Christianity: First 3000 years – Transcripts Part 3 & 4 – Catholicism

Video 2, Part 3 of the seriesCatholicism

80 years ago,  my mother was a little girl in the Staffordshire Potteries. One day she was out walking  with my grandfather, devout pillar of his local Anglican parish church, when they passed a church that  she thought she’d like to look into because it was Roman Catholic and  she had a girl’s curiosity about it. 

Her father made it quite clear  that he would be highly displeased if she even went inside a Roman  Catholic church to look round. For him, Rome was an alien world, liable to pollute  the English way of life.

That seems a world away now. And my grandfather  isn’t around to stop me exploring. 

So my second journey  into Christianity takes me into the history of the  Church which calls itself Catholic. Its headquarters  is the Vatican in Rome – an independent sovereign state  with influence all over the world. 

Over one billion Christians  look to Rome. That’s more than half  of all Christians on the planet.

But there’s a huge paradox here. 

It’s a story of what can be achieved  when you have friends in high places. The centre of the Western Latin Church is the city of Rome, and the spiritual head of that Church  is the Bishop of Rome – the Pope.

And that’s very odd  when you think about it because Rome is the centre of  the Empire which killed Christ.

And the Empire went on  killing members of the Church for another 300 years, on and off. 

So what happened to give Rome  a Christian destiny?  The obvious focus for the newly  emerging Church was Jerusalem. It’s where Jesus was crucified. But in 70AD  the Romans destroyed the city. Christianity gradually spread south and east.  But one missionary, the Apostle Paul,  looked in a different direction – to Asia Minor, now modern Turkey,  and Greece. 

His letters in the New Testament  trace his journey through the trading routes of  the Empire whose capital was Rome. And eventually, as a prisoner of  the Emperor, Paul came to Rome. It’s said that he was met by his friends here on the Appian Way just outside the city,  that he then spent years  under house arrest before the Roman authorities killed him. 

With the perversity of history, Rome’s brutality would put the city  centre-stage for Christianity. Like Jerusalem, Rome could now claim  a piece of the Christian story. From very early on,  Christians were drawn here, to the underground catacombs  of San Sebastiano, where Paul’s body  was hidden from the authorities.

But they were also drawn  to another martyr’s grave –Simon Peter, one of the 12  original disciples of Jesus. Peter and Paul are equally venerated in these graffiti  from the 3rd century. At that stage, there was no hint that one of them would become the  sole spiritual leader of the Church, nor that the Roman Empire  would become Christian, or Rome the centre of  a worldwide Christian Church. So what on earth –  or what in heaven – happened? 

This is the first glimpse that  many early Christians had of Rome. It’s the port of Ostia, about 12 miles southwest of the city. The first Christians in the West  were Greek speakers, travelling merchants or slaves who sailed here from trading ports  all round the Mediterranean. 

These Christians  met together in secret to share an idea which has seized  millions across 2,000 years. Eternal salvation is open to  anyone who believes in Jesus Christ as the Son of God. And at the heart of their new faith was a ritual symbolising  selfless love – sharing a meal. Christian people  went on breaking bread and drinking wine in thanksgiving  for Jesus Christ, and they probably did so here  in this family home – and the clue to that  is in the mosaic. It’s got fish in it, and fish  are a secret Christian symbol, because the first letters in Greek  for fish are the same as the first letters  in Greek for Jesus Christ.

Christianity began creeping in  from the fringes of Roman society. Church buildings  started openly appearing. This is just one of at least two  in the port of Ostia. 

By the year 251, the Church in Rome  had on its books 46 priests, seven deacons and 52  exorcists, readers and doorkeepers. If you were a traditional-minded  Roman, you’d notice all this. You’d notice crosses  appearing on floors and walls, and you wouldn’t like it. The gods would be offended. Stories spread that Christians actually drank blood during their ceremonies – after all,  that’s what they said they did. But the rumours grew – Christian love feasts  were said to be incestuous orgies. And although Christians  were a non-violent sect,their refusal to sacrifice  to the emperor looked like treason. Christians became scapegoats for a whole heap of new threats  to the Roman Empire. Economic crisis… Social breakdown… Civil war… It culminated in a savage attack on  Christians right across the Empire. 

In the Great Persecution  at the end of the 3rd century church buildings were destroyed and all Christians were required  to sacrifice to the pagan gods. 

