|
I.
IN THE WESTERN CHURCH
"The
Rosary", says the Roman Breviary, "is a certain form of
prayer wherein we say fifteen decades or tens of Hail Marys with an
Our Father between each ten, while at each of these fifteen decades
we recall successively in pious meditation one of the mysteries of
our Redemption." The same lesson for the Feast of the Holy
Rosary informs us that when the Albigensian heresy was devastating
the country of Toulouse, ST.
DOMINIC earnestly
besought the help of Our Lady and was instructed by her, so
tradition asserts, to preach the Rosary among the people as an
antidote to heresy and sin. From that time forward this manner of
prayer was "most wonderfully published abroad and developed [promulgari
augerique coepit] by St. Dominic whom different Supreme Pontiffs
have in various past ages of their apostolic letters declared to be
the institutor and author of the same devotion." That many
popes have so spoken is undoubtedly true, and amongst the rest we
have a series of encyclicals, beginning in 1883, issued by Pope Leo
XIII, which, while commending this devotion to the faithful in the
most earnest terms, assumes the institution of the Rosary by St.
Dominic to be a fact historically established. Of the remarkable
fruits of this devotion and of the extraordinary favours which have
been granted to the world, as is piously believed, through this
means, something will be said under the headings FEAST
OF THE ROSARY and CONFRATERNITIES
OF THE ROSARY. We will
confine ourselves here to the controverted question of its history,
a matter which both in the middle of the eighteenth century and
again in recent years has attracted much attention.
Let
us begin with certain facts which will not be contested. It is
tolerably obvious that whenever any prayer has to be repeated a
large number of times recourse is likely to be had to some
mechanical apparatus less troublesome than counting upon the
fingers. In almost all countries, then, we meet with something in
the nature of prayer-counters or rosary beads. Even in ancient Nineveh
a sculpture has been found thus described by Lavard in his Monuments (I, plate 7):
"Two winged females
standing before the sacred tree in the attitude of prayer; they lift
the extended right hand and hold in the left a garland or
rosary." However this may be, it is certain that among the
Mohammedans the Tasbih or bead-string, consisting of 33, 66,
or 99 beads, and used for counting devotionally the names of Allah,
has been in use for many centuries. Marco Polo, visiting the King of
Malabar in the thirteenth century, found to his surprise that that
monarch employed a rosary of 104 precious stones to count
his prayers. St. Francis Xavier and his companions were equally
astonished to see that rosaries were universally familiar to the
Buddhists of Japan. Among the monks of the Greek Church we hear of
the kombologion, or komboschoinion, a cord with a
hundred knots used to count genuflexions and signs of the cross.
Similarly, beside the mummy of a Christian ascetic, Thaias, of the
fourth century, recently disinterred at Antinöe in Egypt, was found a sort of cribbage-board with holes, which has generally
been thought to be an apparatus for counting prayers, of which
Palladius and other ancient authorities have left us an account. A
certain Paul the Hermit, in the fourth century, had imposed upon
himself the task of repeating three hundred prayers, according to a
set form, every day. To do this, he gathered up three hundred
pebbles and threw one away as each prayer was finished (Palladius, Hist.
Laus., xx; Butler, II, 63). It is probable that other ascetics who also numbered
their prayers by hundreds adopted some similar expedient. (Cf.
Vita S. Godrici, cviii.) Indeed when we find a papal
privilege addressed to the monks of St. Apollinaris in Classe
requiring them, in gratitude for the pope's benefactions, to say Kyrie
eleison three hundred times twice a day (see the privilege of
Hadrian I, A.D. 782, in Jaffe-Löwenfeld, n. 2437), one would infer
that some counting apparatus must almost necessarily have been used
for the purpose.
But
there were other prayers to be counted more nearly connected with
the Rosary than Kyrie eleisons. At an early date among the monastic
orders the practice had established itself not only of offering
Masses, but of saying vocal prayers as a suffrage for their deceased
brethren. For this purpose the private recitation of the 150 psalms,
or of 50 psalms, the third part, was constantly enjoined. Already in
A. D. 800 we learn from the compact between St. Gall
and Reichenau (Mon. Germ. Hist.: Confrat., Piper, 140)
that for each deceased brother all the priests should say one Mass
and also fifty psalms. A charter in Kemble (Cod. Dipl., I, 290)
prescribes that each monk is to sing two fifties (twa fiftig)
for the souls of certain benefactors, while each priest is to sing
two Masses and each deacon to read two Passions. But as time went
on, and the conversi, or lay brothers, most of them quite
illiterate, became distinct from the choir monks, it was felt that
they also should be required to substitute some simple form of
prayer in place of the psalms to which their more educated brethren
were bound by rule. Thus we read in the Ancient Customs of
Cluny, collected by Udalrio in 1096, that when the death of
any brother at a distance was announced, every priest was to offer
Mass, and every non-priest was either to say fifty psalms or to
repeat fifty times the Paternoster ("quicunque sacerdos est
cantet missam pro eo, et qui non est sacerdos quinquaginta psalmos
aut toties orationem dominicam", P. L., CXLIX, 776). Similarly
among the Knights Templar, whose rule dates from about 1128, the
knights who could not attend choir were required to say the Lord's
Prayer 57 times in all and on the death of any of the brethren they
had to say the Pater Noster a hundred times a day for a week.
