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Cathar Glossary
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Cathar Beliefs
Cathars clearly regarded themselves as good Christians, since that
is exactly what they called themselves. On the surface, their
basic beliefs seem unremarkable. Most people would have difficulty
in distinguishing the principle Cathar beliefs
from what are now regarded as conventional orthodox Christian beliefs.
However, pursuing their fundamental beliefs to their logical
conclusion revealed surprising implications
(for example that Roman Catholics were mistakenly following a Satanic
god rather than the beneficent god worshipped by the Cathars.)
Like the earliest Christians, Cathars recognised no priesthood.
They did however distinguish between ordinary believers (Credentes)
and a smaller, inner circle of leaders initiated in secret knowledge,
known at the time as boni homines, Bonneshommes or
"Goodmen" , now generally referred to as the Elect
or as Parfaits.
Cathars had a Church
hierarchy and a number of rites and ceremonies.
They believed in reincarnation,
and in heaven,
but not in hell
as it is now normally conceived by mainstream Christians.
The Cathar
view was that their theology was older than that of the Roman
Church and that the Roman Church had corrupted its own scripture,
invented new doctrine and abandoned the beliefs and practices of
the Early Church. The Catholic
view, of course was exactly the opposite, they imagined Catharism
to be a badly distorted version of Catholicism. In addition
to accusing the Cathars of faulty theology, they imagined a range
abominable practices which would have been amusing except that,
converted into propaganda,
they led to the death of countless thousands through the Cathar
Crusades and the Inquisition.
The Roman Church seemed to have successfully extirpated Cathars
and Cathar beliefs by the early fourteenth century, but the truth
is more complicated. For one thing, modern historians have
shown that many Catholic claims were false, while they have vindicated
many Cathar claims; and there is a case that the Cathar
legacy is more influential today than has been at any time over
the last seven hundred years.
Cathars were Dualists.
That is, they believed in two universal principles, a good
God and a bad God, much like the Jehovah and Satan of mainstream
Christianity. As Dualists, they belonged to a tradition that
was already ancient in the days of Jesus. (The revered Magi
in the nativity story were Zoroastrians - Persian Dualists). Dualism
came, and still comes, in many flavours. Even the Cathar
variety came in more than one flavour, but the principal one was
this: The Good God was the god of all immaterial things (such
as light and souls). The bad God was the god of all material
things, including the world and everything in it. He had
contrived to capture souls and imprison them in human bodies through
the process of conception. As Cathars put it, we are all
divine sparks, even angels, imprisoned in tunics of flesh.
According to later Cathar ideas, when we die the powers of the
air throng around and persecute the newly released soul, which flees
into the first lodging of clay that it finds. This "lodging
of clay" might be human or animal. The soul would therefore
be condemned to a cycle
of rebirth, trapped in another physical body. By leading
a good enough life human beings or rather their souls could win
freedom from imprisonment and return to heaven,
the immaterial realm of the good god. For members of the
Elect, those who had undertaken the Consolamentum,
death was no more than taking off a dirty tunic.
The realm of the Good God, heaven,
was filled with light. Some Cathars regarded the stars as
divine sparks, or souls, or angels, in heaven.
The realm of the bad god was the material world in which
we serve out our earthly terms. Satan had entrapped these divine
sparks and created humankind as their prison. Thus there was a part
of the Good God trapped in all men and women, longing to rejoin
its Maker. The Bad God filled humankind with temptations to frustrate
souls from ever making that reunion. They could be tortured by disease,
famine and other travails, including man's own inhumanity to his
fellow man. Yet the Bad God had no power over the soul - a divine
spark of the Good God. His remit was confined to material things.
Any hell
that existed was here on this material earth. To confound the Bad
God it was necessary to abstain from all earthly temptations and
to strengthen the inner spirit by prayer. It was an argument that
seemed to provide a rational explanation for all the misfortunes
of the world.
Dualist ideas had a long history, stretching back well into pre-Christian
times. All of the essentials were known to the Greek philosophers.
Plato held that the soul yearns to fly home on the wings of love
to the world of ideas. According to him it longs to be freed from
the chains of the body. Early Christianity had adopted Neoplatonist
ideas. Neoplatonism taught a doctrine of salvation alongside Dualism.
Human bodies were material objects made of earth and dust, but our
immortal souls were not, they were sparks of the divine. The divine
was characterised as light, opposed to the darkness. According to
Plotinus, souls were illuminated by the divine light. Matter on
the other hand was just darkness, and had no real existence. These
Neoplatonist ideas were an integral part of Early Christianity,
later dropped in mainstream Christianity when it switched from Plato's
philosophy to Aristotle's as a result of Thomas Aquinas's attempts
to reconcile Christianity with Aristotle's philosophy. The Cathars'
teachings on this, as on many other matters, reiterate those of
the early Church. They provide one of a number of pieces of circumstantial
evidence that their origins date from early Christian times.
The idea that flesh was inherently evil became popular in mainstream
Christianity too - it was formalised in the concept of Original
Sin and was enormously popular up until the twentieth century. Significantly,
the doctrine of Original Sin was invented by St
Augustine, a Christian who had previously been a Manicaean -
ie a Gnostic Dualist. Today this traditional teaching is played
down, and it comes as a shock to many Christians to hear the words
like that of the Burial service from the Book of Common Prayer,
contrasting an evil material body with a good spiritual one: "....
our Lord Jesus Christ, who shall change our vile body that it may
be like to his glorious body."
Cathars were also Gnostics.
Gnostics believed, and still believe, that divine knowledge
is granted only to an inner
elite, like the "esoteric" knowledge of the Pythagoreans.
The inner elite undertook a long period of training before becoming
being formally accepted as members of the elite, and thereafter
leading severely ascetic lives. Their lives of meditation, fasting,
hardship, poverty and good works matched exactly the highest ideals
of Catholic and Orthodox hermits, monks and friars. The Cathar Elect
are now popularly known Parfaits or "Perfects", though
they never referred to themselves as such. They also believed in
metempsychosis
or the transmigration of souls, as had the Pythagoreans. In other
words, both Pythagoreans and Cathars believed not only in reincarnation
but in the rebirth of the soul in animals as well as humans - and
both refrained from eating meat for exactly this reason.
Cathars were also universalists, which means that they believed
in the ultimate salvation of all human beings.
Here is an account of how they saw themselves, recorded in 1143
or 1144 by Eberwin, Prior of the Premonstratensian Abbey of Steinfeld
writing to Bernard of Clairvaux (St Bernard):
Of themselves they say: "We are the poor of Christ, who
have no fixed abode and flee from city to city like sheep amidst
wolves, are persecuted as were the apostles and the martyrs, despite
the fact that we lead a most strict and holy life, persevering
day and night in fasts and abstinence, in prayers, and in labour
from which we seek only the necessities of life. We undergo this
because we are not of this world. But you, lovers of the world,
have peace with it because you are of the world. False apostles,
who pollute the word of Christ, who seek after their own interest,
have led you and your fathers astray from the true path. We and
our fathers, of apostolic descent, have continued in the Grace of God and shall so remain to the end of time. To distinguish
between us and you Christ said "By their fruits you shall
know them". Our fruits consist in following the footsteps
of Christ.
(Sancti Bernardi epistolae, (letter 472,
Everwini Steinfeldensis praepositi ad S. Bernardum) cited by Walter
L Wakefield & Austin P Evans Heresies of the High Middle
Ages, (Columbia, 1991) p. 129.)
Basic
Tenets
Implications
of Cathar Beliefs
Ordinary
Believers ("Credentes"; or Listeners - "Auditores")
The
Elect (Parfaits and Parfaites)
Heaven,
Hell
and Reincarnation
Other Teachings
Cathar
Ceremonies
Cathar Prayer
The
Cathar Church Hierarchy
A
Cistercian writes ....
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Franciscan
Friars witness a Cathar Consolamentum
(Medallion from a bible representing orthodoxy
(the Franciscan
friars) faced with heresy (a Cathar Consolamentum), second
half of the thirteenth century, Bibliothèque nationale
de France)
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Basic Tenets
Cathars were Gnostic Dualist Christians who claimed to retain many
of the beliefs and practices of the early Christian Church.
All of their beliefs stemmed from logical deductions from a combination
of these three fundamental beliefs (Gnosticism, Dualism and Christianity)
For example they displayed contempt for everything material, a
position with enormous ramifications, based on their Dualism.
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Dualism
The Cathars were Dualists. That is, they believed in two
universal principles, a good God and a bad God, much like the Javeh
and Satan of mainstream Christianity. As Dualists, they belonged
to a tradition that was already ancient in the days of Jesus. (The
revered Magi in the nativity story were Zoroastrians - Persian Dualists.
Dualism came, and still comes, in many flavours. Even the
Cathar variety came in more than one flavour, but the principal
one was this: The Good God was the god of all immaterial things
(such as light and souls). The bad God was the god of all material
things, including the world and everything in it. He had contrived
to capture souls and imprison them in human bodies through the process
of conception. As Cathars put it, we are all divine sparks, even
angels, imprisoned in a tunic of flesh.
According to later Cathar ideas, when we die the powers of the
air throng around and persecute the newly released soul, which flees
into the first lodging of clay that it finds. This "lodging
of clay" might be human or animal. The soul would therefore
be condemned to cycle of rebirth, trapped in another physical body.
By leading a good enough life human beings or rather their
souls could win freedom from imprisonment and return to heaven,
the immaterial realm of the good god. For members of the Cathar
Elect, death was no more than taking off a dirty tunic.
The realm of the Good God, heaven,
was filled with light. (Some Cathars regarded the stars as
divine sparks, or souls, or angels, in heaven).
The realm of the bad god was the material world in which
we serve out our earthly terms. Satan had entrapped these divine
sparks and created humankind as their prison. Thus there was a part
of the Good God trapped in all men and women, longing to rejoin
its Maker. The Bad God filled humankind with temptations to frustrate
souls from ever making that reunion. They could be tortured by disease,
famine and other travails, including man's own inhumanity to his
fellow man. Yet the Bad God had no power over the soul - a divine
spark of the Good God. His remit was confined to material things.
