Miracles
do not happen in contradiction to nature, but only
in contradiction to that which is known to us of nature.
St. Augustine
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The Pre-Christian
Origins of European Pilgrimage
|
In the long ago epoch of the 5th through
the 3rd millennia BC, a mysterious megalithic culture
developed across much of western and Mediterranean Europe.
This grand culture, characterized by enormous stone
temples and celestial observatories, was not destined
to endure however. In the centuries following 2500 BC
a series of events began which shook megalithic culture
at its foundations, thereby initiating its decline.
These events were long-term climatic changes and the
arrival of new cultures. Yet while the arrival of new
cultures contributed to the decline of megalithic era
it did not erase the influences of that era but instead
perpetuated them. The religious and scientific endeavors
of the megalithic era had conditioned prehistoric Europe
for more than two millennia and would continue to influence
subsequent cultures all the way up to and through Christian
times. The great stone structures of the megalithic
era would no longer be erected yet those already standing
would continue to be used as religious centers for a
variety of succeeding cultures.
Climactic changes were to adversely
affect megalithic culture in two ways. Europe's climate
during the earlier years of the megalithic era was warmer
than it is today. Because of this, productive agricultural
communities were possible in far northern latitudes.
When the climate began to cool in 2500 BC, however,
farming became increasingly difficult, living conditions
worsened and people migrated south in search of warmer
climates. As a result, many megalithic communities in
northern Europe were abandoned. The second way that
worsening weather affected megalithic culture was by
hindering or preventing the use of the celestial observatories.
As the weather cooled and the rainfall increased, the
skies clouded over and astronomical observations were
no longer possible on a consistent basis. Given the
importance of these observations in predicting periods
of increased energy at the power places and the sacred
nature of those periods to megalithic people, it is
easy to understand how poor weather would have had a
debilitating effect upon the spiritual life of a community.
Coupled with harsh living conditions and decreasing
food supplies, these religious stresses would have severely
affected the social cohesiveness of the community and
thus led to further abandonment of megalithic sites
in northern Europe.
|

AVEBURY
STONE CIRCLE
|
The southern European megalithic culture
also began to decline during the 2nd millennium BC.
While this decline was caused by the climactic conditions
which affected northern Europe, an equally significant
influence was the influx of new cultures into southern
and central Europe and the effect those cultures had
in altering megalithic people's understandings of the
customs their own culture had been founded upon. The
new cultures, such as the Beaker people from 2500 BC
and later the La Tene Celts from approximately 700 BC,
brought about the continuing decline of the indigenous
people's sensitivity to and understanding of earth energies,
even while these newer cultures continued to use the
sacred sites where the earth energies had long been
experienced. It may seem unbelievable that veneration
of particular places could occur across centuries and
different cultures without people really knowing why
a place was first considered sacred. This is not so
difficult to conceive, however, if one understands the
developmental dynamics of the megalithic communities
which were experiencing the dilution of their cultural
customs by the infusion of new ideas.
The developmental dynamics of the
post-megalithic social centers were a result of the
population growth caused by the influx of new peoples.
With the growth of population came a corresponding development
in the diversity of individual occupations necessitated
by the goods and services infrastructures that are an
unavoidable part of larger social centers. This occupational
diversity resulted in task specialization, social stratification
and, thereby, a gradual disassociation for many people
from the earth-based wisdom traditions of early megalithic
times.
This process occurred over long periods
of time, and it was during this time - before writing
and historical analysis were yet practiced - that the
ancient reasons for settlement at and veneration of
particular places were forgotten. Legends and myths
remained, but these changed emphasis over hundreds of
generations until most people no longer knew why they
held certain places sacred. Shrines, megalithic constructions,
earthen mounds, remote forest glens and thermal springs
were still visited and venerated, yet the priestly elites
of the early pagan (Beaker and Celtic) proto-religions
had for the most part lost deep sensitivity to the subtle
earth energies, and thus stressed magic, ritual and
socio-religious conditioning rather than the simple,
individual communion with the power place energies which
the ancient hunter/gatherers and their megalithic descendents
had practiced.