Some of those who refused are said to have been slaughtered  here in the theatre at Ostia. It had never been this bad. The Roman Empire  was now gleefully killing Christians just as it had killed Christ  two and a half centuries before. 

You’d have been mad to think that Rome could be the centre of  worldwide Christianity. But Christian fortunes  were about to change dramatically. 

One Emperor did a reverse turn which  took Christianity from a religion of the poor and dispossessed into a religion of the rich and powerful. In the early 4th century, the Roman Empire was torn apart by  rival claims to the imperial throne. During the struggle for power,  one general and ruthless politician made a decision which changed   the course of Christian history. Because of that, Christians have  called him Constantine the Great.

He made the decision  to become a Christian. For reasons which lie buried forever  in his mind, he became convinced that the Christian God  had helped him hack his way to power. This was the God whose followers were  still being persecuted by his rivals, and that might have had  something to do with it.

When Constantine had secured supreme  power in all Roman territories in the east and west, he set about making the Empire Christian. 

To secure the Eastern half, he moved  his capital to a small Greek city overlooking the Bosphorus, which he named after himself – Constantinople.  But he had plans for Rome, too, rooting out Rome’s pagan past and remodelling Christianity  into a state religion. Constantine was a generous  benefactor of this church – 

St Martin on the Mount. It’s rather off the tourist map, but in here  there’s something very special. A glimpse of the true scale of Constantine’s vision  for a Christian Rome, a new Jerusalem with churches to outshine the ancient imperial buildings  of the Roman past. And here it is – a church  which became one of the most famous in Christian history –  the Basilica of St Peter. And it’s one of the few  decent views of what old St Peter’s  looked like inside. In a word – huge. 

All this architectural fuss  about St Peter raises an historical mystery  about Catholic Rome which has never been fully resolved. Why has Paul  not been given equal reverence? One answer lies within  St Peter’s Basilica itself, built over the shrine and probably  the final resting place of Jesus’ right-hand man,  Simon Peter.

It was Jesus  who gave him the nickname which, in Greek, means rock –  Petrus. In three of the Gospels, Jesus says  that on this rock  he will build his Church. 

And so Constantine may well have  focused on a church to St Peter because of that key line. The power of Christian Rome  founded on a Greek pun. TANNOY: Attention, please.  This is a sacred place. Please observe silence  and reflection.

Constantine had given promotion  to the cult of Peter. While curiously,  and surely significantly, he seems to have made no effort  to provide St Paul with anything nearly so grand. Paul’s body lies in the Church  of St Paul’s Outside the Walls – the name says it all. Here we are in what was once a malaria-infested plain, two miles beyond the city walls  of Rome. 

Your average tourist might be  forgiven for not noticing that Paul the Apostle of the Gentiles  had anything to do with the city. It was Paul  who pursued the radical idea of taking Christianity to non-Jews, something the conservative Peter  had been very sceptical about. Surely the Catholic Church owes its existence more to Paul? 

And there’s no better person  to reflect on this mystery than the Abbot of St Paul’s himself. Well, how about a ‘what if’? If the situation had been reversed,  what would the church look like now? If Paul had been the centre… Even that image, Paul the centre,  doesn’t make sense. Right. Paul by nature represented  this movement on the fringe. And it’s clear to me how Peter took the dominant position because Peter represented  the stability at the core. The basic… The rock. So I mean  I think it would have been a much less centralised church, probably.  Risky question –  good thing or bad thing? So you’re asking  a solid Roman Catholic whether it’s good  to have the strong centre or not? Well, of course it’s important  to have a strong centre.

But what’s going on around it  is equally important. It’s a pity, in a way… I’d like to see the Pope declaring his Pauline ministry as well, which would then kind of bring the  two a bit more into, into equality. 

I was grateful to the Abbot  for his gentle frankness. There’s one thing that  the modern papacy really pushes at the faithful –  "Rome knows best". The centre is what matters. But it took the Church a long time to make this  the big theme in Catholicism.  

And there is no guarantee  that it will always be like that. The crucial steps  towards centralised power were taken 30 years  after Constantine’s death. The decision to promote Peter  over Paul was exploited to the full. That laid foundations  for the later papacy. 

It was during the time of  Pope Damasus I that the Bishop of Rome  was established as bishop in unbroken succession  from St Peter.  

