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St. Caesarius of Arles
Bishop, administrator, preacher, theologian, born at Châlons in Burgundy,
470-71, died at Arles, 27 August, 543, according to Malnory. He entered the
monastery of Lérins when quite young, but his health giving way the abbot sent
him to Arles in order to recuperate. Here he won the affection and esteem of the
bishop, Æonus, who had him ordained deacon and priest. On the death of ths
bishop Caesarius was unanimously chosen his successor (502 or 503). He ruled the
See of Arles for forty years with apostolic courage and prudence, and stands out
in the history of that unhappy period as the foremost bishop of Gaul. His
episcopal city, near the mouth of the Rhone and close to Marseilles, retained
yet its ancient importance in the social, commercial, and industrial life of
Gaul, and the Mediterranean world generally; as a political centre, moreover, it
was subject to all the vicissitudes that in the early decades of the sixth
century fell to the lot of Visigoth and Ostrogoth, Burgundian and Frank.
Eventually (538) the latter, under King Childebert, obtained full away in
ancient Gaul. During the long conflict, however, Caesarius was more than once
the object of barbarian suspicion. Under Alaric II he was accused of a
treasonable intention to deliver the ity to the Burgundians, and without
examination or trial was exiled to Bordeaux. Soon, however, the Visigoth king
relented, and left Caesarius free to summon the important Council of Agde (506),
while in harmonious co-operation with the Catholic hierarchy and clergy he
himself published the famous adaptation of the Roman Law known as the
Breviarium Alarici
, which eventually became the civil code of Gaul. Again in
508, after the siege of Arles, the victorious Ostrogoths suspected Caesarius of
having plotted to deliver the city to the besieging Franks and Burgundians, and
caused him to be temporarily deported. Finally, in 513, he was compelled to
appear at Ravenna before King Theodoric, who was, however, profoundly impressed
by Caesarius, exculpated him, and treated the holy bishop with much distinction.
The latter profited by the occasion to visit Pope Symmachus at Rome. The pope
conferred on him the pallium, said to be the first location on which it was
granted to any Western bishop. He also granted to the clergy of Arles the use of
the dalmatic, peculiar to the Roman clergy, confirmed him as metropolitan, and
renewed for him personally (11 June, 514) the dignity of Vicar of Apostolic See
in Gaul, more or less regularly held by his predecessors (see VICAR APOSTOLIC;
THESSALONICA; VIENNE), whereby the Apostolic See obtained in Southern Gaul,
still Roman in language, temper, law, and social organization, an intelligent
and devoted co-operator who did much to confirm the pontifical authority, not
alone in his own province, but also throughout the rest of Gaul. He utilized his
office of vicar to convoke the importance theories of councils forever connected
with his name, presided over by him, and whose decress are, in part or entirely,
his own composition. These are five in number: Arles (524), Carpentras (527),
Orange (II) and Vaison (529), and Marscilles (533), the latter called to judge a
bishop, Contumeliosis of Riez, a self-confessed adulterer, but who managed later
to obtain a reprive through Pope Agapetus, on the plea of irregular procedure,
the final outcome of the case being unknown. The other councils, whose text may
be read in Clark's translation of Hefele's History of the Councils
(Edinburgh,
1876-96), are of primary importance for the future religious and ecclesiastical
life of the new barbarian kingdoms of the West. Not a few important provisions
were later incorporated into the traditional or written law of the Western
Church, e.g. concerning the nature and security of ecclesiastical property, the
certainty of support for the parochial clergy, the education of ecclesiastics,
simple and frequent preaching of the Word of God, especially in country parishes,
etc. Caesarius had already drawn up a famous resume of earlier canonical
collections known to historians of canon law as the Statua Ecclesiae Antiqua
,
by the inadvertence of medieval copyist wrongly attributed to the Fourth Council
of Carthage (418), but by Malnory (below, 53-62, 291-93) proved to be the
compilation of Caesarius, after the Ballerini brothers had located them in the
fifth century, and Maassen had pointed out Arles as the place of compilation.
The rich archives of the Church of Arles, long before this a centre of imperial
administration in the West and a papal direction, permitted him to put together,
on the borderline of the old and the new, this valuable summary, or speculum, of
ancient Christian life in the Roman West, in its own way a counterpart of the
Apostolic Constitutions (q. v.) and the Apostolic Canons (see CANONS APOSTOLIC)
for the Christian Orient. If we add to these councils his own above-mentioned
council of Agde, those of Gerone, Saragossa, Valencia and Lerida in Spain
(516-524), and these of Epaone (517) and Orléans (538, 541) in Gaul (influenced
by Caesarius, Malnory, 115, 117), we have a contemporary documentary portrait of
a great Gallo-Roman ecclesiastical legislator and reformer whose Christian code
aimed at and obtained two things, a firm but merciful and humane discipline of
clergy and people, and stability and decency of ecclesiastical life both
clerical and monastic. To a Catholic mind the above-mentioned Second Council of
Orange reflects special credit on Caesarius, for in it was condemned the false
doctrine concerning grace known as Semipelagianism (g. v.); there is good reason
for believing that the council's decrees (Hefele, ad. an. 529; P. L., XXXIX,
1142-52) represent the work (otherwise lost) De gratiâ et libero arbitrio
that
Gennadius (De vir. ill., c. 86) attributes to Caesarius, and which he says was
approved and widely circulated by Felix IV (526-530). It is noteworthy that in
the preface to the acts of the council, the Fathers say that they are assembled
at the suggestion and by the authority of the Apostolic See, from which they
have received certain propositions or decrees (capitula), gathered by the
ancient Fathers from the Scriptures concerning the matter in hand; as a matter
of fact the decrees of the council are taken almost word for word, says de la
Bigne (op. cit., 1145-46), from St. Augustine. Finally the confirmation of the
council's doctrinal decrees by Boniface II (25 Jan., 531) made them
authoritative in the Universal Church.
