Heresy of the Free Spirit
The Heresy of the Free Spirit was originally the name given from the late thirteenth to fifteenth centuries to a set of heretical beliefs believed to be held by some Christians, especially in the Low Countries, Germany, France, Bohemia and northern Italy, which caused great unease among Church leaders at the time. The set of errors condemned in the bull Ad nostrum at the Council of Vienne (1311-2) has often been used by historians to typify the core beliefs, though there was great variation during the period over how the heresy was defined, and there is great debate over how far the individuals and groups accused of holding the beliefs (including Marguerite Porete, beguines, beghards, and Meister Eckhart) actually held the views attributed to them.[1]
The meaning of the term has in more recent times been extended to apply to the beliefs of other Christian individuals and groups, active both before and after the core period of the late Middle Ages.
Origins
The set of beliefs ascribed to the Free Spirits is first to be found in a text called the Compilatio de novo spiritu put together by Albert the Great in the 1270s, concerning a group of persons investigated in the Swabian Ries area of Germany.[2] The themes which occur in these documents, and which would emerge again in subsequent investigations, included:
- Autotheism – in other words, a belief that the perfected soul and God are indistinguishably one. This was often expressed through the language of indistinction or annihilation. This belief would be heretical because it would undermine the necessary distinction between fallen created being and creator.
- Denial of the necessity of Christ, the church and its sacraments for salvation – such that austerity and reliance on the Holy Spirit was believed to be sufficient for salvation. They believed that they could communicate directly with God and did not need the Catholic Church for intercession.
- Use of the language of erotic union with Christ.
- Antinomian statements (“Nothing is a sin except what is thought to be a sin”). Critics of the Free Spirit interpreted their beliefs to mean that they considered themselves to be incapable of sin and above the moral conduct of the Church.[3] Verses such as Galatians 5.18 (“Those who are driven or led by the Spirit of God are no longer under the law”) were seen as foundational to such beliefs.
- Anticlerical sentiment.
During the late thirteenth century, such concerns increasingly became applied to the various unregulated religious groups such as beguines and beghards, who had greatly increased in number in the preceding decades. Concerns over such sentiments then began to occur elsewhere, especially during the 1300s, and especially in Italy. Partly motivated by such concerns, in 1308 Pope Clement V summoned a general council, which met at Vienne from October 1311 to May 1312. In particular, it had to engage with the report from the Paris inquisition (1308–10) into the beguine Marguerite Porete’s The Mirror of Simple Souls (Porete’s writing, which had become well read through France, had been condemned in 1310 as heresy, and Porete had been burned at the stake) .[4][5] It was the Council of Vienne which first associated these various beliefs with the idea of the ‘Free Spirit’.[6]
Fourteenth and fifteenth century
During subsequent centuries, there was great fear of the Heresy of the Free Spirit, and many individuals and groups were accused of it. In particular, beguine and beghard groups came under suspicion.
John of Dirpheim, Bishop of Strasbourg from 1306–28, was a particularly fervent opponent of heresy.[7] Another person accused, by Bishop John’s colleague Henry of Virneburg, loBishop of Cologne, was Meister Eckhart, a German Dominican, who lived during the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries. In 1326, Eckhart was charged by the Pope for teaching heresy. He rigorously denied and defended against that charge until he disappeared from public life. Eckhart may have been familiar with the work of Marguerite Porete through his proximity to theologians involved in her trial, such as Berengar of Landora and William of Poitiers. More broadly, as a result of his prominence and through the statements of his used in the bull In agro Dominico he came to be recognised by the later mystical tradition as the "father" of the Free Spirit. This is seen particularly in the writings of Jan van Ruusbroec and his followers.[8]
During the late fourteenth century, western Germany became a particularly important area for pursuing the heresy. An example of one person executed is the wandering preacher Nicholas of Basel, who was executed sometime between 1393 and 1397.[9] Another known case was the execution of Löffler, who admitted adherence to the movement, in Bern.[10][11] False beliefs about the annihilation of the will were virulently attacked by the late fourteenth century Theologia Deutsch.[12]
In the early fifteenth century, Jean Gerson accused Jan van Ruusbroec of misdescribing the nature of union with God in a way that placed him in the company of the ‘Free Spirit’ heretics’.[13]
By the early fifteenth century, the Catholic Church in Germany viewed heresy as a serious threat. It became a leading topic for discussion at the Council of Basel in 1431. Johannes Nider, a Dominican reformer who attended the council, became concerned that beliefs of the Free Spirit heresy, and other heresies, were mixed with elements of witchcraft. In his 1434 work, Formicarius, Nider combined the Free Spirit heresy with witchcraft in his condemnation of false teachings. Formicarius also became a model for Malleus maleficarum, a later work by Heinrich Kramer in 1486.[14] By the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries, the Church’s efforts to eradicate heresy and witchcraft resulted in heresy trials and the parallel civil authorities conducting witch burnings.
