Page:Catholic Encyclopedia, volume 14.djvu/723

This page needs to be proofread.

THOMAS


661


THOMAS


itig broken out, Paul V sent Dominic to Ferdinand II, who was i)repariiig to engage in wliat was hoped would prove a decisive hattle. With a erueitix in liis hand and a picture of the Madonna, which had hern shame- fully mutilated l)y the heretics, sus])ench'd from his neck, he moved among the combatants, animating the Catholics to light for their Faifli and to gain the vic- tory he promised would be theirs. The Battle of Prague proved indeed a signal success (8 Nov., 1620). Dominic continued his journey through Vienna, Lor- raine, Cologne, Brussels, (where he assisted Archduke Albert on his deathbed), Pans, and Marseilles, being everywhere hailed as a hero. Back in Home towards the end of 1021 he assisted the pope in the establish- ment of Propaganda, towards which end he had col- lected considerable funds during his apostolic journey; he was nominated a member of the Congregation. Urban VIII sent him to Vienna to bring about a set- tlement of the differences between the Court of Au.s- tria and the House of Mantua, but he was taken ill and died, surrounded by the imperial family. His body, partly incorrupt, now rests in the Carmelite church at Unter Doebling near Vienna. His biog- raphers relate numberless miracles alleged to have been WTOught by him during life (for which he was called the Thaumaturgus of his time), and after his death, but until the conclusion of the process of beati- fication it is im])ossilile to speak of these. He wrote, be.sides .some works which remained in MS.: "Senten- ti;e spirituales' (on mystical theology), translated into French (Paris, 1623), German, and Flemish; "Argumenta psalmorum" (Rome, 1623); "De pro- tectione B. Virginis" (French translation, Paris, 1645); "Concordia spiritualis" (Spanish tran.slation, Brussels, 1G26).

Besides the extensive notices contained in Philippcs a SS. Trin'ITate, Decor. Carmeli, in the Reforma de los Descahos, and the Hist, generalis Congregationis S. ElitT-, see Berthold-Ionace DE Ste Anse. Vie de. la Mhre Anne de Jesus (Mechlin, 1.SS2), II, 344-386, concerning Thomas jl Jesu. Philippus a S.S. Trini- TATE, Vila Ven. P. Dominici (Lyons, 1659), also in French, and Maria Gabriela, Lehen dcs ehrw. Dominikus (Innsbruck. 1902).

Benedict Zimmerm.\n.

Thomas a Kempis, author of the "Imitation of Christ", b. at Kerapen in the Diocese of Cologne, in 1.379 or 1380; d. 2.5 July, 1471. His parents, John and (icrtrude Haemerken, were of the artisan class; it is said that Gertrude kept the village school, and most probably the father worked in metals, a common calling in Kempen, whence peihajjs the surname Haemerken, or Haemerlein, Latinized Mnlhiilus (a little hammer). We have certain infoniiatiun of only two children, .John, the senior by about fourteen years, and Thomas. Thom;i,s was only thirteen wlien he set out for the .schools of l)ev<'nter, in Holland. His brother had preceded him thither by ten or twelve years, and doubtless Thomas expected to finfl him still there. On his arrival, how(>ver, he learned that he had gone two years since with five other Brothers of the Common Life to lay the foundations of a n(?w congregation of Canon.<5 Regular at Windesheim, about twenty miles from Deventer, where he then went and was lovingly received by his brother who provided him with a letter of introduction to the superior of the Brothers of Common I^ife at Deventer, Florentius Hiidewyn. Radewyn gave a warm welcome to the young brother of John Haemerken of Kempen, placed him for the time being in the house and under the maternal care of "a certain noble and devout lady", presented him to the rector of the schools, and paid his first fees, though the master returned the money when he learned whence it came. These par- ticulars we have from the pen of Thomas him.self in the biographies, written in his old age, of Gerard Groote, Florentius Hadewyn, and their followers (see "The Founders of the New Devotion", Ixindon, 190.')). For se\-en years he remained at Deventer, numbered from the first among th<' disciples of Radewyn, and


for a good portion of the time living in his house under his immediate care. It is impossible to exaggerate the influence of those years in the formation of his char.icter. The "new devotion", of which Deventer was then the focus and centre, was a revival in the Low Covuitries in the fourteenth century of the fer- vour of the primitive Christians at Jerusalem and Antioch in the first. It owed its inception to the fer\id preaching of the Deacon Gerard Groote, its further organization to the prudence and generous de\'t)tedness of Florentius Radewyn. Its associates were called the "Devout Brothers and Sisters", also the "Brothers and Sisters of the Common Life". They took no vows, but lived a life of poverty, chastit}', and obedience, as far as was compatible with their state, some in their own homes and others, espe- cially clerics, in community. They were forbidden to beg, but all were expected to earn their living by the labour of their hands; for the clerics this meant chiefly the tran- scribing of books and the instruc- tion of the young. All earnings were placed in a com- mon fund at the disposal of the su- perior; the one ambition of all was to emulate the life and vir- tues of the first Christians, especially in the love of God and the neighbour, in simplicity, humility, devotion. Fur- thermore, partly to provide the Devout Brothers and Sisters with effective protectors and experienced guides, partly to afford an easy transit to the religious state proper for those of their number who should desire it, Gerard Groote conceived the idea of estab- lishing a branch of the canonical order, which should always maintain the closest relations with the mem- bers of the new ilevotion. This scheme was carried into effect after his untimely death, at the early age of forty-three, by the foundation of thi- congregation of Windesheim, as it was afterwards called from the tract of land where the first priory W!is established (1386). These details are givi^n as helpful to a better understanding of the life and character of a Kempis, a typical and ex<Mnplary Brother, and for seventy-two years he was one of the most distinguished of the Canons Regular.

At Deventer Thomas proved an apt [lupil, already noted for his neatness and skill in transcribing manu- scripts. This w;vs a life-long labour of love with him; in addition to his own compositions he copied numer- ous treatises from the Fathers, especially St. Bernard, a Mi.ssal for the u.se of his community, and the whole Bible in four large volumes still extant. AftiT com- pleting his humanities at Deventer, in the autumn of i;j99, with the commendation of his superior, Floren- tius Radewyn, Thomas sought admi.ssion among the Canons Regular of Wimleshcim at Mount St. Agnes, near Zwolle, of whi(Oi monastery his brother John waa then prior. The house had been established only the previous year, and as yet there were no claustral buildings, no garden, no benefactors, no funds. Dur- ing his term of office, which last('(l nine years, John a Kempis built the priory and commenced the church. In these circumstances we find the explanation of the


Thomas a Kempis the Getruidcnberg Portrait