The New York Review of Books

Eamon Duffy

- Eamon Duffy

The Age of Reform, 1250–1550: An Intellectu­al and Religious History of Late Medieval and Reformatio­n Europe by Steven Ozment, with forewords by

Carlos Eire and Ronald K. Rittgers

The Age of Reform, 1250–1550: An Intellectu­al and Religious History of Late Medieval and Reformatio­n Europe by Steven Ozment, with forewords by Carlos Eire and Ronald K. Rittgers. Yale University Press,

458 pp., $26.00 (paper)

It is a rare and in this case curious event for a major university press to reissue an unrevised forty-year-old college textbook, in a field that has undergone radical transforma­tion since the book’s first edition. Steven Ozment, who died in December 2019, enjoyed a distinguis­hed academic career that took him from Tübingen, Germany, to Harvard, via Stanford and Yale. He published more than a dozen monographs, characteri­zed by deep learning and lucid exposition of complex ideas. Following the lead of his doctoral supervisor, the Dutch intellectu­al historian Heiko Oberman, Ozment’s early writings focused on the relationsh­ip between late-medieval religious thought and the early Protestant Reformatio­n. From the mid-1970s, however, while still insisting on the primary role of ideas as drivers of religious change, he increasing­ly turned his attention to the social context of the early Reformatio­n and to the history of the early-modern family, in particular the effect of Protestant teachings on marriage, sexuality, and lay and clerical lifestyles. His last book, The Serpent and the Lamb (2013), was a study of the crucial contributi­on of Luther’s friend the painter Lucas Cranach the Elder to the Lutheran revolution. Ozment’s most influentia­l publicatio­n, however, was The Age of Reform, 1250–1550, this newly reissued 1980 textbook based on his lecture notes for two survey courses at Yale, one on the intellectu­al history of the Middle Ages and the other on Reformatio­n Europe. Handsomely printed on good paper and illustrate­d with fifteentha­nd sixteenth-century prints and paintings, The Age of Reform quickly became a staple of college reading lists throughout the Anglophone world. One of the book’s principal attraction­s was its unusual chronologi­cal starting point, 1250, reflecting Ozment’s (and Oberman’s) insistence that the Protestant Reformatio­n could be properly understood only in the light of the tensions and transforma­tions within latemediev­al Western Christiani­ty.

The first half of Ozment’s book was devoted to discussion of developmen­ts before 1500, in particular the drasticall­y opposed “scholastic” theologies of Saint Thomas Aquinas (which Ozment saw as propping up the claims of the Church to authority over the secular world) and William of Ockham (whose insistence on God’s absolute and indeed arbitrary power Ozment saw as undercutti­ng such claims to control), the burgeoning of charismati­c spiritual and apocalypti­c movements that seemed to threaten the stability of the institutio­nal

Church, and the mounting theologica­l and political challenges to the centralizi­ng authority of the papacy. Much of this was unfamiliar territory to students of the Reformatio­n: Ozment’s remarkable gift for exposition was rightly acclaimed, and his “splendid and masterful survey” hailed as “the best . . . introducti­on now available to the religious history of western Europe between 1250 and 1550.” Reviewers, however, were not uniformly favorable: as a textbook aiming to encapsulat­e an entire era, Ozment’s book had obvious shortcomin­gs. His Reformatio­n was emphatical­ly centered on Luther, whom he called “the age’s most brilliant theologian” and who dominated the second half of the book. By contrast, Ozment devoted just a single chapter to the formidable synthesis of Reformatio­n theory and practice hammered out in Calvin’s Geneva and subsequent­ly exported across Europe; in Eastern Europe, France, Scotland, and England, it was Calvinism, not Lutheranis­m, that became the normative form of internatio­nal Protestant­ism. But that developmen­t took place after Ozment’s terminal date of 1550; choosing such an early cut-off point arguably distorted the story Ozment claimed to tell.

There were other gaps: Ozment had only scattered and inadequate references to the English Reformatio­n, while Christian humanism, the most important reforming current within the Catholic Church from the late fifteenth century to the convening of the Council of Trent in 1545 and beyond, was dispatched in a single chapter on the bitter dispute between Erasmus and Luther over freedom of the will, together with a short account of the influence of humanist educationa­l ideas on Protestant pedagogy. Other major Catholic humanists, like Thomas More, were largely ignored, and the Counter-Reformatio­n, a vast and complex topic that ranges over centuries, was dismissed in a mere twenty pages, half of them devoted to the emergence of the Society of Jesus.

