SAVONAROLA OF FLORENCE: A "SON OF THUNDER"
by Paul K. Christianson
What doest Thou, O Lord? Why dost Thou slumber? Arise and come to
Deliver Thy church from the hands of the devils! Hasten then the chastisement
and the scourge, that it may be quickly granted us to return to Thee. Be
ye not scandalized, O my brethren. The only hope is that the sword of God
may soon smite the earth.
This extract from a sermon by Girolamo Savonarola (1452-1498) highlight
his profound sense of outrage over the condition of the Roman Catholic church
at the end of the fifteenth century. Earlier efforts to deliver this church
from worldliness had failed on two counts: in the defeat of the Hussites
and their once victorious armies, and the papal dominion over the council
of Constance 1414 - 1418, which had sought - in vain - to reform the church
from within.
From Pope Nicholas V (1447-1455), to Alexander VI, who closes the century,
the primary interest of the popes was the extension of their personal domains,
architectural grandeur and humanism. Perhaps the comments of the later Medici
Pope, Leo X, on learning of his election to the throne (1513) summarizes
the character of the Renaissance papacy: "Now that we have attained
the papacy, let us enjoy it". And enjoy it he did, when not distracted
by the unyielding German reformer, Martin Luther.
Rodrigo Borgia came to the papal throne as Alexander VI (1492-1503), his
pontificate exemplifying a love of pleasure to the point of obsession, and
the making of a career founded upon nepotism, simony and profligacy. The
papacy had reached its climax in an abyss of moral, religious and bureaucratic
decadence. In the midst of these appalling corruptions of the late fifteenth-century
Girolamo Savonarola appears.
Born in Ferrara, the son of a family who served the wealthy and politically
astute Este, Savonarola renounced his humanistic and medical studies, fleeing
to the Dominican monastery at Bologna. The life at the Renaissance court,
as well as the "new learning" had no appeal for the monk. But
in the strict observance of the cloister, Savonarola not only escaped what
he perceived to be the wickedness and vanity of the world, but also found
a refuge for study and meditation. As was typical of his day, the young
monk studied Aguinas and Augustine, but unlike his contemporaries he drank
deeply at the well of Scripture, putting much of it to memory.
After completing his studies Savonarola was surprisingly recognized, not
for his preaching, but for his skillful administrative work. His initial
attempts at preaching met with little success either in his native city
of Farrara, or in Florence. Late in the fifteenth century, Florence was
the most brilliant of the Italian Renaissance cities, and under the tutelage
of the dazzling Lorenzo de Medici (1449-1492), the city came to its height
of prestige and influence. Though considered to be a crude and unrefined
preacher, Savonarola was not dissuaded from the task to which he thought
God had called him: to preach against the evils around him in the Roman
Catholic church and in Italian society. For a period of several years he
withdrew to the lesser cities of northern Italy improving and polishing
his preaching style. At Brescia in 1486, the friar preached a series of
Lenten sermons which established his reputation, especially by his belief
that the mark of the true church was obedience to God rather than to Rome.
While his preaching brought him greater and greater acclaim, he was also
a keen administrator for the order. The famous humanist Pico della Mirandola
(1463-1494), enthusiastically commended these abilities to Lorenzo de Medici
who, in 1490, offered Savonarola the priorate of the Dominican monastery
of San Marco in Florence.
In this period and down to the time of his death, Savonarolaís preaching
attracted large crowds. It also aroused great interest from lords and princes,
businessmen and the lower classes of society, and eventually from the papacy
itself. Progressing from the seclusion of the monastery cloisters, to the
monastery church, and to the cathedral in Florence, the thunder of Savonarola's
voice could be heard crying against sin: "For, behold, the day cometh,
it burneth as a furnace; and all the proud, and all that work wickedness,
shall be stubble; and the day that cometh shall burn them up" (Mal.
4:1). The Dominican friar called all classes in the city to repentance and
devotion to God; but some of his more vigorous indictments came against
the lower clergy and the prelates.
P. Villari, a nineteenth-century Renaissance historian quotes from one of
Savonarolaís sermons denouncing widespread corruption:
In these days, prelates and preachers are chained to the earth by the love
of earthly things. The care of souls is no longer their concern. They are
content with the receipt of revenue. The preachers preach to please princes
and to be praised by them. They have done worse. They have not only destroyed
the Church of God. They have built up a new church after their own pattern.
Go to Rome and see! Thou shalt find them all with the books of the humanities
in their hands and telling one another that they can guide men's souls by
means of Virgil, Horace and Cicero. Dost thou not know what I would tell
thee? What doest thou, O Lord! Arise, and come to deliver thy Church from
the hands of devils, from the hands of tyrants, from the hands of iniquitous
prelates.
Such Preaching, attended by thousands, brought on the disfavor of the leading
political family of Florence, the de Medici. The Medicean circle included
noblemen, soldiers, wealthy bankers, artists and cardinals with ties to
the papacy. Savonarola continued unrelenting in his preaching against the
"vanities" and sins of Florentine life. Lorenzo de Medici soon
requested a meeting with the monk that issues might be resolved, but the
latter refused. Indeed, after learning of a large "donation" bestowed
upon the monastery by De Medici, Savonarola responded from the pulpit: A
virtuous pastor "is like a good watchdog - when a thief comes along
and throws him a bone, he puts it to one side and goes on barking".
