The Rule of St.
Columban of Ireland
Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition:
T201052
Here begin the Chapters of the Rule.
- Of Obedience.
- Of Silence.
- Of Food and Drink.
- Of Overcoming Greed.
- Of Overcoming Vanity.
- Of Chastity.
- Of the Choir Office.
- Of Discretion.
- Of Mortification.
- Of the Monk's Perfection.
Monks' Rule
Of Obedience
At the first word of a senior, all on hearing should
rise to obey, since their obedience is shown to God, as our Lord Jesus
Christ says: He who hears you hears Me.
Luc. 10.16
(II)
Therefore if anyone hearing the word does not rise at
once, he is to be judged disobedient. But he who answers back incurs
the charge of insubordination, and thus is not only guilty of
disobedience, but also, by opening the way of answering back
Cf. Basil. (transl. Rufin.) Interrog. 69
for others, is
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to be regarded as the destroyer of many. (III) Yet if
any murmurs, he too, as though not obeying heartily, must be considered
disobedient. Therefore let his work be rejected,
cf. Basil. Interrog. 71
until his goodwill be made known. But up to what measure
is obedience laid down? Up to death
cf. Basil. Interrog. 65, Cassian. Inst.
xii. 28
it is assuredly enjoined, since Christ obeyed the Father
up to death for us. And this He suggests to us saying through the
Apostle: Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus,
Who though He was in the form of God, thought it no prize to snatch at
to be equal with God; but emptied Himself, taking the form of a
servant, and being found in fashion as a man, humbled Himself, being
made obedient to the Father up to death, even the death of the cross.
Phil. 2. 5-8
Thus nothing must be refused in their obedience by
Christ's true disciples, however hard and difficult it be, but it must
be seized with zeal, with gladness, since if obedience is not of this
nature, it will not be pleasing to the Lord Who says: And he who
does not take his cross and follow Me, is not worthy of Me.
Matt. 10. 38
And thus He says of the worthy disciple, how that Where
I am, there is My servant also with Me.
Ioann. 12.26
Of Silence (IV)
The rule of silence is decreed to be carefully observed,
since it is written: But the nurture of righteousness is silence
and peace.
Isa. 32.17
And thus, lest one be apprehended as guilty of much
talking, it is needful that he keep silence, except for things
profitable and necessary, since according to Scripture, in many
words sin will not be lacking.
Prov. 10.19
Therefore the Saviour says: By thy words thou shalt
be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned.
Matt. 12.37
Justly will they be damned who would not say just things
when they could, but preferred to say with garrulous loquacity what is
evil, unjust, irreverent, empty, harmful, dubious, false, provocative,
disparaging, base, fanciful, blasphemous, rude, and tortuous. Therefore
we must keep silence on these and kindred matters, and speak with care
and prudence, lest either disparagements or swollen oppositions should
break out in vicious garrulity.
Of Food and Drink (V)
Let the monks' food be poor and taken in the
evening,
cf. Hieron. Epist. lviii. 6
such as to avoid repletion,
cf. Hieron. Epist. xxii. 17
and their drink such as to avoid intoxication, so that
it
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may both maintain life and not harm; vegetables, beans,
flour mixed with water, together with the small bread of a loaf, lest
the stomach be burdened and the mind confused. For indeed those who
desire eternal rewards must only consider usefulness and use. Use of
life must be moderated just as toil must be moderated, since this is
true discretion, that the possibility of spiritual progress may be kept
with a temperance that punishes the flesh. For if temperance exceeds
measure, it will be a vice and not a virtue; for virtue maintains and
retains many goods. Therefore we must fast daily, just as we must feed
daily; and while we must eat daily, we must gratify the body more
poorly and sparingly; since we must eat daily for the reason that we
must go forward daily, pray daily, toil daily, and daily read.
Of Poverty and of Overcoming Greed (VI)
By monks, to whom for Christ's sake the world is
crucified and they to the world,
cf. Gal. 6.14
greed must be avoided, when indeed it is reprehensible
for them not only to have superfluities, but even to want them. In
their case not property but will is required; and they, leaving all
things and daily following the Lord Christ with the cross of fear, have
treasures in heaven.
cf. Matt. 19.21
Therefore, while they will have much in heaven, on earth
they should be satisfied with the small possessions of utter need,
knowing that greed is a leprosy for monks who copy the sons of the
prophets, and for the disciple of Christ it is revolt and ruin, for the
uncertain followers of the apostles also it is death. Thus then nakedness
and disdain of riches
cf. Cassian. Inst. iv. 43
are the first perfection of monks, but the second is the
purging of vices,
cf. Cassian. Conl. xiv. I
the third the most perfect and perpetual love of God and
unceasing affection for things divine, which follows on the
forgetfulness of earthly things. Since this is so, we have need of
few things, according to the word of the Lord, or even of one.
Luc. 10.42
For few things are true necessities without which life
cannot be led, or even one thing, like food according to the letter.
But we require purity of feeling by the grace of God, that we may
understand spiritually what are those few gifts of love which are
offered to Martha by the Lord.
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Of overcoming Vanity (VII)
How dangerous vanity also may be is shown by a few words
of the Saviour, Who said to His disciples when they exulted in this
vanity, I saw Satan like lightning fall from heaven,
Luc. 10. 18
and Who says to the Jews when once they excused
themselves, But what is lofty among men is an abomination in the
Lord's sight.
Luc. 16. 15
By these and by that most notorious case of the Pharisee
who excused himself, we gather that vanity and proud self-esteem are
the destroyer of all good things, when the Pharisee's vainly extolled
goods perished and the publican's self-confessed sins vanished away.
Then let no large word proceed from a monk's mouth, lest his own large
labour perish.
Of Chastity (VIII)
A monk's chastity is indeed judged in his thoughts, and
to him, along with the disciples who approached to hear, it is
doubtless said by the Lord: He who looks on a woman to lust after
her has already defiled her in his heart.
Matt. 5. 28
For while his vow is weighed by Him to Whom he is
devoted, there is cause to fear lest He should find in the soul
something to loathe, lest perhaps according to the opinion of St. Peter
they have eyes full of wantonness and of adultery.
2 Pet. 2. 14
And what profit is it if he be virgin in body, if he be
not virgin in mind? For God, being Spirit,
cf. Hieron. Epist. xxii. 38 Ioann. 4. 24
dwells in the spirit and the mind which He has seen
undefiled, in which there is no adulterous thought, no stain of a
spirit polluted, and no spot of sin.
Of the Choir office
But concerning the synaxis, that is, the office of
psalms and prayers in canonical manner, some distinctions must be
drawn, since its observance has been variously bequeathed to our
remembrance by different authorities. Thus, in accordance with the
nature of man's life and the succession of the seasons, the same will
be variously suggested by myself also in writing. For it should not be
stereotyped in view of the mutual changes of the seasons; for it is
fitting that it be longer on the long nights and shorter on the short
ones. Hence, in agreement with our predecessors, from the twenty-fourth
of June, while the night increases, the office
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begins to grow gradually from twelve chants of the
shortest measure on the night of the Sabbath or the Lord's Day, up to
the beginning of winter, that is, the first of November. Then they sing
twenty-five antiphonal psalms [of twice the same number] which always
follow third after two chanted, in such a way that within the two
aforesaid nights they sing the entire total of the psalter, while they
modify the remaining nights for the whole winter with twelve chants. At
winter's end, gradually each week throughout the spring, three psalms
are always dropped, so that only twelve antiphons remain on the holy
nights, that is, the thirty-six psalms of the daily winter office, but
it is twenty-four throughout the whole spring and summer and up to the
autumn equinox, that is, the twenty-fourth of September. Then the
fashion of the synaxis is like that on the spring equinox, that is, the
twenty-fifth of March, while by mutual changes it slowly grows and
lessens.
