Portiuncula Chapel replica in Pembroke Ma
Built by Richard Cardinal Cushing.
WHAT AN INDULGENCE IS NOT
To facilitate explanation, it may be well to state what an
indulgence is not. It is not a permission to commit sin, nor a pardon of
future sin;
neither could be granted by any power. It is not the forgiveness of the guilt
of sin; it supposes
that the sin
has already been forgiven. It is not an exemption from any law or duty, and
much less from the obligation consequent on certain kinds of sin, e.g., restitution; on
the contrary, it means a more complete payment of the debt which the sinner
owes to God.
It does not confer immunity from temptation or remove the possibility of
subsequent lapses into sin.
Least of all is an indulgence the purchase of a pardon which secures the
buyer's salvation or releases the soul of another from Purgatory. The absurdity
of such notions must be obvious to any one who forms a correct idea of what the
Catholic Church really teaches on this subject.
Portiuncula
(PORZIONCULA or PORZIUNCOLA).
A town and
parish situated about three-quarters of a mile from Assisi. The town, numbering
about 2000 inhabitants and officially known as Santa Maria degli Angeli, has
grown up around the church (basilica) of Our Lady of the Angels and the
adjoining Franciscan monastery. It was here that on 24 Feb., 1208, St. Francis
of Assisi recognized his vocation; here was for the most part his permanent
abode, after the Benedictines (of the Cluny Congregation from about 1200) had presented
him (about 1211) with the little chapel Portiuncula, i.e. a little portion (of
land); here also he died on Saturday, 3 October, 1226. According to a legend,
the existence of which can be traced back with certainty only to 1645, the
little chapel of Portiuncula was erected under Pope Liberius (352-66) by
hermits from the Valley of Josaphat, who had brought thither relics from the grave of the Blessed Virgin.
The same legend relates that the chapel passed into the possession of St.
Benedict in 516. It was known as Our Lady of the Valley of Josaphat or of the
Angels -- the latter title referring, according to some, to Our Lady's ascent into heaven
accompanied by angels
(Assumption B.M.V.); a better founded opinion attributes the name to the
singing of angels
which had been frequently heard there. However this may be, here or in this
neighbourhood was the cradle of the Franciscan Order, and on his death-bed St.
Francis recommended the chapel to the faithful protection and care of his
brethren. Concerning the form and plan of the first monastery built near the
chapel we have no information, nor is the exact form of the loggia or platforms
built round the chapel itself, or of the choir for the brothers built behind it,
known. Shortly after 1290, the chapel, which measured only about twenty-two
feet by thirteen and a half, became entirely inadequate to accommodate the
throngs of pilgrims. The altar piece, an Annunciation, was painted by the
priest, Hilarius of Viterbo, in 1393. The monastery was at most the residence,
only for a short time, of the ministers-general of the order after St. Francis.
In 1415 it first became associated with the Regular Observance, in the care of
which it remains to the present day. The buildings, which had been gradually
added to, around the shrine were taken down by order of Pius V (1566-72), except
the cell in which St. Francis had died, and were replaced by a large basilica
in contemporary style. The new edifice was erected over the cell just mentioned
and over the Portiuncula chapel, which is situated immediately under the
cupola. The basilica, which has three naves and a circle of chapels extending
along the entire length of the aisles, was completed (1569-78) according to the
plans of Jacob Barozzi, named Vignola (1507-73), assisted by Alessi Galeazzo
(1512-72). The Doric order was chosen. The basilica forms a Latin cross 416
feet long by 210 feet wide; above the middle of the transept rises the
magnificent cupola, flanked by a single side-tower, the second never having
been finished. In the night of 15 March, 1832, the arch of the three naves and
of the choir fell in, in consequence of an earthquake, but the cupola escaped
with a big crack. Gregory XVI
had all restored (1836-40), and on 8 Sept., 1840, the basilica was
reconsecrated by Cardinal
Lambruschini. By Brief of 11 April, 1909, Pius X raised it to a
"patriarchal basilica and papal chapel". The high altar was therefore
immediately rebuilt at the expense of the Franciscan province of the Holy Cross
(also known as the Saxon province), and a papal throne added. The new altar was
solemnly consecrated by Cardinal De Lai on 7 Dec., 1910. Under the bay of the
choir, resting against the columns of the cupola, is still preserved the cell
in which St. Francis died, while, a little behind the sacristy, is the spot
where the saint, during a temptation, is said to have rolled in a briar-bush,
which was then changed into thornless roses. During this same night the saint
received the Portiuncula Indulgence.
The representation of the reception of this Indulgence on the facade
of the Portiuncula chapel, the work of Fr. Overbeck (1829), enjoys great
celebrity.