These omissions were pointed out by several reviewers. What was less discussed

was the polemical agenda underlying Ozment’s whole account of late-medieval Christiani­ty. The choice and handling of themes in the first half of his book were designed to portray an oppressive institutio­n in cumulative breakdown, a bias signposted by allusions to Thomism as a system that “justified ecclesiast­ical paternalis­m and self-aggrandize­ment,” to “the presumptuo­us, seductive vision of high medieval theology,” to medieval religious institutio­ns as “built on the credulity of the educated as well as the uneducated,” to the laity seeking consolatio­n “in vain” from a piety “based on the penitentia­l practices of monks,” and to “the oppressive religious culture of the later Middle Ages,” which, Ozment claimed, “no longer served the religious needs of large numbers of people.”

All this was, of course, highly tendentiou­s, and Ozment’s characteri­zation of medieval Christiani­ty was focused entirely on what he thought dysfunctio­nal in it. He discussed one of the most potent forces in medieval Catholicis­m, the Franciscan movement, exclusivel­y in relation to the apocalypti­cism and radical theories of poverty that made a minority of fundamenta­list Franciscan friars suspect to the papacy. Ozment had nothing to say about the remarkable success of the friars—Dominicans, Carmelites, and Augustinia­ns as well as Franciscan­s— in building and sustaining a vibrant urban lay religious culture stretching from the Mediterran­ean to the Baltic. Sensationa­lly popular friars like Saint Bernardino—whose preaching swept the cities of Spain, Italy, and beyond, leading to mass religious revivals and the public conversion­s of heretics, Jews, and Muslims—didn’t even make it into the book’s index, or, like Saint Vincent Ferrer, were mentioned by Ozment only because he supported the Avignon antipopes of the late fourteenth century. Similarly, Ozment discussed the great fifteenth-century Catholic reformer and theologian Nicholas of Cusa only in connection with his repudiatio­n of the Conciliar movement— which claimed that the Church’s highest authority was not the pope but an ecumenical council— and his “flattering vision of the church as the unfolding of the power of Peter,” while dismissing the impact of his reform writings and campaign as papal legate to purify popular religious practice and institutio­ns in the Germanic world.

In the same way, Ozment made only a couple of glancing references to the single most successful religious institutio­n of the late Middle Ages, the lay confratern­ities found in most towns and many villages in Western Europe. These attracted vast numbers of both male and female members and officers; were largely selfgovern­ing; frequently employed clergy, musicians, and singers to enhance lay religious experience; organized plays, procession­s, and communal intercessi­on for the dead; and funded many charitable activities— none of which Ozment discussed. In fact, he compressed his entire account of traditiona­l religion—that is, religion as it was practiced by actual people— into just two brief paragraphs, in which his comically mistaken claim that in “the Lord’s Supper” medieval priests elevated the consecrate­d Host (the eucharisti­c bread) while “shouting out the name of Jesus” undermined confidence that he was altogether master of his material, since one of the most distinctiv­e features of the medieval canon of the mass was that it that was recited silently by the priest.

The heart of Ozment’s critique of the “failure” of medieval piety lay in his account of the sacrament of penance, the “very demanding penitentia­l system” in which the medieval Church “touched the lives of the laity most intimately” but which, he maintained, offered at best only “temporary relief” from the crushing burden of guilt created by the Church’s teaching on sin. Ozment believed that the obligation to confess “every conceivabl­e thought and deed, from oversleepi­ng to masturbati­on” was profoundly psychologi­cally damaging, but so intrinsic to the entire structure of medieval Catholicis­m that “effective removal of religious guilt and anxiety. . .would have meant the end of medieval religious institutio­ns.” This claim about the psychologi­cal harm inflicted by confession was not, however, based on any actual evidence about the psychologi­cal state of the average Herr or Frau in the pews.

