxity and its
consequences, however, became a standard
piece of reform rhetoric in the Church's
tradition.
The priest Eli was
accused of honoring his sons more than
God. The sons of Eli were spoiling the
sacrifices to Yahweh but Eli failed to
punish them. Though Eli had not actively
participated in the sins of his sons,
Yahweh declared a death sentence upon
him together with his sons. Just as the
one who had corrected sins was worthy of
a blessing, Peter Damian concluded, so
too the one who fails to punish sinners
is likely to be cursed by God. (49) To
justify his position, he cited Gregory
the Great's interpretation of this
passage: "He who fails to correct, when
it is possible for him to do so, makes
himself guilty of the others fault."
(50) Peter Damian asked the pope and the
other metropolitan bishops how they
thought God would judge them if they
remained silent when they were
confronted with the sins of the clerics
under their jurisdiction.
Peter Damian saw the
failure of bishops to enforce
ecclesiastical discipline as bringing
into disrepute the dignity of
ecclesiastical office. Interpreting 1
Samuel 2:30-31, where God told Eli that
he would lop off his limbs, Peter Damian
wrote:
With these words, he
said, as it were, "Since by granting you
the dignity of the pastoral office I
strengthened your arm against my
enemies, although you refused to use
force in punishing them, I will now cut
off your arm, that is, I will take away
the power of the priestly office, so
that as you were lacking an arm in
fighting for me, you will now be without
a hand to defend yourself." (51)
Because of their failure
to exercise appropriate episcopal
oversight, he believed that God would
strip bishops of the one thing they
truly prized, the power and privileges
associated with their ecclesiastical
offices. Since they had refused to
fulfill the duties demanded by their
pastoral office, Peter Damian argued
that bishops lost the privileges
associated with those duties.
This argument also
applied to the pope. Since the papacy
itself had been strengthened by both lay
and clerical reformers for the purpose
of correcting ecclesial corruption, Pope
Nicholas II would have seen how Peter
Damian's warning was most directly aimed
at him. The secular rights and
privileges that the lay reformers
Empress Agnes, Duke Godfrey, and Duchess
Beatrice had given to the papal office
could also be taken away by the laity.
Peter Damian had developed strong
arguments for papal primacy and fought
to free papal elections from political
influences, but he also maintained that
the pope could be corrected and even
deposed for malfeasance by lay
authorities. (52)
Though they might escape
a just judgment for the moment, Peter
Damian warned the pope and bishops that
they would never be able to escape the
sentence of the heavenly judge. Over the
course of his career as a member of the
papal reform movement, Peter Damian came
to see that people had to be persuaded
to follow the law. Increasingly, his
rhetoric shifted away from legal
categories to spiritual ones such as the
fear of God. Nonetheless, he worked to
establish universal standards when it
came to canon law and the enforcement of
the Church's discipline, but he learned
reforming the laws of the Church meant
little if bishops were too weak or
apathetic to enforce them. In such
cases, it was particularly important for
the laity to collaborate with religious
and clerical reformers in order to
compel bishops to uphold appropriate
discipline or to remove them from
office.
COLLABORATIVE REFORM
Peter Damian saw reform
as involving all of the orders of the
Church--a rather progressive attitude
for a man of the eleventh century. He
believed that the monastic and
eremitical life was superior to other
Christian vocations and that the clergy
officially held places of leadership. As
we have seen, he was arguably the
strongest supporter of papal primacy;
but he also believed that popes could be
legitimately deposed by lay leaders.
Further, he knew all too well that one
cannot assume that officeholders fulfill
the duties of their offices or that
vowed persons observe their vows. Peter
Damian's experience of the Church led
him to oppose the idea that bishops or
popes stood above the law, a judgment
justified by a forged collection of
canon law popular with the clergy, the
Pseudo-Isidorian Decretals. (53)
Peter Damian argued that
everyone is subject to correction. He
applauded Henry III's deposition of the
three popes he found when he went to
Rome for his coronation, calling the
imperial intervention a strike against
the "multicephalous hydra" of the
simoniacal heresy. (54) Though he
encouraged lay authorities to uphold the
laws of the Church when the clergy
failed to do so, he did not believe that
the laity should manipulate the Church
or write canon law. Peter Damian went so
far as to argue that a ruler who failed
to respect the will of God as
established by the canons could be
rightfully overthrown by the people.
(55)
In 1058 Peter Damian
wrote a letter to his secretary
Ariprandus asserting the idea that no
spiritual institution could survive
without correction. He argued that St.
Peter's willingness to accept correction
from St. Paul, who certainly in the
minds of medieval Christians held a
lower hierarchical place than St. Peter,
was a model for all human institutions.
Lifting up St. Paul's example for
imitation, he showed his medieval
contemporaries that sometimes it is
appropriate to reprove superiors
publicly. While this idea was not new,
Peter Damian went further and set out to
refute the scriptural arguments that the
clergy cited against publicly speaking
out against superiors. (56)
There were basically two
primary texts that were used to
discourage people from speaking out
against their superiors. The first was
Matthew 18:15-17 when Jesus said:
If another member of the
Church sins against you, go and point
out the fault when the two of you are
alone. If the member listens to you,
then you have regained that one. But if
you are not listened to, take one or two
others along with you, so that every
word may be confirmed by the evidence of
two or three witnesses. If the member
refuses to listen to them, tell it to
the Church. (57)
This was difficult
advice for a medieval Christian to
follow. Bishops, abbots, abbesses, and
nobles had tremendous power over the
people in their jurisdiction. To think
of confronting such a person privately,
especially if they were wicked or
abusive, was more than most people could
imagine. In effect, it was asking people
to confront privately the very people
who had abused or wronged them. If the
poor person survived the encounter
unscathed, it was unlikely that he or
she could find two or three others to
privately accuse their superiors of a
crime. Thus he or she could never
fulfill the requirements to justify
making a public charge.