The Portiuncula
Indulgence could at first
be gained only in the Portiuncula chapel between the afternoon of 1 Aug. and
sunset on 2 Aug. On 5 Aug., 1480 (or 1481), Sixtus IV extended it to
all churches of the first and second orders of St. Francis for Franciscans; on
4 July, 1622, this privilege was further extended by Gregory XV to all the
faithful, who, after confession and the reception of Holy Communion, visited
such churches on the appointed day. On 12 Oct., 1622, Gregory granted the same
privilege to all the churches of the Capuchins; Urban VIII granted it for
all churches of the regular Third Order on 13 Jan., 1643, and Clement X for all churches
of the Conventuals on 3 Oct., 1670. Later popes extended the privilege to all
churches pertaining in any way to the Franciscan Order, even to churches in
which the Third Order held its meetings (even parish churches, etc.), provided
that there was no Franciscan church in the district, and that such a church was
distant over an Italian mile (1000 paces, about 1640 yards). Some districts and
countries have been granted special privileges. On 9 July, 1910, Pius X (only, however, for
that year) granted the privilege that bishops could appoint any public churches
whatsoever for the gaining of the Portiuncula Indulgence, whether on 2
Aug. or the Sunday following (Acta Apostolicae Sedis, II, 1910, 443 sq.; Acta
Ord. Frat. Min., XXIX, 1910, 226). This privilege has been renewed for an
indefinite time by a decree of the S. Cong. of Indul., 26 March, 1911 (Acta
Apostolicae Sedis, III, 1911, 233-4). The Indulgence is toties-quoties, that is, it may be gained as often
as one wishes (i.e. visits the church); it is also applicable to the souls in purgatory.
While the
declarations of the popes have rendered the Portiuncula Indulgence certain and
indisputable from the juridico-canonistic standpoint, its historical
authenticity (sc. origin from St. Francis) is still a subject of dispute. The
controversy arises from the fact that none of the old legends of St. Francis
mentions the Indulgence,
and no contemporary document or mention of it has down to us. The oldest
document dealing with the Indulgence
is a notary's deed of 31 October, 1277, in which Blessed Benedict of Arezzo,
whom St. Francis himself received into the order, testifies that he had been
informed by Brother Masseo, a companion of St. Francis, of the granting of the Indulgence by Honorius III
at Perugia. Then follow other testimonies, for example, those of Jacob Cappoli
concerning Brother Leo, of Fr. Oddo of Aquasparta, Peter Zalfani, Peter John
Olivi (d. 1298, who wrote a scholastic tract in defence of this indulgence about 1279),
Blessed John of Laverna (Fermo; d. 1322), Ubertinus of Casale (d. after 1335),
Blessed Francis of Fabriano (d. 1322), whose testimony goes back to the year
1268, etc. In addition to these rather curt and concise testimonies there are
others which relate all details in connection with the granting of the Indulgence, and were
reproduced in numberless books: e.g. the testimony of Michael Bernardi, the
letters of Bishop Theobald of Assisi (1296-1329) and of his successor Conrad
Andreae (1329-37). All the testimonies were collected by Fr. Francesco Bartholi
della Rossa in a special work, "Tractatus de Indulgentia S. Mariae de
Portiuncula" (ed. Sabatier, Paris, 1900). In his edition of this work,
Sabatier defends the Indulgence,
although in his world-famous "Vie de S. Francois" (Paris, 1894), he
had denied its historicity (412 sqq.); he explains the silence of St. Francis
and his companions and biographers as due to reasons of discretion etc. Others
seek to accord more weight to the later testimonies by accentuating their
connection with the first generation of the order; others again find allusions
to the Indulgence
in the old legends of St. Francis. On the other hand, the opponents regard the
gap between 1216 and 1277 as unbridgable, and hold that the grounds brought
forward by the defenders to explain this silence had vanished long before the
latter date. No new documents have been found recently in favour of the
authenticity of the Indulgence.
[Note: The
norms and grants of indulgences
were completely reformed by Pope Paul VI after the Second Vatican Council in
his Apostolic Constitution "Indulgentiarum Doctrina" (1967), and the
Portiuncula Indulgence
was again confirmed at that time. According to the Enchiridion Indulgentiarum,
the Catholic faithful may gain a plenary indulgence on 2 August
(the Portiuncula) or on such other day as designated by the local ordinary for
the advantage of the faithful, under the usual conditions (sacramental
Confession, Holy Communion, and prayer for the intentions of the Supreme
Pontiff), by devoutly visiting the parish church, and there reciting at least
the Lord's Prayer and the Creed. The Indulgence applies to the
cathedral church of the diocese, and to the co-cathedral church (if there is
one), even if they are not parochial, and also to quasi-parochial churches. To
gain this, as any plenary indulgence,
the faithful must be free from any attachment to sin, even venial sin. Where
this entire detachment is wanting, the indulgence is partial.]
The word indulgence (Lat. indulgentia, from indulgeo, to be kind or tender) originally
meant kindness or favor; in post-classic Latin it came to mean the remission of
a tax or debt. In Roman law and in the Vulgate of the Old Testament (Is., lxi,
1) it was used to express release from captivity or punishment. In theological
language also the word is sometimes employed in its primary sense to signify
the kindness and mercy of God.
But in the special sense in which it is here considered, an indulgence is a
remission of the temporal punishment due to sin, the guilt of which
has been forgiven. Among the equivalent terms used in antiquity were pax,
remissio, donatio, condonatio.
WHAT AN
INDULGENCE IS NOT
To facilitate explanation, it may be well to state what an
indulgence is not. It is not a permission to commit sin, nor a pardon of
future sin;
neither could be granted by any power. It is not the forgiveness of the guilt
of sin; it supposes
that the sin
has already been forgiven. It is not an exemption from any law or duty, and
much less from the obligation consequent on certain kinds of sin, e.g., restitution; on
the contrary, it means a more complete payment of the debt which the sinner
owes to God. It
does not confer immunity from temptation or remove the possibility of
subsequent lapses into sin.
Least of all is an indulgence the purchase of a pardon which secures the
buyer's salvation or releases the soul of another from Purgatory. The absurdity
of such notions must be obvious to any one who forms a correct idea of what the
Catholic Church really teaches on this subject.
