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On Early Islam

Augustine of Hippo, the greatest early Christian thinker, outlines his theology of history in his City of God. The West


What was the cultural landscape in the medieval West? The path to the Renaissance was paved less by the top-down activism of a minority, more by accretive cultural shifts near the wider bottom. Faith is what differentiates cultures, or human responses, across time and place. The faith implicit in a cultural worldview is shaped by subjective factors: climate, geography, natural resources, religious and material history, random events, etc. Faith, whatever its form and object, religious or secular, is ultimately what makes peoples tick; it is the basis of both individual and collective identity. Cultural values, choices, and aspirations are all derived from its interior discourse.

In medieval times, religion was such a dominant component of faith that many of the ultimate explanations are to be found in its dynamics. With this in mind, let's survey the temper of religious life in medieval Christendom. 

Emperor Constantine (272-337 CE)

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Portal sculpture at Chartres cathedral are among the first examples of Gothic art.

It is early in the second millennium CE. Europe is a conglomeration of warring kingdoms, changing shape with personalities, dynastic succession is the norm. The Angles, Saxons, and Franks are basically an aggressive lot with no semblance of a secular culture. Local languages and related identities are slowly emerging. Society is feudalistic; the economy rests on subsistence agriculture, stagnant for centuries without perceptible change. Man's idea of himself is reflected in Catholic art: submissive and weak, man occupies his preordained place in the world, seeped in a morality centered on sin and guilt. Painting and sculpture have an unreal quality—meek expressions, flat faces; a benign, guilt-ridden, awestruck-at-the-heavens kind of portrayal. Education is religious and monopolized by monasteries—secular education is scarce. Representative religious music includes the Gregorian chants. Literature espouses chivalrous values, fantastic tales of valor, honor and patriotism.  

In 1054 CE, the Roman and the Eastern Churches split on doctrinal and political grounds with reciprocal excommunications. Both now claim to be the sole true Church of Christ. The Roman Church, since the fall of Rome to the Visigoths, has acquired enormous temporal authority; the Pope is effectively the chief civic leader in many lands. The coronation of Charlemagne as the Holy Roman Emperor establishes a precedent whereby imperial authority depends on the sanction of the Pope. Armed with the power to excommunicate, the Pope could, and did on at least one occasion, undermine imperial power by absolving the emperor's vassals from their allegiance to him. The chief concern of medieval western political thought remains the proper relation between the church and state, settling most often in the middle ground between the extremes of theocracy and Erastianism (the church as a department of state).

By the early second millennium, the Western masses are swept by an intense religious enthusiasm. Theirs is a passion filled faith, preoccupied with literalist dogma and rituals, largely devoid of the non-denominational spirituality that seeks worldly detachment; its rational metaphysics, or secular philosophical thought, is scarce. Even in Christianity's early days, the spiritual-mystical Gnostic tradition was declared heretical and by the end of the first century CE the canonizing process and scripture were formalized in a form that still exists today. It was built entirely upon the gospels of holy men who trailed Jesus by decades, and were responding to radically different social tensions and political realities. On its tolerance for other beliefs, here is an excerpt from the Encyclopedia Britannica 1998. 

Christianity, from its beginning, tended toward an intolerance that was rooted in its religious self-consciousness. Christianity understands itself as revelation of the divine truth that became human in Jesus himself. 'I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but by me' (John 14:6). To be a Christian is to 'follow the truth' (3 John); the Christian proclamation is 'the way of truth' (2 Peter 2:2). Those who do not acknowledge the truth are enemies 'of the cross of Christ' (Philippians 3:18) who have 'exchanged the truth about God for a lie' (Romans 1:25) and made themselves the advocates and confederates of the 'adversary, the devil,' who 'prowls around like a roaring lion' (1 Peter 5:8). Thus, one cannot make a deal with the devil and his party—and in this lies the basis for intolerance in Christianity. 

Christianity consistently practiced an intolerant attitude in its approach to Judaism and paganism as well as heresy in its own ranks ... Early Christianity aimed at the elimination of paganism—the destruction of its institutions, temples, tradition, and the order of life based upon it ... it left only the ruins of paganism still remaining. Christian missions of later centuries constantly aimed at the destruction of indigenous religions, including their cultic places and traditions (as in missions to the Anglo-Saxons, Germans, and Slavs). This objective was not realized in mission areas in which Christian political powers did not succeed in conquests—e.g., China and Japan; but in Indian Goa, for example, the temples and customs of all indigenous religions were eliminated by the Portuguese conquerors. 

