Germanic
or
Saxon
Christianity
The Stuttgart Psalter
Introduction
Germanic
or Saxon Christianity is a term used to describe a form of the Christian faith
that grew out of the Christianisation of the Germanic and particularly the
Anglo and Continental Saxon people.
This
article is mostly based on a book by the author James C Russell entitled ‘The Germanization of early Medieval Christianity’. It examines the conversion period of both
Anglo Saxon and Continental Germanic peoples and concludes that the process of
conversion was a two way one. Russell
examines the concept of conversion itself and concludes that the Christian
missionaries adopted a deliberate policy of emphasising their religion’s similarities
with the Germanic pagan or heathen religion and of underplaying the profound
differences. Right from the start, the
Augustine mission to southern England sought to adapt existing buildings and
religious practices rather than to replace them outright. It emphasised physical things such as the
veneration of relics and the magical properties of the mass. It portrayed Christ as a heroic warrior in
the Germanic tradition, whose magic (literally God’s spell or Gospel) was more
powerful than that of the old gods.
However, it did not properly explain the total change in world view
required by true conversion; in particular the eschatological nature of
Christianity as a ‘world rejecting religion’.
Early missionaries therefore deliberately hid some of the more radical
differences between the two religious systems in an attempt to overcome earlier
outright rejection by Germanic pagans of what was seen as an alien
religion.
Warrior
Christ from a terracotta funerary plaque of central gaul
circa fifth or sixth centuries. Cover
illustration of James C. Russell’s book: “The Germanization
of early medieval Christianity”. |
This accommodation was only meant to be temporary and was to
be followed by a second phase of ethical and doctrinal change. However, this did not happen to any great
extent, partly because of a decline in the catechumenate (religious
instructors) and partly because of the sheer vitality of Germanic folk
religion. The result was a Germanic
folk-religious reinterpretation of Christianity that eventually became the
norm throughout western Christendom.
This Germanic or Euro-centric folk Christianity remained dominant
within western Christianity until relatively recently, although several movements
such as the monastic movements and the protestant reformation attempted to
reassert the Judaic Christianity of the middle east. However, opposition to Germanic
Christianity has grown since the second world war as Churches have sought a
more internationalist or universalist approach and one that emphasises the
faith’s origins within Judaism.
Nevertheless, euro-centric religio-cultural
sentiment remains strong within several traditionalist groups even if these
have become minority groupings within their respective denominations. Russell argues that opposition to
traditional euro-centric Christianity by the mainstream Churches is likely to
lead to alienation amongst those Germanic and Euro-folk Christians for whom
religiosity and cultural identity are closely related. |
Examples of medieval
Christo-Germanic syncretism may be found in the development of chivalry and of
the Eigenkirche or Propriety Church. This was a church or abbey built on private
ground by a feudal lord, over which he retained certain propriety interests,
such as nominating clergy. This provided
the local dryhtens or chieftains with checks and
balances to the power of the, usually Italian, popes. In England, the Royal peculiars have remained
propriety churches to this day.
Accommodating
Germanic folk religion and the re-interpretation of Christianity
The following extract of a
letter from Pope Gregory to Abbot Mellitus in the early days of Augustine’s
mission to the English, demonstrates how the Church hoped to retain and adapt
ancient folk customs as a way of making Christianity more familiar to the
people and of increasing its chances of taking root. This is a process known as inculturation and still used today.