Thus we must weigh our watching according to our
strength, especially when we are bidden by the Author of our salvation
to watch and pray at all times,
Luc. 21. 36
and when Paul ordains: Pray without ceasing.
I Thess. 5. 17
But since we must know the manner of canonical prayers,
in which all gather together at appointed hours in common prayer, at
the conclusion of which each should pray in his own cell,
cf. Matt. 6.6; cf. Cassian. Inst. iii.
3
our predecessors have appointed three psalms at each of
the day-time hours, considering the interruption of work, together with
an addition of versicles which intercede first for our own sins, then
for all Christian people, then for priests and the other orders of the
holy flock that are consecrate to God, finally for those that do alms,
next for the concord of kings, lastly for our enemies, that God reckon
it not to them for sin that they persecute and slander us, since they
know not what they do.
Luc. 23. 34
But at night-fall twelve psalms are chanted, and at
midnight twelve likewise; but towards morning twice ten and twice two
are appointed, as has been said during the seasons of short
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nights, while more, as I have already said, are always
ordained for the night of the Lord's Day and Sabbath vigil, on which
seventy-five are sung individually in the course of one office.
These things are said with reference to the communal
synaxis. However, as I have said, the true tradition of praying is that
the capacity of the man devoted to this work should be realized without
wearying of his vow, whether the excellence of his capacity allows
this, or whether his mental grasp or physical condition could allow it,
considering his limitations, and that it should be realized as far as
the zeal of each demands, if he be unhampered and alone, or as far as
the scope of his learning requires, or the leisure of his position, the
amount of study, the type of occupation and the difference of ages
permits, although this is to be reckoned as the excellence of a single
work in such various ways, because it alternates with labour and
circumstance. And thus, although the length of standing or singing may
be various, yet the identity of prayer in the heart and mental
concentration that is unceasing with God's help will be of a single
excellence. However there are some Catholics, who have the same
canonical number twelve of psalms,
cf. Cassian. inst. ii. 4 et 12
whether on short nights or on long ones, but they render
this canon in four portions during the night; that is, at nightfall and
at midnight and at cock-crow and at morning. And as this office seems
small to some in winter, so in summer it is found burdensome and heavy
enough, while with its frequent risings in the night's short length it
causes not so much weariness as exhaustion. But on the most holy
nights, namely on those of the Lord's Day or the Sabbath, three times
the same number is performed at morning, that is, with thrice ten and
six psalms. The crowds of these men and their holy life have directed
many to this canonical number with sweet delight, as well as to the
rest of their discipline, in the belief that none is found weary under
their rule. And though their crowds are so great that a thousand
fathers are said to live under one archimandrite, yet there, from the
foundation of the community, no quarrel is related to have been seen
between two monks; and without the dwelling there of God Who says, I
will dwell with them and walk among them, and I will be their God and
they will be My people,
2 Cor. 6. 16
this clearly could not happen. Therefore they have grown
deservedly, and they grow dailythanks be to Godin whose midst God
dwells, and through whose merits may we merit salvation from our Lord
and Saviour.
Amen.
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Of Discretion (IX)
How necessary discretion is for monks is shown by the
mistake of many, and indicated by the downfall of some, who
beginning without discretion and passing their time without a sobering
knowledge, have been unable to complete a praiseworthy life;
cf. Cassian. Conl. ii. 2
since, just as error overtakes those who proceed without
a path, so for those who live without discretion intemperance is at
hand, and this is always the opposite of virtues which are placed in
the mean between each extreme. Its onset is a matter of danger, when
beside the straight way of discretion our foes place the
stumbling-blocks of wickedness and the offences of various mistakes.
(X) Therefore we must pray God continually that He would
bestow the light of true discretion to illumine this way, surrounded on
every side by the world's thickest darkness, so that His true
worshippers may be able to cross this darkness without error to
Himself. So discretion has got its name from discerning, for the reason
that it discerns in us between good and evil, and also between the
moderate and the complete. For from the beginning either class has been
divided like light and darkness, that is, good and evil, after evil
began through the devil's agency to exist by the corruption of good,
but through God's agency Who first illumines and then divides. Thus
righteous Abel chose the good, but unrighteous Cain fell upon evil.
(XI) God made all things good that He created, but the
devil sowed evils over them by cunning craftiness and the sly
inducement of a perilous design. What things then are good? Doubtless
those which are untouched, and have remained in the undefiled
state of their creation;
cf. Cassian. Conl. viii. 24
which God [alone] created and prepared, [according
to the Apostle], that we should walk in them; [which are] the good
works in which in Christ Jesus we were created,
cf. Eph. 2. 10
namely goodness, innocence, righteousness, justice,
truth, pity, love, saving peace, spiritual joy, together with the fruit
of the Spiritall these with their fruits are good. But to these the
evils are opposed, namely wickedness, seduction, unrighteousness,
injustice, lying, greed, hatred, discord, bitterness, together with
their manifold fruits, things which are born from them. For countless
are the things that are produced from the two opposites, that is, from
goods and evils.
(XII) But what departs from its established goodness and
innocence is the first evil, which is the pride of primal wickedness;
the opposite of which is the lowly esteem of a righteous
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goodness that acknowledges and glorifies its Creator,
and this is a rational creature's first good. Thus the rest also have
gradually grown to a huge forest of names in two sections. Since this
is so, the good must be firmly held by those that have God's help,
which is ever to be prayed for in prosperity and in adversity, lest
either in prosperity we be lifted up to pride, or in adversity be cast
down to despair. Thus we must always restrain ourselves from either
danger, that is, from all excess by a splendid temperance and true
discretion, which cleaves to Christian lowliness and opens the way of
perfection to Christ's true soldiers, namely by ever discerning rightly
in doubtful cases, and everywhere dividing justly between good and
evil, whether between both in external acts, or between flesh and
spirit in the inner life, or between good works and character, or
between action and contemplation, or between official duty and private
devotion. Therefore the evils are to be equally avoided, pride, ill
will, lying, seduction, unrighteousness, wicked transgression of
morality, gluttony, fornication, avarice, wrath, dejection,
inconstancy, vainglory, boasting, slander; the goods of the virtues are
also to be followed, lowliness, kindness, purity, obedience,
temperance, chastity, liberality, patience, cheerfulness, constancy,
zeal, persistence, watchfulness, silence, which through an enduring
courage and sobering moderation, as in some weighing balance of
discretion, are to be weighed in the performance of our customary work,
according to the capacity of our endeavour, if everywhere we seek
sufficiency. For it is doubtful to none that the man to whom
sufficiency is not enough
cf. Sulp. Sev. Dial. i. 18
has overstepped the measure of discretion, and whatever
oversteps the very measure is clearly a vice.
(XIII) Thus between the little and the excessive there
is a reasonable measure in the midst, which ever recalls us from every
superfluity on either side, and in every case posited provides what is
universally fixed by human need, and spurns the unreasonable demand of
superfluous desire. And this measure of true discretion, weighing all
our actions in the scales of justice, in no wise allows us to err from
what is just, or to suffer a mistake, if we ever follow straight behind
it as our leader. For while we must always restrain ourselves from
either side, according to that saying, Keep yourselves from the
right and from the left,
cf. Deut. 5. 32
we must ever proceed straight forward by discretion,
that is, by the light of God,
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while very often we say and sing the victorious
psalmist's verse, My God, enlighten my darkness, since in Thee I
am rescued from temptation.
