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Aelfric, Those Who Pray, Work,
and Fight
The monastic orders, which
in the seventh and eighth centuries had made
England a center of learning, went into decline
as a result of the Danish invasions, when
the great abbeys in the north — including
Bede's at Wearmouth and Jarrow — were
sacked and destroyed. In the ninth century,
King Alfred succeeded in containing the Danes
by a series of successful battles; assisted
by his clergy, he also worked to stimulate
a revival of religion and learning. Alfred
made the first English translation of Boethius's
Latin Consolation of Philosophy. Although
probably not original with Alfred, it is
in an addition to his translation that the
notion of three estates that, respectively,
pray, fight, and work surfaces for the first
time. Alfred comments on the "tools" by
which a king reigns: ". . .
he must have prayer-men and army-men and
workmen (gebedmen, fyrdmen, weorcmen)
. . . without these tools no king
can exhibit his craft."
A more elaborate articulation
of this division is found in the works of
Aelfric (ca. 955.ca. 1020), a Benedictine
monk who became abbot of a monastery at Eynsham.
Aelfric was an important figure in the Benedictine
revival that promoted religion, education,
learning, and art such as the Benedictional
of St. Ethelwold. He was a prolific writer
of religious and didactic works . sermons,
saints' lives, and biblical and other
translations. In manuscripts, the passage
below is sandwiched between a free adaptation
of the Book of Maccabees and a life of the
Anglo-Saxon king and martyr St. Oswald. Aelfric's
chief concern seems to be to distinguish
the duties of clergy . monks and priests
. from those of the warrior class. Both are
engaged in warfare, but the former fight
against spiritual instead of human foes,
and their battle is the more important. Possibly
Aelfric is arguing practically for the exemption
of the clergy from military service against
the Danes, but he is also expressing the
ancient position of the Church that martyrdom
is preferable to fighting back against oppressors.
That position is dramatized eloquently in
the Dream of the Rood, where the Cross
says, "They pierced me with dark nails:
the wounds are seen on me, open gashes of
hatred. Nor did I dare harm any of them" (NAEL
8, 1.28). Within a century the Church's
attitude toward war would change with the
preaching of the Crusades.
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It is well known that in this world
there are three orders, set in unity:
these are laboratores, oratores, bellatores.
>> note 1
Laboratores are those who labor for our living;
Oratores are those who plead for our peace with God;
Bellatores are those who battle to protect our towns
and defend our land against an invading army.
Now the farmer works to provide our food,
And the worldly warrior must fight against our foes,
and the servant of God must always pray for us
and fight spiritually against invisible foes.
>> note 2
Therefore greater is the struggle of the monks
against the invisible devils who lay traps around us,
than that of worldly men who contend against carnal foes
and fight in plain sight against men they can see.
Now worldly warriors must not to the worldly battle
force the servants of God away from the spiritual battle,
for it will be better for them that the invisible enemies
be defeated than the visible ones.
And it would do great harm were they to forsake God's service
and turn to the worldly battle, which is none of their business.
Julian the Apostate
>> note 3 and
the cruel Caesar
wanted to compel priests to worldly warfare,
as well as the holy monks, and ordered them thrown in prison.
Then was Apolonius, abbot of the Egyptians,
locked up in prison with his brothers in faith.
But God's angel came to him in prison by night
with heavenly light and unlocked the prison.
Also the centurion who had locked them in there
came in the morning with a great multitude
and said that his house collapsed suddenly with an earthquake,
and his dearest men lay fallen there dead.
And he bade the saints to go away from there,
and they went back into the wilderness with hymns of praise.
God's servants must preserve their innocence,
just as Christ set the example Himself
when he commanded Peter to put up his sword,
and healed through his might the man's ear,
which Peter had cut off,
>> note 4 and
demonstrated His goodness.
Now the monk who bows to Saint Benedict's rule
and gives up all things of the world, why will he go back
to worldly weapons and forsake his warfare
against invisible foes so as to offend his Creator?
The servant of God may not fight together with men of the world
if he is to have speed in spiritual warfare.
There was no holy servant of God after His Savior's suffering
who would ever defile his hands by fighting,
but they bore the tortures of infidel tormentors
and gave up their lives in innocence
for God's faith, and now they live with God,
because they would not even kill a bird. |
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