"To my most beloved son, Abbot
Mellitus; Gregory, servant of the servants of God. Since the departure of our companions and yourself, I have
felt much anxiety because we have not heard of how your journey
prospered. However, when Almighty God
has brought you to our most reverend brother, Bishop Augustine, tell him what
I have decided after long deliberation about the English people, namely that
the idol temples of that race should by no means be destroyed; only the idols
within them. Take holy water and
sprinkle it in these shrines, build alters and place relics in them. For if the shrines are well built, it is
essential that they should be converted from the worship of devils to the
service of the true God. When this
people see that their temples are not destroyed, they will be able to banish
error from their hearts and be more ready to come to the places they are
familiar with, but now recognizing and worshipping the true God. And because they are in the habit of
slaughtering many oxen as sacrifices to devils, some solemnity ought to be
given them in exchange for this. So,
on the day of the dedication, or the festivals of the holy martyrs, whose
relics are deposited there, let them build themselves huts from the boughs of
trees, about those churches which have been converted from shrines, and let tem celebrate the solemnity with religious feasting. Do not let them sacrifice animals to the
devil, but let them slaughter animals for their own food to the praise of
God, and let them give thanks to the Giver of all things for His bountiful
provision”. Letter from Pope Gregory the Great to Abbot Mellitus, upon his
journey to England [AD. 601] – taken from Bede, ‘Ecclesiastical History
of the English’ 1:30. |
However, an earlier letter from
Gregory to the Kentish King Æþelbert, was less accommodating and shows that he would have
preferred the pagan temples and holy places to have been destroyed and
completely replaced with Christian places of worship. This was the more familiar process that had
been used elsewhere in Europe as Christianity gradually spread northwards and
westwards. His change of tact owed more
to real politique
than anything else. He recognised that
the pagan faith and traditions of the Saxon English were simply too embedded in
the folk culture for a complete replacement to have stood any chance of
success. Yet, his policy of inculturation meant that the true nature of conversion was
never really understood and ensured that significant elements of the old
religion were absorbed into the new.
Importantly, the mission of St Boniface to the continental Saxons over
100 years later adopted a similar approach with much the same result.
Religion
and socio, ethnic & cultural identity
Broadly
speaking, there are two types of religion; folk religion which tends to be
ethno-specific and universal religion which proclaims a universal truth to all
peoples. Native European religions were folk based, of which the pre-Christian Germanic heathen
religions were a part. One of the most
important aspects of a folk religion is the folk group itself. A key feature of Indo-European religion is
what is often called ‘ancestor worship’, but is really a tribal bonding process
that recognises and honours those members of the tribe that have gone before
and attaches great significance to the bonds between its living and dead members. This is the basis of an ethnic religion, in
which adherents are not just members of a religious community, but are part of
the same blood family with blood ties that go back to the distant past. The tribe or folk group thus becomes the
basis of the religion, the folk related not just to each other and to their
ancestors but to the very gods themselves.
The sacredness of the community is expressed in ritual ceremonies that
celebrate its relationship with its own exclusive gods and which ‘promote a
strong sense of in-group identification and loyalty’ Pearson, R: Introduction to Anthropology 1974. An example of this is the Greek polis, which
was originally perceived as a living community, based on ethnic kinship in
which as much societal life as possible revolved around the extended
family. According to Plato in Laws, the polis religion ‘is not tuned
to the needs of the individual... but rather shapes the community, pointing out
and expressing its functions through its gods’.
This concept of polis would appear to have grown out of the
Indo-European tribal institutions and religion.
Like the ancient Greeks, the
Germanic people are part of the wider Indo European or Aryan family, although
very significant differences have clearly emerged between the different
branches of this group. Despite this, it
is still possible to identify Indo-European social and religious
characteristics which form the basis of social structure and religious
mythology and practice of all Indo European peoples. Identifying the impact of these
characteristics on medieval Christianity helps to define and quantify the
impact of pre-Christian Germanic religion and culture on it. Edgar Polome (Essays on Germanic Religion), for
instance, identifies a number of these characteristics. He considers Indo European society to be
ethno-centric and patrilineal, essentially based around the patrilineal
extended family. Kindred
was the cornerstone of this structure – a grouping together of families
into clans claiming descent from a common ancestor. Clans were grouped into larger structures or
tribes, also based around some common ancestor.
Ethnic solidarity was the means by which the tribe or clan defended
itself against outsiders and maintained its own security and social
systems.