Well, I’ll stick my neck out and say that I don’t believe  that Peter was Bishop in Rome. You’d be hard put to find anyone  before the time of Pope Damasus who made that claim. The list of the Bishops of Rome  up to about 180 is just that – a list, linking Damasus back to  the disciple who knew Jesus, Peter.  

You might say that Paul  was now surplus to requirements. As successor of Peter, the Bishop of Rome became the Holy Father, Pope, of all Christians in the West. Now Damasus set out to give Christianity the glory which an imperial religion demanded. He brought the Good News, not to the poor and the downtrodden, to whom Jesus had preached, but to the Roman nobility. 

There’s a monumental room just  above the catacombs of San Sebastiano which shows precisely how.Well, this chamber  may not be much to look at now, but it’s something very precious – it’s a building actually commissioned  by Bishop Damasus himself, and what it is,  is a luxury mausoleum for the aristocratic members  of his congregation in Rome. Pope Damasus also personally composed Latin inscriptions glorifying the suffering  of the Christian martyrs.  There’s rather more elegance than evidence in what he wrote. This is actually one of  Damasus’ inscriptions. It’s about a very obscure saint called Eutychius. "Eutychius martyr crudelia iussa  tyranni. Carnificumque vias…" "Eutychius the martyr showed that he could "conquer the evil commands of the  tyrant and the ways of the world". But what’s nice about it as well  is the lettering. It’s the best, most expensive  imperial lettering you could get, like on an imperial  Roman inscription. It’s a symbol that the Church  is no longer the Church of a few Greek-speaking  traders, it’s the Church  of all Roman society at all levels. The Catholic Church   was no longer an upstart. It had friends in high places. Now a religion fit for gentlemen. 

But I don’t want to  leave the impression that the Catholic story  is just about power politics. If you’re in any sense  a Western Christian,  you live with one legacy in  particular from this period, even if you fight against it. The idea that Adam and Eve have  left us totally corrupted by sin. That was the conclusion of Augustine,  Bishop of Hippo in North Africa, the father of Western theology. 

As a young man, Augustine  lived the life of a playboy. He was also a scholar  with a brilliant career ahead of him. But it all turned sour. Then, in a garden in Milan, came a moment when he began to see a purpose in his life. He heard a child chanting  "tolle lege" – "take up and read". 

Augustine opened Paul’s Epistle To The Romans at random. Paul confronted him with his own sin and told him that the only way to  salvation was through purity of life. Augustine became obsessed with the source of sin in Adam and Eve’s  disobedience to God, and his answer bequeathed the Western Latin Church an idea which not every Christian has  found in the Bible – original sin. Augustine came to believe  that all humans inherit sin  from the sin of Adam and Eve, and that sexual desire is an appetite  of the baser physical body rather than the soul, and that the sexual act is the way that sin is transmitted  from one generation to the next. 

It means that you and I  are so corrupted by sin there’s nothing we can do  to save ourselves from Hell. Only God can do that, by his grace. And there is no reason why  he shouldn’t make random decisions as to who to send to Heaven  and who to leave in Hell. We have no say in the matter, because we’re nothing but corruption.  

That idea of predestination still  hangs around Western Christianity, Catholic and Protestant. As does Augustine’s dark view of sex. And maybe the modern West is so obsessed with good sex as  the symbol of a fulfilled life precisely because  the Western Latin Church has been so long obsessed with  bad sex as the root of human sin. 

The Christian Church’s humble beginnings were now a distant memory. A golden age seemed to beckon. But this turned out to be a mirage. 

In the 5th century,  Barbarian invaders overran the Western half  of the empire. And in 410 they took Rome itself. At that moment, the Latin Church  could easily have crumbled and become a footnote  in European history. 

To see what happened, I’ve come to  North Italy and the city of Ravenna. The centuries while the Church stood alone after the fall of Rome are often called the Dark Ages,  as if civilised life collapsed.

Actually that’s not true. The Church  was not about to die with the Empire, but it was at a crossroads.  

A choice of routes lay ahead. This is the Church of San Vitale. It marks one possible future – to look east to Byzantium, the surviving half  of the Roman Empire and one half of the imperial Church. San Vitale was built by an Emperor  of the East, Justinian, whose ambition was to win back the whole territory of the old Roman Empire. Ravenna was one of his conquests, the Church of San Vitale  one of his legacies. Eventually his branch of imperial  Christianity would become Orthodoxy, and flourish  in the Balkans and Russia. 