The second text that
discouraged open criticism was drawn
from 1Timothy. St. Paul categorically
stated: "Never be harsh with an elder
(presbytero), but speak to him as a
father" (1 Timothy 5:1). (58) Peter
Damian turned to consider how Paul could
ignore his own advice and the command of
Jesus. How could Paul heap rebukes on
Peter, who had the right to govern the
whole Church, in the presence of
everyone? Damian's answer was that St.
Paul could do so in the service of
obedience. St. Peter had fallen away
from maintaining the "orthodox" position
he had formulated at the Council of
Jerusalem in Acts 15:10-11, namely that
gentiles should not be forced to follow
Jewish observances. He wavered because
of pressure from James and the other
Jewish Christians in the Jerusalem
community. Peter Damian claimed that by
publicly shaming St. Peter, St. Paul had
helped the "first pope" to recover the
resolve he needed to lead the community.
(59)
In other words, Peter
Damian was arguing that it is legitimate
to correct superiors harshly and
publicly when they failed to follow the
guidelines of Scripture and tradition.
By defending the gospel and the
decisions of the Council of Jerusalem,
Paul was being obedient. Of course,
Peter Damian had to defend such action
because he was frequently correcting his
superiors in exactly this way. One of
the most interesting aspects of his work
is that he argued that the duty to
correct prominent members of the clergy
was a duty that applied to women too.
In 1064 Peter Damian
wrote a letter to Duchess Adelaide of
Turin justifying the idea that women
could correct and reform even the most
preeminent members of the clergy and
urging her to reform the dioceses in her
territory. Peter Damian knew this idea
would not be well received by his fellow
clerics, especially since he was writing
about clerical concubinage. He claims to
have hesitated in writing the letter
because he feared the "calumny of
insulting clerics." (60) So first, he
wrote to the bishop of Turin in order to
deflect criticism and seemed apologetic
for his delay, writing:
Indeed, they would have
complained and said, "See how shamefully
and inhumanely he acts while preparing
to destroy us, he who is unwilling to
discuss this matter cautiously and
discreetly with bishops or with other
men of the Church, but brazenly
publicizes to women what should have
been handled in the sacristy." (61)
Since the bishop of
Turin had only one diocese under his
jurisdiction and Adelaide controlled the
Kingdoms of Italy and Burgundy, Peter
Damian argued it was not improper for
him to write to her concerning clerical
sexuality. He knew Adelaide had the
means to reform the behavior of the
clergy by force.
For Peter Damian, one's
sex did not determine a person's virtue
or power. Virtue comes from God. Peter
Damian praised God for making Adelaide
as strong as a man and for endowing her
with more good will than temporal power.
He urged her to follow the Old Testament
example of Deborah, who sat in judgment
and who ruled without the help of a man.
Peter Damian affirmed Adelaide's own
justification for her power over men.
Defending her power to a petulant priest
or bishop, she had said: "Why should one
wonder, father, that almighty God saw
fit to grant me, his unworthy servant,
some small degree of power over men,
since at times he endows even some
despicable herb with wonderful
qualities." (62)
Though Peter Damian
asked Adelaide to collaborate with the
bishop of Turin, he did not expect the
bishop to be very cooperative. This is
why he concentrated on the relationship
between Deborah and Barak as an example
for how she should behave. Deborah had
commanded Barak to battle against
Sisera, but Barak refused to go unless
Deborah went as well. According to Peter
Damian, Barak represents bishops whose
reform efforts began with zeal but did
not endure because they were weak and
lazy. Sisera represents clerical
impurity. Because of his reluctance,
Barak does not slay Sisera. In the end,
it is a woman named Jael who slayed the
enemy by driving a tent stake through
his skull. This story shows that
sometimes God "uses women to achieve a
more glorious triumph." (63) It also
justified unilateral action on
Adelaide's part if bishops failed to
act.
Peter Damian provided
Adelaide with an arsenal of scriptural
citations justifying her action in
reforming the male clergy. He pointed to
the example of Judith on whom God
afforded the glory of cutting off
Holofernes's head as a reward for the
harsh rebuke she gave to the weak and
fearful priest Uzziah (Judith
8:12-13:20). He also cited the deeds of
Esther who caused Haman to be hanged
(Esther 7:9-10), the wise woman who cut
off the head of Sheba and threw it to
Joab (2 Samuel 20:16-22), the woman of
Thebez who threw a stone that crushed
the head of the general Abimelech
(Judges 9:53; 2 Samuel 11:21), and
Abigail who disobeyed her husband and
thus saved her family from destruction
(1 Samuel 25:14-35). (64) Peter Damian
promised Adelaide, "You can also turn
away the sword of God's anger from your
own house and from the one's you have
under your authority in these areas, if
you strive to overcome impurity that is
supported even in the highest circles of
the Church by bishops who do not pay
attention to it." (65)
Peter Damian's position
on the right and the duty of the laity
to correct the clergy was increasingly
at odds with papal reform movement as
envisioned by Gregory VII. Nonetheless
his justification for everyone,
including women, to correct their
"superiors" continued to influence
reformers well into the sixteenth
century. Peter Damian's theology
provided a counterbalance to the
increasingly excessive claims of papal
authority. Since temporal privileges
such as wealth and coercive power were
not inherent to any pastoral office, he
argued that the laity could legitimately
take these away from the clergy.
PETER DAMIAN AND THE
CURRENT CRISIS
Applying Peter Damian's
ideas about reform to the current crisis
in the Church requires some care in
terms of delineating his context from
our own. First, the scope of the crisis
in the eleventh century was much worse
than the current scandal in the United
States. Second, the medieval theologians
were not concerned with sexual
orientation; instead they concentrated
on actions that they believed were
impinging upon ritual purity or were
manifestations of the abuse of power.