Ps. 17. 28
For temptation is the life of man on earth.
Iob 7. 1
Of mortification (XIV)
The chief part of the monks' rule is mortification,
since indeed they are enjoined in Scripture, Do nothing without
counsel.
Ecclus. 32. 24
Thus if nothing is to be done without counsel, everything
must be asked for by counsel.
cf. Cassian. Conl. ii. 10
Thus we are enjoined through Moses also, Ask thy
father and he will show thee, thy elders and they will tell thee.
Deut. 32. 7
But though this training seem hard to the hard-hearted,
namely that a man should always hang upon the lips of another, yet by
those who are fixed in their fear of God it will be found pleasant and
safe, if it is kept wholly and not in part, since nothing is pleasanter
than safety of conscience and nothing safer than exoneration of the
soul, which none can provide for himself by his own efforts, since it
properly belongs to the judgement of others. For what the judge's
examination has already tried preserves from the fear of censure, and
on him is laid the weight of another's burden, and he bears all the
peril that he undertakes; for, as it is written, the peril of the
judge [is greater than that] of the accused.
cf. Matt. 7.1. et seq.
So anyone who has always asked, if he follows will never
err, since if the other's reply has erred, there will be no error in
the faith of him who believes and the toil of him who obeys, nor will
they lack the reward of his asking. For if he has considered anything
by himself when he ought to have asked, he is proved guilty of error in
this very fact that he dared to judge when he ought to have been
judged; even though it turn out right, it will be reckoned to him as
wrong, since he has departed from the right course in this; for the man
to whose duty it belongs only to obey presumes to judge nothing by
himself.
Then, since this is so, monks must everywhere beware of
a proud independence, and learn true lowliness as they obey without
murmuring and hesitation, that according to the Lord's word [they
may feel] the yoke [of Christ] pleasant and [His] burden light.
Matt. 11. 30
Otherwise, while they are learning the lowliness of
Christ, they will not feel the pleasure of His
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yoke and the lightness of His burden. For lowliness of
heart is the repose of the soul when wearied with vices and toils, and
its only refuge from so many evils, and in so far as it is wholly drawn
to the meditation of this from so many errant and empty things without,
so far does it enjoy repose and refreshment within, with the result
that even bitter things are sweet to it, and things before considered
hard and toilsome it feels to be plain and easy, and mortification
also, which is unbearable to the proud and hard-hearted, becomes his
comfort who takes pleasure only in what is lowly and mild. But we must
know that neither this bliss of martyrdom nor any other benefit that
follows can be perfectly fulfilled by any, save him who has given
particular attention to this, that he be not found unready. For if, in
following this pursuit, he has wished to observe or nourish any of his
own desires, at once occupied and wholly confused by concern for these
intrusions, he will not always be able to follow thankfully where the
commandment leads, nor can the disorderly and unthankful perform as is
his duty.
Thus there is a threefold scheme of mortification: not
to disagree in mind, not to speak as one pleases with the tongue, not
to go anywhere with complete freedom. Its part is ever to say to a
senior, however adverse his instructions, Not as I will but as thou
wilt,
Matt. 26. 39
following the example of the Lord and Saviour, Who says,
I came down from heaven, not to do My will, but the will
of Him Who sent Me, the Father.
Ioann. 6. 38
Of the Monk's Perfection
Let the monk live in a community under the discipline
of one father and in company with many, so that from one he may learn
lowliness, from another patience. For one may teach him silence and
another meekness. Let him not do as he wishes, let him eat what he is
bidden, keep as much as he has received, complete the tale of his work,
be subject to whom he does not like. Let him come weary to his bed and
sleep walking, and let him be forced to rise while his sleep is not yet
finished. Let him keep silence when he has suffered wrong, let him fear
the superior of his community as a lord, love him as a father, believe
that whatever he commands is healthful for himself, and let him not
pass
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judgement on the opinion of an elder, to whose duty
it belongs to obey and fulfil what he is bidden
[for the entire chapter] cf. Hieron.
Epist. cxxv. 15
as Moses says, Hear, O Israel,
Deut. 6. 4
and the rest.
END OF THE RULE.
Communal Rule
- Of confession before meat or entering our beds, and
of keeping grace at table, likewise also of silence.
- That the lamp should be blessed, and of him who has
called anything his own, and of the management of the knife at table,
and of him who has lost anything in serving, and of prostration in the
synaxis, and of him who has lost the crumbs.
- Of him who has lost anything carelessly, and who has
spilt anything on the table, and who on leaving the house has not bowed
himself for prayer, and who forgets the prayer before work, and who
eats without grace, and who on returning home has not bowed himself,
and of him who has confessed all this.
- He who at the beginning of a psalm has not chanted
well, and who has bitten the Lord's chalice with his teeth, and who has
not kept his place, and who has laughed in the synaxis, and who
receives blessed bread, and who forgets to make the offering. Of idle
tales and of self-excuse, and of setting counsel against counsel, and
of striking the altar.
- Of him who utters a loud speech, and who excuses
himself, and who contradicts a brother in pointing something out, and
that those who excuse themselves are not the sons of God.
- Of him who has said a proud word, and who utters a
loud speech, and who conceals someone's fault until he may utter it for
a bad end, and who censures another's works, and who utters reproof
against reproof.
- Of him who slanders another, and of the
argumentative, and him who censures his superior, and of him who has
been melancholy, and who entices his brother to evil, and who condemns
another's obedience.
- Of him who instructs his brother against his own
senior, and who gainsays his case to his prior, and who does not ask
pardon when reproved, and who wishes to be the visitor of others, and
those who visit the kitchen without orders, and who go outside the
bounds, and who speak together when forbidden, and who say that they
are not permitted to do what they are asked, and of those who say We
are doing what you tell us, and who knowingly transgress, and of him
whose chrismal has fallen off.
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- Of him who utters an idle word, and of brethren doing
penance, and of minor penances.
- Of a brother who has been disobedient, and who says
and does not, and who murmurs, and who fails to seek pardon or excuses
himself, and who provokes two brethren to anger, and of lying, and of
him who contradicts a brother, and who breaks a commandment, and who
does the work enjoined him with negligence, and who slanders his abbot,
and who forgets or loses something out of doors.
- Of him who speaks with a lay person, and who
completes his work and then does something without orders, and of him
who is double-tongued, and who eats in a strange house, and who tells a
past sin, and who on returning from the world tells also of worldly
things, and of him who is the accomplice of one who does something
contrary to the injunction of the rule.
- Of him who excites wrath in his brother, and of him
who does not come to grace at table, and who sleeps at prayer, and who
does not respond Amen, and who neglects an hour-office, and who does
not hear the call to prayer, and who communicates in his night-garment.
- Of him who on the fourth and sixth day eats before
nones, and who tells a lie, and who sleeps in the same house as a
woman, and who does not close the church behind him, and who spits in
church, and who is forgetful of psalmody.
- Of him who comes too slowly to some signal, and who
makes a sound after the peace, and who enters with his head covered,
and who does not ask a prayer, and who eats without praying, and who
makes a noise during prayers, and who retains anger or melancholy.
- Of neglect in the offerings.
