| St.
Bernard, long before he received the title of Doctor of the Church, had become part of the
common inheritance of the Church's children. A majority, perhaps even the great majority,
of canonized saints are wholly unknown outside a region or a religious family; others have
a world-wide clientele, but only among theologians or the devout; a few are figures in
world history, whose personality and actions molded the life of their day and attract the
notice of all who read of the past. In this last group, and not among its shadows, stands
St. Bernard. He is indeed there on more than one title. As a great religious statesman, as
the leader and spokesman of a celebrated order, as a theologian, and as a writer and
speaker of genius he can make his claim. To the
historian he is perhaps most remarkable for his achievement on the stage of Church
politics. It is hard to name any other, not occupying the chair of St. Peter--St.
Athanasius is the only possible rival--who so determined the policy and the fortunes of
the Church as he. He confirmed one pope and instructed another; he confounded anti-popes
and revolutionaries; he put down dynasts from their seats in Church and state; he
determined the agenda at Councils; he sent Christendom on a crusade. He challenged and
engaged single-handed the greatest monastic confederation that the Western Church had
seen, and the acutest mind that the new dialectic had tempered. And all the time he was
drawing to his abbey of Clairvaux, and sending as colonists all over Europe, a corps
d'élite that counted among its numbers a pope, cardinals, bishops, and saints not a few.
Had he been no more than a Cistercian abbot, his fame would have been secure. When, at the
age of twenty-two and in the year 1112, he arrived at the gates of Cîteaux as a postulant
--with twenty-nine relatives whom he had won to his ideal--the new abbey of Cîteaux, to
outward sight, was on the point of foundering. Poverty, austerity and disease had killed
many and deterred more. With Bernard's arrival it was as if a great spring had been
tapped. When he died the progeny of Cîteaux numbered 339 houses, and his own abbey of
Clairvaux had 68 daughters and 159 lineal descendants. As for the numbers of their monks,
who shall tell them? Bernard's magnetism was indeed irresistible. He could launch armies
on the road to Jerusalem, and call legions to the cloister. Wherever he went, we are told,
mothers feared for their sons, and brides for their husbands, as they were to do centuries
later at the passage of Napoleon. The whole world, it was said, was turning into Cîteaux.
The spiritual teaching of St. Bernard has never been
neglected by the monastic order, and his treatises have throughout the centuries given joy
to the city of God, but the historical personality of the saint has been strangely
neglected by scholars and historians almost to our own day. Even now no fully satisfactory
biography, no adequate critical edition of his works, exists. The classical Life of
Vacandard, supplemented by articles in the great French Dictionnaires, is still
indispensable, but, even apart from the precisions which every year has added to the
story, it somehow fails to present the living Bernard. A Life to end all other Lives is
even now in the making, but can any Life be adequate? A biographer of Bernard might well
feel that had he a hundred tongues, a hundred mouths and a voice of iron, he could not
comprehend all in his pages. A Life of Bernard becomes almost insensibly a history of
Europe, in which dates and facts and unfamiliar names and episodes come crowding in till
the sight of the wood is lost behind the endless trees.
Nor have the biographers with tightened rein fared better.
St. Bernard, whose own voice could kindle a fire of desire or shatter an opposing
adversary, has emerged a pale shadow from the hands of apologists and expositors, and has
suffered from the misunderstanding and sheer ignorance of historians. And, although we
have so many of his own words, and a chain of early biographies, all are, with scarcely an
exception, too studied and too polished to give us those intimate incidents and sayings
that make such unique records of Eadmer's Life of Anselm and the early Lives of St.
Francis.
St. Bernard the Towering Figure
What was it in St Bernard that made him the
towering figure that he was? Circumstances are no explanation of genius, but they may help
it to expand, and undoubtedly one reason of St. Bernard's influence was his long life as
master of himself and in high place. Many saints--an Augustine, a Dominic, a Teresa, a
Vincent--have spent many years or decades of their lives in finding their salvation or
their vocation; others--a Gabriel or a Thérèse-- have been made perfect in short space.
For St. Bernard the decisive struggle was over before he came to Cîteaux; he was abbot at
twenty-five, and for almost forty years he could act and speak as the father of an immense
and saintly family. Then, the age and the man were exactly matched. The tide of reform was
still running strongly, and with all the anarchy and evils of the time there were
everywhere some men at least in high office who were united in their aims. Moreover, the
monastic ideal was acknowledged by the whole of western Christendom; the monastic life
seemed to most the one and only ideal Christian life. Finally, Bernard was at the heart of
the greatest monastic revival the West had ever seen; in his later years he had his
marshals, his garrisons, his storm-troops everywhere. With one of his sons in the chair of
Peter, and others in sees from York to the Mediterranean, he was at the center of a
network which he could use for intelligence, for propaganda and for execution.
Every human personality is unique, and the richer and
deeper the personality, the more is it distinguished from all others. Among the saints, ex
hypothesi the most fully developed of all human beings, the variety is infinite. Nor can
the historian, whom even the play of motive eludes, catch the workings of grace.