WHAT AN INDULGENCE
IS
An indulgence is the extra-sacramental remission of the
temporal punishment due, in God's
justice, to sin
that has been forgiven, which remission is granted by the Church in the
exercise of the power of the keys, through the application of the superabundant
merits of Christ and of the saints, and for some just and reasonable motive.
Regarding this definition, the following points are to be noted:
€ In the Sacrament of Baptism not only is
the guilt of sin
remitted, but also all the penalties attached to sin. In the Sacrament of
Penance the guilt of sin
is removed, and with it the eternal punishment due to mortal sin; but there still
remains the temporal punishment required by Divine justice, and this
requirement must be fulfilled either in the present life or in the world to
come, i.e., in Purgatory.
An indulgence offers the penitent sinner the means of discharging this debt
during his life on earth.
€ Some writs of indulgence--none of them,
however, issued by any pope or council (Pesch, Tr. Dogm., VII, 196, no.
464)--contain the expression, "indulgentia a culpa et a poena", i.e.
release from guilt and from punishment; and this has occasioned considerable
misunderstanding (cf. Lea, "History" etc. III, 54 sqq.). The real
meaning of the formula is that, indulgences presupposing the Sacrament of
Penance, the penitent, after receiving sacramental absolution from the guilt of
sin, is afterwards freed
from the temporal penalty by the indulgence (Bellarmine, "De
Indulg"., I, 7). In other words, sin is fully pardoned,
i.e. its effects entirely obliterated, only when complete reparation, and
consequently release from penalty as well as from guilt, has been made. Hence Clement V (1305-1314)
condemned the practice of those purveyors of indulgences who pretended to
absolve" a culpa et a poena" (Clement, I. v, tit. 9, c. ii); the Council of Constance
(1418) revoked (Sess. XLII, n. 14) all indulgences containing the said formula;
Benedict XIV (1740-1758)
treats them as spurious indulgences granted in this form, which he ascribes to
the illicit practices of the "quaestores" or purveyors (De Syn.
dioeces., VIII, viii. 7).
€ The satisfaction, usually called the
"penance", imposed by the confessor when he gives absolution is an
integral part of the Sacrament of Penance; an indulgence is extra-sacramental;
it presupposes the effects obtained by confession, contrition, and sacramental
satisfaction. It differs also from the penitential works undertaken of his own
accord by the repentant sinner -- prayer, fasting, alms-giving -- in that these
are personal and get their value from the merit of him who performs them,
whereas an indulgence places at the penitent's disposal the merits of Christ
and of the saints, which form the "Treasury" of the Church.
€ An indulgence is valid both in the
tribunal of the Church and in the tribunal of God. This means that it
not only releases the penitent from his indebtedness to the Church or from the
obligation of performing canonical penance, but also from the temporal
punishment which he has incurred in the sight of God and which, without the
indulgence, he would have to undergo in order to satisfy Divine justice. This,
however, does not imply that the Church pretends to set aside the claim of God's justice or that she
allows the sinner to repudiate his debt. As St. Thomas says (Suppl., xxv. a. 1
ad 2um), "He who gains indulgences is not thereby released outright from
what he owes as penalty, but is provided with the means of paying it." The
Church therefore neither leaves the penitent helplessly in debt nor acquits him
of all further accounting; she enables him to meet his obligations.
€ In granting an indulgence, the grantor
(pope or bishop) does not offer his personal merits in lieu of what God demands from the
sinner. He acts in his official capacity as having jurisdiction in the Church,
from whose spiritual treasury he draws the means wherewith payment is to be
made. The Church herself is not the absolute owner, but simply the
administratrix, of the superabundant merits which that treasury contains. In
applying them, she keeps in view both the design of God's mercy and the demands
of God's justice. She
therefore determines the amount of each concession, as well as the conditions
which the penitent must fulfill if he would gain the indulgence.
VARIOUS KINDS OF INDULGENCES
An indulgence that may be gained in any part of the world is
universal, while one that can be gained only in a specified place (Rome,
Jerusalem, etc.) is local. A further distinction is that between perpetual
indulgences,which may be gained at any time, and temporary,which are available
on certain days only, or within certain periods. Real indulgences are attached
to the use of certain objects (crucifix, rosary, medal); personal are those
which do not require the use of any such material thing, or which are granted
only to a certain class of individuals, e.g. members of an order or
confraternity. The most important distinction, however, is that between plenary
indulgences and partial. By a plenary indulgence is meant the remission of the
entire temporal punishment due to sin so that no further
expiation is required in Purgatory.
A partial indulgence commutes only a certain portion of the penalty; and this
portion is determined in accordance with the penitential discipline of the
early Church. To say that an indulgence of so many days or years is granted
means that it cancels an amount of purgatorial punishment
equivalent to that which would have been remitted, in the sight of God, by the performance of
so many days or years of the ancient canonical penance. Here, evidently, the
reckoning makes no claim to absolute exactness; it has only a relative value.
God alone knows what
penalty remains to be paid and what its precise amount is in severity and
duration. Finally, some indulgences are granted in behalf of the living only,
while others may be applied in behalf of the souls departed. It should be
noted, however, that the application has not the same significance in both
cases. The Church in granting an indulgence to the living exercises her
jurisdiction; over the dead she has no jurisdiction and therefore makes the
indulgence available for them by way of suffrage (per modum suffragii), i.e. she petitions God to accept these works
of satisfaction and in consideration thereof to mitigate or shorten the
sufferings of the souls in Purgatory.