Any hell
that existed was here on this material earth. To confound the Bad
God it was necessary to abstain from all earthly temptations and
to strengthen the inner spirit by prayer. It was a persuasive argument
and it seemed to provide a rational explanation for all the misfortunes
of the world.
Early Christianity adopted Neoplatonist ideas and these ideas paralleled
Dualist ideas. Neoplatonism taught a doctrine of salvation alongside
Dualism. Human bodies were material objects made of earth and dust,
but our immortal souls were not, they were sparks of the divine.
The divine was characterised as light, opposed to the darkness.
According to Plotinus, souls were illuminated by the divine light.
Matter on the other hand was just darkness, and had no real existence.
These Neoplatonist ideas were an integral part of Early Christianity,
later dropped in mainstream Christianity when it switched from Plato's
philosophy to Aristotle's as a result of Thomas Aquinas's attempts
to reconcile Christianity with Aristotle's philosophy. The Cathars'
teachings on this, as on many other matters, reiterate those of
the early Church, and suggest that their origins date from early
Christian times. The Cathar Consolamentum,
almost certainly preserves this ancient tradition:
Moreover, you must hate this world and its
works and all things that are of this world
Many early Christian writings reflect the same early Christian
distaste and even loathing of the material world. Most of these
writings were discarded from the orthodox version of the New Testament,
but a few passages made it into canonical scripture. Here for example
is 1 John 2:15-17
Love not the world, neither the things that
are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father
is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh,
and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the
Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth away, and the
lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.
The idea that flesh was inherently evil was particularly popular
in mainstream Christianity - it was formalised in the concept
of Original Sin and was enormously popular up until the twentieth
century. Today this traditional teaching is played down, and it
comes as a shock to many Christians to hear the words like that
of the Burial service from the Book of Common Prayer, contrasting
an evil material body with a good spiritual one: ".... our
Lord Jesus Christ, who shall change our vile body that it may
be like to his glorious body."
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St
Augustine of Hippo - ex Manichaean (Dualist)
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The idea that God and the world are utterly
opposed to each other survives in mainstream Roman Catholicism.
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Gnosticism
Cathars were also Gnostics. Gnostics believed, and still believe,
that divine knowledge is granted only to an inner elite, like
the "esoteric" knowledge of the Pythagoreans. The inner
elite undertook a long period of training before leading severely
ascetic lives. These were the Cathar
Elect, or as they are now popularly known Parfaits. Cathars
were also universalists, which means that they believed in the
ultimate salvation of all human beings.
Here is an account of how they saw themselves, recorded in 1143
or 1144 by Eberwin, Prior of the Premonstratensian Abbey of Steinfeld
writing to Bernard of Clairvaux (St Bernard):
Of themselves they say: "We are the poor of Christ, who
have no fixed abode and flee from city to city like sheep amidst
wolves, are persecuted as were the apostles and the martyrs, despite
the fact that we lead a most strict and holy life, persevering
day and night in fasts and abstinence, in prayers, and in labour
from which we seek only the necessities of life. We undergo this
because we are not of this world. But you, lovers of the world,
have peace with it because you are of the world. False apostles,
who pollute the word of Christ, who seek after their own interest,
have led you and your fathers astray from the true path. We and
our fathers, of apostolic descent, have continued in the Grace of God and shall so remain to the end of time. To distinguish
between us and you Christ said "By their fruits you shall
know them". Our fruits consist in following the footsteps
of Christ.
(Sancti Bernardi epistolae, (letter 472, Everwini
Steinfeldensis praepositi ad S. Bernardum) cited by Walter L Wakefield
& Austin P Evans Heresies of the High Middle Ages,
(Columbia, 1991) p. 129.)
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Implications of Cathar Beliefs
The idea that human beings were sparks of light trapped in tunics
of material flesh had a number of logical consequences:
- Procreative sex was bad, since conception would result in another
soul being trapped. For this reason, normal sex between
man and wife was as bad as any other procreative sex. Marriage
was worthless, while contraception was regarded with approval.
Also, there was no reason to condemn any form of non-procreative
sex.
- The less one had to do with evil (ie material) things, the better.
Eating animals, or animal products, was particularly abhorred,
though fish were allowed (as they were thought to reproduce asexually
and were not therefore able to imprison a soul).
- The sooner we can shed this tunic of flesh, the sooner our
souls could be free to fly like a spark of light back to heaven,
the realm of the good God. There was therefore no reason
to discourage suicide.
- There was not any reason to regard men as better than women.
The important part, the soul, was the same. Only
the vile material body was different.
- Since material objects were creations of the Bad God, it was
absurd to imagine that they could be of any virtue. So,
for example, jewels, money, relics, the Eucharist, reproductions
of the cross, and church buildings were of no value whatsoever.
Similarly the Catholic teaching about resurrection of the body
was absurd. The very idea of a physical body in heaven
was ridiculous. Further, it was not plausible that the Good
God would send anyone from his realm into the evil material world
of the Bad God. Jesus must therefore have been a
sort of phantom, looking like a man but in fact immaterial.
- Anyone who attached great value to material things was at best
mistaken and at worst a disciple of the Bad God. It was
no secret that the Pope was the richest man in Europe.
Cardinals, bishops and priests lived in great luxury and dressed
in gorgeous robes. Worse, the Roman Church encouraged the
worship of material objects such as the relics of saints.
And worse yet it venerated the cross - not only a material object
but also an instrument of torture. There was no escaping
the logical conclusion. Roman Catholics were worshipping the wrong
God - the God of Evil who had created this world. The behaviour
of devout Catholics seemed to confirm this conclusion.
Carthars referred to the Roman Church as the Church of Wolves.
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The Cathar Church Hierarchy
Cathars did not regard Parfaits
as priests. Parfaits did exercise sacramental responsibilities
but did not carry out sacrifices, the defining activity of a priest.
The New Testament word often translated as priest, presbyter,
does not really mean "priest". It means "elder", which is how
it is translated in many modern bibles. Perhaps significantly,
the New Testament never uses the word priest (sacerdos)
nor does it talk about a priesthood (except in the sense that
all believers are priests). In this, as in much else, historians
concur that
Cathars appear to represent a survival of the Earliest Christian
Church.
Although the Cathars did not recognise a priesthood, they did
elect bishops from among the elect. These were bishops in the
sense that the word (episcopos) is used in the New Testament
- it could reasonably be translated into English as supervisor.
Cathar bishops were responsible for distinct areas. Various
bishoprics were mentioned including Toulouse,
Carcassonne,
Albi, Agen, Lombers, Saint-Paul, Cabaret,
Servian and Montségur
(
Montsegùr),
to which was soon added that of the Razès (founded during
the 1226 Cathar Council at Pieusse).
When a bishop died another official, the Elder Son (filius
major), would take his place. The Younger Son (filius minor)
would replace the Elder Son and a new Younger Son would be chosen
from the existing Elect.
The Elder and Younger sons can conveniently be regarded as first
and second deacons respectively. Cathar Deacons were tasked
with the Apareilementum
(or public confession). Some authorities, including Jean Duvernoy,
claim that each Deacon controlled a region. Among the seats of
the deacons were Moissac, Cordes, Toulouse,
Puylaurens, Avignonet,
Fanjeaux, Montr�al, Carcassonne,
Mirepoix, Le
Bézu , Puilaurens,
Peyrepertuse,
Qu�ribus,
and Tarascon-sur-Ari�ge. Historians disagree about the existence
of Deaconesses.
Cathars did not recognise the hierarchy of the Roman Church,
much of which has no biblical sanction. There are for example
no archbishops, metropolitans, primates, cardinals, patriarchs,
or popes mentioned in the New Testament.
For a long time the Catholics accused the Cathars of having their
own Pope, apparently misunderstanding the famous visit of Cathar
bishop from the Balkans to a Cathar Council in the Languedoc.
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Ordinary Believers
("Credentes"; or Listeners - "Auditores")
Like the members of most religions, ordinary Cathar believers held
a range of beliefs at different times and in different places.
In general, their beliefs would be almost indistinguishable from
those of most modern Christians. Certainly, their beliefs
would seem unremarkable to most people in the western world.
Certainly too, ordinary Cathars and ordinary Catholics in the Languedoc
got on together perfectly well before the Crusades.
Ordinary Cathar believers behaved much like anyone else at the
time, they contracted marriages, had children, ate meat, fought
in wars, and followed the Ten Commandments when it suited them.
The distinguishing feature was that they undertook to undergo a
special ceremony (called the Consolamentum)
before their death. They generally deferred this rite until
they were on their deathbeds, just as early Christians normally
deferred baptism
until they were on theirs. This rite ensured that their soul
would be released from the cycle of earthly imprisonment.
Instead it would be free to return to the realm of light.
Although undergoing the Consolamentum
before their death was the only obligation on them, adherents of
the sect seem to have led more ascetic lives than their conventional
Catholic neighbours. They made serious efforts to follow not
only the Ten Commandments (especially about killing and lying) but
other biblical injunctions (for example not swearing oaths in any
circumstances). They kept three Lents each year, and fasted
on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays of each week. During these
fasts a diet of bread and water was usual. Believers would
also engage in a regular form of public confession which, they were
taught, dated from the earliest days of Christianity.
Some believers chose to undertake the Consolamentum
before the prospect of death loomed. This changed the believer
into one of the Cathar
Elect, which had profound implications for the rest of their
lives. This was not a step to be undertaken lightly.
Such a believer would be put under a period of probation for initiation,
which lasted at least one and often several years, during which
they fasted continuously, before being considered for the Consolamentum.