But there was another option for the  Western Church, even more radical. It could choose to do some sort of deal with the new barbarian rulers. With the invading Franks in Gaul, Visigoths in Spain, Vandals in the African provinces,  Ostrogoths in north Italy.  

Contrary to the image of barbarians,  these people were not savages. Most of them were already Christians, just not Catholic Christians. I’ve come to the Church of Sant’  Apollinare Nuovo, also in Ravenna.

It was built for Theodoric,  King of the Ostrogoths. The trouble was,  in the eyes of the Catholic Church, everything about his Christianity  was heretical. 

He was a follower of Arius, who believed that Jesus Christ was not fully eternal and divine  in the way that God the Father was. Now what’s so precious about  this place is that it’s not just  an Arian Church building.

We’ve got Arian pictures, mosaics.  We’ve got the life of Christ, miracles, we’ve got the miraculous draught of fishes, for instance. On this wall he’s a young Christ. He’s got no beard. When we go round to this side,  later scenes in the life of Christ like his betrayal in the Garden  of Gethsemane, he’s got a beard!

So, the Arian Christ – like us, he grows older. He’s human. 

Faced with the choice of an alliance  with the east or with the Arians, what would the Latin Church do?  Its decision  forever shaped western Christendom. It decided to go it alone,  and look to the Pope to guide it. And in the end, it was the  Latin Church which survived intact and it was Arian Christianity which was wiped from the record.

Well, we’ve got an intriguing case  of Catholics censoring mosaics here. Because this is a picture of a palace – it’s helpfully labelled "palatium". And it’s the palace  of the Arian King, Theodoric.

But he’s missing! He would be where that great area  of gold mosaic is, but he’s gone. And either side of him would be his courtiers. But instead of the courtiers, you’ve  got these rather boring curtains. But they haven’t done it very well  because, you see, they’ve left hands on the columns.  Hand, hand, fingers!

There, they’ve gone.  They just don’t exist any more. 

So how did the Latin Church  survive on its own? Well, the decisions made by  that wily politician Pope Damasus began to pay off.  The Church  still had influential friends. The Latin Church survived because of a great choice made by people clinging to  shreds of imperial power – the Roman aristocracy.

Once they’d ruled the empire, now they decided to rule the Church. Roman noblemen became bishops to preserve the world they loved. And when the Empire collapsed, the  Church stepped into the power vacuum. 

The Western Church had survived. It had adapted. 400 years earlier, Christianity  was against the establishment. Now, it was the establishment. Not surprisingly, the Bishops of Rome were in an expansive mood. Rome would play a new role as the capital of a Western Christian Empire of the mind, greater than any Empire created by the Roman army. 

 

Video 2, Part 4 of the series – Catholicism 

The Church no longer had the backing of imperial might but it had one institution, a christian powerhouse for just such a mission – the monastery. 

I’m in central France, just  outside of Poitiers and this is Ligugé Abbey, probably the very first monastery in Western Christianity. It was founded in 360AD by one of the earliest monks of the west, St  Martin of Tours,  (316-397). 

Many miracle stories quickly grew up around Martin at even at the time one or two people who had known him found some of them rather hard to take.  This chapel here commemorates one of the best known ones of them which was that he actually raised a young man from dead. 

Whatever the truth of the stories, what really mattered about Martin was that he had power. St Martin exploited his charisma to the full using an approach to Catholic expansion that would  be the model for Catholic conversion for the next 800 years. First convert Kings and Queens, the rest will follow. Monks prayed for the salvation of royalty and noblemen but they also gave all society something that they desperately needed – a sense of order, design and harmony.  Monasteries became beacons of order thanks to a rule attributed to a monk called Benedict and the community of Ligugé Abbey lives under that rule today. 

Of the Monastic vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, I think obedience is the most difficult  for modern individualists to understand, especially that bit of the Benedictine rule which allows the Abbot to beat his monks. But the aim was to strike a balance between the spiritual development of the individual monk and the  peace and well being of the community. And you have to remember that this was a terrifying lawless age and people longed for the lost security of the Roman empire. 

Hundreds of Benedictine monasteries were founded. They were a  vision of God’s imperial court in heaven. Between 5th and 9th century the midwife of Catholicism in Europe was not imperial might but the monastery.  

Now the Arian peoples had brought  their own Christianity westwards  as far as Spain. Now, Rome would outflank them.  