A diversity of faults should be cured by the
application of a diversity of penance. Therefore, my dearest brethren:
1
It has been ordained, my dearest brethren, by the holy
fathers that we make confession before meat or before entering our beds
or whenever it is opportune of all failings, not only mortal ones,
but also of minor omissions
cf. Caesar. Arelat. Serm. 235. 4
since confession and penance free from death. Therefore
not even the very small sins are to be omitted from confession, since,
as it is written, He who
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omits small things gradually declines
seq. Ecclus. 19. 1
so that confession should be made before meat, before
entering our beds, or whenever it is opportune to make it.
Thus him who has not kept grace at table and has not
responded Amen, it is ordained to correct with six blows. Likewise
him who has spoken while eating, not because of the wants of another
brother, it is ordained to correct with six. If one has called
anything his own, with six blows. And him who has not blessed the
spoon with which he sups with six blows, and him who has spoken
with a shout, that is, has talked in a louder tone than the usual, with
six blows.
2
If he has not blessed the lamp, that is, when it is
lighted by a younger brother and is not presented to a senior for his
blessing, with six blows. If he has called anything his own,
cf. Basil. (transl. Rufin.) Interrog.
29, Cassian. Inst. iv. 13
with six blows. If he has done some idle work, with
six blows. Let him who has cut the table with a knife be corrected
with ten blows. Whoever of the brethren, to whom the care of cooking or
serving has been entrusted, has spilt any drop, it is ordained to
correct him by prayer in church after the end of the office, so that
the brethren pray for him. Let him who has forgotten the prostration at
the synaxis, that is, at the office, namely the prostration in church
after the end of each psalm, do penance likewise. In the same manner
let him who has lost the crumbs be corrected by prayer in church; yet
this small penance is only to be assigned to him, if it is something
small that he has spilt.
3
But if through negligence or forgetfulness or failure of
care he has lost more than usual either of fluids or of solids, let him
do penance with a long pardon in church by prostrating himself without
moving any limb while they sing twelve psalms at the twelfth hour. Or
certainly if it is much that he spilt, according to the measures of
beer or portions of whatever things he has lost in spilling through the
occurrence of neglect, let him supply for an equal number of days what
he had been accustomed to receive lawfully for his own use, and know
that he has lost them to his cost, so that he drink water in place of
beer. For what is spilt on the table and runs off it, we say that it
suffices to seek pardon in his place.
Him who on leaving
cf. Hieron. Epist. xxii. 37
the house has not prostrated himself to ask a prayer,
and after receiving a blessing has not sained himself, has not
approached
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the cross, it is ordained to correct with twelve blows.
Likewise him who has forgotten the prayer before work or after work,
with twelve blows.
And him who has eaten without a blessing, with twelve
blows. And let him who on returning home has not bowed himself within
the house to ask a prayer, be corrected with twelve blows. But the
brother who has confessed all these things and others as far as
deserves an imposition, with half penance, that is, a modified penance,
and so with these matters; thus we ordain to apportion meanwhile.
4
Him who through a cough has not chanted well at the
beginning of a psalm, it is ordained to correct with six blows.
Likewise him who has bitten the cup of salvation with his teeth, with
six blows. Him who has not followed the order for the sacrifice for
celebrating, with six blows. A priest when celebrating who has
not trimmed his nails, and a deacon, whose beard has not been shaved,
him who receives the sacrifice, approaches the chalice, straight from
farm-work, with six blows. And him who is smiling at the synaxis,
that is, at the office of prayers, with six blows; if his laughter has
broken out aloud, with an imposition, unless it has happened
pardonably. A priest, when celebrating, and a deacon, who are
holding the sacrifice, should beware lest they wander with roving eyes;
and if they neglect this, they must be corrected with six blows. He who
has forgotten his chrismal when hurrying out to some work, with five
times five blows; if he has dropped it on the ground in a field, and
found it at once, with five times ten blows; if he has hung it on a
tree, with thrice ten, if it remains there overnight, with an
imposition. He who with unclean hands receives the blessed bread,
with twelve blows. He who forgets to make the oblation right until they
go to Mass, with a hundred blows.
He who tells idle tales to another, if he censures
himself at once, with a mere pardon; but if he has not censured himself
but has declined the way in which he ought to excuse them
with an imposition of silence or fifty blows. He who brings forward an
excuse honestly, when examination is made of something, and does not at
once say in begging pardon,
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It is my fault, I am sorry, with fifty blows. He who
honestly sets counsel against counsel, with fifty blows. He who has
struck the altar, with fifty blows.
5
He who utters a loud speech without restraint, unless
where there is need, with an imposition of silence or fifty blows. Let
him who makes excuses for pardon do penance likewise. He who has
replied to a brother on his pointing something out, It is not as you
say, except for seniors speaking honestly to juniors, with an
imposition of silence or fifty blows; unless this only be allowed, that
he should reply to his brother of equal standing, if there is something
nearer the truth than what the other says and he remembers it, If you
recollect rightly, my brother, and the other on hearing this does not
repeat his assertion, but humbly says, I trust that you remember
better; I have erred in speech by forgetfulness, and am sorry that I
said ill. These are the words of the sons of God, if nothing be in
rivalry, [as the apostle says,] nor in vain glory, but in lowliness of
spirit each reckoning the other better than himself.
Phil. 2. 3
But let him who has excused himself be considered, not a
spiritual son of God, but a carnal son of Adam.
6
Whoever has not quickly fled to the haven of rest of the
Lord's humility, when opening the way of argument for others largely as
he sticks to a word of pride, let him be cut off in his cell from the
freedom of holy church in order to do penance, until his good will is
made known, and through humility he be joined afresh to the holy
congregation.
He who utters a loud speech to censure the porter's
work, that the porter has not kept the hours well, with an imposition
of silence or fifty blows. And he who conceals some fault when he sees
it in his brother, until he is reproved over another failing or over
the same, and then brings it forward against his brother, with three
impositions. Let him who corrects or slanders other brothers' works, do
penance with three impositions. Let him who utters reproof against
reproof, that is, who chides one who is chiding him, likewise do
penance with three impositions.
7
He who slanders a brother, or hears one slandering, and
does not at once correct him, with three impositions. He who
utters some abuse with spleen, let him likewise do penance with three
impositions. He who in censuring something does not wish to show it to
his immediate
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superior, until he may show it to the senior father,
with three impositions, unless all these things arise out of a
confession of modesty. If a brother has been melancholy if
possible, let him receive comfort, if he can contain himself, let
him keep back his confession for the meanwhile, so that he may speak
more modestly, when the melancholy has ceased let the brethren pray
for him.
If anyone says to his brother, enticing him who dwells
in the best spot, It is better for you to live with us, or in some
community, with three impositions. And Let anyone who finds
fault for showing obedience to a brother do penance likewise.
8
He who advises a relative when learning some skill or
anything enjoined by the seniors, that he should rather learn reading,
with three impositions.
He who dares to say to his immediate superior, You
shall not judge my case, but our senior, or the remaining brethren,
or, We will all go to the father of the community, must be punished
forty days in penance, on bread and water unless he himself
says lying prostrate before the brethren I am sorry for what I
said. Any brother who is kept at some work, however wearied he be,
yet let him speak in his own cause to the overseer thus, If you agree,
I shall speak to the abbot, but if not, I shall not speak; in
another's cause, If you keep on, do not feel it hard if perhaps I
speak to the abbot; so that obedience may be observed.
He who does not bring back what he is furnished with
until the morrow, if he himself remembers and brings it back, with six
blows; if he forgets until it is sought for, with twelve. If anyone has
forgotten to ask his due of penance until the morrow, with six blows.