It is generally thought that
the oldest Indo European mythology saw a supreme god expressed as Sky Father,
who was the creator of the cosmos, protector of the clan and often as the
primal ancestor. The Roman historian
Tacitus says of the lowland Germanic peoples, ‘In ancient songs, the only kind
of record or annal they have among them, they
celebrate the god Tuisto born of the earth. To him they attribute a son Mannus as the origin of their people, to Mannus three sons and founders from whose names those
nearest the Ocean may be called the Ingaeuones, those
in the middle the Herminiones and the rest the Istaevones’.
Wolf’s
cross – a Christo-heathen cross |
Another characteristic of the
Indo Europeans is the tri-partite division of society into priestly, warrior
and farming classes. Beowulf, the
oldest English poem, starts with the funeral of Scyld
Scefing – Shield, the son of Sheaf. This is a mythology that goes back to the
dawn of time and is a clear reflection of the importance of and the
inter-relationship between the warrior and farming classes. In Norse mythology, the god Rig (probably
another name for Heimdall or Hama as he is known in
Anglo Saxon English) fathered the three classes of society. The importance of the warrior class both in
terms of defending the folk group and of conquering new lands to farm
provides the basis for the warrior cult that pervades our pre-Christian folk
religion and the Germanic Christianity that grew out of it. These Indo-European, or Aryan, folk
religions are often described as ‘world accepting’. This means that the emphasis of society was
in the ‘here and now’ and not in some promised after life. The material world was not seen as
inherently evil and people just got on with life as best they could. Though there were certainly notions of an after life, this was not the focus of people’s
concern. By contrast, Christianity can
be seen essentially as a ‘world rejecting’ religion which looks to the
promises of an after-life and, at least in its most extreme forms, considers
the material world to be evil. These
ideas may have grown out of the world rejecting view of the Jewish Essenes
and of Gnosticism
which often saw the material world as the creation of an evil
demiurge rather than the true God.
Later Greek Hellenism, which strongly influenced early Christianity,
was also world rejecting mainly because it had
become distanced from its Indo European origins and fused with eastern
mystery religions. |
Honour and loyalty
At the heart of the warrior
system lay the Germanic notion of honour. This is honour in the sense of glory,
splendour or everlasting fame. It was a
notion of external approval and praise being granted by the Chieftain and tribe
for acts of great courage performed on behalf of the tribe. This externalised concept of honour stemmed
from a desire not to be publicly shamed and can be contrasted with the
Christian concept of internalised honour based on guilt and personal sin. Central to the Indo-European social system
was the idea of war and the heroic warrior cult as a religious practice. This was probably because of the central
importance of the warrior to defending the homeland and to winning more
territory for the expanding tribe to farm.
Thus, the warrior and farming classes were closely inter-related and
depended on each other. The warrior code
was itself central to the social bonds that defined the tribe and gave it such
strength. This was a system based on
honour, bravery and the winning of eternal glory. The poem Havamal
(attributed to the sayings of Odin or Woden) puts it succinctly: ‘Cattle die,
kinsmen die, thyself will soon die; but fair fame will never die for him who
wins it’.
No
where else
was this ethos as strongly embedded into social structure as it was in the
Germanic social system. Warriors were
bound to their Lord by an oath of loyalty that they could not break. They would be expected to fight for and
defend their Lord in battle even if that meant their own death. In fact, surviving a battle in which the King
was killed was a great shame to the warrior.
However, the King was bound to his warriors by the same code – bound to
gain favour from the gods in both battle and agriculture. This ‘favour’ with the gods formed the basis
of the Germanic notion of holiness to which the words holy, healthy and hail
were originally applied. As the process
of Christianisation took hold, so the concept of holiness changed to one of
personal holiness.
This concept of loyalty to the
warlord and folk group was so central to Germanic society and world view, and
so different to the cosmopolitan Christian world view, that the early
missionaries simply could not directly oppose it. Instead, they sought to present their
religion in a way that was compatible with this world view and then sought to
slowly adapt society to true Christian values.