Third, Peter Damian lived in a time when
clerics were formally excluded from
civil prosecution for crimes. Many
bishops viewed this exclusion of the
clergy from civil law as a divine right
rather than as a privilege granted by
the state--one that had a corrupting
influence on the clergy as a whole. Even
when one distinguishes between the
eleventh-century context and our present
situation, there are some remarkable
parallels in terms of the failure of
bishops to understand how clerical
sexuality is an abuse of power similar
to incest, the almost total divorce
between the rights and duties of the men
holding clerical offices, and problems
with canon law.
One of the causes of the
eleventh-century scandal was that there
were so many disciplinary canons in
ecclesiastical law that people felt it
was impossible to observe the law. But,
if Archbishop Pilarczyk is right, our
problem is that canon law is essentially
unenforceable. Another problem we face
is the lack of ecclesiastical
institutions to investigate, punish, and
depose lax bishops. If there is a
problem with our canon law, however, it
is up to the bishops to reform the law.
Bishops cannot simply wring their hands
and point to the Code of Canon Law so as
to absolve themselves of any
responsibility.
Peter Damian's argument
as to why the sexually active cleric can
only be restrained from his illicit
activities by the fear of losing his
office can also be applied to some
bishops. Perhaps the lax bishop, like
the sexually active cleric, is more
afraid to be despised by people than
judged by God. The decisions of such men
are driven by their fear of scandal
rather than by considering what is truly
just. Instead of disciplining offenders,
they prefer to hide problems and to
avoid conflict. (66) Peter Damian
suggested that the only way to check the
vices of such men is by having and
enforcing laws that hold them
accountable. The need for such laws does
not, however, indicate a fundamental
problem with the structures of the
Church. Our need for laws and discipline
arises out of the human problem of
original sin, which is also why
Catholics believe they need a visible
and organic community to grow in
holiness.
Seen from this
perspective, the scandal has arisen both
from deficiencies in canon law and from
the individual weaknesses of clerics.
(67) The two problems are, in Peter
Damian's theology, inseparable.
Ecclesiastical laws and disciplines are
aids to help people (a category that
includes bishops) overcome their moral
deficiencies. However, the laws should
be grounded in Scripture and tradition.
When the laws are not in accord with
revelation as it has been received,
bishops are duty bound to reform the
laws. If they are ignorant of the
Scripture and tradition, which is the
collective experience of the body of
Christ, then they should not presume to
accede to the rank of bishop.
The fact that in our day
certain bishops failed to recognize
sexual abuse of minors as both an abuse
of office and an abuse of power is a
telling sign of entrenched problems in
the attitudes of some who hold episcopal
office. It points to a sense of
entitlement that finds its source in the
contemporary issues over clerical
identity and theology of the "indelible
mark" of priesthood. Explaining the
reasoning of bishops, Archbishop
Pilarczyk writes: "Simply firing a
priest was out of the question because
the priest had been ordained for life
and his bishop owed him sustenance for
as long as he lived." (68) What the
archbishop and other bishops failed to
realize is that it is the laity who
provides sustenance for bishops and
priests in return for their service. It
is the workman, not the miscreant, who
is worth his wages.
Peter Damian saw bishops
who fail to fulfill their duties as
essentially rebels. This was a position
established by Gregory the Great who
described such a bishop in this way:
He thus brings himself
to be likeness of him about whom
Scripture says: "He beholds every high
thing, and he is the king over all the
children of pride." He who aspired to
singular eminence and disdained life in
common with the angels, said: "I will
place my seat in the North, I will be
like the Most High." By a wonderful
decree, therefore, he finds within
himself the pit of his downfall, while
outwardly exalting himself on the
pinnacle of power. A man is made like
the apostate angel when he disdains,
though a man, to be like other people.
(69)
Just as Satan never
loses his "angelic mark," even after he
was cast out of his angelic office, so
too a priest or bishop can retain his
"indelible marks" and be legitimately
deposed. Gregory charged bishops and
priests who forgot about their primary
duty to their people with ignoring
Christ's command: "Whosoever will be the
greater among you, let him be your
minister; and he that will be first
among you shall be your servant. Just as
the Son of Man did not come to be
ministered to, but to minister" (Matthew
20:25-28). (70) By forgetting that they
are servants, the clergy disrupt the
proper order of the Church by
transforming the magisterium into an
unaccountable imperium.
For Peter Damian, proper
order demanded that the worst offenses
be made public. On one level, he was
simply echoing the penitential
disciplines of the ancient and medieval
Church; but on another level, he was
arguing that publicly revealing the
worst sins was the means to preserve the
credibility of the Church. This course
of action was warranted by the
scriptural examples of Phinehas and Eli.
By exposing the worst offenses, bishops
show they will expose all sins.
Conversely, when bishops are lax in
their discipline and cover up the
misdeeds of the clergy, they signal that
they are not serious about the Church's
laws, tradition, and mission. By setting
a bad example in terms of Christian
order, Peter Damian believed bishops
were impeding the Church's ability to
save souls by undermining its authority.
This laxity, he argued, stood in direct
contradiction to Jesus' teaching in
Matthew 5:19 on the importance of
following the law. (71)
Despite the problems in
today's Church leadership, there are
promising signs of hope. First, the
laity have recognized this hypocrisy
quite clearly and have begun to act by
using civil law to discipline the clergy
or by withholding tithes, something
which was not an option in the Middle
Ages. Given the new environment, more
bishops are beginning to collaborate
with the laity in responding to the
crisis. Second, the two reports by the
National Review Board are an important
initial step in recovering an
appropriate role for the laity in the
governance of the Church. Finally, the
fact that offending priests are being
scrutinized and removed from public
ministry is, according to Peter Damian,
an example of how God has been
disciplining priests and bishops
throughout history. Rather than seeing
such correction as a source of despair,
Peter Damian taught believers to see it
as a hopeful sign of God's providence.