WHO CAN
GRANT INDULGENCES
The distribution of the merits contained in the treasury of
the Church is an exercise of authority (potestas iurisdictionis), not of the power conferred by Holy
orders (potestas ordinis). Hence the pope, as supreme head of the Church on earth, can grant all
kinds of indulgences to any and all of the faithful; and he alone can grant
plenary indulgences. The power of the bishop, previously unrestricted, was
limited by Innocent III
(1215) to the granting of one year's indulgence at the dedication of a church
and of forty days on other occasions. Leo XIII (Rescript of 4 July.
1899) authorized the archbishops
of South America to grant eighty days (Acta S. Sedis, XXXI, 758). Pius X (28 August, 1903)
allowed cardinals
in their titular churches and dioceses to grant 200 days; archbishops, 100; bishops,
50. These indulgences are not applicable to the souls departed. They can be
gained by persons not belonging to the diocese, but temporarily within its
limits; and by the subjects of the granting bishop, whether these are within
the diocese or outside--except when the indulgence is local. Priests, vicars
general, abbots, and generals of religious orders cannot grant indulgences
unless specially authorized to do so. On the other hand, the pope can empower a
cleric who is not a priest to give an indulgence (St. Thomas,
"Quodlib.", II, q. viii, a. 16).
DISPOSITIONS
NECESSARY TO GAIN AN INDULGENCE
The mere fact that the Church proclaims an indulgence does
not imply that it can be gained without effort on the part of the faithful.
From what has been said above, it is clear that the recipient must be free from
the guilt of mortal sin.
Furthermore, for plenary indulgences, confession and Communion are usually
required, while for partial indulgences, though confession is not obligatory,
the formula corde saltem contrito, i.e. "at least with a contrite heart ", is the
customary prescription. Regarding the question discussed by theologians whether
a person in mortal sin
can gain an indulgence for the dead, see PURGATORY. It is also
necessary to have the intention, at least habitual, of gaining the indulgence.
Finally, from the nature of the case, it is obvious that one must perform the
good works -- prayers, alms deeds, visits to a church, etc. -- which are
prescribed in the granting of an indulgence. For details see
"Raccolta".
AUTHORITATIVE
TEACHING OF THE CHURCH
The Council of
Constance condemned among the errors of Wyclif the proposition:
"It is foolish to believe in the indulgences granted by the pope and the
bishops" (Sess. VIII, 4 May, 1415; see Denzinger-Bannwart,
"Enchiridion", 622). In the Bull "Exsurge Domine", 15 June,
1520, Leo X
condemned Luther's
assertions that "Indulgences are pious frauds of the faithful"; and
that "Indulgences do not avail those who really gain them for the
remission of the penalty due to actual sin in the sight of God's justice"
(Enchiridion, 75S, 759), The Council of Trent (Sess,
XXV, 3-4, Dec., 1563) declared: "Since the power of granting indulgences
has been given to the Church by Christ, and since the Church from the earliest
times has made use of this Divinely given power, the holy synod teaches and
ordains that the use of indulgences, as most salutary to Christians and as approved
by the authority of the councils, shall be retained in the Church; and it
further pronounces anathema
against those who either declare that indulgences are useless or deny that the
Church has the power to grant them (Enchridion, 989). It is therefore of faith
(de fide)
€ that the Church has received from Christ
the power to grant indulgences, and
€ that the use of indulgences is salutary
for the faithful,
BASIS OF THE DOCTRINE
An essential element in indulgences is the application to one
person of the satisfaction performed by others. This transfer is based on three
things: the Communion of Saints, the principle of vicarious satisfaction, and
the Treasury of the Church.
(1) The
Communion of Saints
"We being many, are one body in Christ, and every one
members one of another" (Rom., xii, 5). As each organ shares in the life
of the whole body, so does each of the faithful profit by the prayers and good
works of all the rest-a benefit which accrues, in the first instance, to those
who are in the state of grace, but also, though less fully, to the sinful
members.
(2) The
Principle of Vicarious Satisfaction
Each good action of the just man possesses a double value:
that of merit and that of satisfaction, or expiation. Merit is personal, and
therefore it cannot be transferred; but satisfaction can be applied to others,
as St. Paul writes to the Colossians (i, 24) of his own works: "Who now
rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up those things that are wanting of
the sufferings of Christ, in my flesh, for his body, which is the Church,"
(See SATISFACTION.)
(3) The
Treasury of the Church
Christ, as St. John declares in his First Epistle (ii, 2),
"is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for
those of the whole world." Since the satisfaction of Christ is infinite,
it constitutes an inexhaustible fund which is more than sufficient to cover the
indebtedness contracted by sin,
Besides, there are the satisfactory works of the Blessed Virgin Mary
undiminished by any penalty due to sin, and the virtues,
penances, and sufferings of the saints vastly exceeding any temporal punishment
which these servants of God
might have incurred. These are added to the treasury of the Church as a
secondary deposit, not independent of, but rather acquired through, the merits
of Christ. The development of this doctrine in explicit form was the work of
the great Schoolmen, notably Alexander of Hales (Summa, IV, Q. xxiii, m. 3, n.
6), Albertus Magnus (In IV Sent., dist. xx, art. 16), and St. Thomas (In IV
Sent., dist. xx, q. i, art. 3, sol. 1). As Aquinas declares (Quodlib., II, q.
vii, art. 16): " All the saints intended that whatever they did or
suffered for God's
sake should be profitable not only to themselves but to the whole Church."
