A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Cluny’s prestige was great because of the influence of its founders, the status of


Saint Peter, and the fame of the monastery’s elaborate round of prayers. The Cluniac


monks fulfilled the role of “those who pray” in dazzling manner. Through their


prayers, they seemed to guarantee the salvation of all Christians. Rulers, bishops, rich


landowners, and even serfs (if they could) gave Cluny donations of land, joining their


contributions to the land of Saint Peter. Powerful men and women called on the


Cluniac abbots to reform new monasteries along the Cluniac model.


The abbots of Cluny came to see themselves as reformers of the world as well as


the cloister. They believed in clerical celibacy, preaching against the prevailing norm


in which parish priests and even bishops were married. They also thought that the


laity could be reformed, become more virtuous, and cease its oppression of the poor.


In the eleventh century, the Cluniacs began to link their program to the papacy. When


they disputed with bishops or laypeople about lands and rights, they called on the


popes to help them out.


The popes were ready to do so. A parallel movement for reform had entered


papal circles via a small group of influential monks and clerics. Mining canon


(church) law for their ammunition, these churchmen emphasized two abuses:


nicolaitism (clerical marriage) and simony (buying church offices). Why were these


two singled out? Married clerics were considered less “pure” than those who were


celibate; furthermore, their heirs might claim church property. As for simony: the new


profit economy sensitized reformers to the crass commercial meanings of gifts; in


their eyes, gifts given or received by churchmen for their offices or clerical duties


were attempts to purchase the Holy Spirit.


Initially, the reformers got imperial backing. In the view of German king and


emperor Henry III (r.1039–1056), as the anointed of God he was responsible for the


well-being of the church in the empire. (For Henry and his dynasty, see Genealogy


5.3: The Salian Kings and Emperors.) Henry denounced simony and personally


refused to accept money or gifts when he appointed bishops to their posts. He


presided over the Synod of Sutri (1046), which deposed three papal rivals and


elected another. When that pope and his successor died, Henry appointed Bruno of


Toul, a member of the royal family, seasoned courtier, and reforming bishop. Taking


the name Leo IX (1049–1054), the new pope surprised his patron: he set out to


reform the church under papal, not imperial, control.

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