The idea that everyone
needs to be accountable and be provided
correction when necessary is a
foundational aspect of the Catholic
faith. Peter Damian showed us that
reform has to include everyone and every
institution in the Church. More
importantly, he demonstrated that
collaborative reform has worked in the
past. This requires of believers
patience to continue and expand
collaborative reform initiatives. The
"Report on the Crisis in the Catholic
Church" states that the only way to
combat sinfulness is with holiness;
however, one must be careful to avoid
interpreting the Report in a way that
equates holiness with perfection or we
risk impatience, bitterness, and
division. (72) Though the Church was
seriously flawed in the eleventh
century, it cannot be argued that it was
not holy. As a visible and organic
community, all members of the Church
will have to struggle with human
propensity to sin, individually and
collectively, until Christ returns and
establishes his kingdom.
Footnotes:
(1) "A Report on the
Crisis in the Catholic Church in the
United States" (Washington: United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops,
2004).
(2) Archbishop Daniel
Pilarczyk, "What Were the Bishops
Thinking?" Origins 33 (April 1, 2004)
734. On the following page he notes that
until 2002 the canon law treating these
matters made it practically obligatory
to return offending priests to some sort
of ministry.
(3) Ibid. 734-35.
(4) Ibid. 736.
(5) Gregory the Great's
Pastoral Care, which was one of the
first reform treatises aimed at the
clergy in the West, was an almost
universal source for this idea. There is
an archaic English translation
available: Pastoral Care, trans. Henry
Davis (New York: Newman, 1950). The
critical edition is Regle pastorale /
Gregoire le Grand, ed. Floribert Rommel,
trans. Charles Morel (Paris: Cerf,
1992).
(6) Peter Damian
ascribed infallibility to canon law, but
he believed the various collections of
canon law contained many false decrees
originating from human customs. In
effect, for him the existence of a canon
does not prove its legitimacy. While a
pope or synod could write a canon, Peter
Damian actually judged the canons on the
basis of Scripture and tradition.
Instead of seeing bishops as the sources
of Church laws, he understood bishops as
being particularly bound and constrained
by the canons. This makes more sense
when one considers that a magister can
be a civil servant roughly equivalent to
a judge, but in the medieval period a
civil servant was bound to uphold and to
apply the laws of his lord or lady. Like
most of the medieval theologians, Peter
Damian was not entirely consistent on
his understanding of the authority of
canon law. He was consistent, however,
in his understanding that ecclesial
leaders become corrupt when they see
themselves as lords. The idea that canon
law had equal authority to Scripture or
tradition would cause chaos in the
latter part of the Middle Ages as people
began to realize that many of the canons
stemming from councils, synods,
decretals, and papal bulls are
irreconcilably contradictory. It was not
until the Council of Trent that canon
law was formally subjected to the
authority of Scripture and the apostolic
tradition concerning matters of faith
and morals. For a detailed discussion of
the matter, see George Tavard, Holy Writ
or Holy Church: The Crisis of the
Protestant Reformation (London: Burns &
Oates, 1959) 196-209.
(7) Bernard of
Clairvaux, On Consideration, 3.1.2: "Is
not an estate made subject to a steward
and a young lord to a teacher?
Nevertheless, the steward is not lord of
the estate nor is the teacher lord of
his lord. So also, you should preside in
order to provide, to counsel, to
administer, and to serve. Preside so as
to be useful; preside so as to be the
faithful and prudent servant whom the
Lord has set up over his family. For
what purpose? So that you may give them
food in due season; that is, so that you
may administer, not rule." The English
quotation is cited from Bernard's Five
Books On Consideration: Advice to a
Pope, trans. John D. Anderson and
Elizabeth T. Kennan (Kalamazoo, Mich.:
Cistercian, 1976) 80. The critical
edition of this text can be found in
Sancti Bernardi Opera, vol. 3, ed. Jean
Leclercq and Henri Rochais (Rome:
Editiones Cistercienses, 1957) 379-494.
(8) I began working on
this idea of the magisterium becoming an
imperium after reading Bernard Hoose's
article, "Authority in the Church,"
Theological Studies 63 (2002) 107-22.
Hoose described in that article some of
the corruptions resulting from confusing
the authority to teach with the
authority to govern, such as the attempt
to impose truth by decree. He did not
consider how these corruptions might
extend beyond the realm of theology and
proclamation, which is the link I am
attempting to make. The importance of
issues surrounding authority and
ecclesial governance, especially in the
realm of morality, can be seen from the
many books and treatises it has
generated in the last 20 years. See
Governance and Authority in the Roman
Catholic Church: Beginning a
Conversation, ed. Noel Timms and Kenneth
Wilson (London: SPCK, 2000); Richard
Gaillardetz, Teaching with Authority: A
Theology of the Magisterium in the
Church (Collegeville: Liturgical, 1997);
William Spohn, "The Magisterium and
Morality," Theological Studies 54 (1993)
95-111; Louis Janssens, "The
Non-infallible Magisterium and
Theology," Louvain Studies 14 (1989)
195-259; Ladislas Orsy, "Magisterium:
Assent and Dissent," Theological Studies
48 (1987) 473-98; Francis Sullivan,
Magisterium: The Teaching Authority of
the Church (New York: Paulist, 1983). In
the various documents generated by
ecumenical dialogue, there are even more
sources on the relationship between
authority and governance.
(9) Gregory the Great,
Register, 3.40, 3.42, 3.45, 4.24, 4.26,
5.18, 13.38; Burchard of Worms,
Decretorum libri XX, 19.5; Bernard of
Clairvaux, On Conversion, 19.32--22.40;
Hildegard of Bingen, Scivias, 2.6.59-95;
Fourth Lateran Council, Canons 10, 14,
30, and 31; Catherine of Siena, The
Dialogue, 120-26. I find canon 30 of the
Fourth Lateran especially relevant to
the question at hand. It stated: "It is
very serious and absurd that prelates of
churches, when they can promote suitable
men to ecclesiastical benefices, are not
unafraid to choose unworthy men who lack
both learning and honesty of behavior
and who follow the urgings of the flesh
rather than the judgment of reason.
