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Title: Main References


1
  • Main References
  • Baldwin, John W. The Scholastic Culture of the
    Middle Ages, 1000-1300. Lexington Heath, 1971.
  • Brooke, Rosalind B. The Image of St. Francis
    Responses to Sainthood in the Thirteenth Century.
    Cambridge Cambridge U. Press, 2006.
  • Englebert, Omer. Saint Francis of Assisi a
    Biography. Ann Arbor Servant Books, 1979.
  • Grundmann, Herbert. Religious Movements in the
    Middle Ages the Historical Links between Heresy,
    the Mendicant Orders, and the Womens Religious
    Movement in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Century,
    with the Historical Foundations of German
    Mysticism. Nortr Dame, Ind. U. of Notre Dame
    Press, 1995.

2
  • Lawrence, C.H. The Friars the Impact of the
    Early Mendicant Movement on Western Society.
    London Longman, 1994.
  • -------------------. Medieval Monasticism Forms
    of Religious Life in Western Europe in the Middle
    Ages. London Longman, 1989.
  • Maier, Christoph T. Preaching the Crusades
    Mendicant Friars and the Cross in the Thirteenth
    Century. Cambridge Cambridge U. Press, 1994.
  • Robson, Michael. St. Francis of Assisi the
    Legend and the Life. London G. Chapman, 1997.

3
  • Roest, Bert. A History of Franciscan Education
    (c. 1210-1517). Leiden Brill, 2000.
  • Short, William J. Poverty and Joy the
    Franciscan Tradition. New York Orbis Books,
    1999.
  • Talbot, J.M. The Lessons of St. Francis How to
    Bring Simplicity and Spirituality into Your Daily
    Life. New York Dutton, 1997.
  • Tugwell, Simon, ed. Early Dominicans Selected
    Writings. New York Paulist Press, 1982.
  • Ugolino, di Monte Santa Maria. The Little
    Flowers of St. Francis of Assisi. New York
    Vintage Books, 1998.

4
  • I. The Scholastic/Monastic Culture in 12th
    century Europe
  • II. The Mendicant Movement -- The Dominicans and
    the Franciscans
  • It was said that medieval scholasticism was a
    kind of philosophy for medieval Europe.

5
  • Scholastik
  • Characteristics (1) It was a kind of religious
    philosophy, its essence was theology, its
    theories were about Christian doctrines, and its
    targets were on Christianity and theology (2)
    The Holy Bible and Christian doctrines were its
    absolute sources, theses, and themes, for
    instance, Thomas Aquinas on The Existence of God
    -- he based his arguments on the Bible and its
    footnotes, etc., so it provided the theoretical
    foundation for medieval Christianity and
    theology, strengthening medieval Christian faith
    (3) its methodology -- (A) quoting and citing the
    Holy Bible and (B) analyzing with arguments,
    replies, and refutations, etc., such as those by
    Thomas Aquinas.

6
  • From 8th to 15th centuries Europe, monastery
    focus of learning (theology and philosophy.
  • 3 Schools/Main Streams
  • 1. 5th century onward, St. Augustine (Plato) --
    traditional theology by faith (contemplation) --
    orthodox main stream

7
  • 2. 12th to 13th centuries, the philosophy of
    Aristotle, especially his scientific thoughts,
    returned from the Middle East (because of the
    Crusades) -- by observation and experiments --
    became a new kind of Christian philosophy, but it
    had been a kind of heresy or side stream until
    Thomas Aquinas who tried to merge faith and
    reason
  • 3. 14th century, mysticism, a kind of religious
    philosophy became popular, but it was considered
    a kind of heresy, and was trialed in the
    Inquisition (and heretics were to be burned at
    stakes.

8
  • Scholasticism added notes and explanation to
    Christian faith and doctrines, thus, it was said
    to be serving the Christian Church as its
    arguments and theories were protecting and
    defending the principles of the Church (even
    though it was using scientific and rational
    methods.

9
  • II. Mendicantism
  • Mendicants beggars
  • Mendicare to beg
  • Vowed absolute poverty in voluntary imitation of
    the poverty and humility of Christ and the
    Apostles opposite to the medieval Church, which
    had a lot of wealth (because of donation, etc.),
    and it became corrupted.

10
  • Therefore, 2 religious ordered (A) the
    Dominicans and (B) the Franciscans
  • Devoted to a life of poverty, preaching and doing
    charitable deeds
  • Rejecting wealth, luxury, corruption
  • Dedicated themselves to religious works

11
  • Meanwhile, there were heretics (mysticism)
    rebelling against the Christian Church
    (orthodoxy, main stream) and the Papacy used
    Inquisition to put them on trial and then burnt
    them at stake, which caused grievances.
  • Now, with the Dominicans and the Franciscans,
    they became more effective tools to deal with the
    heretics (or opposing forces).
  • And these Dominicans and Franciscans were
    mendicants, thus, starting a mendicant movement.

12
  • The Dominicans
  • St. Dominic (1170-1221) well-educated Spaniard,
    mid-30s to Rome, met Pope Innocent III, asking to
    start a religious order for preaching
  • 1205-1215 St. Dominic won himself fame
  • 1215 The Dominicans became the Order of Friars
    (brothers) preachers.
  • Spread rapidly

13
  • 1221 St. Dominic died. (There were 500 friars and
    60 priories organized in 8 provinces especially
    attractive to those who could not be satisfied
    with the enclosed life of earlier monasticism).
  • The Dominicans -- traveling and preaching
  • Strictness of the discipline
  • Albertus Magnus (1206-1280)
  • Thomas Aquinas (1226-1274)
  • Concerned with education and knowledge

14
  • St. Francis (1182--1226) son of a wealthy cloth
    merchant of the Italian town of Assisi, a warm,
    appealing man youth generous, high-spirited,
    and popular soon became the leader of a
    boisterous but harmless teenage gang then in his
    20s, sick of fever, underwent a profound
    religious conversion (dramatic)cf. Muhammad, Tai
    Ping leaders, etc.