The attitude of intolerance was further reinforced when Islam confronted Christianity ... Islam understood itself as the conclusion and fulfillment of the Old and New Testament revelation; from the Christian view, however, Islam was understood eschatologically—i.e., as the religion of the 'false prophets,' or as the religion of the Antichrist. The aggression of Christianity against Islam—on the Iberian Peninsula, in Palestine, and in the entire eastern Mediterranean during the Crusades—was carried out under this fundamental attitude of intolerance. Intolerance of indigenous religions was also manifested in Roman Catholic missions in the New World; these missions transferred the methods of the struggle against Islam to the treatment of the Native Americans throughout the Western Hemisphere and destroyed their cults and cultic places. Against Protestants, the Counter-Reformation displayed the same kind of intolerance ...

During the period 1095-1212, the Catholic Church and the leading European monarchs devoted considerable energy to the Crusades. Notably, the Popes themselves called for a holy war against the Muslims. It drew wide support and participation.   

In 1095, Pope Urban II called for a Christian army to help the Byzantine monarch ... and to recapture the Holy Sepulcher. Armies were raised by knights ... Smaller, generally ill-organized bands were collected by sundry lesser warriors, adventurers, and zealots ... On July 15, 1099, Jerusalem fell to the crusaders, and its Muslim and Jewish inhabitants were slaughtered ... During the second Crusade, armies led by Emperor Conrad III of Germany and King Louis VII of France joined forces in Jerusalem in the spring of 1148 and with 50,000 men struck north at Damascus ... [it] ended in humiliating failure. [The Turkish Mamluks led by Saladin regained control.]

The first of the several European crusades.

Shocked by the fall of Jerusalem, Pope Gregory VIII called for the Third Crusade. The largest crusader army yet assembled set out ... In 1191 Richard I, the Lion-Heart of England, conquered the Byzantine province of Cyprus and then joined Phillip II Augustus of France in the siege of Acre ... its inhabitants were slaughtered. After failing to reach Jerusalem, in 1192 Richard I negotiated a five-year peace treaty with Saladin that permitted European pilgrims access to holy shrines. 

The Fourth Crusade, called in 1198 by Pope Innocent III to strike against Egypt, took a bizarre course. The crusader army was unable to pay for ships and outfitting obtained from Venice and so agreed to assist the Venetians in capturing the city of Zara ... then moving against Constantinople ... on April 13, 1204, the crusaders sacked the city ... and established the Latin Empire of Constantinople, which was to last 60 years ... destroying any hope of alliance between the Byzantine and Latin churches. It also mortally wounded the Byzantine Empire.

A wave of revived crusading fervor in Europe produced the pathetic Children's Crusade of 1212, in which thousands of children were lost or sold into slavery. Three years later Pope Innocent III called for another strike at the Muslim world. The Fifth Crusade, manned chiefly by French and German crusaders, captured Damietta, near the Nile, in 1219. Floods stopped a march on Cairo, and the crusade ended indecisively with an eight-year truce.

Beowulf battling Grendel. A heroic poem, the highest achievement of Old English literature and the earliest European vernacular epic.

Disputation over dogma between the two flavors of Christianity obscured deep-seated cultural differences rooted in a more distant past: while Byzantium developed a predominantly mystical theology, mysticism kept a low profile in the West until the twelfth century. Then it did gather momentum but remained confined to monasteries and to small segments of the population, for e.g., the Augustinian monastery of St Victor in Paris. Its leading exponents include St Bonaventura, sometime Master of the Franciscans, 'Meister' John Eckhart of Strasbourg, and the Fleming Jan van Ruysbroek, 'the ecstatic teacher'. In fact, 'some of the most profound [late medieval] expressions of Christ-mysticism are found in the women mystics, such as Catherine of Siena and Julian of Norwich.' According to a leading modern scholar of monotheistic religions, Karen Armstrong, 

In the West, Christians were slower to develop a mystical tradition. They had fallen behind the monotheists in the Byzantine and Islamic empires and were perhaps not ready for this new development ... the path to God [remained] beset with guilt, tears and exhaustion ... clearly the West continued to find God a strain. 