The Pope sent a mission  reaching beyond the Arians,  to the former Roman colony  of Britannia. In 597, a party of 40 Roman monks  and priests landed in Kent. They had been sent by Pope Gregory I,  himself a monk and one of those Roman aristocrats  who had taken over the Church. It’s said that his mother, Silvia, sent his monastery  daily meals on a silver dish. Gregory couldn’t have been less like an upper-class twit playing at being a monk. He was the first Pope  to take an initiative in mission to the boundaries of the lost Empire. 

It was led by a monk  from his own monastery in Rome – a priest called Augustine. Augustine’s often been celebrated as the man who brought Christianity  to England. Actually, it wasn’t quite like that. Britannia already had some Christians  from its days as a Roman province. But for two centuries it had been  in the power of non-Christians – Anglo-Saxon warriors  from mainland Europe. In the mere eight years of life  left to him,

Augustine laid a solid foundation  for an Anglo-Saxon Church which was quite exceptional in Europe  in its devotion to Rome. His seat of power,  Canterbury Cathedral, was given the dedication  Christ Church because it was then the dedication  of the Pope’s Cathedral in Rome. It was the Pope  who appointed Augustine the first Archbishop of Canterbury. And in fact,  Pope Gregory gave Augustine a special liturgical garment, the pallium, and this was a symbol that the power  of the Archbishops of Canterbury came from Rome.  

It’s easy to forget  that the English Church was under Roman obedience for 900 years – far longer than it’s been Protestant. Eventually, the Church of England turned its back on the Church of Rome in the 16th-century Reformation. But it forgot one little thing. Bizarrely, the coat of arms of the Archbishop of Canterbury still incorporates  the Y shape of the pallium. It’s a little piece of heraldry which the Protestant Reformation in England  either failed to notice,  or decided to ignore. When Augustine died there were around  a dozen monasteries in England. A century later,  there were at least 200. 

But these distant isles made  their own special contribution. They gave shape to one of  the distinctive practices of the Catholic Church – Confession. I’ve come as far west in Europe  as you can get, to where monks lived a life  as intense and austere as anything in Church history. I’m heading for Skellig Michael  off the Kerry coast in Ireland.  

These monks were not Anglo-Saxon,  but Celtic Christians. They came to settle out here  in the Atlantic Ocean as far back as the 6th century. It’s easy to see them as isolated  from the Church in Rome. But for them, the sea was not a barrier, but a series of pathways  to their neighbours and beyond. They shared books with other monks  right across the Mediterranean, and Latin was the language of  their liturgy and their literature.

These are man-made steps,  600 of them, designed by the monks  to take me up to the monastery. I have to confess that I started up  these stairs cheerfully enough, but vertigo has taken over  and I simply can’t go on. 

So I will never see the monastery  on Skellig Michael. I cannot understand  why the monks lived here. It feels like the edge of the world. It seems absurd to me that,  living here, Irish monks could have  an upbeat view of human nature. But they did. Such a contrast with the pessimism  of Augustine of Hippo. 

And out of this optimism  came a new practice designed to cope with that sense  of guilt and falling short that Christians call sin. They came up with "tariff books" – guidebooks to dealing with sin. The principle is you can find out or  decide what sort of penalty, penance, deals with what sort of sin. And you can list them, and there  they are for priests to deal with. Who wouldn’t jump at the chance of  having a forgiveness-of-sin tariff?

And this is the beginning of  individual confession to a priest. It’s a very powerful thing to do, to offer someone forgiveness. Confessions remain very precious  for Catholics, but it’s also been an enormous source of conflict and anger in the Western Church. 

That’s because forgiveness  is very personal. So is a priest getting in the way or  is he helping you reach out to God? That idea doesn’t sit very well with Augustine of Hippo’s views  about total human corruption. And aren’t you rather  manipulating God by setting up measurements  for forgiveness? The clash between those two thoughts went on lurking  in the life of Latin Christians In the 16th-century Reformation it was the central issue to split the Western Church. It’s an impressive witness  to the energy of Celtic Christians that this remote corner of Europe had such a profound influence  on the whole Church.  

Western Latin Catholicism had not  faded during the so-called Dark Ages. It had survived, and more than that, it had spread its Christian message  to a world beyond Rome. But it was still vulnerable. With the Emperor gone, it was  at the mercy of kings and noblemen who were often  little better than bandits.  