Similarities to other Christian beliefs
Fears over sets of beliefs similar to the Heresy of the Free Spirit have recurred at various points in Christian history. Fears over esotericism and antinomianism, such as were detected in the Heresy of the Free Spirit, may be detected in the early Church’s response to Gnosticism. Fears of suspect forms of prayer were particularly apparent in reactions to the fourth and fifth century Messalianism.
What was perhaps novel in the fears of the Heresy of the Free Spirit was the fear of the notion of personal annihilation. This was a new idea to the mystical tradition, but was also seen as the root of many of the other dangers that were perceived in mystics in the late medieval period.[15]
Similarities may also be detected with seventeenth-century quietism.
References
- ↑ Both Robert E. Lerner, The Heresy of the Free Spirit in the Late Middle Ages, (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1972) and Malcolm Lambert, Medieval Heresy, 2nd edn, (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992) agree that the so-called “heresy of the free spirit” never actually existed, even in the early fourteenth century, at least not in the form of specific doctrines promoted by any organised body, still less by any sect and least of all by the Beguines or Beghards.
- ↑ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany, (New York: Crossroad, 2005), p63.
- ↑ Michael D. Bailey, "Battling Demons: Witchcraft, Heresy, and Reform in the Late Middle Ages", (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2003) , 56.
- ↑ Richard Kieckhefer, "Repression of Heresy in Medieval Germany", (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1979) , 38-39.
- ↑ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany, (New York: Crossroad, 2005), p65.
- ↑ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany, (New York: Crossroad, 2005), p65.
- ↑ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany, (New York: Crossroad, 2005), p65.
- ↑ Robert E. Lerner, The Heresy of the Free Spirit in the Late Middle Ages, (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1972), intro.; Edmund Colledge, O.S.A. and J.C. Marler, “’Poverty of the Will’: Ruusbroec, Eckhart and The Mirror of Simple Souls,” in Jan Van Ruusbroec: The Sources, Content and Sequels of his Mysticism, ed. P. Mommaers and N. De Paepe (Leuven: Leuven University Press, 1984), esp. 15-16.
- ↑ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany, (New York: Crossroad, 2005), p69.
- ↑ Henry Frank Eshleman (1917): Historic Background and Annals of the Swiss and German Pioneer Settlers of Southeastern Eastern Pennsylvania, and of Their ReMote Ancestors, from the Middle, of the Dark Ages, Down to the Time of the Reva War. London: Forgotten Books (reprint), 2013, p. 5. Online text: scan A, scan B.
- ↑ Dr. John C. L. Gieseler (1855): A Textbook Of Church History, vol. 3. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1858, tr. John W. Hull, p. 174, footnote 8, where he cites Justinger's Bernese Chronicle. Online text
- ↑ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany, (New York: Crossroad, 2005), p402.
- ↑ Denys Turner, ‘Dionysius and some late medieval mystical theologians of northern Europe’, Modern Theology 24:4, (2008), p654.
- ↑ Bailey, Battling Demons, 49.
- ↑ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany, (New York: Crossroad, 2005) , p55.
Further reading
- Norman Cohn, The Pursuit of the Millennium (Oxford, 1957).
- Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany, (New York: Crossroad, 2005)
- Robert E. Lerner, The Heresy of the Free Spirit in the Late Middle Ages, (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1972).
- Malcolm Lambert, Medieval Heresy, 2nd edn, (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992).
- Denys Turner, ‘Dionysius and some late medieval mystical theologians of northern Europe’, Modern Theology 24:4, (2008),