He who murmurs, who says, I will not do it unless the abbot or prior
tells me, with three impositions. He who makes unnecessary journeys or
detours, with twelve strokes. It is forbidden for any to hold
[another's] hand.
cf. Cassian. Inst. ii. 15
Let the overseer provide for showing hospitality to
arrivals, whether pilgrims or other brethren, and let all the brethren
be ready to serve with all diligence for the sake of God. Although the
overseer has not noticed or has not been present, let the remainder do
carefully what is needful, and guard their baggage, until this is
prepared and allotted to a keeper; but if they have neglected it, with
a penance for this as seems good to be applied according to the
judgement of the priest.
p.155
8
Let him who does not ask pardon when corrected do
penance with an imposition. He who has visited other brethren in their
cells without asking leave, let him do penance likewise; or if he has
gone to the kitchen after nones without instructions or orders
with an imposition; or if he has gone outside the wall, that is,
outside the bounds of the monastery, without asking, with an
imposition. Youths who are assigned a period for not speaking to each
other, if they have transgressed it, with three impositions. Let
them say this only, You know that we are not allowed to speak with
you. And if anyone has commanded what they are not allowed, let
them say, You know that we are not allowed; and if the other
commands further, let him be condemned to three impositions, but let
them say, We do what you say, so that the good of obedience may be
preserved. But they must particularly beware, that just as they do not
speak together amongst themselves, so they do not confer either through
the lips of another brother. But if they have transgressed this
knowingly, let them do penance in the same way as if they had spoken
amongst themselves.
Let him whose chrismal has fallen off and
without breaking anything, be corrected with twelve blows.
9
He who utters an idle word, to be condemned to silence
for the two following hours, or to twelve blows.
Let brethren doing penance, however hard and dirty the
work they do, not wash their heads except on the Lord's day,
that is, the eighth, but if not, on every fifteenth day, or certainly
on account of the growth of flowing locks, let each employ the
judgement of his senior in washing. For turning aside from the way
without asking leave or receiving a blessing, six blows. If the
immediate superior is made aware of minor penances at table, let him
impose them there, and let no more than twenty-five blows be given at
one time.
Brethren doing penance, and those who need a penance of
psalms that is, one for whom it has been necessary that he should chant
further psalms on account of a night dream, because of a devilish
delusion, or because of the nature of his dream should, when they need
a penance of psalms, chant, some thirty, some twenty-four psalms in
order, some
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fifteen, others twelve; and thus these persons, as
penitents, knee on the Lord's night and in the season of Easter-tide.
If a monk to whom his abbot or immediate superior has
given commandment, repeats the same command to the brethren, it must be
kept in such a way that the junior obey the senior; yet let him be
careful to see whether what he has told them be correct. If the abbot
or principal overseer commands something, and the deputy overseer
repeats something else, the monk himself must obey, though silently
pointing out what the other principal has commanded; but within the
monastery, let none command with another overriding commandment, except
him who bears supreme authority.
From day-break until night let there be one change of
clothing, and another at night; let clothes be changed in private. He
who serves on the Lord's Day or on another feast, for the ablutions or
for any want, requires one prayer before leaving and entering. But let
him ask leave. If he is not going far, he requires the sign of the
cross. Although he crosses himself while walking, yet it is not
necessary that he turn towards the East. Anyone going out of the house
in a hurry and crossing himself, does not require a turning to the
East. Let him also do so when he meets any in walking, if he is in a
hurry, asking a prayer, and bowing himself. In the house, where
genuflexion is not suitable, an inclination only will be enjoined.
If any wishes, let him prepare the offering of the
Lord's Day on the day of the Sabbath; when the ablutions are over the
priests are to change, if it is possible, but let the deacons perform
their proper service either before or after the exhortation.
If anyone has had an unclean dream, or has been
defiled, or is doing penance, when the exhortation is given, he is
bidden to stand. But on the great festivals, when they hear the signal
to sit during the daily exhortation, when it is almost half-way
through, they are told to sit. Then when all hear the signal for the
synaxis that begins the day's assemblies, let them wash before entering
the oratory, unless they have already washed. A cantor will be
appointed to lead the chanting, and a subcantor; and let there be no
bending of the knee, but only an inclination. Let the ranks who are
senior be in the middle of the oratory, and the rest
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stand by on right and left, except for the celebrant
and him who serves him. And on every dominical festival let the hymn of
the Lord's Day be sung, and on the opening day of Easter-tide. Now let
him who has begun to approach the altar, to receive the sacrifice,
prostrate himself thrice. And let novices, because they are untrained,
and any who are such, not approach the chalice, and when the oblation
is offered, let none be compelled by force to receive the sacrifice,
except in case of necessity. And on every Lord's Day and festival, let
him who has not been in the assembly of the brethren as they pour out
prayers to the Lord, pray by himself, if some need compels him. And
during the oblation let there not be much movement. A penitent also,
when overtaken by the necessity of a journey, and walking with the rest
who are lawfully using food, if the third hour has come and they are
making a long march, let him also receive some measure of food for a
portion, and let him receive what is lacking to it when he goes to rest.
But all the brethren together, every day and night at
the time of prayers, on the ending of all psalms, should uniformly bend
their knees in prayer, if bodily weakness does not prevent it, saying
in silence, O God make speed to save me, Lord make haste to help
me.
Ps. 69. 1
And after they have chanted this verse silently thrice
in prayer, let them rise uniformly from their bending in prayer, except
on the Lord's Days and from the first day of holy Easter up to the
fiftieth day, on which, while they bow themselves slightly in time of
psalmody, let them without bending their knees pray carefully to the
Lord.
10
If any brother has been disobedient, let him spend two
days on one loaf and water. If any says, I will not do it, three days
on one loaf and water. If any murmurs, two days on one loaf and water.
If any does not seek pardon or mentions an excuse, two days on one loaf
and water. If two brothers have had an argument and come to anger, two
days on one loaf and water. If anyone maintains a falsehood and affirms
his difference, two days on one loaf and water. If any contradicts a
brother and does not ask his pardon, two days on one loaf. If any cuts
short what he is bidden and breaks the rule, two days on one loaf and
water. If any,
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when a task is enjoined him, actually does it
carelessly, two days on one loaf and water. If any has slandered his
abbot, seven days on one loaf and water; if his brother, twenty-four
psalms, if a lay person, twelve psalms. If any forgets something out of
doors, if it is comparatively small, twelve psalms, if it is greater,
thirty psalms. If any has lost or destroyed something, according to its
price, so also is his penance.
11
If any holds converse with a lay person unbidden,
twenty-four psalms. If any, when he has completed his task, does not
ask for something else and has done something unbidden, let him
sing twenty-four psalms. If anyone has been double-tongued and
distresses the hearts of the brethren, one day on a loaf and water. If
any has eaten in a strange house unbidden and reaches his own house,
one day on a loaf. If any has related a past sin, one day with a loaf.
Or he who has walked in the world and speaks of the world's sin, one
day on bread and water. And the lukewarm, who has heard someone
murmuring and slandering or doing something against the rule and agrees
to withhold confession, one day on a loaf.
