Everything about St Anselm totally explained
Saint
Anselm of Canterbury (
1033 –
April 21,
1109) was an
Italian medieval
philosopher,
theologian, and church official who held the office of
Archbishop of Canterbury from
1093 to
1109. Called the founder of
scholasticism, he's famous as the originator of the
ontological argument for the existence of
God and as the archbishop who openly opposed the
Crusades.
Biography
Early life
Anselm was born in the city of
Aosta in the
Kingdom of Burgundy (currently the capital of the
Aosta Valley in Northern
Italy). His family was noble and owned considerable property. His father, Gundulph, was by birth a
Lombard and seems to have been harsh and violent. Ermenberga, his mother, was regarded as prudent and virtuous. She gave young Anselm careful religious instruction.
At the age of fifteen, Anselm desired to enter a monastery but couldn't obtain his father's consent. Disappointment brought on apparent
psychosomatic illness. After recovery, he gave up his studies and lived a carefree life. During this period, his mother died and his father's harshness became unbearable.
In
1059, he left home, crossed the Alps and wandered through
Burgundy and
France. Attracted by the fame of his countryman
Lanfranc (then
prior of the
Benedictine Abbey of Bec), Anselm entered
Normandy. The following year, after some time at
Avranches, he entered the
abbey as a
novice at the age of twenty-seven.
Years at Bec
In
1063, Lanfranc was made abbot of
Caen and Anselm was elected
prior of the
Bec. He held this office for fifteen years before, in
1078, the death of warrior monk Herluin (founder and first abbot of Bec) brought about his election to abbot.
Under Anselm's jurisdiction, Bec became the first seat of learning in Europe, but he appears to have been little concerned with attracting external students. It was during these quiet years that he wrote his first works of philosophy, the
Monologion and the
Proslogion. These were followed by
The Dialogues on Truth,
Free Will and
Fall of the Devil.
The monastery grew in wealth and reputation and, after the
Norman Conquest, acquired large property in
England. It was Anselm's duty, as abbot, to visit this property on occasion. He became popular among the citizens of England for his mild temper and unswerving rectitude, and was considered by many the natural successor to Lanfranc as
Archbishop of Canterbury.
Upon Lanfranc's death, however,
King William II seized the possessions and revenues of the
see, and made no new appointment. In
1092, at the invitation of
Hugh, Earl of Chester, Anselm crossed to England. He was detained there by business for nearly four months and then refused permission to return to Bec by the king, who suddenly fell ill the following year. Eager to make atonement for his failure to appoint a new archbishop, he nominated Anselm to the vacant see. After a great struggle, the king compelled him to accept the pastoral staff of office. After obtaining dispensation from his duties in Normandy, Anselm was consecrated as Archbishop of Canterbury in
1093.
Archbishop of Canterbury
In exchange for retaining office, Anselm demanded certain conditions -- that King William return the possessions of the see, accept Anselm's spiritual counsel and acknowledge
Urban II as pope, in opposition to
Antipope Clement III. He only obtained partial consent to the first of these demands, and the last involved him in serious difficulty with the king.
The Church's rule stated that metroplitans couldn't be consecrated without receiving the
pallium from the hands of the pope. Anselm, accordingly, insisted that he must proceed to
Rome to receive the pall, but King William wouldn't permit it; he hadn't acknowledged Urban as pope and maintained his right to prevent a pope's acknowledgment by an English subject without his permission.
A council of churchmen and nobles was held to settle the matter, and advised Anselm to submit to the king, but he remained firm and the matter was postponed. During this time, William sent secret messengers to Rome. They acknowledged Urban and prevailed on him to send a legate to the king bearing the archiepiscopal pall. Anselm and King William partially reconciliated, and the matter of the pall was finally decided. It wasn't given by the king but laid on the altar at Canterbury, where Anselm received it.
Over a year later, Anselm encountered further trouble with King William. He resolved to proceed to Rome and seek the counsel of the pope. He obtained the king's permission to leave with great difficulty and, in October
1097, set out for Rome. William immediately seized the revenues of the see and retained them until his death. Anselm was received with high honour by Urban at the
Siege of Capua, where he garnered high praise from the
Saracen troops of Count
Roger I of Sicily. The pope, however, didn't wish to become deeply involved in Anselm's dispute with the king.