Nobody of a sound mind is ignorant of
how much damage to churches arises from
this.... Therefore he who has been found
guilty [of installing unworthy men into
ecclesiastical benefices] after a first
and second correction is to be suspended
from conferring benefices by the
provincial council, and a prudent and
honest person is to be appointed at the
same council to make up for the
suspended person's failure in this
matter" (translation from Decrees of the
Ecumenical Councils, ed. Norman P.
Tanner (Washington: Georgetown
University, 1990) 1.249.
(10) Peter Damian's
reform theology was heavily grounded in
the principles of rhetoric; and, as a
result, applying his approach to
episcopal problems demands strong
rhetorical language. I agree with James
Cone's statement in Black Theology and
Black Power (New York: Seabury, 1969;
reprint, San Francisco: Harper and Row,
1989) 3: "It may be that the importance
of any study in the area of morality or
religion is determined in part by the
emotion expressed. It seems that one
weakness of most theological works is
their 'coolness' in the investigation of
an idea. Is it not time for theologians
to get upset?" The citation is from
David S. Cunningham, "Theology as
Rhetoric," Theological Studies 52 (1991)
409. For the purposes of this article, I
leave the defense of rhetoric in
Cunningham's capable hands. See also
Bradford Hinze, "Reclaiming Rhetoric in
the Christian Tradition," Theological
Studies 57 (1996) 481-99. Hinze provides
a wealth of bibliographical sources in
the notes.
(11) For a recent review
of the biographical sources see Owen
Blum, "Introduction," in Peter Damian:
Letters, vol. 1, trans. Owen J. Blum,
The Fathers of the Church: Medieval
Continuation (Washington: Catholic
University of America, 1989) 3-4. All of
the English translations of the letters
are from this six-volume series. I have
largely followed Blum's translation
adjusting it from time to time for
inclusive language. The numbering of the
letters follows the critical edition Die
Briefe des Petrus Damiani, ed. Kurt
Reindel, Monumenta Germaniae Historica:
Die Briefe der deutschen Kaiserzeit,
vols. 1-4 (Munich: Monumenta Germaniae
Historica, 1983). The critical edition
is cited as MGH. I provide the volume
and page numbers of the critical edition
in addition to the traditional
numeration employed by the English
translation.
(12) Jean Leclercq,
Saint Pierre Damien: Ermite et homme
d'Eglise (Rome: Edizioni de storia e
letteratura, 1960) 193. Leclercq argued
that it is important to keep his
cultural context in mind and to realize
that he was writing in a way that was
acceptable to his contemporaries.
Leclercq's study is the most recent
biography of Peter Damian. For examples
of his sermons and a description of his
preaching methods, see chapter seven of
C. Colt Anderson, Christian Eloquence:
Contemporary Doctrinal Preaching
(Chicago: Hillenbrand, 2004). Despite
the title chosen by the press, my book
is a history of doctrinal preaching and
contains two new translations of Peter
Damian's sermons by Dr. Ian Levy.
(13) Letter 40.12-13;
MGH, vol. 1, 404: "Et tamen dicit
apostolus, quia indignus iudicium sibi
manducat et bibit, non diiudicans corpus
Domini [1 Corinthians 11:29]. Si ergo et
illud corpus Domini est, quod indignus
accipit, perspicuum est, quia res bona
malo vertitur in perniciem, quae bono
utique provisa est ad salutem. Nec tamen
res mala est dicenda, quia nocet, nec
ideo esse sacramentum desiit, quia
execrandus accaepit. Sed potius
asserendum est, quia indigno eadem res
facta est occasio mortis, quae bonis
procurata est ad remedium salutis."
Given the controversial nature of some
of this material, I include the Latin
texts so that readers can see Peter
Damian's words in their original
context.
(14) For an excellent
overview of the various historical
issues, see Colin Morris, The Papal
Monarchy: The Western Church from 1050
to 1250 (New York: Clarendon, 1989)
45-107; Bernard Schimmelpfennig, The
Papacy, trans. James Sievert (New York:
Columbia University, 1992) 130-50; and
R. I. Moore, The Origins of European
Dissent (New York: Basil Blackwell,
1985; repr., Toronto: University of
Toronto, 1994) 46-81. Moore's study
provides a strong historical case that
ecclesial claims to unaccountable power
and authority are the very roots from
which dissent sprouts and grows.
(15) Though canon law
was seen as having absolute authority,
the diversity of laws had led people to
assume it was impossible to observe
them. Abbot Siegfried of Gorze wrote in
1043: "it is sure and undoubtedly true
that the authority of the canons is the
law of God." The quote is from Colin
Morris, The Papal Monarchy 30-31.
Heinrich Fichtenau points out that the
general attitude in the tenth and early
part of the eleventh centuries was that
it was impossible to follow all the
details of canon law in Living in the
Tenth Century: Mentalities and Social
Orders, trans. Patrick J. Geary
(Chicago: University of Chicago, 1991)
118.
(16) The National Review
Board has also indicated that this is a
problem in many dioceses in the United
States today because they are structured
as a "corporation sole," whereby the
bishop owns all of the diocesan assets.
This structure leads to a conflict of
interest between the bishop and his
diocese. See "A Report on the Crisis"
63-64.
(17) Colin Morris has an
extensive discussion of the roots of the
reform movement
in the first chapter of
The Papal Monarchy 28-30.
(18) Ibid. 29.
(19) Ibid. 103.
(20) Heinrich Fichtenau,
Living in the Tenth Century 107-10.