12
If any excites anger in his brother and afterwards makes
it up to him, and the other does not forgive him but sends him to his
senior, he who has excited anger, twenty-four psalms, and the other,
one day on bread and water. If any has wanted something and the
overseer forbids and the abbot orders, five days. If any has not come
to prayer at table and after food, let him sing twelve psalms. If any
has slept while prayer is made, if often, twelve psalms, if not often,
six psalms. If any does not say Amen, thirty lashes. If he has omitted
an hour, fifteen psalms, songs of degrees, except for the morning hour
in winter, twelve psalms. And he who has not heard the call to prayers,
twelve psalms. If any comes to the sacrifice and his night girdle or
garment around him, twelve psalms.
13
If any eats before the ninth hour on the fourth and
sixth day, unless he be sick, let him live two days on bread
and water. If any has told a lie unwittingly, fifty lashes; if he
speaks wittingly and presumptuously, two days on bread and water. If
his lie is contradicted and he
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affirms it, seven days on bread and water. If any monk
has slept in the same house as a woman, two days on bread and water; if
he did not know that he ought not, one day. If any does not shut the
church, twelve psalms. If any spits and touches the altar, twenty-four
psalms; if he touches a wall, six. If he forgets chanting or reading,
three psalms.
14
If any comes too slowly to the prayers, fifty, or
noisily, fifty, or if he is too slow in doing what he is told, fifty.
If he has made a sound after the peace, fifty. If he has replied
stubbornly, fifty. If he comes into the house with his head covered,
fifty lashes. If he does not ask a prayer when he enters the house,
fifty. If he eats without prayer, fifty. If he has spoken with
something in his mouth, fifty. If he has caused a noise while prayer is
made, fifty lashes. If any retains anger or spleen or ill will against
his brother, according to the time he has kept it, so shall be his
penance on bread and water; but if he has confessed on the first day,
let him sing twenty-four psalms.
15
Whoever has lost the sacrifice and does not know where
it is, let him do penance for a year. He who has shown neglect to the
sacrifice, so that it is dried up and eaten by worms, with the result
that it is reduced to nothing, let him do penance for half a year. He
who has been guilty of neglect to the sacrifice, so that a worm is
found in it and yet it is entire, let him burn the worm with fire and
hide its ashes in the earth near the altar, and himself do penance
forty days. And he who neglects the sacrifice, and it has been changed
and the bread has lost its savour, if it is coloured red, let him do
penance twenty days, if deep purple, let him do penance fifteen days.
But if it has not been changed in colour, but is congealed, let him do
penance seven days. But he who has immersed the sacrifice, let him
drink the water immediately which was in his chrismal; let him eat the
sacrifice. If it has fallen from a boat or a bridge or a horse, and not
by neglect but through some chance, let him do penance for one day; but
if he has submerged it through disrespect, that is, has waded out of
the water and not taken thought for the danger of the sacrifice, let
him do penance forty days. But if he has vomited the Supper on a day of
sacrifice, with the excuse of richer food than usual and not through
the vice of gluttony but of indigestion, twenty days; if because of ill
health, let him do penance ten days on bread and water.
p.165
15
He who knows that his brother is sinning a [mortal]
sin
cf. 1 Ioann. 5. 16
and does not correct him, must be reckoned a
transgressor of the Gospel law, until he corrects the man about whose
evil he kept silence, and confesses to the priest, so that for as long
as his evil conscience kept silence, so long he may do penance in
affliction. Let him who has kept silence about a small sin do penance
with a similar reproof but not the same affliction, but with thirty
strokes, or else let him sing fifteen psalms. If in the future he
despises this and neglects trifling faults, let him do penance on bread
and water, so that the sinner may be reproved
cf. Matt. 18. 15
according to the Lord's command. But let him who
corrects ungently, be taken note of, until he asks pardon from the
brother who has been reproved, with thirty strokes also or fifteen
psalms. He who upbraids another with a shameful sin, before he corrects
him alone between themselves,
cf. Matt. 18. 15
let him be reproved as the Lord says, until he makes
it up to the one who has been upbraided, and let him do penance for
three days on bread and water.<
He who breaks the rule of a particular command or of
the general discipline, let him be expelled and remain without food,
that he may be re-admitted on the morrow.
He who speaks freely to a woman quite alone without
the presence of trusty persons, let him remain without food, or two
days on bread and water, or two hundred strokes.
He who dares to make a journey without the permission
of the superior, by going out free and unrestrained without any need,
let him be chastised with fifty strokes. The taking up of private
work,
cf. Cassian. Inst. iv. 16
with a hundred strokes, the possession
cf. Cassian. Inst. iv. id. ib.
of anything, which need does not universally allow
the brethren, must be restrained with the loss of the same and a
hundred strokes. But to cause to give or receive something necessary
and lawful without orders, with twelve strokes, unless some reason
forbids it, so that a prayerful reparation should win pardon.
He who speaks while eating, with six strokes. And the
man whose voice carries from table to table, with six strokes; if he
has sent a shout from the house out of doors or from outside into the
house, with twelve strokes.
Leaving or entering the house or doing a task without
prayer and the sign of the cross, with twelve strokes, if otherwise,
with five strokes.
Saying mine or thine, with six strokes.
An affirmation honestly made against another, with
six blows; if from argumentativeness, with a hundred strokes or an
imposition of silence.
If he has not kept the order of chanting, with six
blows.
If at the appointed time of silence he has dared to
speak without necessity, with seventeen strokes.
If any has lost or wasted anything from the furniture
of the monastery
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through lack of regard, let him restore it by his own
sweat and application of work, or in proportion to its value at the
judgement of the priest let him do penance with an imposition, or one
day on bread and water. If he has lost or broken it not through lack of
regard but by some accident, let him pay for his neglect not otherwise
than by a public penance; when all the brethren are gathered at the
synaxis he will ask pardon lying prostrate on the ground all the time,
until the performance of the prayers is finished, and will receive it
when he has been ordered at the abbot's judgement to rise from the
floor. In the same way let any make satisfaction who has come too
slowly when summoned to prayer or to some work.
cf. Cassian. Inst. iv. 16
If he has faltered in chanting a psalm, if he has
replied needlessly, too harshly, or too proudly, with an imposition. If
he has fulfilled the obedience enjoined too carelessly, with an
imposition. If he has murmured even slightly, with an imposition. If
preferring reading to work or obedience, with an imposition. If he has
carried out his appointed duties too lazily, with an imposition. If at
the dismissal of the synaxis he has not hastened back to his cell at
once, with an imposition. If he has stood with another for a short
time, with an imposition. If he has gone aside anywhere for a short
space of time, with an imposition. If he has dared to converse at all
with one who is not the partner of his cell, with an imposition. If he
has held another's hand, with an imposition. If he has prayed with one
who is excluded from prayer, with an imposition.
cf. Cassian. Inst. iv. 16
If he has seen any of his relatives or lay friends,
or spoken to such unbidden, if he has received a letter from anyone, if
he has dared to send one without asking his abbot, with an imposition.
If he has hindered anyone from the fulfilment of a necessary deed, with
an imposition. If through enthusiasm of mind he has gone beyond the
lawful measure of devotion, with an imposition. If thanks to his own
indifference he has dared to restrain another who is zealous from some
lawful deed, with an imposition.
cf. Cassian. Inst. iv. 16
Thus far in like transactions also does spiritual
censure proceed,
cf. Cassian. Inst. iv. 16
so that the reproof which is given by several
2 Cor. 2. 6
may profit the sinner for salvation, and being more
careful and diligent for the rest, through improvement of character he
may be found saved by the goodness of God.
But he who has occasioned a brawl, let him do penance
for seven days. However, he who has despised his immediate superior or
spoken evil of the rule, is to be cast out, unless he himself says, I
am sorry for what I said. Yet if he has not humbled himself, let him do
penance for forty days, since he is infected with the disease of pride.