And a new religious rival  had risen in the East – Islam. At the end of the 8th century, with  Islam relentlessly pressing westward, Pope Leo III  turned the clock back 400 years and made Western Christianity  an imperial power once more. Just like Constantine I, the new Emperor, Charles,  would be nick named "the Great". 

Charlemagne. The ancient spa town of Aachen  in south-west Germany was once home to Charlemagne, the most powerful man  in 8th-century Western Europe. But also a man with  a fetish for history.  Charlemagne loved to wallow  in the hot pools of Aachen, pretending to be a Roman  at the baths. But he was actually descended  from barbarians, the Franks. They were one of the peoples  who’d swept into Western Europe and smashed the central structures  of the Roman Empire. But the Franks were different  from the other barbarians. They’d taken up Catholic  rather than Arian Christianity.  

Charlemagne’s Empire extended from beyond the Pyrenees into the heart of modern Germany. But his ambition was to reunite  the old Roman Empire, west and east – a Christian Roman Empire. His first priority was to become the protector and defender  of the Catholic Church. In return, Pope Leo III  crowned him as Emperor of the West on Christmas Day, 800,  in St Peter’s Basilica in Rome. Charlemagne’s successors called themselves Holy Roman Emperors. And many of them  were crowned on this throne in Charlemagne’s Cathedral in Aachen. No Pope before had crowned monarchs. 

Did this now mean that the Church  was mightier than the Empire? For the next few centuries,  Popes and Emperors quarrelled about who best represented  Christian Rome and which side had supreme authority over the other. There never was a clear answer. But at least Emperor and Pope  shared a vision – an imperial Western Latin Church. And that gave Latin Christianity  a new self-assurance. 200 years later, in 1054, the West would finally split from the Church in Constantinople, creating distinct Catholic and Orthodox Churches. Far from damaging the Western Latin  Church, the split became the platform for an ambitious new Pope, Gregory  VII, to revolutionise the Church. So much has happened to the Roman Catholic Church in the centuries since then, but it’s still indebted to Gregory’sreforms 1,000 years ago. 

The big theme of Catholicism  has come to be the centre. Central control is now what matters, and what marks it out  from other denominations. The Church expects obedience  from the faithful. But in the Middle Ages it couldn’t  always take that for granted. In converting Europe,  monks and missionaries had chiefly targeted the nobility,  reasoning that the rest would follow. But the Church  now had a greater ambition.

What Gregory now wanted to do was to micro-manage the fate  of every soul in Europe. 

And to drive through this change,  the Papacy first targeted the clergy. Gregory made a change which was to redefine the popular image of the Catholic cleric. Before that, most clergy who were not monks would expect to marry. Gregory started a campaign to make  all clergy automatically celibate. That was because he wanted  the best, the most disciplined and the most loyal clergy possible. He deeply distrusted married clergy. They might found dynasties  and might make Church lands their own hereditary family property. With its foot soldiers in place,  the Church now had a presence in every village and town, every parish, doing its best to control  every aspect of people’s lives. 

What emerged was a single Western  Latin Catholic society unified by the Latin language and underpinned by a complex  religious bureaucracy. It reflected the lost Roman Empire,  it outshone the Roman Empire. And what was it all for? Nothing  less than making all society holy. But far and away  the most centralising step was taken by the Pope himself  when he told the world what he thought he was,  or what he’d like to be – a universal monarch reigning over  all the rulers of the earth. A set of so called "Dictates"  spelled it out –27 very blunt statements of power. No Pope before  had said it quite like this. It didn’t actually use the word  "infallibility" – that wouldn’t happen  until the 19th century – but it did say that every Pope is undoubtedly made a saint  by the merits of St Peter.  

Well, excuse me! Frankly, I don’t see every Pope  as a living saint, and neither have countless Catholics over the centuries. And in fact the Popes after Gregory have been pretty wary  about his statement. 

But neither have they said  that he was wrong. This absolutism  would give later Protestants yet another reason to break away  from the Western Latin Church. But this was not just  a greedy Church grabbing power. It was also intended to  offer something to the faithful. Not just any old something –  salvation. 

For 1,000 years the Christian picture  of the afterlife had been stark. After death,  you either went to Heaven or Hell. But now the Latin Church picked up  an old idea from early centuries. Purgatory – a place for purging.