To
count these accurately there is every reason to believe that already
in the eleventh and twelfth centuries a practice had come in of
using pebbles, berries, or discs of bone threaded on a string. It is
in any case certain that the Countess Godiva of Coventry (c. 1075)
left by will to the statue of Our Lady in a certain monastery
"the circlet of precious stones which she had threaded on a
cord in order that by fingering them one after another she might
count her prayers exactly" (Malmesbury, Gesta
Pont., Rolls Series 311). Another example seems to occur in
the case of St. Rosalia (A. D. 1160), in whose tomb similar strings
of beads were discovered. Even more important is the fact that such
strings of beads were known throughout the Middle Ages —and in
some Continental tongues are known to this day —as
"Paternosters". The evidence for this is overwhelming and
comes from every part of Europe. Already in the thirteenth century the manufacturers of these
articles, who were know as "paternosterers", almost
everywhere formed a recognized craft guild of considerable
importance. The Livre des métiers of Stephen Boyleau,
for example, supplies full information
regarding the four guilds of patenôtriers in Paris in the year 1268, while Paternoster Row in
London still preserves the memory of the street in which their English
craft-fellows congregated. Now the obvious inference is that an
appliance which was persistently called a "Paternoster",
or in Latin fila de paternoster, numeralia de paternoster,
and so on, had, at least originally, been designed for counting Our
Fathers. This inference, drawn out and illustrated with much
learning by Father T. Esser, O.P., in 1897, becomes a practical
certainty when we remember that it was only in the middle of the
twelfth century that the Hail Mary came at all generally into use as
a formula of devotion. It is morally impossible that Lady Godiva's
circlet of jewels could have been intended to count Ave Marias.
Hence there can be no doubt that the strings of prayer beads were
called "paternosters" because for a long time they were
principally employed to number repetitions of the Lord's Prayer.
When,
however, the Hail Mary came into use, it appears that from the first
the consciousness that it was in its own nature a salutation rather
than a prayer induced a fashion of repeating it many times in
succession, accompanied by genuflexions or some other external act
of reverence. Just as happens nowadays in the firing of salutes, or
in the applause given to a public performer, or in the rounds of
cheers evoked among school-boys by an arrival or departure, so also
then the honour paid by such salutations was measured by numbers and
continuance. Further, since the recitation of the Psalms divided
into fifties was, as innumerable documents attest, the favourite
form of devotion for religious and learned persons, so those who
were simple or much occupied loved, by the repetition of fifty, a
hundred, or a hundred and fifty were salutations of Our Lady, to
feel that they were imitating the practice of God's more exalted
servants. In any case it is certain that in the course of the
twelfth century and before the birth of St. Dominic, the practice of
reciting 50 or 150 Ave Marias had become generally familiar. The
most conclusive evidence of this is furnished by the
"Mary-legends", or stories of Our Lady, which obtained
wide circulation at this epoch. The story of Eulalia, in particular,
according to which a client of the Blessed Virgin who had been wont
to say a hundred and fifty Aves was bidden by her to say only fifty,
but more slowly, has been shown by Mussafia (Marien-legenden, Pts I,
ii) to be unquestionably of early date. Not less conclusive is the
account given of St. Albert (d. 1140) by his contemporary
biographer, who tells us: "A hundred times a day he bent his
knees, and fifty times he prostrated himself raising his body again
by his fingers and toes, while he repeated at every genuflexion:
'Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee, blessed art thou
amongst women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb'." This was
the whole of the Hail Mary as then said, and the fact of all the
words being set down rather implies that the formula had not yet
become universally familiar. Not less remarkable is the account of a
similar devotional exercise occurring in the Corpus Christi manuscripts of the Ancren Riwle. This text, declared by Kölbing to
have been written in the middle of the twelfth century (Englische
Studien, 1885, P. 116), can in any case be hardly later than 1200.
