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PENITENTIAL ( See also: manual used by priests of the Catholic See also: Church for guidance in assigning the penance due to sins
.
Such manuals played a large role in the early
See also: middle ages, particularly in See also: Ireland, See also: England and See also: Frankland, and their influence in the moral See also: education of the See also: barbarian races has not received sufficient See also: attention from historians
.
They were mainly composed of canons See also: drawn from various See also: councils and of dicta from writings of some of the fathers
.
Disciplinary regulations in Christian communities are referred to from the very See also: borders of the apostolic age, and a See also: system of careful oversight of those admitted to the mysteries See also: developed steadily as the membership See also: grew and dangers of contamination with the outside See also: world increased
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These were the elaborate precautions of the catechumenate, and —as a bulwark against the persecutions—the rigid system known as the Discipline of the Secret (disciplina arcani)
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The treatment of the lapsed, which produced the Novatian See also: heresy, was also responsible for what has frequently been referred to as the first penitential
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This is the libellus in which, according to Cyprian (Ep
.
51), the decrees of the See also: African synods of 251 and 255 were embodied for the guidance of the See also: clergy in dealing with their repentant and returning flocks
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This manual, which has been lost, was evidently not like the See also: code-like compilations of the 8th century, and it is somewhat misleading to speak of it as a penitential
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Jurisdiction in penance was still too closely limited to the upper ranks of the clergy to See also: call forth such literature
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Besides the See also: bishop an official well versed in the penitential regulations of the Church, called the poenitentiarius, assigned due penalties for sins
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For their guidance there was considerable conciliar legislation (e.g
.
See also: Ancyra, See also: Nicaea, Neocaesarea, &c.), and certain patristic letters which had acquired almost the force of See also: decretals
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Of the latter the most important were the three letters of St See also: Basil of Caesarea (d
.
379) to Bishop See also: Amphilochus of See also: Iconium containing over eighty headings
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Three things tended to develop these rules into something like a system of penitential See also: law
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These were the development of auricular confession and private penance; the extension of the penitential jurisdiction among the clergy owing to the growth of a parochial priesthood; and the See also: necessity of adapting the penance to the See also: primitive ideas of law prevailing among the newly converted barbarians, especially the idea of compensation by the See also: wergild
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In Ireland in the middle of the 5th century appeared the " canons of St Patrick." In the first See also: half of the next century these were followed by others, notably those of St Finian (d
.
552)
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At the same See also: time the See also: Celtic See also: British Church produced the penitentials of St See also: David of Menevia (d
.
544) and of See also: Gildas (d
.
583) in addition to synodal legislation
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These furnished the material to See also: Columban (d
.
615) for his See also: Liber de poenitentia and his monastic See also: rule, which had a See also: great influence upon the continent of See also: Europe
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The Anglo-Saxon Church was later than the Irish, but under See also: Theodore of See also: Tarsus (d.69o), archbishop of See also: Canterbury, the practice then in force was madethe basis of the most important of all penitentials
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The Poenitentiale Theodori became the authority in the Church's treatment of sinners for the next four centuries, both in England and elsewhere in Europe
.
The See also: original text, as prepared by a See also: disciple of Theodore, and embodying his decisions, is given in Haddan and Stubbs's Councils and Ecclesiastical Documents See also: relating to Great Britain and Ireland (iii
.
173 seq.)
.
A
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Penitentiale Commeani (St Cumian), dating apparently from the early 8th century, was the third See also: main source of Frankish penitentials
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The extent and variety of this literature led the Gallican Church to exercise a sort of censorship in See also: order to secure uniformity
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After numerous synods, Bishop Haltigar of See also: Cambrai was commissioned by Ebo of See also: Reims in 829 to prepare a definitive edition
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Haltigar used, among his other materials, a so-called poenitentiale romanum, which was really of Frankish origin
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The canons printed by David See also: Wilkins in his Concilia (1737) as being by Ecgbert of See also: York (d
.
767) are largely a See also: translation into Anglo-Saxon of three books of Haltigar's penitentials
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In 841 Hrabanus Maurus undertook a new Liber poenitentium and wrote a long letter on the subject to Heribald of See also: Auxerre about 853
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Then followed the See also: treatise of See also: Reginon of Prum in 906, and finally the collection made by Burchard, bishop of See also: Worms, between 1012 and 1023
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The codification of the See also: canon law by See also: Gratian and the change in the sacramental position of penance in the 12th century closed the See also: history of penitentials
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Much controversy has arisen over the question whether there was an official papal penitential
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It is claimed that (quite apart from Haltigar's poenitentiale romanum) such a set of canons existed early in See also: Rome, and the attempt has been made by H
.
J
.
Schmitz in his learned treatise on penitentials (Buszbiicher and das kanonische Buszverfahren, 1883 and 1898) to establish their pontifical character
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The See also: matter is still in dispute, Schmitz's thesis not having met with universal acceptance
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In addition to the See also: works mentioned above the one important See also: work on the penitentials was L
.
W
.
H
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Wasserschleben's epoch-making study and collection of texts, Die Buszordnungen der abendlandischen Kirche nebst einer rechtsgeschichtlichen Einleitung (See also: Halle, 1851)
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See articles in Wetzer and Welte's Kirchenlexikon, Hauck's Realencyklopadie, and Haddan and Stubbs's Councils
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See also Seebasz in Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte, xviii . 58 . On the canons of St Patrick see theSee also: Life of St Patrick by J
.
B
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See also: Bury (pp
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233—275)
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