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The Canterbury Tales A View Of The (стр. 2 из 2)

nothing but a seemingly

uncomplicated and untwisted faith. The Plowman has the faith of a poor

farmer, uncomplicated by the

bureaucracy of the church. The Pardoner is probably on this journey because

he is being required to go

by the church or he sees some sort of economic gain from this voyage, most

likely from selling

forgiveness to the other pilgrims. The Plowman on the other hand is probably

on this voyage because of

his sincerity and faith in its purpose.

While this was the story of religion at ‘grass-roots’ level, at the

organisational and hierarchical level,

the church developed along a different line. It became more organized, more

bureaucratic, more legal,

more centralized and basically more powerful on a European scale. This

process was spearheaded

by the papacy and reached its pinnacle under Pope Innocent III in the early

13th Century. He embodied

what became known as the ‘papal monarchy’ – a situation where the popes

literally were kings in their

own world. The relative importance of spiritual and secular power in the

world was a constant question in

the middle ages with both secular emperors and kings, and the popes

asserting their claims to rule by

divine authority with God’s commands for God’s people proceeding out of

their mouths. The power of the

church is hard to exaggerate: its economic and political influence was huge,

as its wealth, movements

like the crusades, and even the number of churches that exist from this

period truly show its greatness.

By the early 10th century, a strange malaise seems to have entered the

English church. There are

comments from this time of a decline in learning among churchmen and an

increase in a love for

things of this earthly world. Even more of these lax standards had begun a

decline in the power structure

of the church which included a decrease in acceptable behavior amongst

churchmen and a growing use

of church institutions by lay people as a means of evading taxes.

Christianity affected all men in Europe at every level and in every way.

Such distances however, led

to much diversity and the shaping of Medieval religion into a land of

contrasts. One can also see how

man’s feelings of extreme sinfulness and desire for God are quite evident

in these tales.

Still, we are told that history repeats itself because nobody listens to it,

but more realistically

history repeats itself because man is essentially the same from one

generation to the next. He has

the same aspirations, fears and flaws; yet the way that these are expressed

differs from age to age.

This is why each period of history is different. The fact that man is the

same yet different is what

makes the study of the people who formed the medieval church directly

applicable to Christians’ lives and experiences today.

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