Andrea Barbiani, Saint Peter Damian Italian, 18th Century (d. 1779) Ravenna, Biblioteca Classense |
"Beloved:
I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus,
who will judge the living and the dead,
and by his appearing and his kingly power:
proclaim the word;
be persistent whether it is convenient or inconvenient;
convince, reprimand, encourage through all patience and teaching.
For the time will come when people will not tolerate sound doctrine
but, following their own desires and insatiable curiosity,
will accumulate teachers and will stop listening to the truth
and will be diverted to myths.
But you, be self-possessed in all circumstances;
put up with hardship;
perform the work of an evangelist;
fulfill your ministry."
I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus,
who will judge the living and the dead,
and by his appearing and his kingly power:
proclaim the word;
be persistent whether it is convenient or inconvenient;
convince, reprimand, encourage through all patience and teaching.
For the time will come when people will not tolerate sound doctrine
but, following their own desires and insatiable curiosity,
will accumulate teachers and will stop listening to the truth
and will be diverted to myths.
But you, be self-possessed in all circumstances;
put up with hardship;
perform the work of an evangelist;
fulfill your ministry."
(First Reading for the Memorial of Saint Peter Damian, February 21)
February 21 is the feast of Saint Peter Damian, who lived
from 1007 to 1072, a period that perhaps to most of us seems impossibly far
away, literally a thousand years ago.
However, a look at the life and times of Peter Damian is, in some ways,
even more shocking because it sounds uncomfortably like today. It is, therefore, extremely interesting that
the much commented on meeting of the heads of every bishops’ conference,
worldwide, to discuss the abuse of minors should open on his feast day.
Peter Damian was born into a noble family in the area around
Ravenna, on the Adriatic coast of Italy.
Once this had been the capitol of the Byzantine Empire in Italy. However, by the
time of his birth it had lessened in importance versus the rising star of the
Adriatic, Venice. Being noble doesn’t,
by itself, guarantee wealth, either then or now, and Peter’s family seems to
have been large and poor. His parents
died when he was still a child and his care was assumed by one of his older
brothers. This brother sounds a bit like
the evil sisters in Cinderella, for he sent his own brother to work as a
shepherd and deprived him of status and birthright. After a few years, a different brother, a man
who was a priest in the diocese of Ravenna, learned of his younger brother’s
plight, adopted him and took him with him to Ravenna for an education. In gratitude for this brotherly kindness,
Peter added that brother’s name, Damian, to his own name.
Peter Damian grew up to be a fine scholar and a notable
teacher. He contributed a great deal to the
ongoing creation of medieval philosophy.
However, in spite of his success, Peter Damian was uncomfortable with the
corruption he saw around him, especially corruption within the Church. He gave
up his academic career in favor of life in a recently formed monastery called
Fonte Avellena. This was one of a series
of monastic foundations that were shaking up the face of western European
monasticism. Up until this time the
great Benedictine foundation of Cluny in France had been the summit of the
monastic life. From this point on a
variety of other possible ways of living out an orderly, vowed, existence would
be possible in many different ways, from multiple religious orders.
Attributed to Girolamo Muziano, Peter Damian Writing the Rule for His Hermits Italian, 16th Century Vatican, Vatican Museums, Apostolic Palace, Map Rooms |
Fonte Avellena was a monastery of hermits. Many years later it would be merged into
another religious order, called the Camaldolese Order, founded around this time
by Saint Romauld (also from the Ravenna area).
But at the time it seems to have been a sole institution, not affiliated
with any other religious foundation. Saint
Peter Damian eventually became Abbot of Fonte Avellena. He wrote a rule for his monastery and also
contributed much to philosophy and theology and is remembered today primarily
for these writings. It is for these works that he is placed in Heaven by Dante
Alighieri, in his third book of the Divine
Comedy, Paradise.
|
However, in the last year or so, renewed interest has
focused on another of his activities, as a monastic and Church reformer. The last years of the tenth century were bad
ones for the Church. One might say with
some justice that there is a recurring flow within the greater history of the
Church. Approximately every 500 years a
wave of sin seems poised to overwhelm the Church, to nullify its mission and to
destroy it from within. One such
occurred in the fifth century, when the wave of barbarians from outside
combined with the lack of faithfulness within.