Caesarius, however, was best known in his own day, and is still best
remembered, as a popular preacher, the first great Volksprediger of the
Christians whose sermons have come down to us. A certain number of these
discourses, forty more or less, deal with Old Testament subjects, and follow the
prevalent typology made popular by St. Augustine; they seek everywhere a mystic
sense, but avoid all rhetorical pomp and subtleties, and draw much from the
admirable psalm-commentary, Enarrationes in Psalmos
, of St. Augustine. Like
the moral discourses, Admonitiones
, they are quite brief (his usual limit was
fifteen minutes), clear and simple in language, abounding in images and
allusions drawn from the daily life of the townsman or the peasant, the sea, the
market, the vineyard, the sheepfold, the soil, and reflecting in a hundred ways
the yet vigorous Roman life of Southern Gaul, where Greek was still spoken in
Arles and Asiatic merchants still haunted the delta of the Rhone. The sermon of
Caesarius opens usually with an easy and familiar introduction, offers a few
plain truths set forth in an agreeable and practical way, and closes with a
recapitulation. Most of the sermons deal with the principles of Christian
morality, the Divine sanctions: hell and purgatory (for the latter see Malnory,
185-86), the various classes of sinners, and the principal vices of his day and
surroundings: public vice, adultery and concubinage, drunkenness, neglect of
Mass, love of (landed) wealth, the numerous survivals of a paganism that was
only newly overcome. In them the popular life of the Provincia is reproduced,
often with photographic accuracy, and frequently with naive good-nature. These
sermons are a valuable thesaurus for historical students, whether of canon law,
history of dogma, discipline, or liturgy.
Many of these sermons were frequently copied in with works of St. Augustine,
whose text, as stated, they often reproduced. The editio princeps is that of
Gilbertus Cognatus Nozarenus (Basle, 1558), and includes forty sermons, of which,
according to Arnold (see below, 492), only about twenty-four were surely genuine.
The great Maurists, Constant and Blancpain, made clear his title to 103, which
they printed in the appendix to the fifth volume of the Benedictine edition of
St. Augustine (P. L., LXVII, 1041-90, 1121-25). Casimir Oudin, the
ex-Premonstratensian and familiar in his Catholic period with the aforesaid
Maurists, intended (1722) to bring out a special edition of the sermons and the
writings of Caesarius, the former of which he calculated as one hundred and
fifty-eight in number. The Benedictine editors of the Histoire Littéraire de la
France
(III, 200-217) put down as surely genuine one hundred and twenty-two or
one hundred and twenty-three. Joseph Fessler, Bishop of St. Pölten, had planned
an addition of St. Caesarius, but death (1872) surprised him, and his materials
passed to the Benedictines of Maredsous in Belgium, who have confided this very
important task to Dom Germain Morin. In the Revue Bénédictine
(Feb., 1893) he
made known the principles and the method of his new edition. Several other
essays from the same pen and in the same place represent the choicest modern
learning on the subject.
In the history of monastic life and reforms in Gaul, Caesarius occupies an
honourable place between St. Martin of Tours and St. Honoratus of Lérins on the
one hand, and St. Columbanus on the other, while he is a contemporary of St.
Benedict, and in fact survived him but a few months. He composed two rules, one
for men (Ad Monachos
), the other for women (Ad Virgines
), both in Migne, P.
