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| Peter Abelard The story of my misfortunes IntraText CT - Text |
CHAPTER IX
OF HIS BOOK ON THEOLOGY AND HIS PERSECUTION AT THE HANDS OF HIS FELLOW STUDENTS
OF THE COUNCIL AGAINST HIM
IT SO happened that at the outset I devoted myself to
analysing the basis of our faith through illustrations based on human
understanding, and I wrote for my students a certain tract on the unity and
trinity of God. This I did because they were always seeking for rational and
philosophical explanations, asking rather for reasons they could understand
than for mere words, saying that it was futile to utter words which the
intellect could not possibly follow, that nothing could be believed unless it
could first be understood, and that it was absurd for any one to preach to
others a thing which neither he himself nor those whom he sought to teach could
comprehend. Our Lord Himself maintained this same thing when He said:
"They are blind leaders of the blind" (Matthew, xv. 14).
Now, a great many people saw and read this tract, and it became exceedingly
popular, its clearness appealing particularly to all who sought information on
this subject. And since the questions involved are generally considered the
most difficult of all, their complexity is taken as the measure of the subtlety
of him who succeeds in answering them. As a result, my rivals became furiously
angry, and summoned a council to take action against me, the chief instigators
therein being my two intriguing enemies of former days, Alberic and Lotulphe. These
two, now that both William and Anselm, our erstwhile teachers, we're dead, were
greedy to reign in their stead, and, so to speak, to succeed them as heirs. While
they were directing the school at Rheims, they managed by repeated hints to
stir up their archbishop, Rodolphe, against me, for the purpose of holding a
meeting, or rather an ecclesiastical council, at Soissons, provided they could
secure the approval of Conon, Bishop of Praeneste, at that time papal legate in
France. Their plan was to summon me to be present at this council, bringing
with me the famous book I had written regarding the Trinity. In all this,
indeed, they were successful, and the thing happened according to their wishes.
Before I reached Soissons, however, these two rivals of mine so foully
slandered me with both the clergy and the public that on the day of my arrival
the people came near to stoning me and the few students of mine who had
accompanied me thither. The cause of their anger was that they had been led to
believe that I had preached and written to prove the existence of three gods. No
sooner had I reached the city, therefore, than I went forthwith to the legate;
to him I submitted my book for examination and judgment, declaring that if I
had written anything repugnant to the Catholic faith, I was quite ready to
correct it or otherwise to make satisfactory amends. The legate directed me to
refer my book to the archbishop and to those same two rivals of mine, to the
end that my accusers might also be my judges. So in my case was fulfilled the
saying: "Even our enemies are our judges" (Deut. xxxii. 31).
These three, then, took my book and pawed it over and examined it minutely, but
could find nothing therein which they dared to use as the basis for a public
accusation against me. Accordingly they put off the condemnation of the book
until the close of the council, despite their eagerness to bring it about. For
my part, every day before the council convened I publicly discussed the
Catholic faith in the light of what I had written, and all who heard me were
enthusiastic in their approval alike of the frankness and the logic of my words.
When the public and the clergy had thus learned something of the real character
of my teaching, they began to say to one another: "Behold, now he speaks
openly, and no one brings any charge against him. And this council, summoned,
as we have heard, chiefly to take action upon his case is drawing toward its
end. Did the judges realize that the error might be theirs rather than
his?"
As a result of all this, my rivals grew more angry day by day. On one occasion
Alberic, accompanied by some of his students, came to me for the purpose of
intimidating me, and, after a few bland words, said that he was amazed at
something he had found in my book, to the effect that, although God had
begotten God, I denied that God had begotten Himself, since there was only one
God. I answered unhesitatingly: "I can give you an explanation of this if
you wish it." "Nay," he replied, "I care nothing for human
explanation or reasoning in such matters, but only for the words of
authority." "Very well, I said; "turn the pages of my book and
you will find the authority likewise." The book was at hand, for he had
brought it with him. I turned to the passage I had in mind, which he had either
not discovered or else passed over as containing nothing injurious to me. And
it was God's will that I quickly found what I sought. This was the following
sentence, under the heading "Augustine, On the Trinity, Book I":
"Whosoever believes that it is within the power of God to beget Himself is
sorely in error; this power is not in God, neither is it in any created thing,
spiritual or corporeal. For there is nothing that can give birth to
itself."