However, although this code was to some extent adapted by the advent of
Christianity, it remained extremely strong and continued to form the basis of
Germanic society witnessed through the development of both the feudal system
and of the military orders and chivalry.
A principle way that this occurred was through the portrayal of Christ
as a victorious Germanic warlord or warrior hero such as Beowulf. Poems such as ‘Dream of the Rood’ and the ‘Saxon Gospel’, The Heliand, portray this very clearly.
Indeed, authors such as Lars Lonnroth (writing in the American Scandinavian Society in
1917) find in Germanic Christianity a sympathy for the
old codes of worldly honour and loyalty to the family and tribe, even a
reserved approval of the revenge principle.
For instance, the C13th treatise called ‘the King’s Mirror’
from Moral Values in Icelandic Sagas advises:
“keep your temper calm though not to the point of suffering
abuse or bringing upon yourself the reproach of cowardice. Though necessity may force you into strife,
be not in a hurry to take revenge; first make sure your effort will succeed and
strike where it ought”.
In a
similar vein, St Odo, abbot of Cluny monastery (d.
944), radically redefined the concept of a virtuous and saintly life by
explicitly including the warrior ethos and lifestyle. In defence of this, he states “truly, no one
ought to be worried because a just man sometimes makes use of fighting, which
seems incompatible with religion”. Here
was a clear attempt to not just integrate the warrior ethos into the Christian
ethos, but to adapt it to the basic principles of Christian morality – warfare
for a higher or just cause and not just for its own sake or for temporal glory.
Russell
believes that many of the pre-Christian Germanic values were absorbed into
medieval Christianity and that this suggests that many of its own core values,
such as cosmopolitanism, its world rejecting ethos and pacifism were either
rejected out of hand or significantly adapted to the Germanic world view. In other words, the core values of Germanic
Christianity were quite different to those of Judeao-Christianity
to which the Churches are currently seeking to return.
Judaeo Christianity as
cosmopolitan non-ethnic based universalism We have already seen that
Germanic folk religions were ethno centric and strongly based around
community of kith and kin. In contrast
to this, universalist religions such as Islam or Judaeo-Christianity
emphasise a community of believers.
The fundamental basis of the Germanic religious and social structure
was the blood family – the Cyn. By contrast, Christianity emphasised
celibacy and replaced the Cyn with a family of
believers. Pagan societies tended to
see these non-biological communities as abnormal and dysfunctional. Russell argues that when a cohesive society
is invaded or subject to mass immigration, a process of social
dis-integration will usually take place.
Individuals who once drew strength from their family and tribal ties
will begin to feel alone, alienated from their ancestors and tribal
bonds. In such a state, the appeal of
mystery cults that look not to this world but to the next can be strong. These cults are world rejecting and can be
strongly attractive to individuals and societies experiencing a break down of the known world around them. An early example of this lies in classical
Greece. Originally, she held to an
Indo-European religion the Greeks considered to come from the north. As society changed and became more
cosmopolitan, the people began to look eastwards to the world rejecting
mystery cults. This process is
exemplified in Alexander the Great’s policy of oikoumene (ecumenism or cosmopolitanism).
These cults offered a different sense of community – one based on
shared belief and practice rather than ethnic ancestry. As the old Cyn
structures broke down, so the Church began to take its place by offering
food, shelter, education and many other social services that dis-enfranchised
people found very attractive. |
English White Dragon |
World accepting Germanic
religion versus world rejecting Christianity
The interaction between
Christianity and Indo-European ‘world accepting’ religions did not begin with
its expansion into the Germanic lands. By
the time of Christ, the classical religions of Greece and Rome had absorbed
eastern mystery cults such as Mithraism.
As such, their original Indo-European religiosity had become diluted,
but nevertheless was still apparent. The
meeting of Christianity with these religions had a profound effect on its early
development and on some of its main theological positions. This was the point at which Christianity
ceased to be a Semitic religion, an off shoot of Judaism, and became something
quite different and fundamentally European.