15
  • Then, St. Francis devoted himself to solitude,
    (as a hermit), prayer, and service to the poor.
  • On his pilgrim to Rome, he exchanged clothes with
    beggars, and begging with beggars.
  • When St. Francis returned to Assisi, he spent his
    time to the service for the lepers and hospitals
    thus, his bourgeois father disinherited him.
  • 1209 St. Francis started preaching
  • 1220 Pope Innocent III saw the potential of St.
    Francis, confirmed his religious mission, thus,
    expanding.

16
  • The Franciscans, instead of living in a
    monastery, they worked and preached in the
    outside world.
  • 1204 St. Francis died. (There were 1000 friars,
    active in France, Holy Roman Empire, England,
    Spain, and Hungary)
  • St. Francis preached the imitation of Christ
    poverty, humility, working serving, and
    preaching (I strictly command all the brothers
    never to receive coin or money either directly or
    through an intermediary).

17
  • According to The Oxford Illustrated History of
    Christianity (Edited by John McManners, Oxford
    Oxford U. Press, 1992.), Francis, A charismatic
    personality of tremendous charm, he devoted
    himself to a life of complete poverty and
    alternated his ministry between the crowded
    cities and his beloved hermitages

18
  • The Dominicans and Franciscans were much in tune
    with the thirteenth century than their older
    monastic brethren, for the Dominican and
    Franciscan friars, as the newer groups were
    called, forsook the ascetic life of contemplation
    in monasteries and went into the world to bring
    religion to people everywhere. The friars
    answered an important social need. The
    population of Europe had grown so rapidly that by
    the thirteenth century the establishment of
    parishes lagged far behind. The people of town
    and city,

19
  • They resented the wealth of the Church and the
    worldliness of the clergy. They felt little
    attachment to the great institution that seemed
    to pay so little attention to their spiritual
    needs. The friars served where there were no
    priests, living with the townspeople, teaching
    them, and administrating the sacraments to them.
    At the same time, the friars set an example of
    simple faith and poverty, fixed firmly to rigid
    orthodoxy. They seemed to the troubled souls of
    thirteenth-century Europe a reincarnation of the
    Apostles.

20
  • The Order of Friars Minor, or Franciscans, was
    founded in 1210 when Pope Innocent III gave his
    approval to the primitive rule drawn up by St.
    Francis of Assisi and his followers. They
    refused to live in isolation and practiced
    poverty so complete that they insisted they did
    not even own the ragged garments on their backs.
    Furthermore, they preached an inspirational brand
    of Christianity that might easily slip over into
    heresy. But Innocent saw their worth the Church
    needed men such as these to help revive once more
    the ideals of the Founder.

21
  • St. Francis (1182-1226) was repelled by the
    materialism he saw around him and gave up the
    life of business his father had intended for him.
    He soon began to preach humbly to whoever
    would listen, even to the birds and the beasts.
    In 1223, again against his wishes, he
    prescribed a more elaborate rule the Franciscans
    were organized and disciplined and made a part of
    the institution of the Church in spite of
    themselves.

22
  • Throughout the thirteenth and fourteenth
    centuries the Franciscans grew in numbers and
    influence, for their simple lesson of humility
    and love touched the hearts of all men. the
    anti-materialist doctrine conflicted with profit
    making was ... a reason for its success.
    Bankers and merchants renounced their wealth
    while humble people, already poor, gained hope
    The ideal of St. Francis and his followers
    became, indeed, the most powerful psychological
    force among Europeans of the late Middle Ages.

23
  • Within the order itself, however, the ideal began
    to be questioned soon after Francis death.
    Popularity brought many gifts of property, and
    with wealth came a bitter controversy between the
    Spiritual Franciscans, who wished to live as St.
    Francis had lived, and the majority called
    Conventuals, who wished to modify his absolute
    stand against property.

24
  • The Dominicans were founded by St. Dominic
    (1170-1221), a Spanish priest, to extirpate
    heresy through preaching. Like the Franciscans,
    the Dominicans traveled about, living in the
    world, bringing the Word to the faithful. Like
    the Franciscans, too, they were mendicants, but
    relaxed the rules against owning property early
    in their career. There the similarity stopped.
    The Dominicans were the Churchs guardians of
    orthodoxy -- hounds of the Lord (domini canes, a
    pun on dominicani, Dominicans) to keep the sheep
    from straying from the flock. As scholars, they
    were unrivaled as inquisitors, they were
    tireless in their search for heretics.

25
  • Together the Franciscans and Dominicans revived
    the Church by bringing it once again into harmony
    with the changing times. As we shall see, they
    turned the new learning of the twelfth century to
    the Churchs advantage, creating systems of
    theology that took Aristotle account. They
    protected the interests of the Church in urban
    Europe, where it was in the greatest immediate
    danger. Above all, they gave the Church and
    late medieval man an ideal, one that was rarely
    achieved but one that would prevail until the
    Renaissance. The Oxford Illustrated History of
    Christianity. Edited by John McManners, (Oxford
    Oxford U. Press, 1992.), pp. 213-214, 414-417.
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