And he further points out (Contra Gent., III, 158) that what one endures for
another being a work of love, is more acceptable as satisfaction in God's sight than what one
suffers on one's own account, since this is a matter of necessity. The
existence of an infinite treasury of merits in the Church is dogmatically set
forth in the Bull "Unigenitus", published by Clement VI, 27 Jan., 1343,
and later inserted in the "Corpus Juris" (Extrav. Com., lib. V, tit.
ix. c. ii): "Upon the altar of the Cross ", says the pope,
"Christ shed of His blood not merely a drop, though this would have
sufficed, by reason of the union with the Word, to redeem the whole human race,
but a copious torrent. . . thereby laying up an infinite treasure for mankind.
This treasure He neither wrapped up in a napkin nor hid in a field, but
entrusted to Blessed Peter, the key-bearer, and his successors, that they
might, for just and reasonable causes, distribute it to the faithful in full or
in partial remission of the temporal punishment due to sin." Hence the
condemnation by Leo X
of Luther's assertion
that "the treasures of the Church from which the pope grants indulgences
are not the merits of Christ and the saints" (Enchiridion, 757). For the
same reason, Pius VI
(1794) branded as false, temerarious, and injurious to the merits of Christ and
the saints, the error of the synod of Pistoia that the treasury of the Church
was an invention of scholastic subtlety (Enchiridion, 1541).
According to
Catholic doctrine, therefore, the source of indulgences is constituted by the
merits of Christ and the saints. This treasury is left to the keeping, not of
the individual Christian,
but of the Church. Consequently, to make it available for the faithful, there
is required an exercise of authority, which alone can determine in what way, on
what terms, and to what extent, indulgences may be granted.
THE POWER TO
GRANT INDULGENCES
Once it is admitted that Christ left the Church the power to
forgive sins
(see PENANCE), the power of granting indulgences is logically inferred. Since
the sacramental forgiveness of sin extends both to the
guilt and to the eternal punishment, it plainly follows that the Church can
also free the penitent from the lesser or temporal penalty. This becomes
clearer, however, when we consider the amplitude of the power granted to Peter
(Matt., xvi, 19): "I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven.
And whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven:
and whatsoever thou shaft loose on earth, it shall be loosed also in
heaven." (Cf. Matt., xviii, 18, where like power is conferred on all the
Apostles.) No limit is placed upon this power of loosing, "the power of
the keys ", as it is called; it must, therefore, extend to any and all
bonds contracted by sin,
including the penalty no less than the guilt. When the Church, therefore, by an
indulgence, remits this penalty, her action, according to the declaration of
Christ, is ratified in heaven. That this power, as the Council of Trent affirms,
was exercised from the earliest times, is shown by St. Paul's words (II Cor.,
ii, 5-10) in which he deals with the case of the incestuous man of Corinth. The
sinner had been excluded by St. Paul's order from the company of the faithful,
but had truly repented. Hence the Apostle judges that to such a one "this
rebuke is sufficient that is given by many" and adds: "To whom you
have pardoned any thing, I also. For what I have pardoned, if I have pardoned
any thing, for your sakes have I done it in the person of Christ." St.
Paul had bound the guilty one in the fetters of excommunication; he now
releases the penitent from this punishment by an exercise of his authority --
"in the person of Christ." Here we have all the essentials of an
indulgence.
These
essentials persist in the subsequent practice of the Church, though the
accidental features vary according as new conditions arise. During the
persecutions, those Christians
who had fallen away but desired to be restored to the communion of the Church
often obtained from the martyrs a memorial (libellus pacis) to be presented to the bishop, that
he, in consideration of the martyrs' sufferings, might admit the penitents to
absolution, thereby releasing them from the punishment they had incurred. Tertullian refers to this
when he says (Ad martyres, c. i, P.L., I, 621): "Which peace some, not
having it in the Church, are accustomed to beg from the martyrs in prison; and
therefore you should possess and cherish and preserve it in you that so you
perchance may be able to grant it to others." Additional light is thrown
on this subject by the vigorous attack which the same Tertullian made after he
had become a Montanist. In the first part of his treatise "De
pudicitia", he attacks the pope for his alleged laxity in admitting adulterers
to penance and pardon, and flouts the peremptory edict of the "pontifex
maximus episcopus episcoporum ". At the close he complains that the same
power of remission is now allowed also to the martyrs, and urges that it should
be enough for them to purge their own sins -- sufficiat martyri
propria delicta purgasse". And, again, "How can the oil of thy little
lamp suffice both for thee and me?" (c. xxii). It is sufficient to note
that many of his arguments would apply with as much and as little force to the
indulgences of later ages.
During St. Cyprian's time (d.
258), the heretic Novatian claimed that none of the lapsi should be readmitted
to the Church; others, like Felicissimus, held that such sinners should be
received without any penance. Between these extremes, St. Cyprian holds the
middle course, insisting that such penitents should be reconciled on the
fulfillment of the proper conditions. On the one hand, he condemns the abuses
connected with the libellus, in particular the custom of having it made out in blank by
the martyrs and filled in by any one who needed it. "To this you should
diligently attend ", he writes to the martyrs (Ep. xv), "that you
designate by name those to whom you wish peace to be given." On the other
hand, he recognizes the value of these memorials: "Those who have received
a libellus from
the martyrs and with their help can, before the Lord, get relief in their sins, let such, if they be
ill and in danger, after confession and the imposition of your hands, depart
unto the Lord with the peace promised them by the martyrs " (Ep. xiii,
P.L., IV, 261). St. Cyprian,
therefore, believed that the merits of the martyrs could be applied to less
worthy Christians
by way of vicarious satisfaction, and that such satisfaction was acceptable in
the eyes of God
as well as of the Church.
