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Gregory the Great, 540-604
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GREGORY THE GREAT
540-604
[99] A Roman senator, rich and of an ancient family, was so
attracted by the Order of St. Benedict that he built
six monasteries in Rome; and then a seventh, in which
he went to live himself, and became its abbot. His
name was Gregory, surnamed "the Great."
One day as the abbot walked about the streets, he saw
that there were slaves for sale.
There were always slaves for sale in Rome. Some were
men who had got so deep in debt that they could not get
out, and, having sold all else which they possessed, at
last sold themselves. But most of them were captives
from the wars. All the borders of the Roman Empire
blazed with war. Even after the barbarians came
[100] and destroyed the old empire, still they fought among
themselves. And after every battle, the victors,
whether they were Romans or Goths or Franks, gathered
up a great company of prisoners and sold them in the
nearest market. It was better than the former custom
of putting them all to death. And it was better
sometimes than the modern custom of putting them in
military jails without sufficient food or shelter.
The consequence was that the slave trade was a
flourishing business in Rome, and Gregory, kind-hearted
and large-minded though he was, never thought of trying
to stop it.
A new lot of captives had come that day, sent down from
Britain. They were of the race called Angles, from
whom England got its first name of Angle-land. They
came from the western part of Yorkshire which was then
called Deira. Their yellow hair and fair skin pleased
the eyes of
[101] Gregory, and he stopped to question them.
"Whence do you come?" he said. "We are Angles," they
replied, "from the kingdom of Deira. "God be gracious
to you, my children," said the abbot. "You are Angles?
You are as fair as angels. You should be Christians.
I will go myself to your land of Deira, and save your
people de ira—from the ire, from the
wrath,—of God."
Gregory did not go to England, as he hoped, because he
was detained in Rome. The pope died, and all the
people demanded Gregory, as the Christians of Carthage
had called for Cyprian, and the Christians of Milan for
Ambrose. The desire was unanimous. The people wanted
him, the clergy wanted him, the senate wanted him. He
wrote a letter to the emperor begging him to forbid the
election, but somebody took the letter and never sent
it. There was no escape. So Gregory became the pope
of Rome.
[102] One time, just before Jerome went to Rome to begin his
classes in the house of Marcella, there were two men,
each of whom greatly desired to be bishop, and their
followers had such a battle in the Church of Sta. Maria
Maggiore that, when it was over, a hundred and
thirty-seven dead bodies lay upon the floor. It shows
not only what a fierce and disorderly time it was, but
how much men prized the office. Gregory, indeed, did
not desire it, but that was because he did not care for
wealth or power.
GREGORY THE GREAT
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The pope of Rome was bishop of the greatest city in the
world. The Vandals had ruined Carthage; Constantinople
and Alexandria were far away. Rome had no rival. It
is true that the emperor had ceased to live there; but
his departure had increased the importance of the
bishop, for he was now the leading citizen. He was the
most prominent and influential Christian in the Western
Church. The
[103] invading barbarians cared little for the old empire,
but they had some respect for the Christian religion.
Gradually, by the good services of missionaries, many
of them from the monasteries of St. Benedict, it became
their religion. It was the only living survivor of the
old world which they had destroyed. Whatever of
ancient custom and culture and learning had remained,
was in the Church. The Church was the sole
representative in all Europe of that departed
civilization which had built the great cities, made the
enduring roads, carved the statues, and written the
books. And the leader and spokesman of the Church was
the bishop of Rome.
Moreover, just about the time when Gregory was
questioning the Angle slaves, there was born in Arabia
a man who was to change the whole course of the history
of the Christian East. Out of Mecca came Mohammed. To
the conquest of the west of Christendom by the Goths
and Vandals,
[104] was added the conquest of the East by the Mohammedans.
But the Mohammedans did not become Christians like the
Goths. They came in the strength of their own
religion, hating the religion of the Christians, and
they took possession of almost the whole of the Eastern
empire. They captured Jerusalem. They made themselves
masters of the Holy Land. They took Alexandria. They
were long delayed in taking Constantinople, but they
deprived it of its ancient power. Thus the successors
of Gregory became, not only the greatest bishops in the
West, but the greatest in the world.
This was the office which prevented Gregory from going
to England.
A great slab of stone in the Forum at Rome still shows
the carved picture of the emperor Trajan distributing
food to widows and orphans. This was the Trajan to
whom Pliny wrote in 112 to ask what should be done to
stop the dangerous
[105] growth of the Christians. One day, as Pope Gregory
passed that way, he stopped in front of the stone
picture and looked at it with great appreciation. It
seemed to him a pleasant memorial of ancient times and
of a good and friendly man. That day, at prayer, he ventured to pray
for Trajan, that he might be pardoned for his paganism,
and admitted into the Christian heaven. And in a dream
the Lord appeared to the devout pope. "Gregory," he
said, "you have prayed for the pardon of a pagan, and I
have granted your petition; but do not do it again."
The story shows how the theology of Augustine had taken
hold of the minds of men, who thus found it possible to
believe that all the heathens, good and bad, were lost.
