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Ambassador
College
Church History
Lecture 14
Peter
De Bruys / Arnold of Bresca / Henri the Deacon
I. PETER DE BRUYS - EARLY 1100's A.D.
A. Maybe beginning of Thyatira Era
1. Active in S.
France in the beginning of the 12th century
2. There are
indications of remnants from these eras still extant.
3. Rev 2:19 There
to be a first work that would be eclipsed by a later work
B. First of Anti-Catholic movement.
1. Little known
about family background.
2. Ecclesiastical
priest.
3. Ministry lasted
20 years.
4. Burned at the
stake in c.1125 - some say 1139
5. Followers called
Petrobrusians
6. Successors -
Henri and Arnold.
C. Reference book: Dictionary of Sects and
Hereseys
D. Located in Southern France.
E. Peter the Venerable (historian) only
present source of information on Peter de Bruys.
1. He wrote Contra
Petrobrusans
2. In it he called
Peter:
"That wretched little man"
F. Catholic beliefs he was opposed to:
1. Chanting
(popular method of Catholic worship).
2. Fasting (by
Catholic definition, simply abstaining from red meats).
3. Perverted monks
and priests were put into prison.
G. Five doctrines as documented by Peter
the Venerable:
1. Baptized only
mature adults with understanding.
2. Idle
superstition to build churches.
3. Abhorrence for
crucifixes.
a.
He is noted as saying:
"The cross should be hated as an instrument of torture"
b.
While burning crosses at the town of St. Gilles, near Nimes, he was himself cast
into the flames by enraged onlookers
4. Blood and body of
Christ not Eucharist (doctrine of transubstantiation refuted).
5. Oblations,
prayers, and good works of no use to the dead. Against purgatory.
H. Petrobrusians:
1. Not strong
evidence that they kept the Sabbath.
2. Believed one had
to live and practice right way of life not just perform the works.
The
Dictionary of Sects and Heresies says:
"The sect of the Petrobrusians, was the earliest of the anti-sacerdotal
communities which the profound discontent inspired by the tyranny of Rome called
into existence at the beginning of the twelfth century. They were the followers
of an eloquent but ignorant heretic named Peter of Brueys. The date of his birth
is unknown, nor are we better informed as to his family, life, or personal
character. All the information which has reached us of this remarkable person is
contained in a tract or epistle composed for the refutation of his doctrines,
and addressed to certain Bishops...by Peter the Venerable.... Although the
account of an enemy is always to be read with suspicion, the high and
disinterested character of the Abbot of Clugny gives more than ordinary value to
his narrative...(by) 1125...the author tells us, the heresy had been flourishing
for twenty years. Like many others of the reformers, Peter de Brueys was an
ecclesiastic; apparently one of the secular clergy, and it would seem the
possessor of a benefice in some diocese in Southern France, a region where the
degradation of the clergy had reached its lowest point of infamy.... His
principal doctrines, which (with one exception, his repugnance to the Cross)
were more ably extended by his more powerful successor, Henry the Deacon ...The
capital charges upon which he is arraigned are: 1) He rejected infant baptism,
alleging that no miraculous gifts were possible in that ceremony, which he
declared to be wholly void when performed on the person of an irresponsible
infant. 2) He denied that any special sanctity resided in consecrated buildings
forbidding the erection of churches, and directing that such churches as did
exist should be pulled down. 3) In particular he objected to the worship of the
Cross, alleging that the accursed tree should be held in horror by all
Christians as the instrument of the torture and death of the Redeemer. 4) He
denied any sort of real presence in the Eucharist. Whether or not he retained
the office of the communion as a memorial rite is unknown, but as his rejection
of the Eucharist as such seems inevitable...5) He was bitterly opposed to
prayers, oblations, alms, and other good deed done on behalf of the dead.
Besides these five capital errors, which form the subject of the Clugniac
Abbot's refutation, must be added a total prohibition of chanting and all use of
sacred music. Puritanical as some of these tenets seem, de Brueys was no lover
of asceticism. He inculcated marriage, even of priests, as a high religious
usage, and would have abolished all the fasts of the Church. The deleterious
effects of his teaching are thus summed up by the authority we have quoted: 'The
people are re-baptised, churches profaned, altars overturned, crosses are burnt,
meat eaten openly on the day of the Lord's Passion, priests scourged, monks cast
into dungeons, and by terror or torture constrained to marry.... Strangely
enough this popular heretic met his death at the hands of the people. Seized by
a mob in an emeute caused by his preaching (but which some assume to have been
organized by the ecclesiastical authorities) he was committed to the flames at
ST. Gilles in the Arelatensian diocese. His career, which commenced about A.D.
1104, was thus terminated about A.D. 1225.
II. ARNOLD OF BRESCA
A. Background:
1. Started in
France, Preached in Rome c.1145.
2. Hanged, burned
and ashes thrown in Tiber River.
3. Very politically
oriented - a political reformer.
B. His beliefs:
1. Believed root of
evil to be the wealth of RCChurch
2. Used Bible as
source of authority vs. tradition.
3. All his work
occurred within the Roman church.
4. His followers
went into hiding later became known as Waldensians and Lombards.