L., LXVII, 1099 sqq., 1103 sqq., reprinted from Holstein-Brockie, Codex
regularum monasticarum
(Augsburg, 1759). The rule for monks is based on that of
Lérins, as handed down by oral tradition, but adds the important element of
stability of profession (ut usque ad mortem suam ibi perseveret, c. i), a legal
renunciation of one's property, and a more perfect community of goods. This rule
soon gave way to the Rule of Columbanus, and with the latter, eventually to the
Rule of St. Benedict. The rule for nuns, however, had a different fate. It was
the work of his whole life
, says Malnory (257) and into it he poured all his
prudence, tenderness, experience, and foresight. It borrows much from the famous
Epistle ccxi of St. Augustine and from John Cassian; nevertheless it was the
first rule drawn up for women living in perfect community, and has remained the
model of all such. Even to-day, says Malnory (263), it unites all the
conditions requisite for a cloistered nunnery of strict observance
. His own
sister, St. Caesaria, was placed at the head of the monastery (first built in
the famous Aliscamps, outside the walls of Arles, afterwards removed within the
city), which at the death of the holy founder counted two hundred nuns. It
astonished his contemporaries, who looked upon it as an ark of salvation for
women in those stormy times, and drew from Pope Hormisdas a cry of admiration,
preserved for us in the letter by which, at the request of Caesarius, he
approved and confirmed this new work (super clericorum et monasteriorum excubias
consuetas puellarum quoque Dei choros noviter instituisse te, P.L., LXVII, 1285).
The pope also confirmed the full exemption of the abbess and her nuns from
all episcopal authority; future bishops could only visit them occasionally, in
the exercise of their pastoral duties, or in case of grave violation of the rule.
Elections, constitution, internal administration, even the choice of the
Mass-priest, were confided exclusively to the community in keeping with the rule
that Caesarius did not cease to perfect at all times; in the Recapitulatio
which he finally added (and in his Testament) he insists again on the
quasi-complete exemption of the monastery, as though this freedom from all
external control or interference seemed to him indispensable. The nuns on
entering made a solemn promise to remain until death; moreover, at his request,
Pope Symmachus invalidated the marriage of any professional nun (Malnory, 264).
The convent furniture was of the simplest and no paintings were allowed (a
provision afterwards distorted in favour of Iconoclasm). Spinning of wool, the
manufacture of their own garments, the care of the monastery, were their chief
occupations, apart from prayer and meditation. It is to be noted, however, that
the bishop provided for the copying of the Scriptures (inter psalmos et jejunia,
vigilias quoque ac lectiones libros divinos pulchre scriptitent virgines Christi)
under the direction of Caesaria. In the course of the sixth century the rule of
the nuns was elsewhere in Gaul adapted to monasteries of men, while numerous
monasteries of women adopted it outright, e.g. the famous Abbey of the Holy
Cross at Poitiers founded by St. Radegundis. Its extension was also favoured by
the fact that not a few of his disciples became bishops and abbots, and as such
naturally introduced the ideal of religious life created by their venerated
master. When his end drew near, he made his will (Testamentum), with all the
formalism of Roman law, in favour of his beloved nuns (P. L., LXVII, 1139-40;
Baronius, Ann. Eccl., ad an. 308, no. 25), commending them and their rule to the
affection of his successor, and leaving to his sister Caesaria, as a special
memento, a large cloak she had made for him (mantum majorem quem de cannabe
fecit). The genuinity of this curious and valuable document has been called in
question, but without sufficient reason. It is accepted by Malnory, and has been
re-edited by Dom Morin (Revue Bénédictine, 1896, XVI, 433-43, 486). Caesarius
was a perfect monk in the episcopal chair, and as such his contemporaries
revered him (ordine et officio clericus; humilitate, charitate, obedientia,
cruce monachus permanet - Vita Caesarii, I, 5). He was a pious and a peaceful
shepherd amid barbarism and war, generous and charitable to a fault, yet a great
benefactor of his Church, mindful of the helpless, tactful in dealing with the
powerful and rich, in all his life a model of Catholic speech and action.
We may add that he was the first to introduce in his cathedral the Hourse of Terce, Sext, and None; he also enriched with hymns the psalmody of every Hour.
MORIN in Revue Bénédictine (Maredsous, 1891-1908), passim; LEJAY, St. Césaire d'Arles in Revue du Clergé français (Paris, 1895), IV, 97, 487, and Revue biblique (Paris, 1895), IV, 593; MALNORY, St. Césaire Evêque d'Arles (Paris, 1894), bibliography; ARNOLD (non-Catholic), Caesarius von Arelate und die gallische Kirche seiner Zeit (Leipzig, 1894). For the long conflict concerning the primacy of Gaul, between the churches of Arles and Vienne, see GUNDLACH, Der Streit der Bisthümer Arles und Vienne um den Primatus Galliarum in Neues Archiv (1888-90), XIV, 251, XIV, 9, 233; DUCHESNE, La primatie d'Arles, in Mém. de la Soc. des Antiquaires de France (1891-92), II, 155; SCHMITZ, Der Vikariat von Arles in Hist. Jahrbuch (1891), XII, 11, 245. For the general history of the Church of Arles at this period, see DU PORT, Histoire de l'Eglise d'Arles, tirée des meilleurs auteurs (Paris, 1690); SAXIUS, Pontificium Arelatense (Aix-en-Provence, 1629); TRICHAUD, Hist. de la sainte église d'Arles (N`mes-Paris, 1856); and for the political and social life of the period, FAURIEL, Hist. de la Gaule méridionale sous les conquérants germains (Paris, 1856); DAHN, Könige der Germanen (Leipzig, 1885).
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