But great reformers such as Saint Benedict and Saint Gregory the Great arose
and redirected the Church toward a more rigorous following of the Gospel. Similarly, the year 1500 found the Church in
the hands of the horribly corrupt Pope Alexander VI, with his string of
acknowledged children, reigning over a corrupt and venal clergy. The disgust among the faithful caused by this
was one of the factors that led within a few years to the beginning of the
Protestant upheaval, to the Council of Trent and, eventually, to the great
reforming saints of the sixteenth century.
In the years around 1000 the problems were no
different. There was terrible
corruption, among them the selling of sacramental offices, such as that of
bishop, and worst of all, much sexual sin among the clergy. Priests were still permitted to marry at this
time, but there were those who were unfaithful to their wives, unmarried
priests with mistresses and a huge wave of homosexual activity among the
clergy, especially in the abuse of boys, young men and fellow clerics. Indeed, it sounds like virtually the same
situation we find ourselves in today.
When, last summer, Pope Francis called the heads of the
bishops’ conferences worldwide to Rome for a meeting on the topic of sex abuse
and the protection of minors and announced the date of February 21 as the
opening day, many commentators mentioned the irony of the choice of dates. For it is the feast day of Saint Peter
Damian.
Ercole de Roberti, Virgin and Child with Saints Anne, Elizabeth, Augustine and Peter Damian Italian, c. 1479-1481 Milan, Pinacoteca di Brera |
In his day, Peter Damian was asked by a string of reforming
popes to undertake the task of cleaning up the situation. He was somewhat reluctant to undertake this
as he was very contented with his monastic life and with his work. However, he accepted the job and went on to
become a very effective reformer, traveling considerable distances to do his
work. By reminding the world what
following Christ should look like and contrasting it with the debauched lives
many were leading, he persuaded them to repent and sin no more. He used the information he gained from the
work to write a book called The Book
of Gomorrah, which was recently published in a new translation1. It makes hair raising reading that, sadly,
sounds like it comes directly from current 2019 newspaper accounts Then, as now, it is evident that for some
clerics the Church is a career path and not a vocation, leading to a cynical
attitude to all aspects of church life. So,
not much has changed in a thousand years!
Josef Ferdinand Fromiller, Virgin and Child Appearing to Peter Damian Austrian, c. 1740-1750 Osslach, Monastery Church |
Peter Damian worked tirelessly for several years preaching
and writing and guiding the clergy and the monks back to fidelity, to renounce
their sin. Along the way he was made the
Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia and was also sent on diplomatic missions for the
popes. However, he eventually renounced
his titles and position and returned to the life of his monastery, from which
he had been called by necessity and obedience.
He did continue to undertake some missions for the Holy See and on one
of these he died in 1072.
Up till now, the Church has been rescued from these recurring
periods of clerical vice by great reforming voices. In our current period they have not yet
appeared. We can pray that the event of
the Vatican meeting, opening on Saint Peter Damian’s feast day, will be the
first event of a new reform movement, with great saints among it, to lead the
Church away from sin and back to fidelity to the Lord.
Philipp Veit, Scenes from Dante's Paradiso German, c. 1818-1824 Rome, Casino Massimo |
“Grant, we pray,
almighty God, that we may so follow the teaching and example of the Bishop
Saint Peter Damian, that, putting nothing before Christ and always ardent in
the service of your Church, we may be led to the joys of eternal light. Through
our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of
the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.” 2
© M. Duffy, 2019
1. Saint Peter Damian,
The Book of Gomorrah and Saint Peter
Damian’s Struggle Against Ecclesiastical Corruption, Translated and
Annotated, with Biographical Introduction by Matthew Cullinan Hoffman, New
Braunfels, Texas, Ite Ad Thomam Books and Media, 2015.
2. Optional Prayer
for Feast of Saint Peter Damian.
Scripture texts in this work are taken from the New American Bible,
revised edition © 2010, 1991, 1986, 1970 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine,
Washington, D.C. and are used by permission of the copyright owner. All Rights
Reserved. No part of the New American Bible may be reproduced in any form
without permission in writing from the copyright owner.
No comments:
Post a Comment