Page:A history of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages, volume 3.djvu/145

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CHAPTER III. THE FRATICELLI. AVe have seen how John XXII. created and exterminated the heresy of the Spiritual Franciscans, and how Michele da Cesena enforced obedience within the Order as to the question of gran- aries and cellars and the wearing of short and narrow gowns. The settlement of the question, however, on so illogical a basis as this was impossible, especially in view of the restless theological dogmatism of the pope and his inflexible determination to crush all dissidence of opinion. Having once undertaken to silence the dis- cussions over the rule of poverty which had caused so much trouble for nearly a century, his logical intellect led him to carry to their legitimate conclusions the principles involved in his bulls Quorum- dam, Sancta Romana, and Gloriosam Eeclesiam, while his thorough worldliness rendered him incapable of anticipating the storm which he would provoke. A character such as his was unable to comprehend the honest inconsistency of men like Michele and Bonagrazia, who could burn their brethren for refusing to have granaries and cellars, and who, at the same time, were ready to endure the stake in vindication of the absolute poverty of Christ and the apostles, which had so long been a fundamental belief of the Order, and had been proclaimed as irrefragable truth in the bull Exiit qui seminat. In fact, under a pope of the temperament of John, the ortho- dox Franciscans had a narrow and dangerous path to tread. The Spirituals were burned as heretics because they insisted on follow- ing their own conception of the Rule of Francis, and the distinc- tion between this and the official recognition of the obligation, of poverty was shadowy in the extreme. The Dominicans were not slow to recognize the dubious position of their rivals, nor averse to take advantage of it. If they could bring the received doc- trines of the Franciscan Order within the definition of the new III.— 9