Cathars in England
Cathars spread throughout Europe and are recorded in many
countries. A group of some 30 men and women, referred to as
Publicans, were detected in England. They were brought before
a synod of bishops and King Henry II at Oxford probably in
the winter of 1165.
In those days there came to England certain erring folk
of the sect commonly thought to be called Publicans. These
seem to have originated in Gascony under an unknown founder,
and they spread the poison of their infidelity in a great
many regions; for in the broad lands of France, Spain, Italy,
and Germany so many are said to be infested with this pestilence
that, as the Psalmist of old complained, they seem to have
multiplied beyond number
... When they were questioned systematically upon the articles
of holy faith, they answered correctly enough on the nature
of the Celestial Physician, but as to the remedies by which
He deigns to heal human infirmities - that is, the divine
sacraments - they gave the wrong replies. They scorned holy
baptism, the Eucharist, and matrimony, and with wicked rashness
they disparaged the Catholic unity which these divine aids
instil.
...They laughed at threats uttered in all piety against
them in the hope that through fear they might be brought
to their senses, and misapplied the word of the Lord "Blessed
are they that suffer persecution for justice's sake, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven". Thereupon, the bishops,
taking precautions lest the heretical poison should spread
more widely, publicly denounced them as heretics and handed
them over to His Catholic Highness for corporal punishment.
He commanded that the brand of heretical infamy be burned
on their brows, that they be flogged in the presence of
the people, and that they be driven out of the city. And
he strictly enjoined anyone from presuming to give them
shelter or offer them any comfort. When the sentence had
been declared, they were led away, rejoicing in their just
punishment, their master leading them jauntily and chanting
"Blessed are ye when men shall revile you". ...
Then the detestable group were branded on the brows, and
suffered a just severity - as a mark of his primacy he who
was their leader receiving a double brand on brow and chin.
Stripped of their clothing to the waist and publicly flogged
with resounding blows, they were driven out of the city,
and perished miserably in the bitter cold, for it was winter
and no one offered them the slightest pity.
The quotation is from William of Newburgh's
history of the Kings of England, written around 1199-1201:
Willelmi Parvi, canonici de Novoburgo, historia rerum anglicarum
1. xiii ed. by Richard Howlett, in Chronicles of the Reigns
of Stephen, Henry II and Richard I (Rolls Series, LXXXII
[4 vols, London, 1884-1889] I 131-34). English translation
from Wakefield and Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages,
40 (pp 245 - 247). (
Here's another, fuller translation:
OF THE ENTRANCE OF HERETICS INTO ENGLAND, AND THEIR EXTERMINATION.
At this time certain heretics came into England, of that
sect, as it is believed, commonly called Publicans. These,
spread the poison of their heresy (which had originated
from an un known author in Gascony,) in many regions; for
such numbers are said to be infected with this pestilence
throughout the extensive provinces of France, Spain, Italy,
and Germany, that we may ex claim, in the words of the prophet,
Lord, how are they increased that trouble me!
[Ps. iii. 1.] Finally, when the bishops and princes act
towards them too leniently, these subtle foxes issue from
their hiding-places, and, under the mask of piety, by leading
astray the simple, lay waste the vineyard of the Lord of
Hosts both grievously and widely; but when the zeal of the
faithful is kindled against them by the inspiration of God,
they lie concealed in their dens, and become less noxious;
but still they cease not to annoy, by disseminating their
secret poison. Their victims are rustics, and the half-witted,
who are, consequently, slow to under stand their fallacies;
but, when once tinctured with this heresy, they remain inflexible
to all discipline; whence it rarely happens that they are
reconverted to the truth, when they are dragged from their
lurking-places. From such, and similar heretical pests,
Eng land had always been free, though so many sprang up
in other parts of the world. This island, however, when
it was denominated Britain, from its inhabitants the Britons,
gave birth to Pelagius, the future heresiarch in the East,
and in process of time admitted his error to her own shores;
to annihilate which the pious fore sight of the Gallican
church again and again sent forth the blessed German; but
when this island, after the expulsion of the Britons, became
possessed by the Angles, and was no longer denominated Britain,
but England, no poisonous heresy ever issued from it; nor,
till the time of king Henry the second, did heresy infuse
itself from other countries for the purpose of propagation
and extension. Then, also, by the assistance of God, such
means were adopted to counteract the poison, that it must
tremble at the idea of again entering the island.
There were about thirty men and women who concealed their
error, and came hither, for the purpose of disseminating
their heresy, under the conduct of one Gerard, to whom all
looked up as teacher and chief; for he alone had any tincture
of learning; the others, Germans by birth and language,
were both illiterate and silly, as well as uncouth and rude.
After a short residence in England, they added to their
party only one weak woman, who was overcome by their poisonous
insinuations, and bewitched (as it is said) by certain sorceries.
Indeed, they could not remain long concealed, for certain
persons having carefully examined them, they being of a
foreign sect, they were discovered, seized, and confined
in public prisons. The king, however, being unwilling to.
punish them without examination, commanded a council of
the bishops to be assembled at Oxford. Here, when they were
solemnly interrogated concerning their faith, the man who
appeared the best informed undertaking the cause, and speaking
for all, replied that they were Christians, and highly venerated
apostolical doctrine. Being questioned singly concerning
the articles of the holy faith, they answered rightly concerning
the substance of the doctrines of the heavenly Physician,
but perversely concerning those remediesthat is, the
holy sacraments, whereby He deigns to heal human in?rmity;
they rejected holy Baptism, the Eucharist, and matrimony;
and, with impious daring, derogated from the catholic unity,
which admits of these divine assistances. When they were
pressed by texts taken from the holy Scriptures, they said
they believed as they had been taught, but were unwilling
to dispute about their faith. When admonished to repent,
and become united to the body of the Church, they despised
all whole some counsel. They laughed at the threats kindly
held out to induce them to become wise through fear, misapplying
the divine expression, Blessed are they which are
persecuted for righteous ness' sake; for theirs is the kingdom
of heaven, [Matt. v. 10.] The bishops, therefore,
guarding against the further dissemination of heresy, delivered
them, as convicted heretics, to the catholic prince to be
subjected to corporeal discipline. He commanded the mark
of heretical ignominy to be branded on their foreheads,
and that they should_be whipped in the presence of the people,
and expelled the city, and strictly inhibited any one to
presume to entertain or supply them with any comfort whatever.
Their sen tence being proclaimed, they were conducted to
their just punish ment rejoicing, their leader preceding
with hasty step, and singing, Blessed shall ye be
when men shall hate you.To such a degree did
the seducing spirit pervert the minds of those he had deceived.
The woman whom they had led astray in England, having departed
from them for fear of punishment, confessed her error, and
was recovered to the Church. Moreover, this vile assemblage,
with branded foreheads, was subjected to just severity,
and he who had, the supremacy over them underwent the stigma
of a double brand, on his forehead and his chin, to designate
his authority. Their garments being torn down to their waists,
they were publicly scourged; and while the lash yet resounded,
they were expelled the city, and miserably perished from
the inclemency of the weather, for it was winter, while
no person showed them the smallest pity. The pious severity
of this discipline not only cleansed the kingdom of England
from that pest which had crept into it, but also prevented
its future intrusion, by the terror which it struck into
heretics.
The Church Historians of England, Vol IV, Part
II, The History of William of Newburgh: The Chronicles
of Robert de Monte, Rev Joseph Stevenson, (London: Seeleys,
1856), Chapter XIII, (pp. 460-1). (availble on Google Books)
We can only speculate at how gratified the bishops must have
been that not a single member of their Christian flock offered
not "the slightest pity" to their mutilated, stripped,
resoundingly scourged, Christian brethren from overseas, but
instead left them to starve or freeze to death in the bitter
winter cold.
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The Elect (Parfaits and Parfaites)
When a believer underwent the Consolamentum,
his or her life changed for ever. After this rite they
were members of the Elect. From now on they would lead the
life of an ascetic. They were to be completely chaste, and
were not permitted even to touch members of the opposite sex.
They were not permitted to tell a lie, swear an oath, nor kill
any living creature. They would have to undertake frequent fasts,
including three 40 day fasts each year.
For those who expected to die within hours this had less significance
than for those who undertook the rite without the expectation
of imminent death. They lived simple, peaceful, devotional,
chaste lives of poverty, often travelling on foot in pairs like
the disciples, preaching and working in simple trades like weaving
to earn their living. To their followers the Elect were
living saints. Touched by the Holy Spirit, they were God's
ambassadors in an alien world. The contrast with bejewelled,
warmongering, sybaritic, indolent, lascivious Churchmen living
on forcibly extorted tithes was difficult for the slowest peasant
to miss.
The Elect were not an ordained priesthood, though their Catholic
critics never seem to have fully understood this (and even modern
works still refer to Parfaits as "priests"). The defining
feature of a priest is that he makes sacrifices to a divinity
- something that Parfaits did not do, and so cannot correctly
be called priests. They did however minister and preach, and they
also controlled the Church, electing their own bishops.
They received from the Believers unquestioning obedience. As vessels
in whom the Holy Spirit dwelt, they were adored by the faithful,
who would prostrate themselves before them whenever they asked
for their prayers. (Another practice dating from the earliest
days of Christianity). The Elect alone were adopted sons
of God. Ordinary believers would ask members of the Elect
to pray to the Good God for them - specifically for the Good God
to lead them to a good death.
The Elect were not permitted to eat meat, or other animal products
such as cheese, eggs or milk. All of these were held to
be produced per Siam generatinis sen coitus, and everything
sexually begotten was impure. Another reason why the Perfect
should not eat animals was that a human soul might be imprisoned
in its body. Curiously, the Elect were permitted to eat
fish. Fish were believed to be born in the water without
sexual connection, and on the foundation of this fallacy Christians
framed their fasting rules. As they pointed out, the Jesus
of Gospels was recorded as having eaten fish but not meat.