The talkative is to be punished with silence, the
restless with the
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practice of gentleness, the gluttonous with fasting,
the sleepy with watching, the proud with imprisonment, the deserter
with expulsion. Let each suffer exactly in accordance with his deserts,
that the just may justly live. Amen.
In every place and occupation the rule of silence is
determined to be strictly kept, so that we may be cleansed from every
vice as far as human weakness is able, which usually rushes into vices
with a precipitate course of speech, and that we may utter with the
mouth some edification for our neighbours, for whom our Saviour Jesus
shed His holy blood, rather than abuse of the absent conceived in our
heart, [and altogether] idle words, [for which] we shall render an
account [to a just Avenger].
cf. Matt. 12. 36
These things have seemed good to be ordained for
those who wish to take the high road to the topmost peaks of heaven,
Ovid Met. ii. 3
and who, while the sins of savage men surround them
in the darkness, wish to cleave to the One God, sent upon this earth.
They shall doubtless receive immortal rewards with the highest joy,
which never declines for ever.
Here ends the Communal Rule of St.
Columban the Abbot. Thanks be to God.
Penitential
A
True penance is not to commit things worthy of
repentance but to lament what has been committed.
cf. Ambr. De Quadrag. Serm. 9, Greg.
Magn. Homil. in Evang. ii. 34. 15
But since this is annulled by the weakness of many, not
to say of all, the measures of penance must be known. And thus a scheme
of these has been handed down by the holy fathers, so that in
accordance with the greatness of the offences the length also of the
penances should be ordained.
2
Therefore, if any has sinned in thought, that is, has
desired to kill a man, or to commit fornication, or to steal, or to
feast in secret and be drunken, or indeed to strike someone, or to
desert, or to do anything else like this, and has been ready in his
heart to carry out these sins; let him do penance for the greater in
half a year, for the less in forty days on bread and water.
cf. Paen. Venniani 1-3
3
But if any has sinned in act with the common sins, if he
has committed the sin of murder or sodomy, let him do penance ten
years; if he has committed fornication once only, let him do penance
three years as a
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monk, if oftener, seven years; if he has deserted and
broken his vows, if he repents and returns at once, let him do penance
a hundred and twenty days, but if after a period of years, three years.
4
If any has stolen, let him do penance for a year.
4a
If any has perjured himself, let him do penance for
seven years.
5
5. If any has struck his brother in a quarrel and spilt
blood, let him do penance three years.
6
But if any has made himself drunk and vomited, or being
overfed, for this reason has vomited the sacrifice, let him do penance
forty days.
However, if he is forced by ill health to vomit the
sacrifice, let him do penance seven days. If any has lost the sacrifice
itself, let him do penance for a year.
7
If any has defiled himself, let him do penance for a
year, if he is a Junior.
8
If any has borne false witness knowingly, let him do
penance for two years, together with the loss or restitution of the
object in dispute.
So much for ordinary cases; now for the slight sins of
disorderly characters.
9
He who does something by himself without asking, or who
contradicts and says, I am not doing it, or who murmurs, if it is a
serious matter, let him do penance with three impositions, if a slight
one, with one. An affirmation frankly made against another is to be
rewarded with fifty strokes, but if it is made of design, with an
imposition of silence; for if it is made through contentiousness, the
penance should be for a week.
10
He who slanders or willingly hears a slanderer, let him
do penance with three impositions; if it concerns the superior, let him
do penance for a week.
11
He who has despised his immediate superior in pride, or
has spoken evil of the rule, is to be cast out, unless he has said
immediately, I am sorry for what said; but if he has not truly
humbled himself, let him do penance forty days, because he is infected
with the disease of pride.
12
The talkative is to be punished with silence, the
restless with, the practice of gentleness, the gluttonous with fasting,
the sleepy with watching, the proud with imprisonment, the deserter
with expulsion; let each suffer exactly in accordance with his deserts,
that the just may justly live.
B
The diversity of offences makes adiversity of penances. For
doctors
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of the body also compound their medicines in diverse
kinds;
cf. Greg. Magn. Reg. Past. iii. 36
thus they heal wounds in one manner, sicknesses in
another, boils in another, bruises in another, festering sores in
another, eye diseases in another, fractures in another, burns in
another. Then so also should spiritual doctors treat with diverse kinds
of cures the wounds of souls, their sicknesses, offences, griefs,
distresses, and pains. But since this gift belongs to few, namely to
know to a nicety how to treat all things, how to restore the weak to a
complete state of health, let us set out even a few prescriptions
according to the traditions of our elders, and according to our own
partial understanding, for we prophesy in part and we know in
part.
1 Cor. 13. 9
First we must enact concerning mortal sins, such as are
punished even by the cognizance of the law.
1
If any cleric has committed murder and killed his
neighbour, let him do penance for ten years in exile. After these let
him be restored to his native land, if he has performed his penance
well on bread and water, being approved by the testimonial of the
bishop or priest with whom he did penance and to whose care he was
entrusted, on condition that he make satisfaction to the relatives of
the slain, playing the part of a son, and saying, Whatever you wish I
will do for you. But if he has not made satisfaction to his relatives,
let him never be restored to his native land, but like Cain let him be
a wanderer and fugitive upon the earth.
cf. Paen. Venniani 23
2
If any has fallen by the worst lapse and begotten a
son, let him do penance as a pilgrim for seven years on bread and
water. Then first at the discretion of the priest let him be restored
to communion.
cf. Paen. Venniani 12
3
But if any has committed fornication as the Sodomites
did, let him do penance for ten years, for the three first on bread and
water, but for the seven others let him refrain from wine and meat, and
let him never again live with another.
4
However, if any has committed fornication with women,
but has not begotten a son, and it has not reached public knowledge; if
he is a cleric, three years, if a monk or deacon, five years, if a
priest, seven, if a bishop, twelve years.
cf. Excerpt. de libr. David. 7, Paen.
Venniani 10-11
5
If any has perjured himself, let him do penance seven
years, and never take an oath again.
cf. Paen. Venniani 22
6
If any has destroyed someone by his magic art, let
him do penance three years on bread and water by measure, and for three
other years let him refrain from wine and meats, and then finally in
the seventh year let him be restored to communion. But if any has used
magic to excite love, and has destroyed no one, let him do penance on
bread and water for a whole year, if a cleric, for half a year if a
layman, if a deacon for two, if a priest for three; especially if any
has thus produced abortion, on that account let each add on an extra
two hundred and forty days, lest he be guilty of murder.
cf. Paen. Venniani 18-20
p.175
7
If any cleric has committed theft, that is, has
stolen an ox or a horse, a sheep or any beast of his neighbour's, if he
has done it once or twice, let him first make restitution to his
neighbour, and do penance for a whole year on bread and water. If he
has made a practice of this, and cannot make restitution, let him do
penance three years on bread and water.
cf. Paen. Venniani 25-26
8
But if any cleric or deacon, or a man in any orders,
who in the world was a layman with sons and daughters, after his
profession has again known his wife, and again begotten a son of her,
let him know that he has committed adultery, and has sinned no less
than if he had been a cleric from his youth, and had sinned with a
strange maiden, since he sinned after his vow, after he consecrated
himself to the Lord, and has made his vow void. Therefore let him
likewise do penance seven years on bread and water.
cf. Paen. Venniani 27
9
If any cleric has struck his brother in a quarrel and
spilt blood, let him do penance for a whole year; if a layman, for
forty days.
cf. Paen. Venniani 8-9
10
If any has defiled himself with his own hand or with an
animal, let him do penance two years, if he is not in orders; but if he
is in orders or under a vow, let him do penance three years, if his age
does not forbid.