The impact of Greek pagan philosophers such as Plato and the Roman
hierarchical and legal structures on the development of early Christianity are
two examples of this process. As
Christianity spread northwards into Europe, it encountered successive waves of
increasingly homogenous peoples with increasingly ‘pure’ Indo-European based
folk religions. Thus, by the time it
encountered Germanic folk religion, it had already been affected by its sister
religions of southern and central Europe.
Indeed, according to Russell, the most significant effects of the Celto-Germanic Indo-Europeanization of Christianity were
the emergence of a sense of a specific European Christianity, which encompassed
both a spiritual and political context and included a magical or folk religious
undercurrent that pervaded early medieval Christianity.
It is important to understand
that pre-Christian Germanic society, whilst sharing common Indo European
origins, was fundamentally different to the pre-Christian Hellenistic societies
that Christianity first took root in.
Those societies had already become cosmopolitan, world rejecting and
emphasised gnosis or esoteric
knowledge. Germanic religion, at its
point of contact with Christianity, was not philosophical but rather a national
cult religion as both Greek and Roman religion had originally been. Germanic religion was concerned with the here
and now, with the day to day life of the folk – not with philosophising over
the nature of the afterlife and how to attain it. It is also important to understand that it
is from this perspective that Germanic societies came to terms with
Christianity. Germanic religion at the
time of conversion was actually very strong and vital. As with the Japanese of modern times, they
saw little merit in the new religion and so resistance to it was strong. This is why the Church adopted a process of inculturation and hid the deeper meaning from the
people. As a result, those magico-religious aspects of Christianity that had parallels
with the heathen faith were emphasised, whilst its world rejecting and ethical
side was played down. For this reason,
Germanic Christianity emphasised the veneration of objects such as relics,
Saints and the magical power of the mass.
As Russell puts it, the world accepting, heroic, magico
religious, folk centred Germanic world view led to a worldly, heroic, magico religious, folk centred Christianity.
Russell argues that whilst
there is a general tendency for folk religions to be supplanted by universal
ones, there are occasions where the universalist
religion is re-interpreted in terms of the folk religion and culture. Such a situation occurred in Japan between
Buddhism and Shinto and also in the Germanic lands. This situation appears to occur when a universalist religion expands into areas where the folk
religious culture is solidly entrenched.
One of the main reasons for this is that whilst a people may take on the
trappings of a new religion, they are not necessarily truly converted to
it. In other words, our ancestors may
appear to have been converted to Christianity, but in practice this
‘conversion’ was only skin deep.
Failure of the Church to
achieve true conversion
The term ‘conversion’ does not
simply refer to a change in one’s religious allegiance. In the New Testament, St Peter declares that
people should repent and be baptised in the name of Jesus Christ (Acts 2:38)
and St Paul declares people should repent and turn to God (Acts 26:20-21). The English word ‘repent’ comes from a Latin
translation of the Greek word metanoia to poenitentia,
which mean both repentance and penitence.
Indeed, the Christian concept of conversion implies a form of repentance
from a state of sinfulness and thus the two concepts became intertwined. Furthermore, conversion in this sense implies
something more than a one-off event such as being baptized. It implies an on-going and ever deepening
process of conversion both at an individual and a societal level.
However, there was a relative
absence of a concept of sinfulness in pre-Christian Germanic culture. An absence of any real notion of sin in the
Christian sense means that early ‘converts’ to the faith would not have been
able to repent of their sins in the sense implied by ‘conversion’. Thus, whilst ‘conversion’ to Christianity
amongst the Germanic peoples did mean a change in religious allegiance, there
has to be a real doubt about whether this constituted a ‘conversion’ in the
real meaning of the word. Whilst
individuals may have come to understand the deeper meaning of conversion
through repentance, it is extremely unlikely this was true of an entire
society. This is important because it
means that the behavioural change implied through true conversion did not
happen throughout Germanic society. People were baptised, absorbed some of the
Christian beliefs and went to Church – but conversion did not go much deeper
than a general adhesion to it. Indeed,
there is evidence that well into the sixteenth century ordinary people in
Saxony had only a very vague knowledge of Christian teaching, but still used
sooth sayers, cunning women and other practioners of
forbidden arts (MacMullen, R: Christianizing the Roman Empire 1984).