(The common practice of eating fish but not meat on Fridays is
a Catholic vestige of the same Mediaeval fallacy.) Vegetarianism
was regarded as evidence of heresy, as was the refusal to kill
any animal, as Cathars interpreted the commandment "Thou
shalt not kill" as referring to all animals (The original
Hebrew is ambiguous and some Jewish scholars have agreed with
the Cathar reading, some with the Catholic reading).
As well as refusal to kill, Inquisitors had a range of easy ways
of identifying Cathar Parfaits. Before the real persecutions started
they had always worn black robes, but they stopped doing that
when the persecutions began in earnest. They also refused to swear
oaths in any circumstances, which made it easy to identify them
once subject to questioning. To identify them in the first place
a good indicator was their pale countenance. With rigorous fasting
throughout the year, their pallor often gave them away. Too bad
for anyone who just happened to have a light complexion. The Faithful,
unless they were checked, would kill anyone that did not look
like a healthy meat eater. As on other occasions the unusually
liberal Bishop Wazo of Liege had trouble enforcing rationality
among the faithful:
... in a measure he [Wazo] curbed the habitual
headstrong madness of the French, who yearned to shed blood. For
he had heard that they identified heretics by pallor alone, as
if it were certain fact that those who have a pale complexion
are heretics. Thus, through error coupled with cruelty, many truly
Catholic persons had been killed in the past.
(Extract from Gesta episcoporum Leodiensium
from the period 1043-1048, translated from Latin into English;
Cited by Walter Wakefield & Austin
Evans, Heresies of The High Middle Ages (Columbia, 1991)
p 93)
Even the liberal Bishop Wazo had qualms only about the killing
of Catholics - not about killing Cathars.
From all the evidence we have, the Cathars of the Languedoc were
highly respected by those who knew them best. The contrast with
local Catholic churchmen was apparent to all. The medieval historian
Sir Steven Runciman having indicated the shortcomings of senior
churchmen, goes on:
The parish priests, faced with such examples, either followed
suit or sank into despondent apathy. Some, like the chaplain
of Saint-Michel de Lanes, who would not interrupt his gaming
even to celebrate the Sacraments, were as worldly as any of
their superiors. Others were frankly immoral, like the chaplain
of Rieux-en-Val, who lived with the lady of the village, after
she had murdered her husband. Others again, to save trouble,
maintained the friendliest relations with the heretics and even
were present at their ceremonies. None of them could command
a fraction of the respect given to the heretic leaders either
for the purity of their lives or for the force and efficacy
of their preaching.
Steven Runciman, The Medieval Manichee
(Cambridge University Press, 1999) p 136 (for those who are
interested, Sir Steven provides references for each of the last
5 sentences of this paragraph)
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MINIATURIST, French, Ingeborg Psalter, c.
1195, Manuscript (Ms. 9), 304 x 204 mm, Musée Condé,
Chantilly
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Pentecost, 1386 Armenia
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Cathar Ceremonies
The central Cathar rite was the Consolamentum,
or Baptism
of the Holy Spirit and fire referred to in the New Testament.
The Holy Spirit derived from God and was sent by Christ. The
Consolamentum
removed all sin, reversed the effects of the Fall, and restored
the lost tunic of immortality. A Consoled person is an angel
walking in the flesh, separated from heaven
by a thin veil of death. Only a Parfait
could administer the Consolamentum.
It was striking in its simplicity, and seems to have faithfully
preserved a ceremony of the very earliest Christian Church.
Cathars had a ceremony corresponding to the Catholic mass or Eucharist,
but again bearing a striking resemblance the ceremony of the Early
Church. They blessed bread and shared it between them, though
none imagined that its substance was anything other than bread.
(It is odd that even bread could have held any virtue since as a
material object it belonged to the realm of the Evil god, and for
this reason some Cathars seem to have rejected the idea of blessed
bread). At the other end of the spectrum, some Cathars would
reserve part of their blessed bread and keep it, perhaps for years,
eating of it occasionally though only after saying the Benedicite
(As the Church Father Tertullian relates of his contemporaries in
the 2nd century).
The ordination of modern Christian priests
involves the laying on of hands, a vestige of early Christian
baptism, as retained by medieval Cathars.
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Papal Ordination (Acts 6.6)
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Christ being baptised by John the Baptist
in the River Jordan. (note the holy spirit in the form of
a white dove)
The Morgan Codex (Folio 9)
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Consolamentum or Consolament.
The Consolamentum was a spiritual baptism,
as described in the New Testament, where the Jewish practice of
baptism
by water was abrogated, and baptism
by fire implemented. (Modern Christians remember this as Pentecost
and some, Pentecostalists, make it the main feature of their theology).
Only a Parfait
could administer the Consolamentum, which meant that every new Parfait
stood at the end of a chain of predecessor Parfaits
linking him or her to the apostles and to Jesus himself.
It was the most significant ceremony in Cathar theology, marking
the transition from ordinary believer (auditore or credente) to
to Parfait, one of the elect. During the ceremony the Holy Spirit
was believed to descend from heaven,
and part of the Holy Spirit would then inhabit the Parfait's corporal
body. It was largely because of this indwelling portion of the Holy
Spirit that Parfaits were expected and willing to lead such austere
ascetic lives, and why ordinary believers were prepared to "adore"
them.
The ceremony was striking in its simplicity. It required no material
elements such as water or anointing oil, and seems to have preserved
a ceremony of the very earliest Christian Church. For Cathars this
was hardly surprising, since they claimed that the the rite had
been appointed by Christ, and had been handed down from generation
to generation by the boni homines. For Catholics it was rather
a mystery and their best explanation was that the Cathar rite was
a distorted imitation of various Catholic rites.
The Consolamentum was also given to sick or injured believers,
in the expectation of death. As long as they died quickly this presented
no great problem as they had little opportunity to fall back into
sin. But if they recovered they were now Parfaits, and presumably
expected to behave as such. Some authorities (notably Jean Duvernoy)
differentiate between the baptism
of the Perfects, from the 'Solace' baptism
granted to the dying for the remission of their sins. Even though
both rites are identical those who received the 'Solace' baptism
and survived seem to have been obliged to then undertake the normal
training and receive the Consolamentum again to became a fully functioning
member of the Elect.
Becoming a Parfait or Parfaite required a long period of probation
and instruction, just as becoming a Christian did in the early Church.
Compare the following statements accurately reflecting three different
views of how to become a member of the Church of Christ:
Medieval Catholic
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Early Church
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Cathar Church
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A person would be received into the Church by
being baptised, without necessarily needing to give their consent,
as in the case of infant baptism. |
A person would be received into the Church in one of two
circumstances. They would be deemed worthy after a long period
of preparation and instruction or they would request to be
received on their deathbed. In either case they would need
to give their consent.
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A person would be received into the Church in one of two
circumstances. They would be deemed worthy after a long period
of preparation and instruction or they would request to be
received on their deathbed. In either case they would need
to give their consent.
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As Wakefield and Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages,
§ 57 (p 465), put it "Like a catechumen of the early Church
- Catharist practices reflect the ancient usage - a believer had
to undergo a period of probation, normally at least a year, during
which he was instructed in the faith and disciplined in a life of
rigorous asceticism"
Wakefield and Evans cite Jean Guiraud, "Le
consolamentum cathare", Revue Des questions historiques,
new series XXXI (1904), 74-112, and refer also to Dondaine,
Un Traiténéo-manichéen du XIIIe
siècle: Le Liber de duobus principus, suivi d'un
fragment de rituel cathare (Rome, 1939), pp 45-46, and
Arno Borst, Die Katharer (Schriften der Monumenta Germaniae
Historica, XII (Stuttgart, 1953) PP 193-96.
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Click on the following link for the detailed account of the ceremony
of the Consolamentum
(taken from the Traditio - the Lyons Ritual) in Occitan and English
Below is a summary of what it involved.
After a long period of training and fasting, the rite proceeded as
follows:
- The "Melhoramentum"
- The Perfect
held the Bible above the kneeling postulant's head and recited
the "Benedicite"
.
- The postulant received from a Parfait a copy of the "The
Pater" (Lord's Prayer).
- The Perfect
addressed the postulant and explained to him from Scripture the
indwelling of the spirit in the Perfect,
and his adoption as a son by God.
- The
Lord's Prayer was then repeated by the postulant, the Perfect
explaining it clause by clause.
- There followed the Renunciation, primitive in form, except that
it (in some cases it was adapted so that the postulant solemnly
renounced the harlot church of the persecutors and their replicas
of the cross, their sham baptisms
and their other magical rites).
- Next followed the spiritual baptism
itself, consisting of the imposition of hands, and the touching
of the Gospel on the postulant's head.
- The Parfait's
vocation was then defined, he or she was reminded of all the things
that are forbidden, and of what was required of them: pardoning
wrongdoers, loving enemies, praying for those who calumniate and
accuse, offering the other cheek to the smiter, giving up one's
mantle to him that takes one's tunic, neither judging nor condemning.
Asked if he will fulfil each of these requirements, the postulant
answered: "I have this will and determination. Pray God for me
that he give me his strength".
- The next part of the rite reproduced the confiteor as it existed
in the 2nd century, asking pardon for previous sins.
- Then followed the act of consoling. The Perfect
took the Gospel and placed it on the postulant's head. Other Perfects
present placed their right hands on the postulant's head.
- They then three times adored the Father and Son and Holy Spirit
and said a prayer asking God to welcome his servant and to send
down the Holy Spirit.
- They then said the parcias, and repeated three times the "Let
us adore the Father and Son and Holy Spirit", and then pray: "Holy
Father, welcome thy servant in thy justice and send upon him thy
grace and thy holy spirit."
- Then they repeated the adoration and the The
Lord's Prayer, then read the John Gospel (1:1-17). This was
the most solemn part of the rite, for the postulant was now a
Perfect.
- All Perfects
present would give the kiss of peace and the rite was over.
.The Cathars did have other ceremonies, or quasi-ceremonies, including
the following.