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The Arrival of Christianity and the Age of Medieval
Pilgrimage
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This then was the situation encountered
by Christianity when it began arriving in (what is often
called) 'pagan' Europe during the 2nd through 8th centuries.
Upwards of 3000 years had passed since megalithic times
yet the influences of that era were still felt. Larger
social centers had developed around many of the ancient
megalithic settlement sites and the archaic stone rings,
dolmens and earthen mounds continued to play a significant
role in the religious life of the different pagan communities.
While the pagan's understandings of earth energies were
perhaps diluted by thousands of years of cultural infusions,
their mythologies and religious traditions were very
often still associated with the megalithic sacred sites,
and particular periods in different solar, lunar and
astrological cycles (discovered during the megalithic
era) were celebrated with festivities, maypole dancing
and fertility goddess holy days.
This continuing and powerful attraction
which pagan people felt for their sacred places deeply
disturbed the Christian authorities. This is evidenced
by an edict of Aries in 452 AD:
If any infidel either lighted
torches, or worshipped trees, fountains, or stones,
or neglected to destroy them, he should be found guilty
of sacrilege.
In the early centuries of the Christian
era there was a wholesale destruction of pagan shrines
at the sacred places. However, as the Christian church
slowly recognized they could not catholicize the pre-existing
cultures merely through the use of brute force, they
developed the method of securing religious control of
the people by placing churches and monastery foundations
upon the pagan's sacred sites. An excerpt of a letter
from Pope Gregory to Abbot Mellitus in 601 AD illustrates
that this reasoning had become policy for all of Christendom:
When, by God's help, you come
to our most reverend brother Bishop Augustine,
I want you to tell him how earnestly I have been pondering
over the affairs of the English: I have come to the
conclusion that the temples of the idols in England
should not on any account be destroyed. Augustine must
smash the idols, but the temples themselves should be
sprinkled with holy water and altars set up in them
in which, relics are to be enclosed. For we ought to
take advantage of well built temples by purifying them
from devil worship and dedicating them to the service
of the true God. In this way, I hope the people, seeing
their temples are not destroyed will leave their idolatry
and yet continue to frequent the places as formerly.
Usurpation of pagan holy ground for
the building of Christian churches was not limited solely
to the British Isles but was practiced throughout Europe.
Historical investigation will reveal that nearly all
pre-Reformation cathedrals were placed upon sites of
ancient pagan shrines, that these cathedrals were directionally
oriented according to the astronomical alignments of
the shrines and celestial observatories they replaced,
and that they were dedicated to Christian saints whose
feast days coincided with the days which local pagans
had traditionally recognized as important. This policy
was carried out primarily at major pagan shrines which
could not be destroyed because of their location in
villages and large towns. Venerated power points in
remote, uninhabited places, however, were still destroyed
according to decree of Nantes in 658 AD:
Bishops and their servants should
dig up and remove and hide to places where they cannot
be found, those stones which in remote and woody places
are still worshipped.
The locations of many pagan sacred
sites were lost due to the religious fanaticism of early
Christianity. All was not lost however, for the Catholic
church, in erecting their religious structures upon
the foundations of the ancient megalithic ruins (even
using the broken up dolmen and menhir stones in their
church walls), insured a continuing knowledge of the
locations of the major sacred sites. Some students of
(what I shall call) the megalithic earth energy tradition
may suggest that the architectural structures of these
early churches were not as effective at concentrating
and expressing the earth energies as were the stone
rings, dolmens and other megalithic structures which
they replaced. While this is true in some cases, the
designers of the larger churches and cathedrals were
very often skilled in sacred geometry and therefore
built their structures with the universal mathematical
constants of that arcane science. A perceptive understanding
of sacred geometry was given by the earth mysteries
scholar Paul Devereux:
"The formation of matter from
energy and the natural motions of the universe, from
molecular vibration to the growth of organic forms to
the motions planets, stars and galaxies are all governed
by geometrical configurations of force. This geometry
of nature is the essence of the sacred geometry used
in the design and construction of so many of the world's
ancient sacred shrines. These shrines encode ratios
of creation and thereby mirror the universe. Certain
shapes found in ancient temples, developed and designed
according to the mathematical constants of sacred geometry,
actually gather, concentrate and radiate specific modes
of vibration."