After the
persecutions had ceased, the penitential discipline remained in force, but
greater leniency was shown in applying it. St. Cyprian himself was
reproached for mitigating the "Evangelical severity" on which he at
first insisted; to this he replied (Ep. lii) that such strictness was needful
during the time of persecution not only to stimulate the faithful in the
performance of penance, but also to quicken them for the glory of martyrdom;
when, on the contrary, peace was secured to the Church, relaxation was
necessary in order to prevent sinners from falling into despair and leading the
life of pagans. In 380 St. Gregory of
Nyssa (Ep. ad Letojum) declares that the penance should be shortened
in the case of those who showed sincerity and zeal in performing it -- "ut
spatium canonibus praestitum posset contrahere (can. xviii; cf. can. ix, vi,
viii, xi, xiii, xix). In the same spirit, St. Basil (379), after prescribing
more lenient treatment for various crimes, lays down the general principle that
in all such cases it is not merely the duration of the penance that must be
considered, but the way in which it is performed (Ep. ad Amphilochium, c.
lxxxiv). Similar leniency is shown by various Councils--Ancyra (314), Laodicea
(320), Nicaea (325), Aries (330). It became quite common during this period to
favor those who were ill, and especially those who were in danger of death (see
Amort, "Historia ", 28 sq.). The ancient penitentials of Ireland and
England, though exacting in regard to discipline, provide for relaxation in
certain cases. St. Cummian, e.g., in his Penitential (seventh century),
treating (cap. v) of the sin
of robbery, prescribed that he who has often committed theft shall do penance
for seven years or for such time as the priest may judge fit, must always be
reconciled with him whom he has wronged, and make restitution proportioned to
the injury, and thereby his penance shall be considerably shortened (multum
breviabit poenitentiam ejus). But should he be unwilling or unable (to comply
with these conditions), he must do penance for the whole time prescribed and in
all its details. (Cf. Moran, "Essays on the Early Irish Church",
Dublin, 1864, p. 259.)
Another
practice which shows quite clearly the difference between sacramental
absolution and the granting of indulgences was the solemn reconciliation of
penitents. These, at the beginning of Lent, had received from
the priest absolution from their sins and the penance
enjoined by the canons; on Maundy Thursday they presented themselves before the
bishop, who laid hands on them, reconciled them with the Church, and admitted
them to communion. This reconciliation was reserved to the bishop, as is expressly
declared in the Penitential of Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury;
though in case of necessity the bishop could delegate a priest for the purpose
(lib. I, xiii). Since the bishop did not hear their confession, the
"absolution" which he pronounced must have been a release from some
penalty they had incurred. The effect, moreover, of this reconciliation was to
restore the penitent to the state of baptismal innocence and consequently of freedom
from all penalties, as appears from the so-called Apostolic Constitutions (lib,
II, c. xli) where it is said: "Eritque in loco baptismi impositio
manuum"--i.e. the imposition of hands has the same effect as baptism (cf.
Palmieri, "De Poenitentia", Rome, 1879, 459 sq.).
In a later
period (eighth century to twelfth) it became customary to permit the
substitution of some lighter penance for that which the canons prescribed. Thus
the Penitential of Egbert, Archbishop
of York, declares (XIII, 11): "For him who can comply with what the
penitential prescribes, well and good; for him who cannot, we give counsel of God's mercy. Instead of
one day on bread and water let him sing fifty psalms on his knees or seventy
psalms without genuflecting .... But if he does not know the psalms and cannot
fast, let him, instead of one year on bread and water, give twenty-six solidi in alms, fast till None on one day
of each week and till Vespers on another, and in the three Lents bestow in alms half
of what he receives." The practice of substituting the recitation of
psalms or the giving of alms for a portion of the fast is also sanctioned in
the Irish Synod of 807, which says (c. xxiv) that the fast of the second day of
the week may be "redeemed" by singing one psalter or by giving one denarius to a poor person. Here we have the
beginning of the so-called "redemptions" which soon passed into
general usage. Among other forms of commutation were pilgrimages to well-known
shrines such as that at St. Albans in England or at Compostela in Spain. But
the most important place of pilgrimage was Rome. According to Bede (674-735)
the "visitatio liminum ", or visit to the tomb of the Apostles, was
even then regarded as a good work of great efficacy (Hist. Eccl., IV, 23). At
first the pilgrims came simply to venerate the relics of the Apostles and
martyrs; but in course of time their chief purpose was to gain the indulgences
granted by the pope and attached especially to the Stations. Jerusalem, too,
had long been the goal of these pious journeys, and the reports which the
pilgrims gave of their treatment by the infidels finally brought about the Crusades. At the Council
of Clermont (1095) the First Crusade
was organized, and it was decreed (can. ii): "Whoever, out of pure
devotion and not for the purpose of gaining honor or money, shall go to
Jerusalem to liberate the Church of God,
let that journey be counted in lieu of all penance". Similar indulgences
were granted throughout the five centuries following (Amort, op. cit., 46 sq.),
the object being to encourage these expeditions which involved so much hardship
and yet were of such great importance for Christendom and
civilization. The spirit in which these grants were made is expressed by St.