(21) "There is little in
the whole literature of the papal reform
movement about the need to make the
clergy personally more devout, to build
up their character, or to provide better
instruction or pastoral care for the
laity. Indeed, there is only a limited
amount of discussion designed to define
the priestly office in its inner
character" (Colin Morris, Papal Monarchy
99). While I agree with Morris's
description, he does not adequately take
into account the medieval understanding
of how external acts and discipline were
seen as informing a person's character
and how the priest was supposed to be a
visible model for communal imitation.
(22) Mark D. Jordan has
written two books about sodomy in the
Middle Ages. His position seems
inconsistent. While he argued that
medieval moral theology has "absolutely
nothing" to say about homosexuality, he
concluded: "The idea that same sex
pleasure constitutes an identity of some
kind is clearly the work of medieval
theology; not of nineteenth century
forensic medicine." See The Invention of
Sodomy in Christian Theology (Chicago:
University of Chicago, 1997) 161-64. See
also The Silence of Sodom: Homosexuality
in Modern Catholicism (Chicago:
University of Chicago, 2000) 115. While
I sympathize with Jordan's concerns over
the ways that homosexuals have been
marginalized, his interpretation of
medieval ideas about sodomy as being
related to sexual identity seems to me
to play into the hands of those who
nowadays wish to make homosexuals the
scapegoats for the current crisis. For
an example, see Randy Engel, "St. Peter
Damian's Book of Gomorrah: A Moral
Blueprint for Our Times,
http://www.ourladyswarriors.org/articles/
damian1.htm (accessed August 7, 2004). I
do not see how either of these
anachronistic readings of Peter Damian
can accomplish anything more than
obscuring his critique of clerics who
were abusing their positions of power in
order satisfy their own desires. On
Jordan's The Invention of Sodomy, see
review by John W. Baldwin, Speculum 74
(1999) 438-40.
(23) Peter Damian,
Letter 61.3; MGH, vol. 2, 208.
(24) Ibid. Letter 61.4;
MGH, vol. 2, 208-209: "Porro autem nos
contra divina mandata personarum
acceptores in minoribus quidem
sacerdotibus luxuriae iniquinamenta
persequimur, in episcopis autem, quod
nimis absurdem est, per silentii
tolerantiam veneramur."
(25) Hildebrand, as Pope
Gregory VII, called on the laity in
Milan to withhold obedience from their
clergy and to strike their sacramental
services. He framed his call to action
in terms of papal directives. While
there is a role for the laity, it is
clearly not collaborative in nature.
Gregory VII's rhetoric verged on calling
for acts of violence against the
"precursors of the Antichrist" in Milan.
See R. I. Moore, The Origins of European
Dissent 54-55.
(26) Letter 31.7, MGH,
vol. 1, 287: "Et nisi quantocius sedis
apostolicae vigor occurrat, non est
dubium, quin effrenata nequitia cum
restringi voluerit, a cursus sui impetu
desistere nequeat."
(27) Ibid. 31.7-8; MGH,
vol. 1, 287: "Sodomiticae igitur
immunditiae cancer ita per clericalem
ordinem serpit, immo velut cruenta
bestia intra ovile Christi cure tantae
libertatis saevit audacia, ut
quampluribus multo salubrius fuerit
mundanae militiae iugo deprimi, quam sub
religionis obtentu tam libere ferreo
iuri diabolicae tyrannidis mancipari....
Ut autem res vobis tota per ordinem
pateat, ex huius nequitiae scelere
quatuor diversitates fiunt. Alii
siquidem semetipsos polluunt, alii sibi
invicem inter se manibus virilia
contrectantes inquinantur, alii inter
femora, alii fornicantur in terga."
Since the minor ranks of the clergy
contained boys and adolescents, who were
under the power of their superiors, this
was a serious problem with Church
discipline. Peter Damian was presenting
a polemic against clerical sexual abuse,
but in his other writings he did not use
the term "sodomy." The word appears only
in the context of this polemic.
(28) Letter 31.9; MGH
vol. 1, 288: "Quidam namque rectores
aecclesiarum circa hoc vicium humaniores
forsitan, quam expediat, absolute
decernunt propter tres illos gradus, qui
superius enumerati sunt, neminem a suo
ordine debere deponi."
(29) Letter 31.8; MGH,
vol. 1, 287-288: "Maior siquidem
penitentia illis imponitur, qui cum
aliis cadunt, quam hiis, qui per
semetipsos egesta seminis contagione
sordescunt et districtius iudicantur,
qui alios in posteriora corrumpunt, quam
hii, qui inter femora coeunt." In this
case, solitary masturbation is
considered the least offensive form of
sexual sins. Why was he so concerned? On
one level he was responding to Genesis
39:9-10, which states that Onan was
struck down by God for spilling his seed
on the ground. The medieval theologians
explained why the sentence was so harsh
in terms of the biology of the day,
which was grounded in Stoic,
Neoplatonic, and Aristotelian ideas.
Their scientific sources essentially saw
semen as containing a homunculus, a
living embryo. For example, Peter Damian
described having sex during pregnancy as
a form of abortion, sowing seed upon
seed. He was worried about the fetus,
but he was also concerned about the
effects on the sperm because it
essentially contained human beings. See
Letter 96.18; MGH, vol. 3, 58-59.
(30) Letter 31.50; MGH,
vol. 1, 317.
(31) Letter 31.50-58;
MGH, vol. 1, 317-19.
(32) Leclercq, Saint
Pierre Damien 68-69.
(33) His argument is
quite detailed. See Letter 40.76-77;
MGH, vol. 1, 474-76.