11
If any desires a woman and cannot commit the act,
that is, if the woman does not allow him, let him do penance half a
year on bread and water, and for a whole year let him refrain from wine
and meats and the communion of the altar.
cf. Paen. Venniani 17
12
If any has lost the sacrifice, let him do penance for a
year. If through drunkenness or greed he has vomited it up and cast it
carelessly aside, let him do penance a hundred and twenty days on bread
and water; but if through ill health, let him do penance seven days.
But these provisions are made for clerics and monks
collectively; now for laymen.
13
Whoever has committed murder, that is, has killed his
neighbour, let him do penance three years on bread and water as an
unarmed exile, and after three years let him return to his own,
rendering the due of affection and duty to the relatives of the slain;
and thus after making satisfaction let him be restored to communion at
the discretion of the priest.
cf. Paen. Venniani 35
14
If any layman has begotten a son by another's wife,
that is, has committed adultery in violating his neighbour's bed, let
him do penance for three years, refraining from the more appetizing
foods and from his own wife, giving in addition the price of chastity
to the husband of the violated wife, and thus let his guilt be
cancelled by the priest.
cf. Paen. Venniani 36
15
But if any layman has committed fornication in sodomite
fashion, that is, has sinned by effeminate intercourse with a male, let
him do penance for seven years, for the three first on bread and water
and salt
p.177
and dry produce of the garden, for the remaining four
let him refrain from wine and meats, and thus let his guilt be remitted
to him, and let the priest pray for him, and so let him be restored to
communion.
16
But if any of the laity has committed fornication
with women who are free from wedlock, that is, with widows or virgins,
if with a widow, let him do penance for one year, if with a virgin, for
two years, provided that he pays her relatives the price of her
disgrace; yet if he has no wife, but has lain as a virgin with the
virgin, if her relatives agree let her be his wife, but on condition
that both first do penance for a year, and so let them be wedded.
cf. Excerpt. de libr. David. 6, Paen.
Venniani 36
17
But if any layman has committed fornication with an
animal, let him do penance for a year, if he has a wife; yet if he has
not, for half a year. Likewise also let him do penance who, having a
wife, has defiled himself with his own hands.
18
If any layman or lay woman has smothered their child,
let them do penance for a whole year on bread and water, and for two
others let them refrain from wine and meats, and so first let them be
restored to communion at the discretion of the priest, and then let
such a husband use his bed lawfully. For the laity must know, that in
the period of penance assigned to them by the priests it is not lawful
for them to know their wives, except after the conclusion of the
penance; for penance ought not to be halved.
19
If any layman has committed theft, that is, has stolen
an ox or a horse or a sheep or any beast of his neighbour's, if he has
done it once or twice, let him first restore to his neighbour the loss
which he has caused, and let him do penance for a hundred and twenty
days on bread and water. But if he has made a practice of stealing
often, and cannot make restitution, let him do penance for a year and a
hundred and twenty days, and further undertake not to repeat it; and
thus let him communicate at Easter of the second year, that is, after
two years, on condition that, out of his own labour, he first gives
alms to the poor and a feast to the priest who adjudged his penance,
and so let the guilt of his evil habit be annulled.
20
If any layman has perjured himself, if he did it out of
greed, let him sell all his property and give it to the poor, and
devote himself wholly to the Lord, and receive the tonsure, bidding
farewell to the entire world, and until death let him serve God in a
monastery. Yet if he did it, not out of greed, but in fear of death,
let him do penance for three years on bread and water as an unarmed
exile, and for two more let him refrain from wine and meats, and thus
by offering a life for himself, that
p.179
is, by freeing a slave or maidservant from the yoke of
bondage, and by doing many alms throughout two years, in which he may
quite lawfully use all foods except meat, let him communicate after the
seventh year.
21
If any of the laity has shed blood in a brawl, or
wounded or maimed his neighbour, let him be compelled to restore all
the damage he has done; but if he has nothing to pay with, let him
first attend to his neighbour's work, while he is sick, and call in a
doctor, and after his recovery, let him do penance for forty days on
bread and water.
cf. Paen. Venniani 9
22
If any layman has become intoxicated, or eaten or drunk
to the extent of vomiting, let him do penance for a week on bread and
water.
23
If any layman has desired to commit adultery or
fornication with a married woman, and has lusted after his neighbour's
wife, and not committed the act, that is, has not been able to, because
the woman did not allow him, yet he was ready to fornicate, let him
confess his guilt to the priest, and so let him do penance for forty
days on bread and water.
cf. Paen. Venniani 17
24
But if any layman has eaten or drunk beside the temples,
if he did it through ignorance, let him undertake forthwith never to do
it again, and let him do penance forty days on bread and water. But if
he did it in derision, that is, after the priest has declared to him
that this was sacrilege, and if then he communicated at the table of
demons, if it was only through the vice of greed that he did or
repeated it, let him do penance for a hundred and twenty days on bread
and water; but if he did it in worship of the demons or in honour of
idols, let him do penance for three years.
25
If any layman in ignorance has communicated with the
followers of Bonosus or other heretics, let him rank among the
catechumens, that is, separated from other Christians, for forty days,
and for another eighty days in the lowest rank of Christians, that is,
among the penitents, let him wash away the guilt of his unsound
communion. But if he did this in derision, that is, after he had been
warned and forbidden by the priest not to pollute himself with the
communion of an evil faction, let him do penance for a whole year and a
hundred and twenty days, and for two other years let him refrain from
wine and meats, and thus after imposition of hands by a Catholic bishop
let him be restored to communion.
Finally we must add concerning the minor ordinances of
monks.
26
If any has left the enclosure open during the night, let
him do penance with an imposition; but if during the day, with
twenty-four blows, if others were not following behind when he left it
open. If
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someone has gone immediately in front of himself, let
him do penance with an imposition.
27
If any, desiring a bath, has washed quite alone, let him
do penance with an imposition. But if any, while washing lawfully in
presence of his brethren, has done this standing, unless through the
need for cleansing dirt more fully, let him be corrected with
twenty-four strokes.
28
But if any, even while sitting in the bath, has
uncovered his knees or arms, without the need for washing dirt, let him
not wash for six days, that is, let that immodest bather not wash his
feet until the following Lord's Day. Yet a monk, when standing
privately alone, is permitted to wash his feet; while a senior even
publicly, but with another washing his feet, is permitted to be washed
standing.
29
But before sermon on the Lord's Day let all, except for
fixed requirements, be gathered together, so that none is lacking to
the number of those who hear the exhortation, except for the cook and
porter, who themselves also, if they can, are to try hard to be present
when the gospel bell is heard.
30
It is ordained that confessions be made carefully,
especially of mental disturbances, before going to Mass, lest perhaps
any should approach the altar unworthily, that is, if he does not have
a clean heart. For it is better to wait until the heart is healed, and
becomes a stranger to offence and envy, than rashly to approach the
judgement of the throne. For Christ's throne is the altar, and His Body
there with the Blood judges those who approach unworthily. Therefore,
just as we must beware of mortal and fleshly sins before we
communicate, so we must refrain and cleanse ourselves from interior
vices and the sicknesses of a drooping spirit, before the covenant of
true peace and the bond of eternal salvation.
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