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Franciscan
Friars witness a Cathar Consolamentum
(Bible illumination, Bibliothèque
nationale de France)
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A modern reproduction of the ceremony of
the Consolamentum
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The Cathars, like Saint Cuthbert, especially
favoured the Gospel of Saint John.
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Doctoral degrees were conferred at Oxford
University by the Vice Chancellor in the name of the Father,
Son and Holy Ghost, while tapping the new Doctor on the head
with a New Testament - remnant of the Medieval ceremony when
the award was a sort of Christian admission ceremony - sharing
a common origin with Cathar practices.
(Photo of the Examination Schools, Oxford)
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Doctoral degrees are still conferred at Oxford
University by the Vice Chancellor in the name of the Father,
Son and Holy Ghost, while tapping the new Doctor on the head
with a New Testament - it is now optional.
(Conferring Degrees in the Sheldonian Theatre,
Oxford. Page From The King's Empire C1910)
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Melhoramentum.
Not really much of a ceremony, more a formal greeting. Derived
from an Occitan word meaning improving, the Melhoramentum
was the acknowledgement by a believer of the Holy Spirit dwelling
with the Parfait.
The believer would kneel and, with both hands folded, bow three
times to the ground. On each genuflexion the believer would say:
�Bless me, Lord; pray for me�. Then, the Cathar prayed : �Lead us
to our rightful end�. The perfect, man or woman, then answered �God
bless you... In our prayers, we ask from God to make a good Christian
out of you and lead you to your rightful end�.
As so often, the Catholics never really seem to have understood
what this was about. This practice was often regarded as worship
or as they usually put it "adoration" of the Parfait.
Click on the following link for the Melhormentum
(taken from the Traditio - the Lyons Ritual) in Occitan and English
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Lo Servissi (The "Service")
the Apareilementum or Aparelhament.
This was a monthly rite involving a public and a solemn confession,
identical to the earliest form of confession known in the Christian
Church.
The aparelhament could give rise to punishments, ranging from prayers
with genuflection to fasting. Absolution was given en "masse".
The rite was restricted to the Elect and formed part of the ceremony
of Cathar Baptism or Consolamentum. Click on the following link
for the Servissi
(taken from the Traditio - the Lyons Ritual) in Occitan and English
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Convenenza.
The opportunity to undergo the Consolamentum
on one's deathbed presupposed that death would not come quickly.
(The problem is similar to that of modern Catholics who believe
in the efficacy of the Last Rights or Extreme Unction). In time
of War, the problem was more acute as men were often left conscious,
but dying and deprived of speech. The solution was a ceremony called
Convenenza. It was not itself a Consolamentum,
but it fulfilled the parts of the Consolamentum
that required the candidate to respond and make undertakings. The
Consolamentum
could then be administered subsequently if the candidate was wounded
and could not speak.
The Convenenza seems to have been common before battles and during
sieges. We have a first hand account of this practice, taken from
the D�position de Guillaume Tardieu de la Galiole (translated by
Jean Duvernoy �Le Dossier de Monts�gur : interrogatoires d'lnquisition
1242-1247�):
�... Then, on this Perfect's request, I devoted myself to God
and the Gospel and promised to no longer eat meat, eggs, cheese
and fat apart from oil and fish. I also promised not to swear
in all my life, and to forsake the sect out of fear of fire, water
and other kinds of death. After this oath, I recited the Pater
Noster in the Parfaits' manner, then the Perfait held the book
above my head and read the Gospel of Saint John. After this, they
gave me peace first with the book and then with the mouth, kissing
me twice across the mouth and prayed God, amidst much kneeling
and "venias"�
Sir Seven Runciman, in The Medieval Manichee (CUP, 1982)
PP 152-3) has a slightly different viewpoint, and seems to consider
the Convenenza to be more generally available as a sort of preliminary
membership.
Before the rite of entry into the sect, the ceremony of the Convenenza
(Convenientia), could be performed, the would-be believer had
to be adjudged a suitable recipient. Large numbers of persons
who certainly sympathised with and even believed in the heresy
never went through the ceremony. It was only when they were already
besieged in Montségur in 1244 that the soldiers who were
fighting for Catharism all celebrated the Convenenza. Till then
they had not strictly been members of the sect.
At the ceremony of the Convenenza the celebrant made one promise.
to honour the superior cast: in the sect, the Perfects, and to
hold himself at their disposal whenever they should need him.
In return he was promised that he should have the second initiatory
rite, the Consolamentum,
that would make him a Perfect, administered to him on his deathbed,
or sooner if he so desired. In the latter case the initiation
was very stringent. The noviciate might last for a year or more,
and the candidate would be very carefully examined to be sure
that he could stand the rigours of a Perfect's life. William Tardieu
told the Inquisitor: that for a year he was kept as a novice under
the charge of a Perfect; but because he fell very ill he was given
the Consolamentum
sooner than at first was intended, as his death seemed probable.
Dulcia of Villeneuve-laComtal was kept as a novice for three
years in various establishment: of Perfect women and then it was
decided that she was still too young and her vocation was not
clear enough. Raymonde Jougla of Saint-Martin de Lande, a. candidate
who for a year Was being prepared at a community of Perfect women,
was left behind by them when they fled for safety to Montségur,
as they did not think her nearly readyshe was not firm enough
in the faith. The period of preparation, the Abstinentia, lasted
for a year at least; and during that time the candidate had to
live a life of the utmost austerity and strictness, under the
care of some Perfect.
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Endura
This is not really a rite or ceremony, so much as a practice amounting
to voluntary euthanasia. The Occitan word
Endura translates as "fasting".
In certain circumstances, believers would take the Consolamentum
and then starve themselves to death. This might be done for example
during an extended terminal illness, or in expectation of falling
into the hands of the Inquisitors. Why hang around in hell,
when freedom is within easy reach to those who have undertaken the
Consolamentum?
The practice of suicide was after all common among early Christians.
We have the testimony of a Roman magistrate addressing a group of
early Christians who were asking him to execute them. He told them
it was easy enough to buy some rope or find a suitable precipice.
Although the practice is entirely in line with Cathar theology,
and is attested in contemporary documentary evidence, there is some
doubt about how common it was. References to it are rare, late and
often suspicious - bearing the hallmarks of hostile witnesses. The
case of Guilhelma, a resident of Toulouse for example, is typical
of suspicious reportage - she is supposed to have regularly bled
herself while sitting in a hot bath, and eventually poisoned herself
and ate ground glass.
Since Catholics regarded suicide as a great sin, they seem to
have made the most of the Cathar acceptance of it. (In much the
same way that they exploited a second charge that they found so
horrifying and that was apparently true - that Cathars used and
had no objection to contraception). Many Catholic works, even modern
ones, make out that suicide was a routine and frequent practice,
and it is not unknown for propagandists to claim, or more often
hint, that many Cathars spent their lives in repeated suicide attempts
- starving themselves, slashing their wrists, poisoning themselves
and consuming powdered glass. These accusations are based on the
one isolated and questionable story of Guilhelma - and rely on an
old myth that eating powdered glass will cause death. In fact there
is no evidence that suicide was more common among Cathars than it
was, or still is, among Catholics. The only known difference was
the level of acceptance in the two communities.
The idea of a "good end" is an old one. The term euthanasia
comes from the Greek. Hippocrates used it. It translates in English
literally as "good end". The Cathars on leaving each other
would say not Goodbye ["God be with you"] but "May
you come to a good end" - meaning "may you die having
undertaken the consolamentum". This was the best possible death
as it meant the release of the soul from its cycle of reincarnation.
There are hints that the idea of wishing one's coreligionists a
"good end" was more widespread, and might have been known
to Persian Manichaeans or even Zoroastrians.
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The picture below shows a Persian
ceramic dish dating from 1470-1481, the Timurid period. It
is underglaze-painted fritware. The interesting thing about
it is that around the center rosette are words that translate
as "may you come to a good end" - repeated three
times.
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Location: the Walters Art Museum, 600 N.
Charles Street Baltimore, MD 21201 (Centre Street: Third Floor:
Islamic Art) [but is it Islamic or Zoroastrian?]. Accession
number 48.1031. 3 1/8 x 14 9/16 in. (8 x 37 cm)
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Reincarnation and the Afterlife
Many religions teach that there is an afterlife for humans and
sometimes for other animals too. The Greeks had a concept of an
afterlife - though it was a rather ill-defined and shadowy one.
For heroes there was the prospect of eternity in paradise, a Greek
equivalent of Valhalla. For particularly evil people there was the
prospect of eternal punishment in Tartarus. But for the most part,
the dead would live an anaemic afterlife with no action and not
even their earthly memories.
Some Greek sects taught reincarnation, or more precisely the transmigration
of souls. According to the esoteric teachings of Pythagoras for
example, after death the spirit of one creature might pass after
death into the body of another one.
The Jews had originally had no concept of an afterlife, but under
Greek influence they had developed an ill-defined belief in an afterlife
by the time of Jesus Christ. (The words translated as hell
in the Old Testament actually mean grave or rubbish-tip). According
to the New Testament Jesus seems to have held that there was a fully
developed afterlife in heaven
or hell.
Ideas such as Purgatory and Limbo were developed much later. More
conservative Jews at the time of Jesus still held ideas of an afterlife
to be an offensive novelty. As they pointed out the many punishments
promised by God in scripture are all punishments in this world.
None is promised for an afterlife.
Egyptians believed that the cycle of rebirth
was available only to those who had lived properly before
death. On its first encounter with Osiris they imagined that
the soul had to undergo a judgement, in which the heart (the
seat of thought and emotion) was balanced on a scale against
a feather, the symbol of the goddess Ma'at (representing the
correct order of things). If the two did not balance, the
soul was denied the chance to enter the cycle of rebirth
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The following text is an extract from a work by Julian Moore.
It summarises the Egyptian beliefs concerning the Judgement
as depicted above. Note how Christianity has adapted them,
with St Michael in the Anubis role, and Satan in the role
of Ammit.