(34) Letter 31.9; MGH,
vol. 1, 288: "Quae proculdubio impia
pietas non vulnus amputat, sed ut
augeatur, fomitem subministrat, non
perpetrati illiciti ausus praebet
amaritudinem, sed perpetrandi potius
tribuit libertatem. Carnalis quippe
cuiuslibet ordinis clericus
formidolosius expavescit in conspectu
hominum despici, quam in superni iudicis
examine condemnari. Ac per hoc mavult
quamlibet districtae, quamlibet annosae
penitentiae, quam sui gradus periculo
subiacere. Et dum per indiscretam
discretionem non timet statum sui
honoris amittere, incitatur ad inexperta
praesumere et in hiis, quae inulte
praesumpsit, diutius permanere, atque,
ut ita dixerim, dum illic non feritur,
ubi acrius dolet, in eo quo semel
corruit, coenosae obscoenitatis
volutabro molliter iacet."
(35) Letter 31.13; MGH,
vol. 1, 291: "Sed fortasse dicitur,
necessitas imminet, persona, quae sacrum
in aecclesia offitium peragat, deest et
congrue sententia, quae prius dura
iusticia dictante depromitur, oblata
rerum necessitate mollitur. Ad haec ego
compendiose respondeo: Numquid et tunc
necessitas non incubuerat, cum
pontificalis sedes pastore vacabat? An
pro utilitate unius hominis censura
delebitur, quae in destitutione unius
populi inconcussa servatur? Et quae non
solvitur ad profectum innumerae
multitudinis, violabitur ob personae
commodum singularis?"
(36) Ibid.
(37) Letter 31.18 MGH,
vol. 1, 294.
(38) Letter 31.21; MGH,
vol. 1, 297: "Ut autem diabolicae
machinationis argumenta non lateant, sed
quae in officina veteris malitiae inter
suos secretarios fabricat, in lucem me
pallificante procedant, illud absconsum
iri non patior, quod quidam huius veneno
criminis satiati, dum quasi ad cot
redeunt, ne reatus ad aliorum notitiam
prodeat, inter se invicem confitentur
et, dum hominum faciem erubescunt, qui
reatus auctores existunt, ipsi iudices
fiunt et indiscretam indulgentiam, quam
sin quisque affectat impendi, gaudet
alteri vicaria permutatione largiri."
(39) Letter 31.25; MGH,
vol. 1, 299. See also Letter 61.11; MGH,
vol. 2, 214-215.
(40) Letter 31.25; MGH,
vol. 1, 299: "... luce clarius constat,
quia eiusdem criminis reus est et qui
cum carnali vel baptismatis filia
fornicatur et is, qui cum filio
penitentie turpitudinem operatur. Et
sicut is, qui cum ea lapsus est, quam
carnaliter genuit, vel quam de baptismo
suscepit, vel cui penitentiae iudicium
posuit, ita etiam qui cum filio
penitentiae per inmunditiam labitur,
iustum est, ut ab eo, cuius
amministrator est, ordine modis omnibus
arceatur." Owen Blum translated
"baptismatis filia" as goddaughter, but
I believe these words could be
interpreted as referring to the
relationship between the clergy and
baptized women in general.
(41) Letter 61.11: MGH,
vol. 2, 214-215: "Plane si pater filiam
suam incestuose corrumpit, mox ab
aecclesia proiectus excluditur,
communione privatur, et vel in carcerem
truditur, vel in exilium destinatur.
Quanto ergo deterius ipse abiciendus es,
qui cum filia tua non quidem carnali,
quod minus est, sed cum spiritali potius
petite non metuis? Omnes quippe
aecclesiae tuae filii tui proculdubio
filii sunt. Et certe perspicuum est,
quia spiritalis generatio maior est quam
carnalis.... Qui ergo cum spiritali
filia tua committis incestum, qua
conscientia dominici corporis audes
tractare mysterium?"
(42) Ibid. 31.38; MGH,
vol. 1, 298. Peter Damian is citing
Burchard of Worms, Decretorum libri XX,
19.5. This is difficult to reconcile
with Mark Jordan's assertion that Peter
Damian called for confessions as a
discreet and silent way to conceal the
number of homosexuals in the clergy. See
Jordan, Silence of Sodom 86-87. As
previously noted, Peter Damian, at the
opening of Letter 61.3, called upon the
pope to bring abuses out into the open.
(43) Letter 31.39-40;
MGH, vol. 1, 308-9.
(44) Letter 31.4; MGH,
vol. 1, 286: "Sed nos humanius agentes
eos, qui vel propriis manibus vel
invicem inter sc semen egerunt vel etiam
inter femora ceciderunt, et non longo
usu nec cum pluribus, si voluptatem
refrenaverint et digna penitudine
probrosa commissa luerint, admitti ad
eosdem gradus, in quibus in scelere
manentes non permanentes fuerant,
divinae miserationi confisi volumus
atque etiam iubemus, ablata aliis spe
recuperationis sui ordinis, qui vel per
longa tempora secum sive cum aliis vel
cum pluribus brevi licet tempore,
quolibet duorum feditatis genere, quae
descripseras, maculati sunt, vel, quod
est horrendum dictu et auditu, in terga
prolapsi sunt."
(45) Letter 61.13; MGH,
vol. 2, 216.
(46) Letter 61.14; MGH,
vol. 2, 217-18: "Tu autem, domine mi,
venerabilis papa, qui Christi vice
fungeris, qui summo pastori in
apostolica dignitate succedis, noli
pestem hanc per ignaviam ad incrementa
perducere, noli connivendo et
dissimulando crassanti luxuriae frena
laxare.... Absit igitur, ut sanctum cor
vestrum segnis Hell torpor emolliat, sed
potius ad sceleris ultionem ingenui
Finees zelus accendat. Deponantur hii,
qui aecclesiasticae castitatis non
verentur foedare mundiciam, et deiecti
deterreant, quos male stantes ad turpis
luxuriae contumeliam provocabant. Ad
ultionem igitur se canonicus vigor
exerat, et petulantium clericorum mala
compescat, quatinus et beatitudini
vestrae, quod absit, nevus non obrepat
infamiae, et solitus nitor
aecclesiasticae resplendeat
disciplinae."
(47) Letter 61.4; MGH,
vol. 2, 208-9.