Upon completion, the churches would
be consecrated according to the practices of Roman Catholicism
and the relics of the saints or (if available) Jesus
and Mary would be placed within the high altars and
reliquaries. Because many of these churches were placed
upon ancient power places recognized for their healing
influence, incidents of healing continued to occur.
The Christian authorities, seeking every avenue to further
their psychological and social control over the masses,
attributed these healing incidents to the power of the
saints' relics and perpetrated the idea that relics
and personal possessions of the saints exuded a mysterious
essence which granted requests to prayers and other
miracles. Thus began the era of medieval pilgrimages.
|

Statue
St James The Elder
|
Though pilgrimages had been
a facet of Christianity from as early as the 4th century
when Helena, the mother of the Byzantine Emperor Constantine,
had supposedly found the 'True Cross' in Jerusalem,
it was not until the 9th century discovery of the relics
of St. James in Compostela, Spain and the enormous influx
of relics following the 11th and 12th century Crusades
that European Christian pilgrimages really began.
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Cathedral
of Santiago de Compostela, Spain
|
As these relics, often of dubious
authenticity, were brought back to Europe by returning
French, German and English crusaders and distributed
to the major and minor churches across Europe, a 400
year period of feverish religious wanderlust took hold
of people's minds.
To understand the enormous popularity
of pilgrimages during the late medieval period of the
12th to 15th centuries, it is necessary to recognize
the forces which had been shaping people's minds for
many hundreds of years. The entire medieval period,
beginning in the 6th century, had been a time of relentless
war, abject poverty, devastating famine, near total
illiteracy and ignorance. Infant mortality was high,
life expectancy was low, and medicine was almost non-existent.
Life - even for the nobility - was extraordinarily difficult
and demoralizing. (There had been a thriving tradition
of natural and herbal healing based upon five thousand
years of learned experience but the Christian church
suppressed this tradition, often times torturing and
murdering the practitioners, especially the women.)
The psychological conditions of these
times were even more onerous than the physical. Medieval
Christians had been conditioned to believe that human
beings were essentially evil and that the difficulties
they experienced on the earthly plane were the unavoidable
consequences of their fallen nature. The afterlife was
believed to be more of the same: Eternal damnation in
punishment for a life of sin.
In these times of famine, plague,
back-breaking physical labor, and fear of eternal damnation,
medieval people had only one hope: Christ and the Church.
Though an individual was born into a life of sin, the
church promulgated the idea that by lifelong dedication
to Christian dogma one could make an appeal to Christ
for a remission of personal sins and entrance into the
kingdom of heaven. While this appeal had to be made
with one's entire life, it was believed that pilgrimages
to the places where Christ and his disciples had lived
would be seen by Christ as an especially impassioned
plea for salvation.
There were not, however, very many
places where Christ and his disciples had been, and
furthermore, those places where they had been were far
too distant for the majority of medieval people to visit.
The solution to this dilemma was for the church to increase
the number of pilgrimage places. To increase the number
of pilgrimage places, it was necessary to increase the
number of saints. The church accomplished this by the
canonization of hundreds of dead Christians. Many of
these supposed martyrs had little, if any, claim to
sanctity, yet the illiterate peasants, having no recourse
to historical documents, could do nothing but blindly
accept the assertions of church leaders. The new saints'
relics - the authenticity of which was as questionable
as the saints themselves - were distributed to the churches
of Western and Mediterranean Europe thus multiplying
the number of pilgrimage sites.
|

Basilica of St.
Francis of Assisi, Italy
|
Soon a lively trade in relics
began amongst church officials and monastery abbots.
