It is no mere accident that the heyday of sacerdotal
pretensions coincided with the golden age of the religious orders; that the Hildebrandine
policy took shape when the Cluniac movement was overflowing the borders of
France into all the adjacent countries; that Alexander III was a younger
contemporary of St. Bernard, and that the death-grapple between Empire and
Papacy followed hard upon the foundation of the mendicant fraternities by St.
Francis and St. Dominic. The monks and the friars were the militia of the
Church. Not that the medieval orders devoted themselves to a political
propaganda with the zeal and system of the Jesuits in the sixteenth century.
The serviceswhich the Cluniacs and the Cistercians, the Dominicans and the Franciscans,
rendered to the militant Papacy were more impalpable and indirect.
From time to
time, it is true, they were entrusted with important missions - to raise money,
to preach a crusade, to influence monarchs, to convert or to persecute the
heretic; St. Bernard, the founder of Clairvaux and the incarnation of the
monastic spirit, was for twenty years (1133-1153) the oracle to whom Pope after
Pope resorted for direction. But even in St. Bernard's time, and even when the
reigning Pope was his nominee or pupil, there was a certain divergence between the
theories for which he stood and the actual policy of the Curia. It was, for
example, against his better judgment that he organised the Second Crusade in
deference to the express commands of Pope Eugenius III; and on the other hand,
the Papacy preserved towards the pioneers of scholasticism an attitude which he
thought unduly lenient. Rome was more broad-minded than Clairvaux, more alive
to realities, more versed in statecraft and diplomacy; while Clairvaux fostered
a nobler conception of the spiritual life, and was more consistent in
withholding the Church from secular entanglements. The qualities which made the
monk invaluable as a leader of public opinion also made him an incalculable and
intractable factor in political combinations.