From
A History of the Christian Church, by Schaff, we read:
"During the pontificates of Innocent II., Eugene III., and Adrian IV.
occurred the interesting episode of Arnold of Brescia, an unsuccessful
ecclesiastical and political agitator, who protested against the secularization
of the church, and tried to restore it to apostolic poverty and apostolic
purity... He proclaimed the principle that the Church and the clergy, as well as
the monks, should be without any temporal possessions, like Christ and the
Apostles, and live from the tithes and the voluntary offerings of the people.
Their calling is purely spiritual. All the things of this earth belong to the
laity and the civil government. He practiced what he taught, and begged his
daily bread from house to house. He was a monk of severe ascetic piety,
enthusiastic temper, popular eloquence, well versed in the Scriptures, restless,
radical, and fearless. He agreed with the Catholic orthodoxy, except on the
doctrines of the Eucharist and infant baptism; but his views on these sacraments
are not known. With this ecclesiastical scheme he combined a political one. He
identified himself with the movement of the Romans to emancipate themselves from
the papal authority, and to restore the ancient republic. By giving all earthly
power to the laity, he secured the favor of the laity, but lost the influence of
the clergy. It was the political complication which caused his ruin.... Arnold
sought the welfare of the Church in her complete separation from the State and
of the clerical office from secular entanglements.... The author of the HISTORIA
PONTIFICALIS says that Arnold's doctrine agreed with the Gospel, but stood in
crying contrast with the actual condition
of things...(he) even went so far as to make poverty a condition of salvation
for priests and monks.... Arnold stepped out of the ecclesiastical into the
political sphere, and surrounded the new republic with the halo of religion. He
preached in his monastic gown, on the ruins of the Capitol, to the patres
conscripti, and advised them to rebuild the Capitol, and to restore the old
order of senators and knights... Arnold was banished from Rome in 1154, and soon
afterwards hanged by order of Emperor Frederick I.... His body was burnt and his
ashes were thrown into the Tiber, in 1155. The Arnoldists continued for some
time to defend the doctrines of their master, and were declared heretics by a
council of Verona, 1184, after which they disappeared." p. 97-102
III. HENRI OF LUASSANE:
A. He was a Benedictine monk
B. Eloquent orator.
1. Some priests
turned the pulpit over to him.
2. Powerful voice -
converted many.
The Dictionary of Sects and Heresies says:
"He was of imposing stature, wore a cropped beard and flowing hair, went
barefooted in winters, with a frame so robust as to endure with ease the utmost
rigours of the climate, and a voice so powerful that his adversaries compared it
to the roar of a legion of devils." p. 183
C. Fought two main areas:
1. Fought Catholic
church on its clergy not marrying.
2. Foe of the
clergy's lifestyle in general.
The Dictionary of Sects and Heresies says:
"Henry dwelt much on two points. Although a monk by education, and by
profession and practice a rigid ascetic, he was emphatically the apostle of
marriage and the uncompromising foe of the clergy." p. 183
D. Had universal Influence.
E. Some members of the church may have
been present in his movement (not conclusive).
F. His death:
1. His death
precedes Arnold a few years.
2. Died - 1149.
Schaff's History of the Christian Church
says:
"Of Henry of Lausanne, Peter's successor, we know more. He was a
Benedictine monk, endowed with an unusual gift of eloquence. His name is
associated with Lausanne because, as Bernard tells us, he at one time lived
there.... Henry won the people, but drew upon himself the hostility of the
clergy whose vices he denounced. The bishop, on his return, expelled Henry from
his diocese. The evangelist then went to Lausanne and from there to Southern
France, joining in the spiritual crusade opened by Peter de Bruys. He practiced
poverty and preached it to the laity. One of the results of his preaching was
that women of loose morals repented and young men were persuaded to marry them.
Cardinal Alberic, sent to stamp out the Henrician heresy, called to his aid St.
Bernard, the bishop of Chartres and other prelates. Henry was seized and
imprisoned. What his end was is not known.... Peter and Henry revived the
Donatistic view that piety is essential to a legitimate priesthood. The word
"Church" signifies the congregation of the faithful and consists in
the unity of the assembled believers and not in the stones of the building. God
may be worshipped as acceptably in the market place or a stable as in a
consecrated edifice. They preached on the streets and in the open places. As for
the cross, as well might a halter or a sword be adored? Peter is said to have
cooked meat in the fire made by the crosses he piled up and burnt at St. Gilles,
near the mouth of the Rhone. Song, they said, was fit for the tavern, but not
for the worship of God. God is to be worshipped with the affections of the heart
and cannot be moved by vocal notes or wooed by musical modulations.
"The doctrine of transubstantiation
was distinctly renounced, and perhaps the Lord's Supper, on the ground that
Christ gave up his body on the night of the betrayal once for all. Peter not
only called upon the priests to marry, but according to Peter the Venerable, he
forced unwilling monks to take wives.... Peter argued that for nearly five
hundred years Europe had had no Christian not baptized in infancy, and hence
according to the sectaries had no Christians at all.... The synod of Toulouse,
1119, in condemning as heretics those who rejected the Lord's Supper, infant
baptism, and priestly ordination, condemned the Petrobrusians, though Peter de
Bruys is not mentioned by name. Those who hung upon the preaching of Peter de
Bruys and Henry of Lausanne were soon lost among the Cathari and other
sects." p. 483-485
IV.
THESE THREE ARE NOTED BY PROTESTANTS
A. They are proclaimed as protestant
before the reformation
B. They actually prepared the way for the
greater work that was to come through Peter Waldo.
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