In the spring of 1492 Lorenzo "The Magnificent" died, and two
years later with the invasion of King Charles VIII, the de Medici were exiled,
leaving the monk as the ecclesiastical, political and social leader of the
city.
Savonarola was now freed from every encumbrance to pursue his goal of amending
the social and moral fabric of Florentine society, as well as that of Italy
and beyond, through preaching and constitutional reform. Teaching that man
is reborn through the work of the Spirit of God, and not through the rebirth
of the new learning, which was associated with classical antiquity, Savonarola
painted vivid pictures of an evil society and a depraved clergy.
It was inevitable that this powerful but solitary preacher should clash
with the aims and agenda of the papacy under Alexander VI. This pope had
little interest in reform of any kind, especially when it meant interference
with his own appetite for prestige and political advantage. Savonarolaís
ideal of a theocratic state made up of saints, with Jesus Christ as its
Head did not sit well with the pope, neither did the friar's alliance with
the French King, Charles VIII, who later sacked Rome. In spite of the monk's
attacks on the abuses of the clergy, relations between pope and monk were
not initially adverse. After the murder of the pope's son, Savonarola extended
sympathy to Alexander in a letter mixed with a call to repentance, hoping
in the light of this tragedy, that the pope might repent and be saved. But
Savonarola's hope for this member of the notorious Borgia family was doomed
to disappointment. On 25 July 1495 Alexander summoned him to Rome to answer
charges of rebelliousness. Exasperated, and not wishing for political reasons
to excommunicate the friar, Alexander resorted to bribery. Even the offer
of a cardinal's "red hat" did not suffice to close the mouth of
the monk.
After 17 February 1496, Savonarola's preaching became more intense in its
denunciation of the clergy and Rome:
It begins in Rome where the clergy make mock of Christ....They traffic in
the sacraments. They sell benefices to the highest bidder. Have not the
priests in Rome courtesans and grooms and horses and dogs? Have they not
palaces full of tapestries and silks, of perfumes and lackeys? Seemeth it,
that this is the Church of God?
Finally, refusing to accede to Alexander's demands, Savonarola was excommunicated
on 12 May 1497. His preaching was pointed and powerful up to the very end.
W. Roscoe in his Life of Lorenzo de Medici describes it as not descending
"amongst his audience like the dews of heaven. It was piercing hail,
the sweeping whirlwind, the destroying sword". And Savonarola himself,
in a sermon dated 14 March 1498, described his own style: "I am like
the hail. Cover thyself lest it come down upon thee, and strike thee. And
remember that I said unto the, cover thy head with a helmet, that is, clothe
thyself with virtue and no hail stone will touch thee". The storm finally
erupted but over Savonarola's own head. After a failed attempt to invoke
the Lord's judgment through trial by fire in full view of Florence's citizenry,
the discredited monk was seized, tortured and later "confessed".
It was a confession which he later recanted. Soon after, he was hanged and
the body burnt at the stake in Florence's Piazza della Signoria, in May,
1498.
What may we learn from the life of Savonarola? First, we may take inspiration
from his boldness in preaching, and his uncompromising stand for what he
perceived to be God's truth. In his day, as in ours, many yield their convictions
to the influential family or bloc. Within the congregation, fearing the
reproach of men, rather than of God. Luke records for posterity Paul's declaration:
"I shrank not from declaring unto you anything that was profitable"
(Acts 20:20). As Solomon reminds us, "the righteous are bold as a lion"
(Prov. 28:1). Let people and preacher fear nothing but the loss of Christ's
favor.
Secondly, we learn from the life of Savonarola that it is not enough to
preach moral and ecclesiastical reform apart from sound doctrine. For all
his zeal for righteousness, his Triumph of the Cross is really a defense
of Roman Catholic Doctrine. But that was its weakness. History is strewn
with powerful preachers who momentarily transformed the life of a community.
The monk's sermonizing, while taken from the Scripture, was full of the
apocalyptic and the prophetic, but contained little careful exposition or
doctrine. Savonarolaís appeals were based on the dogmas of Thomas
Aquinas and the traditions of medieval Roman Catholicism.
Where this Dominican monk failed, a German Augustinian monk (Martin Luther)
would later succeed. By God's grace he did so through careful thought and
exposition of the great doctrine of Justification by Faith. Herein lies
that heart-changing power which makes possible the renovation of society.
This is the essential contrast between the Florentine and Wittenberg reformations.
Unlike Savanarola and the Observant mendicant religious orders of his day
which emphasized moral refurbishment, Luther viewed reformation first as
the recovery of sound doctrine. He understood that moral reform is only
shallow reform apart from that doctrine which sponsors a true revival of
faith and practice.
Thirdly, Girolamo Savonarola's message was a dramatic call for individual
and collective reform. It was a desire to see no longer the practice of
immorality among people and clergy. In this he followed in the footsteps
of Wycliffe and Huss, and like them was recognized by Luther and Beza as
a forerunner of the Great Reformation. To this judgment we can heartily
agree.
O that God would raise up a prophetic voice today!
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