Gomeisa
The ways of life are manifold,
the ways beyond uncountable,
but dying is a single step across the threshold in-between.
Whether thin and frayed
by chafing time it seems no longer equal
to the weight of years, or whether fate betrays her hand and
by
untimely happenstance reveals her shears, the thread that
binds
shall find its end and flesh and life shall part.
Upon that day Anubis will
be standing there. He conducts the soul
into the judgement hall of Maat.
And yet the way of death
is also barred. He who would come forth by day
shall know the rites and formulae and speak them well
if he would walk among the gods, within the Fields of Reeds.
So let his mouth be opened
up that he may speak. Let Ptah,
the Opener of Ways who dreamed the world and spoke
the word
now bend to his appointed task, that when the door shall say,
"If thou dost know our names, then speak them now if
thou wouldst pass,"
the dead may have a voice with which to name each part.
Then once within he must
address in turn the sovereign judges
in their winding sheets, call each by name and swear he bears
no stain.
He must narrate his life and then await the weighing of his
soul.
Anubis of the jackal head
accepts his heart and places it upon the scales
against the weight of truth. And Thoth the record-keeper duly
marks in clay
the balance of the beam while Ammit Eater of the Dead
looks on
with hungry eye; if he should fail the test then he shall
die a second time
within the belly of the beast.
Then, having heard the
verdicts of the judges and the scales, Osiris shall decree
his soul be fed to Ammit or his soul set free to pass among
the gods.
A name may be remembered
in the House of Fire by those whose hearts are just.
Weep long and wail for those who cannot see, whose mouths
are shut,
who shall not sail to Abydos,.
Anubis yet waits overhead;
he waits for death, for death will come.
And it is here Gomeisa
shines.
© Julian Moore,
2007
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From the more liberal Jews in an Hellenic world, early Christians
had ready-made concepts of life after death, fuelled perhaps by
other popular religions - Resurrection cults, Egyptian cults, Zorostrianism
and even Buddhism (Buddhist missionaries are known in the Middle
East at this time). What we now regard as mainstream Christianity
slowly evolved its ideas of an afterlife, selecting popular ideas
from other religions.
For example, the popular medieval idea of St Michael weighing the
soul of the newly dead to determine whether it should go to heaven
or hell
is a direct copy of an Egyptian idea. In depictions of the scene,
Christians simply substituted Michael for the original Egyptian
god. Early Christians do not seem to have a clear idea about the
afterlife, and some of them clearly believed in reincarnation.
Christian sects such as the Sethians and the followers of the Gnostic
Church of Valentinus believed in reincarnation.
A Church Council was required to settle the matter some centuries
into the development of "orthodox" Christianity. (Fifth
General Council, 553, in condemning Origen's doctrine of pre-existing
souls)
The Gnostic strands of early Christianity were more attracted to
ideas of reincarnation and transmigration of souls (metempsychosis).
These strands ran from the early Gnostic Dualists, through Manichaeism,
the Paulicians, the Bogomils, the Italian Patarenes and into western
Europe, including the Cathars of the Languedoc.
The beliefs seem to have varied in some details from time to time
and place to place, but the following represents a fair if slightly
simplified version of their beliefs:
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The Fall of the angels depicted in an Apocalypse
from Northern France, circa 800. The chief angel has changed
into a serpent during his fall and the lesser angels are losing
their haloes. Their wings are already shrinking too.
( Trier Apocalypse (Stadtbibliothek (Trier, Germany), fol.
38r)
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Pythagoras
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Heaven
Heaven was the realm of the Good God, the god who had
made all immaterial things including light and souls. These souls
could be thought of as immaterial angels. They belonged in heaven,
the realm of light, but some of them had somehow been captured by
the Bad God and imprisoned in tunics of flesh - human or animal
(generally mammal) bodies. Humans and other mammals were thus hybrid
creatures belonging to two realms: a good potentially immortal spirit
trapped inside a bad and corruptible body. This was one reason why
Cathars refused to kill animals.
In some ways the idea reflected certain Buddhist beliefs. A person
who lead a relatively good life might be reincarnated with a better
and easier life the next time round. One who lived a bad life would
be reincarnated further down the scale, possibly as an animal. Apparently
even animals could live good or bad lives, because it was possible
for an animal to be reincarnated as a human being. A popular Cathar
story tells of a man who is overcome with emotion on recognising
in the grass an iron shoe he had thrown in his previous life as
a horse.
Those who eventually managed to lead a good enough life would be
released from the cycle of rebirth. On their death the Bad God would
loose his power over the angel trapped within. Released from their
imprisonment, such angels would return to heaven, the realm of light
to join the other angels there. They are there in the night sky
for all to see. We non-believers call them stars.
Cathar ideas of Heaven
and hell
included a Fall from heaven, during which a number of angels
were expelled from heaven and fell to earth. Here is an extract
from Montana of Cremona, a Professor at the University of Bologna
who became a Dominican
- possibly an Inquisitor, though this is not known for sure. He
is listing distinctively heretical beliefs - "What Heretics
May Believe, or Rather, Concoct" around 1241-1244:
"They also say and teach that this devil [Satan],
puffed up by the deception which he had practised in heaven,
presumed to ascend into heaven with his cohorts and there
joined battle with the archangel Michael and was defeated
and driven out. They think that the verse Apocalypse 12:7,
"And there was a great battle in heaven. Michael and
his angels fought with the dragon, and the dragon fought
with his angels" is to be interpreted with reference
to this battle. This they take literally."
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English translation from the preface
to Book 1 of Monetae Cremonensis adversus Catharos
et Valdenses libri quinque I (Descriptio fidei haereticorum),
ed. Thomas A Ricchini (Rome, 1743). For a fuller text
see Walter Wakefield & Austin Evans, Heresies
of The High Middle Ages (Columbia, 1991), p309.
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Few Catholics today would find this remarkable, since it is now
Catholic orthodoxy. One of a number of examples
of Catholic teaching adopting Gnostic and Cathar teachings.
According to some versions of Cathar theology the Fall of the Angels
was slightly more complicated than this. The angels also had immaterial
bodies which never left heaven. The Bad God had somehow stolen the
souls from these angelic bodies and imprisoned them on earth to
create human beings and other animals. On their release they were
reunited with their angelic body in heaven.
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Saint Michael weighing souls
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Hell
Hell, to the Cathars, was not a remote place under the Earth. For
them Hell was here and now. The world itself, the creation of the
Bad God, was the only Hell they knew. Torture, pain and misery of
this life was all the Hell they needed to contemplate.
The objective for all Cathars was to escape from the cycle of reincarnation,
to earn the right to return to heaven
and avoid another term of imprisonment here in Hell on Earth. There
was only one way to do this, and that was to be reunited with the
Good God through the agency of the Holy Spirit. In certain defined
circumstances the Holy Spirit would descend (as it had descended
on Jesus) and release the soul. But the release was contingent.
Until the person died, he or she, was obliged to continue trapped
in a corporeal mantle, living a good life in an evil world.
The power to call down the Holy Spirit was conferred on an ascetic
elite consisting of men and women who themselves had won their contingent
release from the cycle of rebirth. These Parfaits
(men) and Parfaites (women) alone could induce the Holy Spirit
to descend and create another Parfait
or Parfaite. This they did through a Cathar
Ceremony called the Consolamentum.
The requirements were rigorous and new Parfaits
and Parfaites were expected to lives of the utmost purity,and
from all the evidence did live lives of the utmost purity.
They lived as Christian monks have always aspired to as an almost
impossible ideal - extreme simplicity, poverty, strict adherence
to the commandments, severe fasting, abstinence and deprivation,
constant prayer, pacifism, the carrying out of good works, spreading
the good word, and so on.
If they lapsed in any way they lost their status, their ability
to pass on the gift of the Holy Spirit and their soul's place in
heaven.
Unless they underwent the Consolamentum
again (which seems to have happened on a few occasions) they would
be condemned to another life sentence in Hell here on earth.
The idea that hell extended to the Earth
was not confined to Cathars.
William Shakespear, The Tempest, Act 1, Scene 2
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"Hell is empty. All the devils are here" |
Some Cathars seem to have held that each soul could undergo at
most seven or, according to some, nine incarnations. The question
then arose as to what happened to those souls that failed to win
their Consolamentum
and release within the maximum number of cycles. Unfortunately we
have no coherent answer to this. Our detailed information about
Cathar
belief comes largely from Catholic
Inquisitors, and this was not a question they dealt with in
detail.
For the Albigensian
Crusaders and Inquisitors
the Cathar idea of Hell was entirely mistaken. As they condemned
hundreds of Parfaits
and Parfaites to burn at the the stake, they recorded with evident
pleasure (and "great joy") the certainty of their victims
passing from the ephemeral flames of this world directly to the
everlasting flames of the next.
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The Catholic Conception of hell
MS Douce 134
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The Cathar conception of Hell - everyday
life on Earth.
(Detail of a miniature of the burning of
heretics.
Northern France, N. (Calais?).
British Library Royal 20 E III f. 177v)
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Other Teachings
Free agency lies at the core of the Italian Book of the Two
Principles. The Cathars of the Languedoc, however, rejected
the notion of free agency, and believed in predestination. Deprived
of free agency, they considered that souls were predestined to be
saved.
This is contrary to the Catholic doctrine of Free Will, but entirely
consistent with the Lutheran and Calvinist doctrines of Predesination.
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Cathar Prayer
The Cathars used mainly the "Pater" - Pater Noster -
"Our father" - the only prayer prescribed in the New Testament.
Click here for more on the The
Pater
They did however use a form of greeting that resembles a simple
prayer, the Melhoramentum. Click here for more on the Melhoramentum.
In their ceremonies they also used the Benedicite
Benedicite, Benedicite, Domine Deus, Pater bonorum spirituum,
adjuva nos in ommibus quae facere voluerimus.