At a great council held at Bari, Anselm was asked to defend the doctrine of the procession of the Holy Ghost against representatives of the Greek Church. He left Rome and spent some time at the little village of Schiavi, where he finished his treatise on the atonement,
Cur Deus homo, before retiring to Lyons. When he attempted to return to England, King William wouldn't permit him entry.
Conflicts with King Henry I
King William was killed in
1100. His successor,
Henry I, invited Anselm to return to England under certain conditions: Anselm was to receive from him, in person, investiture in his office of archbishop. The papal rule, however, stated that all homage and lay investiture were strictly prohibited.
Henry refused to relinquish the privilege possessed by his predecessors, and proposed that the matter be laid before the pope. Two embassies were sent to
Paschal II regarding the legitimacy of Henry's investiture, but he reaffirmed the papal rule on both occasions.
King Henry remained firm. In
1103, Anselm himself and an envoy from the king set out for Rome. Paschal II again ruled in favor of papal rule, and passed a sentence of excommunication against all who had infringed it, except King Henry.
Forbidden to return to England unless on the king's terms, Anselm withdrew to Lyons after this ruling and awaited further action from Pope Paschal. In
1105, Paschal did act, excommunicating King Henry. Henry was seriously alarmed. He arranged a meeting with Paschal, and a reconciliation was established. In
1106, Anselm was permitted to cross to England with authority from the pope to remove the sentence of excommunication from the illegally-invested churchmen.
By
1107, the long dispute regarding investiture was finally settled with a compromise in the
Concordat of London, whereby Henry relinquished his right to invest his bishops and abbots but reserved the custom of requiring them to do homage for the "
temporalities" (the landed properties tied to the episcopate). The remaining two years of Anselm's life were spent in the duties of his archbishopric. He died on
April 21 1109.
Writings
Anselm is considered by many to be the first scholarly philosopher of Christian
theology. His only great predecessor,
Scotus Eriugena, was more speculative and mystical in his writings than what is considered scholarly. Anselm's writings represent a recognition of the relationship of reason to revealed truth, and an attempt to elaborate a rational system of faith.
Foundation
Anselm sought to understand Christian consciousness through reason and develop intelligible truths interwoven with the Christian belief. He believed that the necessary preliminary for this was possession of the Christian consciousness. He wrote, "
Neque enim quaero intelligere ut credam, sed credo ut intelligam. Nam et hoc credo, quia, nisi credidero, non intelligam. " ("Nor do I seek to understand that I may believe, but I believe that I may understand. For this, too, I believe, that, unless I first believe, I shan't understand.") According to Anselm, after faith is found, the attempt must be made to demonstrate by reason the truth of what is believed.
The groundwork of Anselm's theory of knowledge is contained in the tract
De Veritate, where he affirms the existence of an
absolute truth in which all other truth participates. This absolute truth, he argues, is God, who is the ultimate ground or principle both of things and of thought. The notion of God becomes the foreground of Anselm's theory, so it's necessary first to make God clear to reason and be demonstrated to have real existence.
Proofs
Anselm wrote many
philosophical proofs within
Monologion and
Proslogion. In the first proof, Anselm relies on the ordinary grounds of realism, which coincide to some extent with the theory of
Augustine. He argues that "things" are called "good" in a variety of ways and degrees, which would be impossible were there not some absolute standard and some good in itself, in which all relative goods participate. The same applies to adjectives like "great" and "just", whereby things involve a certain greatness and justice. Anselm uses this thought process to state that the very existence of things is impossible without some one Being, by whom they come to exist. This absolute Being, this goodness, justice and greatness, is God. Anselm isn't thoroughly satisfied with this reasoning, however, because it begins from
a posteriori grounds, meaning that the reasoning is
inductive. The philosophy also contains several converging lines of proof.
Anselm desired to have one short demonstration, presented in
Proslogion, his famous proof of the existence of God. It is referred to as the
ontological argument—a term first applied by
Kant to the arguments of Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century rationalists. Anselm defined his belief in the existence of God using the phrase "that than which nothing greater can be conceived". He reasoned that, if "that than which nothing greater can be conceived" existed only in the intellect, it wouldn't be "that than which nothing greater can be conceived", since it can be thought to exist in reality, which is greater. It follows, according to Anselm, that "that than which nothing greater can be conceived" must exist in reality. The bulk of the
Proslogion is taken up with Anselm's attempt to establish the identity of "that than which nothing greater can be conceived" as God and thus to establish that God exists in reality.