Nevertheless, among the saints two broad classes appear. There are those who are roused
and raised from a life of sin or mediocrity to sanctity, the so-called `twice-born', such
as St. Paul and St. Augustine, and there are those whose life resembles, all due
proportions guarded, those of Our Lady or St. John the Baptist; they seem sealed and set
apart to a dedicated life from the waters of Baptism. With the former we can often watch
the struggle between good and evil, with the latter we can only guess how they were called
and strengthened to accept and not to fail, to cooperate and to receive, as wave after
wave of grace came upon them. St. Bernard was clearly of this latter sort. From childhood,
from infancy, he was a privileged soul. There is no hint, either in his writings or in his
biographies, that he had ever closed his eyes to the light or slipped back. There was no
great moral or psychological crisis in his youth. When he hesitated for a few months on
the threshold of manhood, the choice was not between good and evil, God and the world, but
between a life of letters and a life of solitude. Even then the hesitation was brief. For
the rest his life, so far as we can observe it, was a series of responses to the demand
for a love exclusive and heroic, and because such a love of God exceeds our experience and
strains our sympathies, biographers of the saints take refuge either in silence or
devotional exclamations. Moreover, though he wrote so much and was such an artist in
words, and though in some of his sermons he professedly speaks of himself, Bernard is in a
sense an extrovert. He was not interested in his own past and his own growth, as were
Augustine, Ailred and the two Teresas. Even when he speaks of himself it is, so to say,
Bernard speaking of the historical Bernard rather than a soul revealing itself.
It is for this reason, perhaps, that for the many who
admire St. Bernard, either as a teacher or as a leader, or as a master of words and worker
of wonders, there are few who have for him that personal love that the four saints just
mentioned can evoke. With them we feel that we have a spark of kinship, however remote;
they would understand and counsel us. With Bernard it is not so. Yet this is not the true
picture of him. Bernard could be all things to all men; his biographer tells us not only
that his counsel was sought, by letter and face to face, all over Christendom, but that he
was happiest and most himself in the daily relations with his monks. The same biographer,
who knew him well, goes on to say that with his monks he was not only most himself, but
that he used a simplicity of intercourse with them which the world did not know.
Fortitude: the Most Characteristic
of All the Virtues
Bernard's feats of endurance and the
interminable list of his wonders fill almost all the space in his biographies that is not
given to his achievements as founder of Clairvaux and her many daughters, as champion of
the Church, and as the hammer of heretics. Bernard the friend, even Bernard the father in
God, are lost. More strangely still, Bernard's real fortitude is lost also; he becomes a
champion whose victories are assured by his skill and prowess in arms. Yet fortitude, both
in secret and in facie ecclesiae, is perhaps the most characteristic of all his virtues.
Every saint is what he is through charity alone, but in every human personality some
characteristics are more obvious than others. In Bernard it is his fortitude, his utter
fearlessness. Fortitude is as essential a part of the Christian character as is humility;
both in the last resort spring from a love of God which obliterates human apprehensions
and values; but the fortitude of many saints of recent times has been shown only in secret
to a few and in the private relationships of life. Bernard's was shown pre-eminently in
his external dealings with men. Here again his biographers have done him a disservice.
They show him at war only with open heresy and vice and tyranny. In fact, he denounced and
fought against falsehood, worldliness and weakness wherever he saw them, however revered
or exalted might be the object of his attack. A more faithful servant of the pope could
not be found, but neither could one be found who had a clearer sense of the duties and
obligations of that sublime office. Bernard did not hesitate to tell a pope what he should
do, and what he should have done; he did not hesitate to tell him that he had neglected
his duty. Biographers are apt to give the impression that only simoniacs and interlopers
were Bernard's targets. In fact, he did not hesitate to thwart, denounce and uproot
bishops who to the eyes of their contemporaries were passable, even respectable, or at
least were secure and powerful. If he was convinced that a bishop or an abbot or a
community was bad, he said so. Like the man in the nonsense rhyme, he said it very loud
and clear, and went on saying it. He did not mince his words or pull his punches. If he
was persuaded that the great Henry of Winchester, legate of the Apostolic See and brother
of a king, disgraced his high office and his monastic profession by his ambition and his
riches, he called him, in well chosen scriptural phrases, a whore and a wizard. The
bishop's protégé, the archbishop of York, was, he said, an idol set up in the temple of
the Lord. If authority was remiss in acting or punishing, Bernard lashed authority and
gave it no rest till, like the judge in the parable, as if fearful of physical violence,
it was driven to act. But behind the fire and the eloquence the courage was not that of a
knight-errant, still less that of a Quixote; it was the fortitude of Christ, despised as a
Galilean and unlettered in the law, challenging and accusing the priests and lawyers
because they set human respect and the traditions of men before the law of God; it was a
fortitude that owed its clear sight of God's truth to a purity won in the secret conflict
with pain and fatigue and physical illness.
The legendary austerity, the reputation for drastic and
intolerant action, and the ceaseless activity of Bernard, suggest to the casual reader an
iron constitution and physical powers that answered every call made upon them. Assuredly
he came of a race of fighters, and had imposed his leadership upon the whole family while
yet a young man in the world; he was tall and handsome as a youth, with a charm and grace
of manner, and a gaiety which he never lost. But from his early years in the monastery,
whether from unhealthy food, or excessive fasting, or from some cause which would elude
medical science today as it did then, his health broke down utterly and never mended. For
the whole of his adult life he was an invalid, brought more than once or twice to the edge
of the grave. His earliest and most discerning biographer, William of St. Thierry, who
spoke from long and loving observation, gives a number of realistic details which are
hardly susceptible of presentation in English, but which establish beyond all doubt the
painful and humiliating symptoms which made Bernard a burden to others as well as himself.
During the greater part of his life his stomach repeatedly rejected all solid food. For a
whole year in his early manhood as abbot he was forced to live apart from his monks in a
hut because his physical presence was unbearable in choir or at table. He was, after his
first years at Clairvaux, too weak to take part in any manual work; even walking exhausted
him; and to his lifelong friends the characteristic memory was of a Bernard seated,
emaciated and in pain. It was in such circumstances, which to most would seem an excuse
for self-indulgence, self-pity and inertia, that Bernard guided his monks, made his
foundations, wrote his treatises and journeyed across the Alps.
From The Dublin Review (1953) Vol. 227, pp. 104 sqq.
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