Cities of God: The Religion of the Italian Communes 1125-1325

(Darren Dugan) #1

 268 BuoniCattolici


later 1200 s took a similarly permissive line. That author claimed that Saint


Thomas Aquinas himself had said that only two things were necessary for a


worthy daily Communion—freedom from serious sin and a desire for Christ.


But he acknowledged that many devout laypeople communicated only three


times a year and abstained otherwise.^209 Nevertheless, that was still more


than the once-a-year minimum of Lateraniv.


These authors actually discussed daily lay Communion. That suggests


that attitudes had changed since the time of Sicardo. Anecdotal evidence


confirms the impression of more frequent reception, at least among the de-


vout. Pietro Pettinaio was known for his frequent Communions, and people


did not find this very unusual, at least in comparison with his daily atten-


dance at Matins.^210 Fra Vitale, a witness at the canonization of Giovanni


Buono, thought it laudable that the holy man communicated every Sunday,


although he admitted that some considered this excessive.^211 When Margher-


ita of Cortona began to skip Communions out of reverence for the Sacra-


ment (the Salimbene principle), Jesus appeared and told her to receive as


often as she could, provided that she had first gone to confession.^212 This link


of Communion and confession was a conventional and important limiting


factor. In practice, the required confession before every sacramental Com-


munion inhibited frequent reception. If the laity of the communes were mak-


ing increasingly frequent use of confession, as I will suggest in the next


chapter, the vogue of more frequent Communions becomes more intelligi-


ble. Confessing more frequently had the side effect of allowing more frequent


Communion. And a desire to communicate never seemed lacking.


One early-fourteenth-century devotional book contains a vernacular trea-


tise on how to receive Christ’s body in the Eucharist.^213 It suggests how the


devout prepared for Communion. Preparation began a week before, with


meditations on the great gift to sinners of the true Body and Blood of Christ.


The communicant called this to mind as often as possible during the week.


A day or two before the Communion, he either set aside time for meditation


and devotional reading conducive to a proper disposition or, at least, recited


some preparatory prayers. The book gave, for use at Matins on the day of


the Communion, a long prayer on personal unworthiness and the grandeur


of the Sacrament. After many protests of unworthiness and petitions for


forgiveness and mercy, the prayer ended with a declaration of faith in the


Sacrament:



  1. This treatise is preserved in a fourteenth-century French codex: Florence, Biblioteca Medicea
    Laurenziana,msPl.xx 17, fols. 176 r–v.

  2. Pietro of Monterone,Vita del beato Pietro Pettinajo, 5 ,p. 59.
    211 .Processus... B. Joannis Boni, 1. 4. 66 ,p. 789 ; Antonino of Florence, ‘‘De Joanne Bono Cive Mantu-
    ano’’ (Chronicae, 24 : 13 : 3 ), p. 747.

  3. Giunta Bevegnati,Legenda... Margaritae de Cortona, 7. 4 ,p. 321.

  4. Florence, Biblioteca Riccardiana,ms 1419, fols. 70 v– 71 r.

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