Anselm's ontological proof has been the subject of controversy since it was first published in the 1070s. It was opposed at the time by the monk
Gaunilo, in his
Liber pro Insipiente, on the grounds that humans can't pass from intellect to reality. Anselm replied to the objections in his
Responsio.
Gaunilo's criticism is repeated by several later philosophers, among whom are
Aquinas and
Kant. Anselm authored a number of other arguments for the existence of God, based on
cosmological and
teleological grounds.
Further works
In Anselm's other works, he strove to state the rational grounds of the Christian doctrines of
creation and the
Trinity. He discussed the Trinity first by stating that human beings couldn't know God from Himself but only from analogy. The analogy that he used was the self-consciousness of man.
The peculiar double-nature of consciousness, memory and intelligence represent the relation of the Father to the Son. The mutual love of these two (memory and intelligence), proceeding from the relation they hold to one another, symbolizes the Holy Spirit. The further theological doctrines of man, such as
original sin and
free will, are developed in the
Monologion and other treatises.
In
Cur Deus Homo ("Why did God become Man?"), Anselm undertook to explain the rational necessity of the Christian mystery of the
atonement. His philosophy rests on three positions—first, that satisfaction is necessary on account of God's honour and justice; second, that such satisfaction can be given only by the peculiar personality of the God-man Jesus; and, third, that such satisfaction is really given by this God-man's voluntary death.
Anselm expounds on these three positions by beginning with the statement that all of Man's actions are for the Glory of God. If Sin exists, wounding God's honour, Man himself can give no satisfaction, but God's justice demands satisfaction. Because God is infinite, however, any wound to his honour must also be infinite. It follows that satisfaction must also be infinite: it must outweigh all that isn't God.
Because humans are not infinite, such acts of satisfaction can only be paid by God himself and, as a penalty for Man, must be paid under the form of Man. By this, Anselm reasons that satisfaction is only possible through the sinless God-man Jesus. Because he's exempt from the punishment of Sin, the God-man's
passion is voluntary. The merit of the act is therefore infinite, God's justice is thus appeased and His mercy may extend to Man.
This theory has exercised immense influence on church doctrine, providing the basis for the
Roman Catholic concept of the treasury of merit and the
evangelical doctrine of
penal substitution, as developed by
John Calvin. Anselm's philosophy is very different from older patristic philosophies, insofar as it focuses on a contest between the goodness and justice of God rather than a contest between God and Satan.
Critics of Anselm assert that he puts the whole conflict on merely a legal footing, giving it no ethical bearing, and neglects altogether the consciousness of the individual to be redeemed. In this respect, it contrasts unfavourably with the later theory of
Peter Abélard.
"Dilecto dilectori"
Anselm wrote many letters to
monks, male relatives and others that contained passionate expressions of attachment and affection. These letters were typically addressed "
dilecto dilectori", sometimes translated as "to the beloved lover." While there's wide agreement that Anselm was personally committed to the monastic ideal of
celibacy, some academics, including Brian P. McGuire
and
John Boswell
have characterized these writings as expressions of a
homosexual inclination. Others, such as Glenn Olsen
and
Richard Southern describe them as representing a "wholly spiritual" affection, "nourished by an incorporeal ideal" (Southern).
Recognition
Anselm was
canonised by the
Roman Catholic Church in the year
1494 by
Pope Alexander VI. The anniversary of Anselm's death on
April 21 is celebrated in the
Roman Catholic Church, much of the
Anglican Communion and in the
Lutheran Church as Saint Anselm's memorial day. He was proclaimed a
Doctor of the Church in
1720 by
Pope Clement XI. On
April 21,
1909, 800 years after his death,
St. Pius X issued an encyclical
"Communion Rerum", praising Saint Anselm, his ecclesiastical career and his writings. His symbol in
hagiography is the ship, representing the spiritual independence of the church.
In the Middle Ages, Anselm's writings didn't receive the respect that they later would. This may have been due to their unsystematic character, for they're generally tracts or dialogues on detached questions, not elaborate treatises like the works of
Saint Thomas Aquinas,
Albert of Aix and
Erigena. Proponents of his writings, however, enjoy what they call his freshness and philosophical vigour.
Notes and references
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