[Bless us, bless us, O Lord God, the Father of the spirits
of good men, and help us in all that we wish to do]
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The Cathar Pater
The Pater (or Lord's Prayer) was the favourite Cathar prayer -
arguably their only prayer. It is, after all the only one sanctioned
by the New Testament.
The Cathar Pater (from the �Cathar Ritual�)
Our father, which art in Heaven,
Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kingdom come,
Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven.
Give us this day our supersubstantial bread,
And remit our debts as we forgive our debtors.
And keep us from temptation and free us from evil.
Thine is the kingdom, the power and glory for ever and ever.
Amen.
Ordinary believers would not invoke God in this way. The prayer
was reserved for Parfaits
and Parfaites
- who recited it on ceremonial occasions, including before a meal.
The Cathar Consolamentum
was not just a spiritual baptism, it was also a divine adoption
ceremony. The new initiate literally became a child of God, and
God became their father - conferring the right to address God as
"Our Father".
Click on the following link for the Transmission
of the Pater (taken from the Traditio - the Lyons Ritual) in Occitan
and English
Click on the following link for the Rules
for the Use of the Prayer and Conduct Associated with its Recitation
(taken from the Traditio - the Lyons Ritual) in Occitan and English
The Doxology
Notice the final lines - a doxology - which will be familiar to
Protestants but not to Catholics. These words were a sure sign of
heresy to Catholic theologians and Inquisitors for many centuries.
Here is a monk writing in about 1147 on the subject:
A most corrupt and secret aspect of their cult is that
they do not say the [Roman Catholic] doxology but instead of "Glory
be to the Father" say "For thine is the kingdom, and thou
shalt rule over all creation, forever and ever. Amen"
Cathar texts give a slightly different version:
For thine is the kingdom, the power and the glory, forever. Amen
Cathars claimed that the words they used were in the original versions
of the text of Matthew 6:13. Here is an extract from a Cathar ritual
explaining the Lord's Prayer, line by line:
'For thine is the kingdom'. This phrase is said to be in the
Greek and Hebrew texts...
The Catholic Church denied that these words should be included
as they were not to be found in the Vulgate - a fifth century translation
into Latin by St Jerome, which the Roman Catholic Church regarded
as infallible. In fact the phrase is to be found in early Greek
texts and in Slavonic texts - confirming that the Cathars really
did have links to the early Church and suggesting that those links
were Bogomil.
The oldest witness is the Didache, otherwise known as the Teaching
of the Twelve Apostles. This ancient catechism dates to the early
second century, perhaps shortly after 100 AD (ie much earlier than
the texts used to justify omitting the text in question).
Do not let your fasts be with the hypocrites. They fast on Monday
and Thursday; but you shall fast on Wednesday and Friday. Do not
pray as the hypocrites do, but as the Lord commanded in His gospel,
you shall pray thus: 'Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be
thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth, as it is
in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our
debts, as we also forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil. For thine is the power and the glory
forever.' Pray thus three times a day.
The quotation here is from the Writings of a Cistercian
monk from Périgueux named Herbert. The translation
is from Walter Wakefield & Austin Evans, Heresies of
The High Middle Ages (Columbia, 1991) p 139 from Herbiberti
monachi epistola de haereticis Petragoricis reproduced
in Migne, Patrologia latina, CLXXXI, 1721-22.
For the Cathar doxology in Greek and Slavic versions of the
bible see Runciman, The Medieval Manichee: A study of the
Christian Dualist Heresy, Cambridge, 1955, p 166
The question of the Cathar doxology was discussed by Medieval
theologians (eg Antoine Dondaine, UN Traité neo-manichéen
du XIIIe siècle: Le Liber de duobus principiis, suivi
d'un fragment de rituel Cathare. Rome, 1939, p48 and Arno
Borst, Die Katharer (Schriften der Monumenta Germaniae historica,
XII), Stutgart, 1953, p191.
The translation of the Didache is from W. A. Jurgens, The
Faith of the Early Fathers (Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical
Press, 1970), 3.).
There are numerous early witnesses : It is found in the Old
Latin, the Old Syrian, and some Coptic versions (such as Coptic
Bohairic). Old Latin texts, such as Codices Monacensis (q-seventh
century) and Brixianus (f-sixth century), read, "et ne
nos inducas in temptationem. sed libera nos a malo. quoniam
tuum est regnum. et uirtus. Et gloria in saecula. amen."
The Syriac Peshitto (second to third century) reads, "And
bring us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For
thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever
and ever: Amen." (James Murdock, The Syriac New Testament
from the Peshitto Version [Boston: H.L. Hastings, 1896], 9.)
Among the Greek uncials it is found in K (ninth century),
L (eighth century), W (fifth century), D (ninth century),
Q (ninth century), and P (ninth century). It is found in the
following Greek minuscules: 28, 33, 565, 700, 892, 1009, 1010,
1071, 1079, 1195, 1216, 1230, 1241, 1242, 1365, 1546, 1646,
2174 (dating from the ninth to the twelfth century).
The Church Father John Chrysostom was also familiar with
it. He cites the verse in the fourth century in his Homilies:
". . . by bringing to our remembrance the King under
whom we are arrayed, and signifying him to be more powerful
than all. 'For thine,' saith he, 'is the kingdom, and the
power, and the glory.'" (St. Chrysostom, "Homily
XIX," in The Preaching of Chrysostom, ed. Jaroslav Pelikan
[Philadelphia: Fortress Press], 145.)
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The validity of the Cathar version is endorsed by the Anglican
Church which also follows the early Greek texts and includes the
phrase translated in the Authorized Version as "For thine is
the kingdom, the power and the glory, forever. Amen" - the
same as formulation as that used by some Cathar texts. The passage
is also found in Spanish, French, Italian, and German versions which
pre-date the Authorized (or King James) version. Early English versions
such as the New Testament of William Tyndale (1525) also have it:
"And leade us not into temptacion: but delyver us from evyll.
For thyne is the kingdome and the power, and the glorye for ever.
Amen."
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The Lord's Prayer in the original Kione (Greek)
with the word ἐπιούσιον
meaning "supersubstancial" not "daily",
and the doxology in brackets.
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Πάτερ ἡμῶν
ὁ ἐντοῖς οὐρανοῖς�
ἁγιασθήτω τὸ
ὄνομάσου�
ἐλθέτω ἡ βασιλεία
σου�
γενηθήτω τὸ
θέλημά σου, ὡς
ἐν οὐρανῷ καὶ
ἐπὶ τῆς γῆς�
τὸν ἄρτον ἡμῶν
τὸν ἐπιούσιον
δὸς ἡμῖν σήμερον�
καὶ ἄφες ἡμῖν
τὰ ὀφειλήματα
ἡμῶν,
ὡς καὶ ἡμεῖς
ἀφίεμεν τοῖς
ὀφειλέταις
ἡμῶν�
καὶ μὴ εἰσενέγκῃς
ἡμᾶς εἰς πειρασμόν,
ἀλλὰ ῥῦσαι
ἡμᾶς ἀπὸ τοῦ
πονηροῦ.
[Ὅτι σοῦ ἐστιν
ἡ βασιλεία καὶ
ἡ δύναμις καὶ
ἡ δόξα εἰς τοὺς
αἰῶνας.
ἀμήν.]
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The Pater Noster - Our Father in Latin
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Pater noster qui es in celis,
Sanctificetur nomen tuum;
Adveniat regnum tuum.
Fiat voluntas tua sicut in celo et in terra.
Panem nostrum supersubstancialem da nobis hodie.
Et dimitte nobis debita nostra sicut et nos dimittimus
debitoribus nostris.
Et NE nos inducas in temptationem sed libera nos
a malo.
Quoniam tuum est regnum et virtus et Gloria in secula.
Amen.
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Another Cathar Prayer
"Holy Father, just God of the good spirits, you who are
never mistaken, never lie, norr err, nor doubt - for fear
of suffering death in the world of the alien God, for we are
not of the world and the world is not of us - give us to know
what you know and to love what you love"
Cathar prayer from the 13th Century
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Daily Bread ?
One of the most compelling pieces of evidence that the Cathars
preserved a very ancient tradition - earlier than the that represented
by modern mainstream Christian Churches - is the treatment of the
word rendered in the Latin text above as "supersubstancialem".
The original Greek word is επιουσιον
and the interesting thing about it is that no one knows for sure
what it means. One thing for sure is that it does not mean "daily",
which is how mainstream Churches translate it (..Give us this day
our daily bread"). More interesting yet is the fact
that the Cathars, and the Bogomils before them, appear to have preserved
the meaning of the original Greek - and more remarkable still is
the fact that the original meaning was known to the early Church
reformers in England.
If you find this extraordinary, as I do, you might want to read
on. (If not, you may find it hard going). The text below is taken
from the Etudes balkaniques, 2001, No1, which deals in detail
with the whole question - (With thanks to Georgi Vasilev, Ph.D.,
D.Sc. see https://www.geocities.com/bogomil1bg):
JOHN WYCLIFFE, THE DUALISTS AND
THE CYRILLO-METHODIAN VERSION OF THE NEW TESTAMENT
1. Our bread over another substance
[ouer bread over othir substaunce]
... Open any modern official edition
of the Bible in English (for example The Holy Bible. New Revised
Standard Version. Oxford, 1989) and read the Lord�s Prayer and you
shall see that there God is asked to give [us] �this day our daily
bread�. In Wycliffe�s English versions of the Scriptures however,
begun about the year 1380, one finds a rather different text, i.e.
�oure breed ouer othir substaunce� Math. 6:9-13 [give us
this day our daily bread over another substance] {9}. Why the difference?