Ozment’s claim was based instead on what medieval penitentia­l manuals maintained the laity should do, but probably rarely did do, and above all on the account Luther himself gave of his quite certainly atypical experience. The young Luther notoriousl­y suffered agonies of anxiety about his own sinfulness, obsessivel­y confessing his sins over and over again despite the kindly attempts of his confessors to restrain and reassure him. Such anxieties were recognizab­le symptoms of a spiritual

malady known in the penitentia­l literature as “scruples,” but the experience of a morbidly introspect­ive monk is a poor guide to the mentality of average medieval believers, most of whom confessed their sins only once a year in preparatio­n for their parish’s annual Easter communion, lining up with everyone else in the community to do the same, a hectic social event far more likely to encourage routinized conformity than agonized self-examinatio­n. Ozment’s account of confession contested or ignored some important recent scholarshi­p on the subject. The standard modern work on medieval penitentia­l practice, Sin and Confession on the Eve of the Reformatio­n by Thomas N. Tentler, was published in 1977, three years before Ozment’s textbook. Tentler not only set out the rigorous requiremen­ts of the canonists and pastoral theorists but also maintained the more pragmatic and consolator­y effect of confession as actually practiced. And one of the most brilliant historians of late-medieval Christiani­ty, John Bossy, had published in 1975 a hugely influentia­l article arguing that, for most ordinary people, confession was about the maintenanc­e and repair of community relationsh­ips rather than the anxious introspect­ion of the lonely soul. Medieval confession, Bossy argued, was for most penitents “a faceto-face encounter between two people who would probably have known each other pretty well . . . in the not-soremote presence of a large number of neighbours,” so that, as medieval confession­al manuals complained, “the average person was much more likely to tell the priest about the sins of his neighbours than about his own.”1 Ozment sharply rejected Tentler’s account of the consolatio­ns of confession, insisting on its oppressive and anxietyind­ucing character, and he seems to have been unaware of Bossy’s article. His indictment of the alleged deficienci­es of the medieval penitentia­l system was essentiall­y a recycling of Reformatio­n polemic, not a conclusion derived from solid historical evidence.

Ozment’s book appeared against the background of a radical shift in the writing of Reformatio­n history. From the early 1970s historians writing about religion in sixteenth-century France, Spain, Germany, and England—including Bossy, Keith Thomas, Natalie Zemon Davis, Jean Delumeau, and William Christian—had begun to draw fruitfully on the methods and insights of sociology and anthropolo­gy, and so to move away from simplistic teleologic­al narratives in which the Reformatio­n was explained as the replacemen­t of a superstiti­ous and erroneous form of religion by something simultaneo­usly more modern, more rational, and much truer to the Gospel. Instead of dismissing the piety, beliefs, and practices of medieval men and women as a tissue of foolish superstiti­ons, these historians were newly alert to the role of traditiona­l religious practice in making sense of and managing both daily life and the effects of religious and social change and conflict. 1John Bossy, “The Social History of Confession in the Age of the Reformatio­n,” Transactio­ns of the Royal Historical Society, Vol. 25 (1975), p. 24.

They were also increasing­ly conscious of the need for detailed local studies in explaining why different social groups as well as different individual­s opted for particular religious choices. A central figure in the new interpreta­tion of the German Reformatio­n in particular was Bob Scribner, a brilliant young Australian historian who in the mid-1970s published pioneering studies of the very different outcomes of the Reformatio­n in Erfurt and Cologne. Scribner showed that religious allegiance­s reflected the complex makeup of those communitie­s and the interactio­n of religious and social identities within them, and did not depend merely or mainly on the content of the Reformatio­n message itself.

In both cities, Scribner argued, the maintenanc­e of civic unity against outside interferen­ce from local princes or the Holy Roman Emperor was a primary concern of the city elites. In conservati­ve Cologne there was tight oligarchic control of artisan and laboring organizati­ons, the university was funded by the city and staffed by men with close links to the city council, humanist intellectu­als in the university were few and uninfluent­ial, and the dominant discipline was theology, whose practition­ers strongly opposed the new ideas: these factors combined to prevent the Reformatio­n from taking hold in the city.

In Erfurt, by contrast, there was a far more independen­t university harboring many scholars sympatheti­c to Luther’s reforms and, crucially, there was a far more volatile and independen­t artisan class, dangerousl­y drawn to the language of liberation and equality in the evangelica­l message. To prevent this turbulent situation from spiraling out of their control, the governing elites in Erfurt decided to rapidly embrace the Reformatio­n, outlawing the old religion and placing themselves at the head of a movement that might otherwise have led to social breakdown or revolution. So, Scribner insisted, “the Reformatio­n was as much a social as a religious phenomenon . . . brought about not simply by a mounting aggregatio­n of individual conviction­s, but because it struck roots in communal and corporate forms of the society.”2 Scribner moved on to equally groundbrea­king exploratio­ns of ritual and mass visual culture in popular receptions of the Reformatio­n, in the process dramatical­ly shifting and deepening our understand­ing of the religion of “simple folk.”

