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BROTHERS OF COMMON LIFE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 652 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BROTHERS OF
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COMMON
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LIFE
  , a religious community formerly existing in the Catholic Church . Towards the end of his career Gerhard Groot (q.v.) retired to his native
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town of
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Deventer, in the province of Overyssel and the diocese of Utrecht, and gathered around him a number of those who had been " converted " by his preaching or wished to place them-selves under his spiritual guidance . With the assistance of Florentius Radewyn, who resigned for the purpose a canonry at Utrecht, he was able to carry out a long-cherished idea of establishing a house wherein devout men might live in community without the monastic vows . The first such community was established at Deventer in the house of Florentius himself (c . 1380); and Thomas a Kempis, who lived in it from 1392 to 1399, has
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left a description of the manner of
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life pursued: " They humbly imitated the manner of the Apostolic life, and having one heart and mind in
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God, brought every man what was his own into the
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common stock, and receiving
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simple food and clothing avoided taking thought for the morrow . Of their own will they devoted themselves to God, and all busied them-selves in obeying their rector or his vicar . . . . They laboured care-fully in copying books, being instant continually in sacred study and devout meditation . In the
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morning having said Matins, they went to the church (for Mass) . . . . Some who were priests and were learned in the divine law preached earnestly in the church." Other houses of the Brothers of Common Life, otherwise called the "
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Modern Devotion," were in rapid succession established in the chief cities of the Low Countries and north and central Germany, so that there were in all upwards of
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forty houses of men; while those of
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women doubled that figure, the first having been founded by Groot himself at Deventer . The ground-idea was to reproduce the life of the first Christians as described in Acts iv .

The members took no vows and were

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free to leave when they chose; but so long as they remained they were bound to observe chastity, to practise
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personal poverty, putting all their
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money and earnings into the common fund, to obey the rules of the house and the commands of the rector, and to exercise themselves in self-denial, humility and piety . The rector was chosen by the community and was not necessarily a priest, though in each house there were a few priests and clerics . The majority, however, were laymen, of all kinds and degrees—nobles, artisans, scholars, students, labouring men . The clerics preached and instructed the
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people, working chiefly among the poor; they also devoted themselves to the copying of
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manuscripts, in order thereby to
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earn something for the common fund; and some of them taught in the
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schools . Of the laymen, the educated copied manuscripts, the others worked at various handicrafts or at agriculture . After the religious services of the morning the Brothers scattered for the day's
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work, the artisans going to the workshops in the city,—for the idea was to live and work in the
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world, and not separated from it, like the monks . Their
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rule was that they had to earn their livelihood,, and must not beg . This feature seemed a reflection on the mendicant orders, and the idea of a community life without vows and not in
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isolation from everyday life, was looked upon as something new and strange, and even as bearing
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affinities to the Beghards and other sects, at that time causing trouble to both Church and state . And so opposition arose to the Modern Devotion, and the controversy was carried to the legal faculty at Cologne University, which gave a
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judgment strongly in their favour . The question, for all that, was not finally settled until the council of Constance (1414), when their cause was triumphantly defended by
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Pierre d'
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Ailly and Gerson . For a century after this the Modern Devotion flourished exceedingly, and its influence on the revival of religion in the Nether-lands and north Germany in the 15th century was wide and deep . It has been the fashion to treat Groot and the Brothers of Common Life as " Reformers before the Reformation "; but Schulze, in the
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Protestant Realencyklopadie, is surely right in pronouncing this view quite unhistorical—except on the theory that all interior spiritual religion is Protestant: he, shows that at the Reformation hardly any of the Brothers embraced Lutheranism, only a single community going over as a
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body to the new religion .

During the second

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half of the 16th century the institute gradually declined, and by the
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middle of the 17th all its houses had ceased to exist . AUTHORITIEs.—The chief authorities are Thomas a Kempis, Lives of Groot and his Disciples and Chronicle of Mount St
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Agnes (both
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works translated by J . P . Arthur, the former under the title Founders of the New Devotion, 1905); Busch, Chronicle of Windeslikim (ed . Grube, 1887) . Much has been written on the subject in Dutch and German; in
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English, S . Kettlewell, Thomas d Kempis and the
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Brother?of Common Life (1882) (but see Arthur in the Prefaces to above-named books) ; for a shorter sketch, F . R . Cruise, Thomas a Kempis (1887) . An excellent article in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopadie (3rd ed.), " Bruder
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des gemeinsamen Lebens," supplies copious information with references to all the literature; see also Max Heimbucher, Orden and Kongregationen (1897), ii . § 123 . The
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part played by the Brothers of Common Life in the religious and educational movements of the time may be studied in Ludwig Pastor's
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History of the Popes from the close of the Middle Ages, or J .

Janssen's History of the German People . (E . C .

End of Article: BROTHERS OF COMMON LIFE
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