When those of his followers who were present heard this, they were amazed and
much embarrassed. He himself, in order to keep his countenance, said: "Certainly,
I understand all that." Then I added: "What I have to say further on
this subject is by no means new, but apparently it has nothing to do with the
case at issue, since you have asked for the word of authority only, and not for
explanations. If, however, you care to consider logical explanations, I am
prepared to demonstrate that, according to Augustine's statement, you have
yourself fallen into a heresy in believing that a father can possibly be his
own son." When Alberic heard this he was almost beside himself with rage,
and straightway resorted to threats, asserting that neither my explanations nor
my citations of authority would avail me aught in this case. With this he left
me.
On the last day of the council, before the session convened, the legate and the
archbishop deliberated with my rivals and sundry others as to what should be.
done about me and my book, this being the chief reason for their having come
together. And since they had discovered nothing either in my speech or in what
I had hitherto written which would give them a case against me, they were all
reduced to silence, or at the most to maligning me in whispers. Then Geoffroi,
Bishop of Chartres, who excelled the other bishops alike in the sincerity of
his religion and in the importance of his see, spoke thus:
"You know, my lords, all who are gathered here, the doctrine of this man,
what it is, and his ability, which has brought him many followers in every
field to which he has devoted himself. You know how greatly he has lessened the
renown of other teachers, both his masters and our own, and how he has spread
as it were the offshoots of his vine from sea to sea. Now, if you impose a
lightly considered judgment on him, as I cannot believe you will, you well know
that even if mayhap you are in the right there are many who will be angered
thereby and that he will have no lack of defenders. Remember above all that we
have found nothing in this book of his that lies before us whereon any open
accusation can be based. Indeed it is true, as Jerome says: `Fortitude openly
displayed always creates rivals, and the lightning strikes the highest peaks.' Have
a care, then, lest by violent action you only increase his fame, and lest we do
more hurt to ourselves through envy than to him through justice. A false
report, as that same wise man reminds us, is easily crushed, and a man's later
life gives testimony as to his earlier deeds. If, then, you are disposed to
take canonical action against him, his doctrine or his writings must be brought
forward as evidence, and he must have free opportunity to answer his
questioners. In that case if he is found guilty or if he confesses his error,
his lips can be wholly sealed. Consider the words of the blessed Nicodemus,
who, desiring to free Our Lord Himself, said: 'Doth our law judge any man
before it hear him and know what he doeth? (John, vii. 51).
When my rivals heard this they cried out in protest, saying: "This is wise
counsel, forsooth, that we should strive against the wordiness of this man,
whose arguments, or rather, sophistries, the whole world cannot resist!" And
yet, methinks, it was far more difficult to strive against Christ Himself, for
Whom, nevertheless, Nicodemus demanded a hearing in accordance with the
dictates of the law. When the bishop could not win their assent to his
proposals, he tried in another way to curb their hatred, saying that for the
discussion of such an important case the few who were present were not enough,
and that this matter required a more thorough examination. His further
suggestion was that my abbot, who was there present, should take me back with
him to our abbey, in other words to the monastery of St. Denis, and that there
a large convocation of learned men should determine, on the basis of a careful
investigation, what ought to be done. To this last proposal the legate
consented, as did all the others.
Then the legate arose to celebrate mass before entering the council, and
through the bishop sent me the permission which had been determined on,
authorizing me to return to my monastery and there await such action as might
be finally taken. But my rivals, perceiving that they would accomplish nothing
if the trial were to be held outside of their own diocese, and in a place where
they could have little influence on the verdict, and in truth having small wish
that justice should be done, persuaded the archbishop that it would be a grave
insult to him to transfer this case to another court, and that it would be
dangerous for him if by chance I should thus be acquitted. They likewise went
to the legate, and succeeded in so changing his opinion that finally they
induced him to frame a new sentence, whereby he agreed to condemn my book
without any further inquiry, to burn it forthwith in the sight of all, and to
confine me for a year in another monastery. The argument they used was that it
sufficed for the condemnation of my book that I had presumed to read it in
public without the approval either of the Roman pontiff or of the church, and
that, furthermore, I had given it to many to be transcribed. Methinks it would
be a notable blessing to the Christian faith if there were more who displayed a
like presumption. The legate, however, being less skilled in law than he should
have been, relied chiefly on the advice of the archbishop, and he, in turn, on
that of my rivals. When the Bishop of Chartres got wind of this, he reported
the whole conspiracy to me, and strongly urged me to endure meekly the manifest
violence of their enmity. He bade me not to doubt that this violence would in
the end react upon them and prove a blessing to me, and counseled me to have no
fear of the confinement in a monastery, knowing that within a few days the
legate himself, who was now acting under compulsion, would after his departure
set me free. And thus he consoled me as best he might, mingling his tears with
mine.