Where the souls of the dead  burned in fire. The difference from Hell  was that Purgatory wasn’t forever. And Purgatory had only one exit –  up to Heaven. It was tailor-made for those  who in this life feel ordinary – not very good, not very bad, but certainly not good enough  to go straight to Heaven. It was a very comforting doctrine. 

Crucially, it gave people a sense  that while still on this earth they could do something about their salvation. They could pray  or they could do good works to shorten their time in Purgatory. The whole system became an industry  in the Western Church – the Purgatory industry,  a vast factory of prayer and ceremonial observance. It was one of the most successful  ideas in Christian history. It satisfied millions of people  for centuries on end.

By the end of the 11th century, the Catholic Church  was European society’s single most important institution.     

The best-organised monarchy  in Europe. It promised a structure to people’s  life on earth and salvation in death. That’s more than the old Roman  Emperors could ever have offered.  

But the reality was that half of  the world’s professing Christians were now subject  to a different religion. Islam controlled the whole  of North Africa, Spain, Sicily, and much of Western Asia. It even occupied  the original holy city, Jerusalem. And so, in 1095,  in a great blaze of publicity, the Catholic Church mounted  an ambitious military campaign – the First Crusade. There’d been a time  when Christian leaders had tried to stop Christians from becoming soldiers Now, atrocities were committed  in the name of the God of Love. For the first time, the notion of  "holy war" entered Christianity. The Crusades are an embarrassment  for Christianity. In seeking to recapture the Holy Land  they caused misery and destruction. It was idealism,  but it was also Christian love turned to violence and arrogance. 

But I’m here in London,  at the Temple Church, to show that the Crusades  left a more complex legacy. Some say this is modelled on  the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, but I think  that’s to hide an awkward truth. It’s a copy of one of the most famous  Muslim buildings in the world. It was built by the Knights Templar, an order of soldier monks  founded during the Crusades to protect pilgrims to the Holy Land.

They’d seized the Temple Mount  in Jerusalem and made it their headquarters,  hence the name Templars. All over Europe,  they built these circular churches to look like what they thought  was the Jerusalem Temple. It’s a good thing they didn’t realise  it was actually a Muslim building – the Dome of the Rock on the Temple Mount. 

This was the Templars’ English HQ. Burial here in the Round Church was almost as good as being buried  in Jerusalem. These knights are portrayed  in their early 30s, the age at which Christ died and the age at which the dead  will rise on his return. Men like these flocked  to join the enterprise. The Crusades became yet another means of purging sin – like Purgatory, but this time  through action in this life. And that led to a further new Western Catholic idea. The Crusades were sold to noblemen  and humble folk alike as another way of winning salvation. Whatever sins someone committed on  Crusade were more than cancelled out simply by being on Crusade. And this was the first specimen  of something which became big business in Western Europe alongside Purgatory – the indulgence. An indulgence  granted you time off from Purgatory. Later, they became as routine as the modern lottery ticket  for a good cause. In the end, you simply bought them.  

Even now, the idea of Crusade  has its defenders But I have to say that I find  the Crusading era one of the darkest chapters  in the history of Catholicism. There was at least one positive and hugely important outcome of the Crusades, a legacy that’s still with us now. I wouldn’t be a professor without it,  so it must be good.  

Thanks to the Crusades,  Islam gave us universities. And my employer, Oxford University,  was one of the first.  Academic robes, professorial chairs, lectures, the qualification of a  degree itself are not Western ideas.

They are all copied  in remarkable detail from medieval Islamic schools  of higher education, and all to cope with  the flow of new information pouring in from the Middle East. And it was only really the death of  Edward VI which stopped him coming. He seems quietly to have  pocketed the travel expenses and not sent them back, but he was very wise because… In many ways, the Crusades  mark a watershed in the history of the Latin Church. 

In 1,000 years,  the small persecuted Jewish sect had risen to a peak of unprecedented  and, frankly, unexpected power. Certainly, no-one could have  expected the Roman Papacy. But what was much more predictable was rebellion against  the concept of papal monarchy. Dissent would now cast  a long shadow over the Church.

It led to more innovations,  some of which are difficult for modern Christians  to comprehend or even to forgive. At a great Council  of the Church in 1215, Pope Innocent III tried to secure  the loyalty of the faithful by spelling out what it meant  to be a Catholic. Confession and communion  at least once a year. The Council also told people   what to believe about the Mass. Bread and wine miraculously become  the body and blood of Christ. And they helpfully recommended  a way in which philosophers could explain this miracle – transubstantiation. 