This disparity between Germanic
and Judaeo Christian world views is also reflected in their different
conceptions of history. This can be seen
by comparing the allegorical and moralistic orientation of Augustinian
salvation history epitomised in ‘De Civitate Dei’ with the more objective Germanic
depictions of historical events set out in say Beowulf, the Nibelungenlied
and the Icelandic sagas. Whilst these
works were written at a time when Christianity was apparently entrenched in
their respective societies, none have the Christian vision of creation and last
judgement as end points of time. Neither
do they have a providential force acting in secular
events. The fall, original sin, guilt,
redemption or salvation play no role in them. The ethical integrity of the warrior heroes
in these poems is that of the heathen not the Christian religion. Concepts of sin, redemption and salvation
history were not simply Christian modifications of the older world view. They were fundamentally new and alien to it. However, this is how Christianity was dealt
with by most Germanic people. Christ was
simply seen as another powerful god to be added to the existing pantheon,
indeed maybe just another expression of existing gods such as Ingeld. Thus whilst
true Christianity is something fundamentally different to Germanic folk
religion, what took hold in medieval northern Europe was not Christianity but
rather a Germanised folk Christianity that retained and adapted large elements
of the pre-Christian heathen religion.
Christianity requires a conversion of the soul, a
repentance and an acceptance of ethical and doctrinal beliefs rather
than just intercessory appeals to worldly problems. Germanic folk religion had little concept of
the former, but a strong sense of the latter.
This was carried into medieval Christianity. Even the Eucharist or Mass was re-interpreted
in this way and private intercessory or votive Masses became a feature of
Germanic Christianity. The mass
therefore became one of a number of ‘good works’ that could intercede for good
fortune, a view which marked a radical difference between the early and the
mediaeval church of Northern Europe. To
this extent, therefore, it can be argued that what actually took place was a
syncretic development rather than any real Christianisation.
Inculcating a sense of the need
for salvation was very difficult to achieve in a population that had no real
concept of sin and therefore of a need to be saved from it. Thus, the central doctrine of Church
teaching was essentially lost on the Germanic peoples who were sold the new
religion more on the basis that Christ wielded stronger magic than the old
gods. Thus, the Church had to convince
the people that they needed salvation before they could bring that salvation to
them. They did this by emphasising the
notion of sin and of eternal damnation for those who did not receive salvation
through the Church. This process
directly led to the mediaeval obsession with these issues and a change from a
world accepting culture to one that saw horror in this world and looked on the
prospects of the next with fear.
The
Celtic Church may have had a different response to this same question over how
to introduce the concept of sin and repentance into a culture that had no real
grasp of these concepts what this was.
Although branded a heresy, the British monk Pelagius adopted an
essentially Stoic position on the doctrine of free will and the essential
goodness of nature which is only modified by sin rather than corrupted by
it. In this he opposed the conventional
position propounded by Augustine of Hippo who believed that nature, though
created good, had become so corrupted by sin that virtue is impossible without
grace. Augustine’s position was needed
in order to argue that humankind cannot find salvation through its own efforts,
only by the grace of God through Christ.
Pelagius, therefore, was attempting to reconcile a world accepting Celto-Germanic position to that of the world rejecting
nature of Judeao-Christianity.
The Germanization
of Christian liturgy and observance
Candle
with Irminsul motif |
The impact of popular or folk
culture on clerical culture is found right from the beginnings of the
Christianization process. It is
evident from the epic poetry and liturgical developments between the seventh
and tenth centuries. Roman liturgy
spread into the Frankish kingdoms in the eighth century and gradually mixed
with native liturgies to produce a hybrid Germano-Roman
liturgy which was eventually adopted by Rome as its permanent liturgy in the
tenth century. Thus, the classic Latin
liturgy used for centuries by the Roman Catholic Church was not an
exclusively latin one at all but contained
significant elements of Germanic influence.