Why such an unusual sounding in which, besides the translation,
there is obviously a small comment of the translator himself? The
answer on principle was provided by Yordan Ivanov, a noted Bulgarian
philologist and historian. In his well-known book, Bogomil Books
and Legends, he wrote that the Bosnian Bogomils read the Lord�s
Prayer in just such a way, pronouncing �give us our daily bread
of another substance� {10}. A similar version can be found in the
lyonnaise rendition of the Albigensian Scriptures: �E dona a noi
lo nostre pa qui es sabre tota cause� [�the bread that is above
all else�]. Similarly there is one Old Italian version: �Il pane
nostre sopra tucte le substantie da a nnoi oggi� [�our bread over
any substance�].
Since the Bogomils gave the Cathars
the quoted version of the Cyrillo-Methodian translation of the New
Testament (subsequently translated into the Latin by the Cathars),
we shall turn to the idea that John Wycliffe did not translate the
Scriptures from the Vulgate, as the printed editions of his version
later stated, but from a Cyrillo-Methodian version. By the way,
even today the Bulgarian version of the Lord�s Prayer reads �our
daily [substantial] bread� which is much closer to the Greek original
�τον̣ αρτον
ημον τον επιουσιον
where the word �επιουσιον�
means literally �suprasubstantial�. In other words, the Cyrillo-Methodian
version is closer to the Greek original than the Vulgate �our daily
[quotitianum] bread�. In fact, the term �supersubstantialem� is
used in the various Vulgate versions, in Matthew and in Luke (11:2-4),
but it is practically excluded from the liturgical and sacramental
practice of the Catholic Church. What is more, to pronounce �suprasubstantial�
[supersubstantialem] instead of �our daily bread� [panem nostrum
quotidianum] in the Lord�s Prayer was considered a sure sign of
heresy in the Middle Ages. According to Collectio Occitanica, Inquisition
records from Carcassonne, in Lombardy Bernard Oliva, the heretical
bishop from Toulouse, pronounced 'panem nostrum supersubstantialem'
(dicendo in oratione Pater noster: panem nostrum supersubstantialem)
when he said the Lord�s Prayer{11}.
Even in the 19th and the beginning
of the 20th century, many authors paid attention to the fact that
the Bogomils lay the stress on �our bread of another substance�.
In this case we shall list just
a few of them because, both in Bulgaria and abroad, one encounters
a conservative underestimation of this detail and an inability to
decipher its theological significance {12}. H. Puech and A. Vaillant
underscored the concept described by Euthymius Zygavin that �Bogomils
created their haven, the true eucharistic bread that is "αρτος
επιουσιος�,
by which they acquire the blood and flesh of Christ everyday" {13}.
Zygavin mentions the special word "επιουσιος"
by which they characterised the bread: "τον̣
αρτον γαρ, φηςι,
τον επιουσιον�
{14}. N. Osokyn also noted the �Greek practice� of the Bogomils
and the Cathars: they sang the Lord�s Prayer after the Greek fashion,
substituting �our daily bread� (quotidianum) for the words �our
supernatural bread� and adding at the end ����
���� ��� �������� etc. adopted by the Eastern Church with
good reason� {15}. Jean Guiraud, a scholar who studied the Cathars
and was their opponent centuries after they existed, claimed that
�they dared to adjust even the word of Christ�, taking the liberty
to read the said part of the Lord�s Prayer in their own way {16}.
At this point I would like to undertake
a rather more comprehensive explanation of the Cathar concept of
the Lord�s Prayer that C. Schmidt made in 1849: �... they interpreted
�daily bread� in the sense of food for the soul and, instead of
the simple formula from the Scripture, �Give us today our superstubstantial
bread�, ending with the words �for Thine is the kingdom and the
power and the glory in all eternity�. Since these words cannot be
found in the Vulgate, the opponents of the Cathars who were not
familiar with the original text, accused them of misrepresenting
the Bible in this particular place. This accusation the latter did
not deserve because on this point their version, made on the basis
of a Greek source, was more correct than the version of the Western
Church.� {17}
It was exactly Schmidt who gave
the explanation, repeated a century later by Yordan Ivanov. He pointed
out that, in the Greek original, the expression from Matthew �τον̣
αρτον ημον τον
επιουσιον� repeated
also in Luke, was translated as panem supersubstantialem (Matthew)
and panem quotidianum (Luke) in the Vulgate. He added that the latter
expression �was more accepted in the [Catholic � author�s note]
Church than the former one� {18}.
FOOTNOTES
9. The Holy Bible, made from the
Latin Vulgate by John Wyccliffe and his followers, vol. IV, p. 18.
10. ������,
�. ���������� ����� � �������. �����. 1925, �.113. The same fact
is quoted in "Slovnίk jazyka staroslověnskeho. Lexicon
linguae palaeslovenicae. t .II, p.322: "�����������"
(Tetra-evangelium Nikojanum,
Serbia XV, Cyr. Num.indicis A.-23).
11. D�llinger, Ign. V. Dokumente
vornehmlich zur Geschichte der Valdesier und Katharer herausgegeben.
Munchen. T. II. M�nchen, 1890, S. 38: �...dicendo in oratione Pater
Noster: panem nostrum supersubstantialem�. This case was also quoted
by Y. Ivanov.
12. One should mention here that
there are only a few good interpretations of Bogomil and Cathar
theology, including Raicho Karolev�s 19th century work, those of
H. Puech and A. Vaillant, as well as Edina Bozoki, among others.
In the case of Bulgaria, the cause was the fact that, after 1944,
research of the Bogomil movement fell under Marxist interpretation,
with their teaching seen above all as a social moevement. In the
West, powerful Catholic influence was a barrier before studies of
the finer peculiarities of dualistic philosophy. There is not s
single study in this sense in Great Britain.
13. Puech, H. A. Vaillant. Le traite
contre les Bogomiles de Cosmas le Pr�tre. Paris. 1945, p. 245.
14. Patrologia Graeca, 130, col.
1313.
15. �������
�. �����i� ����������� �� ������� ���� ��������i� III. T. I. ������,
1869, �. 214.
16. Giuraud, J. Cartulaire de Notre
Dame de Prouilles, pr�c�d� d�une �tude sur l�Albigeisme languedocien
au XIIe et XIIIe siecles. T. 1-2. Paris. 1907, p. CXXII.
17. Schmidt, C. Histoire et doctrine
de la secte Des cathares ou albigeois. T. II. Paris-Geneve. 1849,
p. 117.
18. Ibidem.
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A Cistercian writes:
Pierre des Vaux-de-Cernay in his Historia Albigensis written
between 1212 and 1218, describes cathar beliefs:
English translation based on Peter of les Vaux-de-Caernay (translation
by WA Sibly and MD Sibly, The History of the Albigensian Crusade
(Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2002) p10-11. There is another translation
at Wakefield & Evans, Heresies of the High Middle Ages,
p 238. The webmaster has marked particularly interesting points
in red). Here the Cathars are presented as Docetes and Dualists
who regard Jehovah, the lying murderous God of the Old Testament,
as the evil God (opposed to the God of the New Testament who is
the good God).
[10] First, it should be known that the heretics [the Cathars]
propose the existence of two creators, one of things invisible,
whom they call the benign God, and one of things visible, whom
they name the evil God.
They attribute the New Testament to the benign God and the Old
to the malign God, and they repudiate all of the Old Testament
except for certain passages included in the New Testament, which
they judge to be appropriate because of their respect for the
New Testament. They assert that the author of the Old Testament
is a liar, for he said to the first created man: "But of
the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat
of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely
die" [Genesis 2:17], yet they did not die after eating of
it, as he had said they would-though in reality after eating of
the forbidden fruit they became subject to death. They also called
him a murderer because he incinerated the people of Sodom and
Gomorrah, destroyed the world by the waters of the Flood, and
overwhelmed Pharaoh and the Egyptians with the sea.
They declared that all of the patriarchs of the Old Testament
were damned; they asserted that John the
Baptist was one of the greatest devils.
[11] And they also said in their secret meetings that the Christ
who was born in the earthly and visible Bethlehem and crucified
in Jerusalem was evil; and that Mary Magdalene
was his concubine; and that she was the woman taken in
adultery of whom we read in Scripture [John 8:3].
Indeed, the good Christ they say neither ate nor drank nor assumed
the true flesh, nor was he ever in this world except spiritually
in the body of Paul. But for this reason we say "in the earthly
and visible Bethlehem": The heretics believe there to be
another earth, new and invisible, and in this second earth some
of them believe the good Christ was crucified.
Likewise, the heretics say the good God
had two wives, Colla and Colliba, and from these he begat sons
and daughters.
There were other heretics who said that there
was one Creator, but that he had as sons both Christ and the Devil.
They said that all creatures were once good but that from the
vials of which we read in the Apocalypse [Revelation 16:1-21],
all were corrupted.
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they asserted that John the Baptist
was one of the greatest devils.
This is not recorded elsewhere, but seems an oddthing for
Pierre des Vaux-de-Cernay to make up.
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Mary Magdalene was his concubine.
An ancient Gnostic belief.
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the good God had two wives, Colla and
Colliba, and from these he begat sons and daughters.
Colla and Colliba (given in some translations as Collant
and Colibant), are probably identical with Oolah and Ooliba
(Aholah and Aholibah) the sister-whores from Ezekiel 23:4
who symbolize Israel and Judah and are described as brides
of God.
But wouldn't they be wives of the bad God? Perhaps Pierre
has misunderstood.
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there was one Creator, but that he
had as sons both Christ and the Devil.
This reporting of alternative versions lends credibility.
If Pierre were making it up, he would have no reason to make
up variations of the story. This one looks like a popular
attempt to reconcile Cathar and Catholic beliefs.
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Further Information on Cathars and Cathar Castles
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If you want to cite this website in a book
or academic paper, you will need the following information:
Author: James McDonald MA, MSc.
Title: Cathars and Cathar Beliefs in the Languedoc
url: https://www.cathar.info
Date last modified: 8 February 2017
If you want to link to this site please see
How
to link to www.cathar.info
For media enquiries please e-mail james@cathar.info
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