That’s a big word for ideas taken not  from the Bible, but from Aristotle, who lived long before Jesus Christ. Failure to accept that the Mass was a  miracle could land you into trouble. And there were plenty of other  forms of religious energy which unnerved the Pope, like the Cathars,  who rejected the Mass altogether. Of course, churchmen didn’t mind  religious fervour in itself. It was when it got out of  their control they got worried. And then they were quick  to label it heresy and punish it. 

Pope Innocent III created structures  to deal with heresy – Inquisitions. The English didn’t actually use them, but this medieval courtroom in the University Church of St Mary   in Oxford gives you a sense  of what it must have felt like to be in front of the Inquisition. It’s still the official courtroom  of the Anglican Diocese of Oxford.

It’s difficult for modern Westerners to understand the mind  of an Inquisitor. But we need to remember that they were clergy, and they saw what they were doing as an aspect of the pastoral role  of a priest to make society better. But there is a fine line in any  system between idealism and sadism. Inquisitions were no worse than most medieval courts. Torture might  be used to extract confessions. Those on trial had no right  to defence counsel. Penalties ranged from  wearing a cross of penitence… to pilgrimage… to imprisonment…  to death by burning at the stake. That’s one way  of dealing with heresy – smash heretics and punish them. 

The other way  is to reinvent the Church. To rediscover core ideas  like poverty, humility, compassion. The sort of things  which Jesus Christ preached. During the 12th century,  new religious movements and maverick holy men attacked  the wealth and power of the Church. Instead of handing all of  them over to the Inquisitions,

Pope Innocent took a huge risk. He brought them into the fold. His hope was to regain something which the Western Church  had forgotten. The most famous of these holy men was called Francis. It’s difficult  not to have heard of Francis, and it’s easy to be sentimental  about him – the loveable saint  immortalised in stories retold to generations of children. He talked to the animals! Actually, you might think he was mad. He chucked away his wealth,  he proclaimed the Christian message to birds in a graveyard,  and he threw the Church into turmoil by saying that Christ was  a down-and-out with no possessions. He might have been burned as a heretic, as many others were. But luckily for him, alongside  his almost pathological nonconformity  

Francis was deeply loyal  to the Church. It was in a church, this church, where Francis  heard his first call to action. He wanted people  to see the ordinariness, the humanity of Christ, so that they could love  and worship him better as God. And that made the Catholic Church  more human and approachable, too. It was Francis who invented the idea  of a Christmas crib in church. The first time, he brought along  a real ox and a real ass. He wanted to remind us of the humble  origins of the Christian faith – God becoming human not in a palace  but in a stable. This was a new, more  personal,  emotional view of Christ, With a mother, Mary,  who suffered like any mother when her son died horribly  and before his time. So, the Catholic Church  accepted Francis. It welcomed the new movements of friars who lived his message. But it actually did nothing  to shed its own wealth and power. It’s just as well Francis never  saw this grand and expensive church built over the humble Chapel  where his mission had begun. 

By the end of the 13th century,  the Western Latin Church had created nearly all the structures which shaped it up to the Reformation era. Monks, nuns and friars  sent up their prayers to Heaven  in an ever-spreading array  of religious houses. Thousands of parish churches made up a giant honeycomb of dioceses and archdioceses across Europe. And millions of Catholics  owed their unfailing allegiance to the Pope in Rome. There would be setbacks, for sure,  but by the 15th century, the Papacy emerged largely unscathed, powerful, wealthy and confident. So much so, it invested its energies in rebuilding Constantine’s St Peter’s to make it the grandest building  in Christendom. But in the 120 years it took for a succession of popes  and architects to complete, the world had changed.

By the time the new Basilica  was dedicated in 1626, Christianity had been convulsed   by a new movement of  revolt which had almost  swept the Papacy away.  In every age of Christian history, even when the church has  been  vigorous and self-confident, there have been restless individuals liable to claim that it could do better.

It was that sort of questioning and  re-examination of Christian origins which led to  the 16th-century   Reformation. The Reformation has proved  the greatest fault line yet in Western Latin Christianity.

But first we need to visit  that earlier and greater fault line, when the Latin and Greek halves of the Roman Empire went their separate ways.  So next time I’m travelling east,  to meet the Orthodox Churches.
 

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