Bernard, the preacher of the Second Crusade (1146):
"Receive the sign of the Cross, and thou shalt likewise obtain the
indulgence of all thou hast confessed with a contrite heart (ep. cccxxii; al.,
ccclxii).
Similar
concessions were frequently made on occasions, such as the dedication of
churches, e.g., that of the old Temple Church in London, which was consecrated
in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary, 10 February, 1185, by the Lord Heraclius,
who to those yearly visiting it indulged sixty days of the penance enjoined
them -- as the inscription over the main entrance attests. The canonization of
saints was often marked by the granting of an indulgence, e.g. in honor of St.
Laurence 0'Toole by Honorius III (1226), in honor of St. Edmund of Canterbury
by Innocent IV
(1248), and in honor of St. Thomas of Hereford by John XXII (1320). A famous
indulgence is that of the Portiuncula (q.v.), obtained by St. Francis in 1221 from
Honorius III. But the most important largess during this period was the plenary
indulgence granted in 1300 by Boniface VIII to those
who, being truly contrite and having confessed their sins, should visit the
basilicas of Sts. Peter and Paul (see JUBILEE).
Among the works
of charity which were furthered by indulgences, the hospital held a prominent
place. Lea in his "History of Confession and Indulgences" (III, 189)
mentions only the hospital of Santo Spirito in Rome, while another Protestant writer, Uhlhorn
(Gesch. d. Christliche Liebesthatigkeit, Stuttgart, 1884, II, 244) states that
"one cannot go through the archives of any hospital without finding
numerous letters of indulgence". The one at Halberstadt in 1284 had no
less than fourteen such grants, each giving an indulgence of forty days. The
hospitals at Lucerne, Rothenberg, Rostock, and Augsburg enjoyed similar
privileges.
ABUSES
It may seem strange that the doctrine of indulgences should
have proved such a stumbling-block, and excited so much prejudice and opposition.
But the explanation of this may be found in the abuses which unhappily have
been associated with what is in itself a salutary practice. In this respect of
course indulgences are not exceptional: no institution, however holy, has
entirely escaped abuse through the malice or unworthiness of man. Even the
Eucharist, as St. Paul declares, means an eating and drinking of judgment to
the recipient who discerns not the body of the Lord. (1 Cor., xi, 27-9). And,
as God's forbearance
is constantly abused by those who relapse into sin, it is not surprising
that the offer of pardon in the form of an indulgence should have led to evil
practices. These again have been in a special way the object of attack because,
doubtless, of their connection with Luther's revolt (see LUTHER). On the other
hand, it should not be forgotten that the Church, while holding fast to the
principle and intrinsic value of indulgences, has repeatedly condemned their
misuse: in fact, it is often from the severity of her condemnation that we
learn how grave the abuses were.
Even in the age
of the martyrs, as stated above there were practices which St. Cyprian was obliged to
reprehend, yet he did not forbid the martyrs to give the libelli. In later times abuses were met by
repressive measures on the part of the Church. Thus the Council of Clovesho in
England (747) condemns those who imagine that they might atone for their crimes
by substituting, in place of their own, the austerities of mercenary penitents.
Against the excessive indulgences granted by some prelates, the Fourth Council
of the Lateran (1215) decreed that at the dedication of a church the indulgence
should not be for more than year, and, for the anniversary of the dedication or
any other case, it should not exceed forty days, this being the limit observed
by the pope himself on such occasions. The same restriction was enacted by the
Council of Ravenna in 1317. In answer to the complaint of the Dominicans and
Franciscans, that certain prelates had put their own construction on the
indulgences granted to these Orders, Clement IV in 1268 forbade
any such interpretation, declaring that, when it was needed, it would be given
by the Holy See.
In 1330 the brothers of the hospital of Haut-Pas falsely asserted that the
grants made in their favor were more extensive than what the documents allowed:
John XXII had all these
brothers in France seized and imprisoned. Boniface IX, writing to
the Bishop of Ferrara in 1392, condemns the practice of certain religious who
falsely claimed that they were authorized by the pope to forgive all sorts of sins, and exacted money
from the simple-minded among the faithful by promising them perpetual happiness
in this world and eternal glory in the next. When Henry, Archbishop of Canterbury,
attempted in 1420 to give a plenary indulgence in the form of the Roman
Jubilee, he was severely reprimanded by Martin V, who
characterized his action as "unheard-of presumption and sacrilegious
audacity". In 1450 Cardinal
Nicholas of Cusa, Apostolic Legate to Germany, found some preachers
asserting that indulgences released from the guilt of sin as well as from the
punishment. This error, due to a misunderstanding of the words "a culpa et
a poena", the cardinal
condemned at the Council of Magdeburg. Finally, Sixtus IV in 1478, lest
the idea of gaining indulgences should prove an incentive to sin, reserved for the
judgment of the Holy See
a large number of cases in which faculties had formerly been granted to
confessors (Extrav. Com., tit. de poen. et remiss.).
Traffic in
Indulgences
These measures show plainly that the Church long before the Reformation,
not only recognized the existence of abuses, but also used her authority to
correct them.
In spite of all
this, disorders continued and furnished the pretext for attacks directed
against the doctrine itself, no less than against the practice of indulgences.
