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Changes Of The Catholic Church As Portrayed

In The Literature During The Late Fourteenth Essay, Research Paper


Changes of the Catholic Church as Portrayed in the Literature during the Late


Fourteenth-Century


In reading the poems Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and Geoffrey Chaucer?s


The Canterbury Tales, it is evident that the church played a major role in the


lives of the English people during the Middle Ages. The Catholic Church was


going through many changes during the late middle ages. After the people of


England were able to read the Bible many of them started to stray from the


church. During this time period many great works of literature were written that


expressed these ideas. Sir Gawain is an Arthurian romance written by an unknown


author in the late fourteenth-century. It is the story of Sir Gawain and his


adventure to find the Green Knight. Religious faith and the Christian idea of


chivalry play a large role in Sir Gawain?s adventure. The Canterbury Tales is


a collection of poems written by Geoffrey Chaucer. Many of the tales and


characters in the story have to do with the church and its corruption during


medieval times.


The poem ,Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, was written during the late 1300?s.


It is a story that was already hundreds of years old. In the poem, Sir Gawain is


being measured against a moral and Christian ideal of chivalry. Chivalry is the


moral code that


knights lived by during the Middle Ages. Chivalrous knights fought for glory


and the Christian purpose and not for profit or gain. In the poem, Gawain?s


chivalry, along with his faith, are tested to prove his worth as a knight. This


poem shows the importance of faith and the church, yet it also shows that


although knights are held to a code of chivalry and strict Christianity, they


are still human and make mistakes. The mistake, or sin that Gawain committed in


the poem showed the more human side of the knight. This was a change from the


more normal approach of a strict, almost unbelievably good character that a


knight usually portrayed in the Middle Ages.


Around the same time that the story of Sir Gawain was written Geoffrey


Chaucer wrote the poem The Canterbury Tales. The Canterbury Tales is the story


of a group of people who decide to make a pilgrimage to the Canterbury


Cathedral. During their journey each person tells a story to the group. What


makes the tales interesting is Chaucer?s ability to know how different types


of people act. One of the interesting aspects of the story is the way the people


related to the church are portrayed by Chaucer. Chaucer portrays his clergy


member characters as ironic figures. He portrays some of them as greedy and


dishonest, despite their social status. The Nun, the Monk, and the Pardoner are


the religious characters in Chaucer?s work. By creating ironies between their


characterizations and their duties, Chaucer expresses the corruption of the


church during the late fourteenth-century. Chaucer also shows the human side of


the clergy. Even though the clergy were held to a higher standard, they still


made mistakes and had vices.


Chaucer?s character, the Prioress, is an interesting portrayal of a nun in


the late middle ages. She is described as a gentle woman, simple and coy. She


do

es not behave as you would think a nun should. She speaks an odd dialect of


French, but not to communicate or help others. She speaks this language for her


own vain reasons. She tries to act like she is in a more refined social class.


It is ironic that she is even on this pilgrimage. Normally a nun would stay


inside of the convent walls. One of the most ironic characteristics of the nun


is that she wears a large gold brooch around her neck, which reads, ?Love


conquers all?. This is wrong because nuns were not supposed to wear jewelry.


The Monk is another one of Chaucer?s characters that didn?t fit into


social norms. The Monk is described as noticeably sarcastic, piggish, and


selfish. Like the nun, he seems to be a vain servant of God. He wears expensive


clothing and is not separated from the world as a Monk is supposed to be. The


tale that he tells about hunting is looked at as a sexual connotation, the


hunting meaning hunting women. This would be improper for a Monk to think, let


alone talk about to a group of people. He seems to be a misguided servant of God


who does not fit the stereotypical description of a monk. The way Chaucer


describes him, as not caring for the monastic rules written by St. Maurus and


St. Benedict shows that the Monk was a corrupt figure in the church.


The Pardoner is probably the most vile and corrupt character in the story.


During the middle ages, pardoners were supposed to issue papal forgiveness from


sins in exchange for money. This money in turn was supposed to be given to the


sick, poor, or any other worthy cause. Many pardoners were frauds. They kept the


money for


themselves, and sold fake relics and pardons. This pardoner claimed to have


come ?straight from the court of Rome?, yet it is known that he has never


even set foot out of England. The pardoner uses stories to trick people into


buying his fake relics. In essence, he was a good B.S. salesman. Ironically, the


stories that the pardoner tells are all moral stories against greed, gluttony,


and other sins. The moral of his tale, ?money is the root of all evil? is


also very ironic, since all he seems to care about is money. The pardoner is an


excellent example of corruption in the Catholic Church during this period.


In closing, all of these stories have one thing in common. Whether it was Sir


Gawain and the sin he committed, or the mistakes and vices of the three corrupt


members of the church in The Canterbury Tales. They all knowingly committed


sins. This shows the more human side of the church. At a point when the rules of


the church were enforced strictly on the people of England, these stories show


that even the people who were supposed to set the example and represent the


church made mistakes and committed sins. With this corruption in the Church came


change. When the common people began to read the Bible written in the


vernacular, English, they realized that they didn?t need the corrupt Church to


tell them about the teachings of God. Around the time period that these stories


were written the Renaissance was beginning, and with the renaissance came new


ideas. Many of these new ideas, e.g. humanism, had an effect on the Church and


ultimately the monarch in England. As the saying goes, ?No Bishop, No King?.

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