Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Public welfare and social legislation in the early medieval councils (Presidential Address)
- National synods, kingship as office, and royal anointing: an early medieval syndrome
- The case of Berengar of Tours
- Ecclesiastica and Regalia: Papal investiture policy from the Council of Guastalla to the First Lateran Council, 1106–23
- Viri religiosi and the York election dispute
- Councils and synods in thirteenth-century Castile and Aragon
- The Byzantine reaction to the Second Council of Lyons, 1274
- The Council of London of 1342
- Education in English ecclesiastical legislation of the later Middle Ages
- The representation of the universitas fidelium in the councils of the conciliar period
- Nicholas Ryssheton and the Council of Pisa, 1409
- The condemnation of John Wyclif at the Council of Constance
- Some aspects of English representation at the Council of Basle
- The Council of Basle and the Second Vatican Council
- The Colloquies between Catholics and Protestants, 1539–41
- King James I's call for an ecumenical council
- John Hales and the Synod of Dort
- Assembly and Association in Dissent, 1689–1831
- The Convocation of 1710: an Anglican attempt at counter-revolution
- Laymen in synod: an aspect of the beginnings of synodical government in South Africa
- The First Vatican Council
- Kikuyu and Edinburgh: the interaction of attitudes to two conferences
The case of Berengar of Tours
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Public welfare and social legislation in the early medieval councils (Presidential Address)
- National synods, kingship as office, and royal anointing: an early medieval syndrome
- The case of Berengar of Tours
- Ecclesiastica and Regalia: Papal investiture policy from the Council of Guastalla to the First Lateran Council, 1106–23
- Viri religiosi and the York election dispute
- Councils and synods in thirteenth-century Castile and Aragon
- The Byzantine reaction to the Second Council of Lyons, 1274
- The Council of London of 1342
- Education in English ecclesiastical legislation of the later Middle Ages
- The representation of the universitas fidelium in the councils of the conciliar period
- Nicholas Ryssheton and the Council of Pisa, 1409
- The condemnation of John Wyclif at the Council of Constance
- Some aspects of English representation at the Council of Basle
- The Council of Basle and the Second Vatican Council
- The Colloquies between Catholics and Protestants, 1539–41
- King James I's call for an ecumenical council
- John Hales and the Synod of Dort
- Assembly and Association in Dissent, 1689–1831
- The Convocation of 1710: an Anglican attempt at counter-revolution
- Laymen in synod: an aspect of the beginnings of synodical government in South Africa
- The First Vatican Council
- Kikuyu and Edinburgh: the interaction of attitudes to two conferences
Summary
‘For he called pope Leo IX not pontifex but pompifex and pulpifex; the Roman Church a council of vanity, the church of the malignant; and the Apostolic See the seat of Satan.’ This hostile epitaph, and more in the same vein, was written in 1088, the year that Berengar died. They are perhaps unequal crimes: to call even a scion of the German aristocracy ‘not pope but a maker of pomp’ or (worse still) ‘pulp’, and to reject the entire Roman Church as an institution. The charges are based on Lanfranc's indictment of twenty-five years before: that Berengar had ignored the judgements of pope and council and despised the testimony of the faithful throughout the ages, saying that in himself and his followers only was the true Church to be found on earth. It is not for claims like these that Berengar is now remembered: he has his niche in Gratian and the ecclesiastical dictionaries as an exponent of views on the Eucharist rather than as a schismatic from the Roman Church. But in his own day Berengar's eucharistic theology did not strike all men as heretical: Peter Damian, for example, is said to have been undecided. For his contemporaries the issue that Berengar raised was as much one of authority as one of doctrine. When rightly or wrongly Leo IX and Nicholas II condemned Berengar, he continued to teach and write. For nearly thirty years he provoked papal interest, resolutions in provincial synods, letters and tracts from individual critics: and still there was no final and effective judgement.
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- Information
- Councils and Assemblies , pp. 61 - 68Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1970