Enterprising ecclesiastical authorities recognized that
the number of pilgrims visiting a shrine was directly
proportional to the quality and quantity of relics at
the shrine. Better than the 'new' saint's relics were
relics of the 12 apostles and better still were relics
from Christ or his mother Mary. The only problem was
that there had been only one Christ, one Mary and 12
apostles. This, however, was an easy obstacle for the
church to overcome. Again, the peasant population had
no way of verifying church claims, so the church was
free to multiply its relic hoard. The proliferation
of relics became so astronomically absurd that Luther,
the great religious reformer, was moved to say, "Enough
pieces of the true cross exist in the monasteries of
Europe to build an entire ship and enough thorns exist
from Christ's crown to fill an entire forest."
Sometimes this duplicity in the duplication
of relics could cause confusion to the peasant pilgrims.
Numerous 'skulls of Christ' existed in pilgrimage churches
throughout Europe. A monastery abbot would need to have
his wits about him if a peasant, upon being shown a
skull of Christ, asked with sincerity how it was possible
that he had seen another skull of Christ at another
pilgrimage church only a few months before. The monastery
abbot would very convincingly explain to the ignorant
peasant that one skull was Christ's when he was a boy
while the other skull was Christ's when he was a man.
(It is not within the scope of this essay to chronicle
the religious history of the Middle Ages, yet interested
readers may consult the books listed at the end of the
essay to learn of the extraordinary corruption which
plagued the Catholic Church during the medieval era.)
Rich and poor, nobleman and peasant
were drawn to the pilgrimage shrines. Kings and knights
would go to pray for victory in war or give thanks for
battles just won, women would pray for children and
ease in childbirth, farmers for crops, diseased persons
for miraculous healings, monks for ecstatic union with
God, and everyone for a remission of the burden of sin
which medieval Christians believed was their preordained
lot in life. Richard the Lion Hearted visited Westminster
Abbey, Louis IV walked barefoot to Chartres, Charles
VII visited the shrine at LePuy five times, Pope Pius
I walked barefoot through the snow to a shrine in Scotland,
and hundreds of thousands of peasants, merchants and
monks undertook year long ambulatory pilgrimages through
bandit infested territories and foreign lands.
Pilgrims visited these relic
shrines primarily in the hopes that by their prayers
they could induce the shrine's saint to intercede with
Christ or Mary on their behalf. As more and more pilgrims
visited the shrines, miracles did indeed begin to occur.
Word of a shrine's miracle causing ability began to
spread to the surrounding countryside and then to the
far corners of the European continent. With the extraordinary
numbers of pilgrims visiting the shrines, often as many
as 10,000 in a single day, church coffers increased
in wealth, monasteries became politically powerful and
the enormous cathedrals of Canterbury, Lincoln, Chartres,
Reims, Cologne, Burgos and Santiago rose towards the
heavens. Larger cathedrals attracted even greater numbers
of pilgrims and thus followed more and more reports
of miracles.
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Cathedral of
Notre Dame Le Puy, France
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Medieval pilgrims were told that the
miracles were caused by the saint's relics, but this
was not the case. As noted earlier, the pilgrimage cathedrals
were very often situated at pagan sacred sites which
had been visited and venerated for many thousands of
years. It was therefore the energies of the power places,
the sacred geometry of the structures built at those
sites and the religious devotion of the pilgrims - not
the relics - which caused the miracles to occur.
The age of medieval pilgrimages
was not destined to last however. Similar to megalithic
culture 4000 years earlier, it began to decline as its
spiritual foundations were weakened by the emergence
of new ideas. The latter part of the 15th century had
already seen a waning of interest in pilgrimages due
to the growth of scientific awareness and the questioning
of Christian dogma, yet the final blow to the medieval
pilgrimage era was dealt by Martin Luther and the Protestant
Reformation of the early 16th century. So intense was
the impact of the Protestant Reformation that by the
end of the 16th century, pilgrimages in Britain and
large parts of central Europe had completely ceased.
To be sure, local people continued to visit pilgrimage
shrines, but the custom of pilgrims walking thousands
of miles across Europe on multiple-shrine pilgrimages
was never to be seen again.
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