But it reveals also the fellowship of Gregory with
anybody who had tried to help his neighbors.
Gregory's ministry was spent in such good deeds. He
took a great and useful
[106] part in all the life about him: dealt with Arians, who
were still troubling Italy, and with Donatists, who
were still troubling Africa; disciplined idle and
unworthy monks and ministers; attended to the needs of
the poor and the sick; and gave his farmer careful
directions about the working of his farm. He
interested himself in the music of the Church, and
introduced a way of chanting which bears his name, and
is still in general use. He added a prayer to that
Communion Service which is called the Mass, and thereby
completed it in the form in which it is said to-day.
The Latin of that service, as it is used in every Roman
Catholic church, is substantially as it came from the
hands of Gregory.
Nothing, however, that Gregory did was of so much
importance to us as his sending of a board of
missionaries to convert the English.
The Christian Church had been planted
[107] in Britain so early in history that nobody knows when
or by whom: probably by Christian soldiers in Roman
legions. There it was, however, in that land which the
Romans had conquered, and to which many wealthy Romans
loved to go in the cool summer. Constantine had
started from York on that eventful march which made him
the first Christian emperor. And when, presently, he
called a conference of bishops to consider the case of
the Donatists, three of the bishops came from Britain.
Then the Angles and Saxons invaded Britain. The Roman
legions had been called home to defend Rome, and the
Britons, who had depended on their arms, were without
defense. They were driven out of their fair country,
from their pleasant cities and their churches, into the
mountains of Wales. The pagan invaders changed Britain
into England. Between the Christian Britons and their
Christian
[108] brethren on the continent of Europe was thrust this
wedge of English heathenism.
Gregory remembered the Angle slaves. Out of one of the
Benedictine monasteries which he had built, he chose a
man named Augustine, and sent him with a band of forty
monks to England. The missionaries to the English
pagans went up through France; and, whenever they
stopped to spend the night, such terrifying tales were
told them of the fierce ways of the barbarous English,
that they stopped, and sent a letter back to Gregory,
asking to be relieved from such a dangerous mission.
But Gregory urged them on.
Thus in 597,—a date to be remembered,—they
crossed the channel, and set their feet upon the soil
of heathen England. But there were friends to meet
them. Bertha, the Queen of Ethelbert of Kent, was
already a Christian, being a daughter of the King of
the Franks, who had his throne at Paris. She had kept
her religion in the
[109] midst of the paganism of the new country, and had
caused to be rebuilt, near Canterbury, where she lived,
a little ruined church. This she dedicated to the
brave memory of St. Martin, who had contended so
faithfully with the pagans of his neighborhood, and out
to little St. Martin's she was wont to go to say her
Christian prayers.
Ethelbert, accordingly, knew who the Christians were;
though he knew so little about them that he preferred
to meet the missionaries in the open air, lest they
should bewitch him with some spell. He sat, therefore,
under a tree, and watched Augustine and his men as they
approached, the forty of them in procession,
carrying a banner, and singing a litany to the music
which they had been taught by Gregory. The king
listened gravely as Augustine preached the religion of
Christ, and promised to consider the matter carefully.
Meanwhile the missionaries were given
[110] freedom to teach, and houses in Canterbury in which to
live, and, pretty soon, St. Martin's church in which to
worship God.
The fact that the missionaries came from Rome, that
distant and renowned capital of the world, emphasized
their message; and it was further confirmed by their
holy living. Thus one heathen Englishman after another
was converted; presently, the king himself; and after
the king, following his good example ten thousand of
his subjects in one day.
Then Augustine was made a bishop,—the first
bishop of the English. Etherlbert gave him his own
palace; and a ruined British church beside it became
the beginning of the Cathedral of Canterbury. The
Christian religion was thus introduced among our
ancestors, the English.
Gregory sent to Augustine a letter of wise advice. Do
not destroy the temples of the English gods, he said;
change them
[111] into Christian churches. Do not forbid the harmless
customs which have been associated with the old
religion; consecrate them, like the churches, to
Christian uses. Let them revere the saints where they
have worshiped idols. Thus, he said, "having some
outward joys continued to them, they may more easily
accept the true inward joys. For assuredly it is
impossible to cut away all things at once from minds
hardened by evil custom; just as the man who strives to
reach the summit of perfection, climbs by steps and
paces, not by leaps and bounds."
It was in accordance with the sensible advice that the
missionaries called the festival of Christ's
resurrection "Easter," from Eostre, the English goddess
of the spring. The Christmas season they called
"Yule-tide," from an English god of the winter; and
they still brought in the yule log from the woods, and
hung the mistletoe upon the walls, as the ancestors of
the
[112] English had done in the long-gone days before ever an
Englishman had heard of Christ or had set his foot in
England.
Thus Tuesday kept the old name of Tuesco, the god of
war; and Wednesday, of Woden, the father of the gods;
and Thursday, of Thor, the god of thunder; and Friday,
of Frigg, the goddess of love; by the courtesy of
Gregory the Great.
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