(48) Letter 61.4; MGH,
vol.2, 209.
(49) Ibid.
(50) Letter 61.9; MGH,
vol. 2, 212: "Facti siquedem culpam
habet, qui potest, neglegit emendare."
The quote can be found in Gregory the
Great, Commentary on Kings 9.215.
(51) Letter 61.9; MGH,
vol. 2, 213.
(52) Letter 40.109-14;
MGH, vol. 1,501-3.
(53) Letter 164; MGH,
vol. 4, 168-169. Owen J. Blum has argued
Peter Damian's opposition to the idea
that the clergy are not accountable to
the laity was a consistent component of
his theology. He provided evidence that
Peter Damian was not opposed to the
intervention of secular, political power
in regards to episcopal nominations and
that he was not even opposed to lay
investiture as long as simony was not
involved. See St. Peter Damian: His
Teaching on the Spiritual Life, Studies
in Mediaeval History, ns 10 (Washington:
Catholic University of America, 1947)
22, 173. Leclercq has also noted the
very active and collaborative role of
the laity in Peter Damian's reform
theology in Saint Pierre Damien 111-17.
Colin Morris focuses on Peter Damian's
acceptance of the legitimacy of lay
investiture as an issue that drove a
wedge between Peter Damian and
Hildebrand, who became Pope Gregory VII
(Papal Monarchy 94-107). There are,
however, some recent scholars who
interpret Peter Damian as being hostile
to the laity and to reform. Michel
Grandjean has argued that Peter Damian
was globally hostile to the laity in
Laics dans l'Eglise: Regards de Pierre
Damien, Anselme de Cantorbery, Yves de
Chartres (Paris: Beauchesne, 1994)
50-51. Phyllis Jestice claims that Peter
Damian was actually an opponent of
pastoral reform because he contended
that hermits and monks should not take
up the mission of preaching. See Phyllis
Jestice, "Peter Damian Against the
Reformers," in The Joy of Learning and
the Love of God: Studies in Honor of
Jean Leclercq, ed. E. Rozanne Elder
(Kalamazoo, Mich.: Cistercian, 1995)
67-94. Bernard Schimmelpfennig, on the
other hand, writes that it would be
wrong to imagine these hermits as
persons who had completely turned their
backs to the world and that they were
reforming by gathering supporters, over
whom they had influence (The Papacy
139).
(54) Letter 40.109-14;
MGH, vol. 1, 501-3.
(55) Blum, St. Peter
Damian: His Teaching on the Spiritual
Life 27.
(56) Letter 54.12-16;
MGH, vol. 2, 145-47.
(57) Peter Damian cites
this text in Letter 54.13; MGH, vol. 2,
146.
(58) Ibid. For Peter
Damian and his medieval audience, Paul
was the author of 1 Timothy.
(59) Letter 54.14-16;
MGH, vol. 2, 146-47.
(60) Letter 114.2; MGH,
vol. 3, 296-97.
(61) Ibid.
(62) Letter 114.4; MGH,
vol. 3, 298.
(63) Letter 114.6; MGH,
vol. 3, 299: "Talis enim victoria Deum
valde laetificat, qui aliquando per
feminas gloriosiori laude triumphat."
(64) Letter 114.8; MGH,
vol. 3, 299-300.
(65) Letter 114.9; MGH,
vol. 3, 300: "Tu quoque a domo tua et ab
his, quibus premines regionibus, gladium
poteris divini furoris avertere, si
etiam episcopis neglegentibus luxuriam
in ipsa aecclesiastici culminis arce
subnixam elaboraveris expugnare."
(66) Peter Damian's
analysis of the causes for sexual
scandal is strikingly similar to Justice
Anne Burke's assessment of the current
crisis. She wrote: "And perhaps the
saddest discovery answers of why so many
church leaders failed to respond to the
seriousness of the problem over a long
period of time. What was it? Fear of
scandal, threat of litigation, failure
to understand the extent of the harm
suffered by the victims, reliance on
treatment programs for abusers, putting
the interests of priests above victims
and the failure of the utilization of
canon law to remove priests from
ministry" ("What, Ultimately, the Church
Has Been Engaged in since Dallas?"
Origins 33 [April 1, 2004] 732).
(67) Richard Major,
drawing on the theology of Peter Damian
and Pope Leo IX, argues that until we
grasp whether the scandal was the result
of many weak men or of a diseased
Church, the crisis will not be resolved
("Betrayal of Innocence, The Tablet
[London] 258 [March 6, 2004] 7-8). I
believe the dichotomy between the
individual failures of clerics and
systemic flaws in Church order is
misleading by its nature.
(68) Archbishop Daniel
Pilarczyk, "What Were the Bishops
Thinking?" 734.
(69) Gregory the Great,
Pastoral Care 2.6. The English
translation is from Pastoral Care,
trans. Henry Davis (New York: Newman,
1950) 61-62. For the Latin see Regle
pastorale / Gregoire le Grand, ed.
Floribert Rommel, trans, by Charles
Morel (Paris: Cerf, 1992) 206.
(70) Ibid.
(71) Letter 87.8; MGH,
vol. 2, 510.
(72) "A Report on the
Crisis" 91.
C. COLT ANDERSON is
associate professor of church history at
the University of St. Mary of the
Lake/Mundelein Seminary, Chicago. He
received his Ph.D. in theology from
Marquette University. He concentrates on
the theology, rhetoric, and spirituality
of reform movements in the history of
the Church. He has recently published a
history of medieval preaching from
Augustine to the Council of Trent
entitled Christian Eloquence:
Contemporary Doctrinal Preaching
(Hillenbrand Press, 2004). He is also
the author of A Call to Piety: St.
Bonaventure's Collations on the Six Days
(Franciscan Press, 2002) and is
completing a volume for publication in
2005 by Paulist Press tentatively
entitled The Great Catholic Reformers.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Theological Studies, Inc.
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