Thursday, October 12, 2023

Catharism, Calvary Chapel, and Catholicism


 I consulted many of the same primary sources for my novel about the Cathars. From The Crossroads:

The following is meant to be a companion to the previous post “Catharism, Calvary Chapel, and Catholicism” (though long overdue! ☹).  On a broader level it can serve as a resource for a few primary sources on Catharism in the Middle Ages.  It includes a pair of orthodox writers as well as a citation from the Charter of Niquinta which is alleged to have come from the Cathar council at Saint-Félix-de-Caraman, ca.1167.

With respect to the ancient Catholic sources, the issue was raised in the previous post as to how much credence they ought to be given.  It was noted that scholars like Mark Gregory Pegg have challenged the historiographical status quo which has been to generally accept the picture that they painted.  As Malcolm Barber indicates, “even orthodox attacks on Cathar belief are important since they were particularly concerned to define it accurately in order to give wight to their refutations”.[1]  Following this methodology then, the Cathari were understood by their opponents to be dualist (i.e. neo-Manichaean) heretics, who established a rival church.

Bernard Gui (d. 1331), Dominican inquisitor.  From the Inquisitors Manual: 

It would take too long to describe in detail the manner in which these same Manichaean heretics preach and teach their followers, but it must be briefly considered here….Of baptism, they assert that the water is material and corruptible and is therefore the creation of the evil power, and cannot sanctify the soul, but that the churchmen sell this water out of avarice, just as they sell earth for the burial of the dead, and oil to the sick when they anoint them, and as: they sell the confession of sins as made to the priests. (My emphasis).

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