The passage in question gives directions how fifty Aves are to be
said divided into sets of ten, with prostrations and other marks of
reverence. (See The Month, July, 1903.) When we find such an
exercise recommended to a little group of anchorites in a corner of
England, twenty years before any Dominican foundation was made in
this country, it seems difficult to resist the conclusion that the
custom of reciting fifty or a hundred and fifty Aves had grown
familiar, independently of, and earlier than, the preaching of St.
Dominic. On the other hand, the practice of meditating on certain
definite mysteries, which has been rightly described as the very
essence of the Rosary devotion, seems to have only arisen long after
the date of St. Dominic's death. It is difficult to prove a
negative, but Father T. Esser, O.P., has shown (in the periodical Der Katholik, of
Mainz, Oct., Nov., Dec., 1897) that the introduction of this meditation
during the recitation of the Aves was rightly attributed to a
certain Carthusian, Dominic the Prussian. It is in any case certain
that at the close of the fifteenth century the utmost possible
variety of methods of meditating prevailed, and that the fifteen
mysteries now generally accepted were not uniformly adhered to even
by the Dominicans themselves. (See Schmitz, Rosenkranzgebet,
p. 74; Esser in Der Katholik for 1904-6.) To sum up, we have
positive evidence that both the invention of the beads as a counting
apparatus and also the practice of repeating a hundred and fifty Aves cannot be due to St. Dominic, because they are both notably
older than his time. Further, we are assured that the meditating
upon the mysteries was not introduced until two hundred years after
his death. What then, we are compelled to ask, is there left of
which St. Dominic may be called the author?
These
positive reasons for distrusting the current tradition might in a
measure be ignored as archaeological refinements, if there were any
satisfactory evidence to show that St. Dominic had identified
himself with the pre-existing Rosary and become its apostle. But
here we are met with absolute silence. Of the eight or nine early
Lives of the saint, not one makes the faintest allusion to the
Rosary. The witnesses who gave evidence in the cause of his
canonization are equally reticent. In the great collection of
documents accumulated by Fathers Balme and Lelaidier, O.P., in their
Cartulaire de St. Dominique the question is studiously
ignored. The early constitutions of the different provinces of the
order have been examined, and many of them printed, but no one has
found any reference to this devotion. We possess hundreds, even
thousands, of manuscripts containing devotional treatises, sermons,
chronicles, Saints' lives, etc., written by the Friars Preachers
between 1220 and 1450; but no single verifiable passage has yet been
produced which speaks of the Rosary as instituted by St. Dominic or
which even makes much of the devotion as one specially dear to his
children. The charters and other deeds of the Dominican convents for
men and women, as M. Jean Guiraud points out with emphasis in his
edition of the Cartulaire of La Prouille (I, cccxxviii), are equally
silent. Neither do we find any suggestion of a connection between
St. Dominic and the Rosary in the paintings and sculptures of these
two and a half centuries. Even the tomb of St. Dominic at Bologna and the numberless frescoes by Fra Angelico representing the
brethren of his order ignore the Rosary completely.
Impressed
by this conspiracy of silence, the Bollandists, on trying to trace
to its source the origin of the current tradition, found that all
the clues converged upon one point, the preaching of the Dominican
Alan de Rupe about the years 1470-75. He it undoubtedly was who
first suggested the idea that the devotion of "Our Lady's
Psalter" (a hundred and fifty Hail Marys) was instituted or
revived by St. Dominic. Alan was a very earnest and devout man, but,
as the highest authorities admit, he was full of delusions, and
based his revelations on the imaginary testimony of writers that
never existed (see Quétif and Echard, Scriptores O.P.,
1, 849). His preaching, however, was attended with much success. The
Rosary Confraternities, organized by him and his colleagues at Douai,
Cologne, and elsewhere had great vogue, and led to the printing of many
books, all more or less impregnated with the ideas of Alan.
Indulgences were granted for the good work that was thus being done
and the documents conceding these indulgences accepted and repeated,
as was natural in that uncritical age, the historical data which had
been inspired by Alan's writings and which were submitted according
to the usual practice by the promoters of the confraternities
themselves. It was in this way that the tradition of Dominican
authorship grew up. The first Bulls speak of this authorship with
some reserve: "Prout in historiis legitur" says Leo X in
the earliest of all. Pastoris aeterni 1520; but many of
the later popes were less guarded.