Protestant thinkers like Karl Barth and Rudolf Bultmann have also denied mysticism an integral role in Catholic belief, claiming that 'mystical union was a Greek [Orthodox] import incompatible with saving faith in the Gospel word.' The monastic-mystic orders were to remain on the fringe in the West, much like the faylasufs in the tradition of al-Farabi and Averroės in medieval Islam. Not surprisingly, they were also among those who first spoke for tolerance in Christianity. The Western Christian masses, however, exhibited no appetite for mysticism, and this is a crucial difference. Instead, popular religion acquired another face. In the words of a leading modern historian of Europe, Norman Davies,  

witchtrial.jpg (43689 bytes)

'The systematic practice of witchcraft seems to have been a product of the late medieval period. What is more, by openly entering into combat with witchcraft, the Church inadvertently fostered the climate of hysteria on which the alleged witches and sorcerers thrived. The crucial Bull Summis Desiderantes, which launched the Church's official counter-offensive, was issued by pope Innocent VIII as late as 1484. The standard handbook for witch-hunters, the Malleus Maleficarum [The Witch Hammer], was published in 1486 by the Dominicans. If previously there had been reticence about witches' doings, now there could be none. Henceforth all Christendom knew that the legions of the Devil were led by evil women who anointed themselves with grease from the flesh of unbaptised children, who rode stark naked on flying broomsticks or on the backs of rams and goats, and who attended their nocturnal Sabbaths to work their spells and copulate with demons. Women were classified as weak, inferior beings, who could not resist temptation. Once the Church gave public credence to such things, the potency of witchcraft was greatly increased ... the frontiers between fact and delusion, between character and hallucination, were hopelessly blurred ... After that, for 300 years and more, witchcraft and witch-hunting were endemic to most parts of Europe.'

'The Malleus codified the folklore and beliefs of the Alpine peasants and was dedicated to the implementation of Exodus 22:18: "You shall not permit a sorceress to live." ... Torture is sanctioned as a means of securing confessions. Lay and secular authorities are called upon to assist the inquisitors in the task of exterminating those whom Satan has enlisted in his cause ... [It] went through 28 editions ... [from 1486 to 1600] and was accepted by Catholics and Protestants alike as an authority on Satanism and as a guide to Christian defense.' It targeted the weak and the minorities: Jews, old women, midwives, Gypsies, poets. 'Witchcraft was not the only crime of which one could be accused ... By questioning any part of Catholic belief, one could be branded a heretic ... The Malleus ... offers us an intriguing glimpse into the Medieval mind ... a taste of what it might have been like to have lived in those times.' 

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When egregious disparities appear between preaching and practice in the Roman Church, made evident by the luxury, dissipation, and the scandalous lifestyles of the clergy, the anguished response from pious followers is not to seek defensive refuge within the soul—this tradition is little developed in Europe—instead, their response is directed externally. A group of fervent Christians break off from the Church, fueling a wider sense of disquiet and scandal. They return to the fundamentals, and rely on their own interpretation of scripture. These are very devout people indeed, and interpret every statement in the New Testament literally. It is not the Greek spirit of reason or inquiry informing their protest—the Greeks and their works have not yet dawned upon them—a handful of theologians, taking the cue from Islamic philosophers, have only taken the first steps. These include Thomas Aquinas, Roger Bacon, John Duns Scotus, and William of Ockham in the 13th and 14th centuries. On the leader of the Reformation, Karen Armstrong says,

Martin Luther was a firm believer in witchcraft and saw the Christian life as a battle against Satan. The Reformation can be seen as an attempt to address this anxiety even though most of the Reformers did not promote any new conception of God. The term [Reformation] suggests a more deliberate and unified movement than actually occurred ... [they] were all trying to articulate a new religious awareness that was strongly felt ... there seems to have been a religious enthusiasm in Europe which led people to criticize abuses that they had previously taken for granted. The actual ideas of the Reformers all sprang from medieval, Catholic theologies.

Martin Luther (1483-1546)

With the Church's worldly power threatened, the ecumenical council of Trent (1545-63) summarily rejected the core Protestant idea—justification by faith alone rather than by faith and rituals—and reasserted itself as the sole interpreter of both faith and rituals through its episcopacy of bishops. The schism thus formalized, the early Protestants were severely persecuted by the Dominicans and the Franciscans under sanction from the Pope (even as late as 1870, at the first Vatican council, the office of the Pope was pronounced infallible). Only in late modern times did a much battered Catholicism grow mellower. 

Better not to speculate on what Socrates would have thought of the medieval West. Its mental life appears to be anything but conducive to the spirit of Classical Greece. How then did so many Western Christians end up embracing it? 

The Mystic Tide: Previous

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