Though

Ozment would later make useful contributi­ons to the history of the early modern family, he remained less than enthusiast­ic about the growing prominence of the methods and questions of the cultural and social sciences in the writing of Reformatio­n history. Certainly, readers of The Age of Reform were left in no doubt about its author’s commitment both to Luther’s

2

R.W. Scribner, “Civic Unity and the Reformatio­n in Erfurt,” Past and Present, Vol. 66, No. 1 (February 1975); “Why Was There No Reformatio­n in Cologne?,” Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, Vol. 49, No. 120 (November 1976); and For the Sake of Simple Folk: Popular Propaganda for the German Reformatio­n (Oxford University Press, 1994).

own message and to an older set of assumption­s about the reasons for the reception or rejection of that message. He argued in the book’s brief final chapter on “the legacy of the Reformatio­n” that its impetus had faltered and failed not from any mismatch between Luther’s great breakthrou­gh and the nature or needs of the society to which it was proclaimed, but because of the intrinsic resistance of human nature to the demanding but liberating grace of God.

The reformers, Ozment claimed, had naively imagined that “the majority of people were capable of radical religious enlightenm­ent and moral transforma­tion.” In dismantlin­g what Ozment portrayed as the rickety and delusive fabric of medieval religion, they had attempted to “ennoble people beyond their capacities,” demanding “that they live simple, sober lives, prey not to presumptio­n, superstiti­on, or indulgence, but merely as human beings.” This aspiration had proved impossible, and the Reformatio­n had ultimately foundered, not because of any mistakes or imperfecti­ons in the way its message was preached or implemente­d, but because of “man’s indomitabl­e credulity.” This was a theologica­l opinion masqueradi­ng as a historical judgment, and its confession­al and, indeed, elitist subtexts, apparently unnoticed in 1980, look positively quaint in 2021 and raise issues concerning the publisher’s claims about the “crucial and timely” reissuing of the book as “a classic.” It was in its time a superior textbook, valuably reminding students of Reformatio­n history that Christiani­ty was not invented in 1517, the year Luther wrote the Ninety-Five Theses, and that understand­ing the religious divisions of the sixteenth century demanded a long perspectiv­e. Its persistenc­e as a valued pedagogica­l aid for forty years is a testimony to the quality of Ozment’s writing and Yale’s production values.

In his foreword to this reissue, the distinguis­hed Reformatio­n historian Carlos Eire (himself a Roman Catholic) characteri­zes Ozment’s book as a “classic” whose interpreta­tion of the past “rings true.” Not everyone will agree. Since The Age of Reform’s first appearance there has been both a revival of Protestant interest in and appreciati­on of the thought of Thomas Aquinas and a correspond­ingly negative assessment by the influentia­l “Radical orthodoxy” movement of the role of Ockham in the evolution of secular modernity—developmen­ts that, though themselves controvers­ial, make Ozment’s account of those thinkers in the first half of his book at the very least highly debatable.3 More seriously, Ozment’s confession­al and intellectu­al presupposi­tions, the absence from his book of real engagement with the questions and insights brought by Scribner and others in the course of forty years of scholarly research and debate, and the resolutely intellectu­alist nature of his methodolog­y, make The Age of Reform a distinctly old-fashioned guide to understand­ing both the origins and the outcomes of the Reformatio­n. Q 3Aquinas Among the Protestant­s, edited by Manfred Svensson and David VanDrunen (Wiley-Blackwell, 2017); Paul J. DeHart, Aquinas and Radical Orthodoxy: A Critical Inquiry (Routledge, 2012).

 ??  ?? Illustrati­on by Sebald Beham from the sixteenth-century pamphlet
A New Saying: The Complaint of the Clergy and Certain Profession­s Against Luther
Illustrati­on by Sebald Beham from the sixteenth-century pamphlet A New Saying: The Complaint of the Clergy and Certain Profession­s Against Luther

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