Two
considerations strongly support the view of the Rosary tradition
just expounded. The first is the gradual surrender of almost every
notable piece that has at one time or another been relied upon to
vindicate the supposed claims of St. Dominic. Touron and Alban
Butler appealed to the Memoirs of a certain Luminosi de Aposa who
professed to have heard St. Dominic preach at Bologna, but these Memoirs have long ago been proved to a forgery. Danzas,
Von Löe and others attached much importance to a fresco at Muret;
but the fresco is not now in existence, and there is good reason for
believing that the rosary once seen in that fresco was painted in at
a later date (The Month, Feb. 1901, p. 179). Mamachi,
Esser, Walsh, and Von Löe and others quote some alleged
contemporary verses about Dominic in connection with a crown of
roses; the original manuscript has disappeared, and it is certain
that the writers named have printed Dominicus where Benoist,
the only person who has seen the manuscript, read Dominus.
The famous will of Anthony Sers, which professed to leave a bequest
to the Confraternity of the Rosary at Palencia in 1221, was put forward as a conclusive piece of testimony by
Mamachi; but it is now admitted by Dominican authorities to be a
forgery (The Irish Rosary, Jan., 1901, p. 92). Similarly, a
supposed reference to the subject by Thomas à Kempis in the Chronicle of Mount St. Agnes is a pure blunder
(The Month, Feb., 1901, p. 187). With this may be noted
the change in tone observable of late in authoritative works of
reference. In the Kirchliches Handlexikon of Munich and in the last edition of Herder's
Konversationslexikon
no attempt is made to defend the tradition which connects St.
Dominic personally with the origin of the Rosary. Another
consideration which cannot be developed is the multitude of
conflicting legends concerning the origin of this devotion of Our Lady's Psalter which prevailed down to the end of
the fifteenth century, as well as the early diversity of practice in
the manner of its recitation. These facts agree ill with the
supposition that it took its rise in a definite revelation and was
jealously watched over from the beginning by one of the most learned
and influential of the religious orders. No doubt can exist that the
immense diffusion of the Rosary and its confraternities in modern
times and the vast influence it has exercised for good are mainly
due to the labours and the prayers of the sons of St. Dominic, but
the historical evidence serves plainly to show that their interest
in the subject was only awakened in the last years of the fifteenth
century.
That
the Rosary is pre-eminently the prayer of the people adapted alike
for the use of simple and learned is proved not only by the long
series of papal utterances by which it has been commended to the
faithful but by the daily experience of all who are familiar with
it. The objection so often made against its "vain
repetitions" is felt by none but those who have failed to
realize how entirely the spirit of the exercise lies in the
meditation upon the fundamental mysteries of our faith. To the
initiated the words of the angelical salutation form only a sort of
half-conscious accompaniment, a bourdon which we may liken to the
"Holy, Holy, Holy" of the heavenly choirs and surely not
in itself meaningless. Neither can it be necessary to urge that the
freest criticism of the historical origin of the devotion, which
involves no point of doctrine, is compatible with a full
appreciation of the devotional treasures which this pious exercise
brings within the reach of all.
As
regards the origin of the name, the word rosarius means a
garland or bouquet of roses, and it was not infrequently used in a
figurative sense —e.g., as the title of a book, to denote an
anthology or collection of extracts. An early legend which after traveling
all over Europe penetrated even to Abyssinia connected
this name with a story of Our Lady, who was seen to take rosebuds
from the lips of a young monk when he was reciting Hail Marys and to
weave them into a garland which she placed upon her head. A German
metrical version of this story is still extant dating from the
thirteenth century. The name Our Lady's Psalter can also
be traced back to the same period. Corona or chaplet suggests the same idea as rosarium. The old
English name found in Chaucer and elsewhere was a "pair of
beads", in which the word bead originally meant prayers.
II.
IN THE
GREEK
CHURCH, CATHOLIC AND
SCHISMATIC
The
custom of reciting prayers upon a string with knots or beads thereon
at regular intervals has come down from the early days of
Christianity, and is still practised in the Eastern as well as in
the Western Church. It seems to have originated among the early monks and hermits who
used a piece of heavy cord with knots tied at intervals upon which
they recited their shorter prayers. This form of rosary is still
used among the monks in the various Greek Churches, although
archimandrites and bishops use a very ornamental form of rosary with
costly beads. The rosary is conferred upon the Greek monk as a part
of his investiture with the mandyas or full monastic habit,
as the second step in the monastic life, and is called his
"spiritual sword". This Oriental form of rosary is known
in the Hellenic Greek Church as kombologion (chaplet), or komboschoinion
(string of knots or beads), in the Russian Church as vervitza (string), chotki (chaplet), or liestovka
(ladder), and in the Rumanian Church as matanie (reverence). The first use of the rosary in any
general way was among the monks of the Orient. Our everyday name of
"beads" for it is simply the Old Saxon word bede (a
prayer) which has been transferred to the instrument used in
reciting the prayer, while the word rosary is an equally
modern term. The intercourse of the Western peoples of the Latin
Rite with those of the Eastern Rite at the beginning of the Crusades
caused the practice of saying prayers upon knots or beads to become
widely diffused among the monastic houses of the Latin Church,
although the practice had been observed in some instances before
that date. On the other hand, the recitation of the Rosary, as
practised in the West, has not become general in the Eastern
Churches; there it has still retained its original form as a
monastic exercise of devotion, and is but little known or used among
the laity, while even the secular clergy seldom use it in their
devotions. Bishops, however, retain the rosary, as indicating that
they have risen from the monastic state, even though they are in the
world governing their dioceses.