Here, as in so many other matters, the love of money was the chief root of the
evil: indulgences were employed by mercenary ecclesiastics as a means of
pecuniary gain. Leaving the details concerning this traffic to a subsequent
article (see REFORMATION), it may suffice for the present to note that the
doctrine itself has no natural or necessary connection with pecuniary profit,
as is evident from the fact that the abundant indulgences of the present day
are free from this evil association: the only conditions required are the
saying of certain prayers or the performance of some good work or some practice
of piety. Again, it is easy to see how abuses crept in. Among the good works
which might be encouraged by being made the condition of an indulgence, alms
giving would naturally hold a conspicuous place, while men would be induced by
the same means to contribute to some pious cause such as the building of
churches, the endowment of hospitals, or the organization of a crusade. It is well to
observe that in these purposes there is nothing essentially evil. To give money
to God or to the poor
is a praiseworthy act, and, when it is done from right motives, it will surely
not go unrewarded. Looked at in this light, it might well seem a suitable
condition for gaining the spiritual benefit of an indulgence. Yet, however
innocent in itself, this practice was fraught with grave danger, and soon
became a fruitful source of evil. On the one hand there was the danger that the
payment might be regarded as the price of the indulgence, and that those who
sought to gain it might lose sight of the more important conditions. On the
other hand, those who granted indulgences might be tempted to make them a means
of raising money: and, even where the rulers of the Church were free from blame
in this matter, there was room for corruption in their officials and agents, or
among the popular preachers of indulgences. This class has happily disappeared,
but the type has been preserved in Chaucer's
"Pardoner", with his bogus relics and indulgences.
While it cannot
be denied that these abuses were widespread, it should also be noted that, even
when corruption was at its worst, these spiritual grants were being properly
used by sincere Christians,
who sought them in the right spirit, and by priests and preachers, who took
care to insist on the need of true repentance. It is therefore not difficult to
understand why the Church, instead of abolishing the practice of indulgences,
aimed rather at strengthening it by eliminating the evil elements. The Council of Trent in its
decree "On Indulgences" (Sess. XXV) declares: "In granting
indulgences the Council desires that moderation be observed in accordance with
the ancient approved custom of the Church, lest through excessive ease
ecclesiastical discipline be weakened; and further, seeking to correct the
abuses that have crept in . . . it decrees that all criminal gain therewith
connected shall be entirely done away with as a source of grievous abuse among
the Christian
people; and as to other disorders arising from superstition, ignorance,
irreverence, or any cause whatsoever--since these, on account of the widespread
corruption, cannot be removed by special prohibitions--the Council lays upon
each bishop the duty of finding out such abuses as exist in his own diocese, of
bringing them before the next provincial synod, and of reporting them, with the
assent of the other bishops, to the Roman Pontiff, by whose authority and
prudence measures will be taken for the welfare of the Church at large, so that
the benefit of indulgences may be bestowed on all the faithful by means at once
pious, holy, and free from corruption." After deploring the fact that, in
spite of the remedies prescribed by earlier councils, the traders (quaestores) in indulgences continued their
nefarious practice to the great scandal of the faithful,
the council ordained that the name and method of these quaestores should be entirely abolished, and
that indulgences and other spiritual favors of which the faithful ought not to
be deprived should be published by the bishops and bestowed gratuitously, so
that all might at length understand that these heavenly treasures were
dispensed for the sake of piety and not of lucre (Sess. XXI, c. ix). In 1567 St. Pius V canceled all
grants of indulgences involving any fees or other financial transactions.
Apocryphal
Indulgences
One of the worst abuses was that of inventing or falsifying
grants of indulgence. Previous to the Reformation, such practices abounded and
called out severe pronouncements by ecclesiastical authority, especially by the
Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215) and that of Vienne (1311). After the Council of Trent the most
important measure taken to prevent such frauds was the establishment of the
Congregation of Indulgences. A special commission of cardinals served under Clement VIII and Paul V, regulating all
matters pertaining to indulgences. The Congregation of Indulgences was
definitively established by Clement IX
in 1669 and reorganized by Clement XI
in 1710. It has rendered efficient service by deciding various questions
relative to the granting of indulgences and by its publications. The
"Raccolta" (q.v.) was first issued by one of its consultors,
Telesforo Galli, in 1807; the last three editions 1877, 1886, and 1898 were
published by the Congregation. The other official publication is the
"Decreta authentica", containing the decisions of the Congregation
from 1668 to 1882. This was published in 1883 by order of Leo XIII. See also
"Rescripta authentica" by Joseph Schneider (Ratisbon, 1885). By a
Motu Proprio of Pius X,
dated 28 January, 1904, the Congregation of Indulgences was united to the
Congregation of Rites, without any diminution, however, of its prerogatives.
SALUTARY
EFFECTS OF INDULGENCES
Lea (History, etc., III, 446) somewhat reluctantly
acknowledges that "with the decline in the financial possibilities of the
system, indulgences have greatly multiplied as an incentive to spiritual
exercises, and they can thus be so easily obtained that there is no danger of
the recurrence of the old abuses, even if the finer sense of fitness,
characteristic of modern times, on the part of both prelates and people, did
not deter the attempt." The full significance, however, of this
"multiplication" lies in the fact that. the Church, by rooting out
abuses, has shown the rigor of her spiritual life. She has maintained the
practice of indulgences, because, when these are used in accordance with what
she prescribes, they strengthen the spiritual life by inducing the faithful to
approach the sacraments and to purify their consciences of sin. And further, they
encourage the performance, in a truly religious spirit, of works that redound,
not alone to the welfare of the individual, but also to God's glory and to the
service of the neighbor.