The
rosary used in the present Greek Orthodox Church —whether in
Russia or in the East —is quite different in form from that used
in the Latin Church. The use of the prayer-knots or prayer-beads
originated from the fact that monks, according to the rule of St.
Basil, the only monastic rule known to the Greek Rite, were enjoined
by their founder "to pray without ceasing" (I Thess., v, 17;
Luke, 1), and as most of the early monks were laymen, engaged often
in various forms of work and in many cases without sufficient
education to read the prescribed lessons, psalms, and prayers of the
daily office, the rosary was used by them as a means of continually
reciting their prayers. At the beginning and at the end of each
prayer said by the monk upon each knot or bead he makes the
"great reverence" (he megale metanoia), bending
down to the ground, so that the recitation of the rosary is often
known as a metania. The rosary used among the Greeks of
Greece, Turkey, and the East usually consists of one hundred beads
without any distinction of great or little ones, while the Old
Slavic, or Russian, rosary, generally consists of 103 beads,
separated in irregular sections by four large beads, so that the
first large bead is followed by 17 small ones, the second large bead
by 33 small ones, the third by 40 small ones, and the fourth by 12
small ones, with an additional one added at the end. The two ends of
a Russian rosary are often bound together for a short distance, so
that the lines of beads run parallel (hence the name ladder
used for the rosary), and they finish with a three-cornered ornament
often adorned with a tassel or other finial, corresponding to the
cross or medal used in a Latin rosary.
The
use of the Greek rosary is prescribed in Rule 87 of the Nomocanon,
which reads: "The rosary should have one hundred [the Russian
rule says 103] beads; and upon each bead the prescribed prayer
should be recited." The usual form of this prayer prescribed
for the rosary runs as follows: "O Lord Jesus Christ, Son and
Word of the living God, through the intercessions of thy immaculate
Mother [tes panachrantou sou Metros] and of all thy Saints,
have mercy and save us." If, however, the rosary be said as a
penitential exercise, the prayer then is: "O Lord Jesus Christ, Son
of God, have mercy on me a sinner." The Russian rosary is divided by
the four large beads so as to represent the different parts of the
canonical Office which the recitation of the rosary replaces, while
the four large beads themselves represent the four Evangelists. In
the monasteries of
Mount Athos, where the severest rule is observed, from eighty to a hundred
rosaries are said daily by each monk. In Russian monasteries the
rosary is usually said five times a day, while in the recitation of
it the "great reverences" are reduced to ten, the
remainder being simply sixty "little reverences" (bowing
of the head no further than the waist) and sixty recitations of the
penitential form of the prescribed prayer.
Among
the Greek Uniats rosary is but little used by the laity. The
Basilian monks make use of it in the Eastern style just described
and in many cases use it in the Roman fashion in some monasteries.
The more active life prescribed for them in following the example of
Latin monks leaves less time for the recitation of the rosary
according to the Eastern form, whilst the reading and recitation of
the Office during the canonical Hours fulfils the original monastic
obligation and so does not require the rosary. Latterly the
Melchites and the Italo-Greeks have in many places adopted among
their laity a form of to the one used among the laity of the Roman
Rite, but its use is far from general. The Ruthenian and Rumanian
Greek Catholics do not use it among the laity, but reserve it
chiefly for the monastic clergy, although lately in some parts of Galicia
its lay use has been occasionally introduced and is regarded as a
latinizing practice. It may be said that among the Greeks in general
the use of the rosary is regarded as a religious exercise peculiar
to the monastic life; and wherever among Greek Uniats its lay use
has been introduced, it is an imitation of the Roman practice. On
this account it has never been popularized among the laity of the
peoples, who remain strongly attached to their venerable Eastern
Rite.
Written by Herbert
Thurston & Andrew J. Shipman
The Catholic
Encyclopedia, Volume XIII
© 1912 by Robert Appleton Company
Nihil Obstat, February 1, 1912. Remy Lafort, D.D.,
Censor
Imprimatur, John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
|