It should more properly be called a Romano-Germanic liturgy. Thus, in England, the old Sarum Mass, its
Anglo Saxon predecessors and the Book of Common Prayer which drew much from
it, can be seen as at least partly native Germanic liturgy rather than solely
Roman. Pre Christian Germanic
shrines were designed to house the idols of the gods and to make votive
offerings rather than to accommodate large numbers of people in communal acts
of worship. It would be possible to
view the objects inside the sanctuary from the outside, with the people often
processing around it rather than stepping inside. These customs became embedded into Germanic
Christian traditions, especially in terms of the display of holy relics and
even the Eucharistic wafer to be seen from the outside and of the development
of processions around a holy building as part of celebrations. By contrast, Germanic communal feasts and
religious celebrations in which people took part were usually undertaken out
of doors or in separate nearby buildings.
|
Josef Jungman
goes further and states that in terms of worship, canon law, monastic life and
theology, from the ninth century it was the countries to the north of the alps that took the lead.
From the tenth century onwards, this tradition spread ever southwards
and became the cultural standard in Rome itself (Jungman, J.: the defeat of Teutonic Arianism and the revolution in religious
culture in the early middle ages.) Examples given by Jungman
of this Germanization include an increase in private
votive masses commemorating Mary and the Saints, the increased use of making
the sign of the cross at mass and the introduction of silent prayer with folded
hands – which is derived from the posture of a vassal pledging fealty to his
lord. Devotion to the saints became more
profound and widespread, a replacement of appeals to the old folk gods with
appeals to the deified saints. He also
attributes to Germanic influence the increased emphasis on representing events
in Christ’s life in the mass as well as the weekly liturgical cycle. Also attributed to the process of Germanization is the emergence of
Christmas as a rival festival to Easter and an increased stratification of
clergy and laity, represented by a growing distance between alter and
worshippers and the introduction of a communion rail.
Germanic Christianity also
placed greater emphasis on objects, such as the cross, the real presence in the
Eucharist, the blessed virgin and the scriptures compared to more subtle
processes such as spiritual growth to perfection. Pre-Christian Germanic religion had a strong
magical component and words were seen as powerful magic in their own
right. Indeed, the word ‘Gospel’ has a
double meaning. The better known one is
from the Anglo Saxon words ‘God Spel’, meaning ‘Good
News’. However, there is another meaning
which goes deeper into the culture of the Anglo Saxon people receiving this
Good News. For ‘Gospel’ can also be seen
as deriving from the words ‘God Spel’, meaning God’s
magic – literally God’s spell. This play
on words was used by the Church to convince Anglo Saxon Kings that their God’s
magic (the Bible) was more powerful than the Holy Runes of the Germanic
peoples.
The Germanic concept of time
Germanic and Christian concepts
of time are completely different. The
former developed from the North European cycles of nature and gave rise to a
sense of the cyclical nature of time.
Germanic religion saw time in terms of things that had already come to
pass, things that were now and things which were coming to pass. Fundamental to understanding this concept is
the notion of Wyrd which is sometimes explained the
Germanic equivalent of fate. Wyrd is the force of the past that helps to form the
present and the present that is yet to come – the nearest the Germanics had to
a notion of future. Thus, the present
and the present yet to come are influenced by the past. The Sisters of Wyrd
represent these aspects of time; that which was, that which is and that which
should be. The third sister, Sculd, represents this notion of future as that which
‘should’ be, as a result of what has been and what is.
|
The Christian concept of
time, on the other hand, is linear and derives from a Judaic sense of
something with a definite beginning (creation) and a definite end
(judgement). In rejecting the material
world, Judeao Christianity effectively rejects the
relevance of the past to the future.
Repentance wipes out the sins of the past, salvation offers a future
not based on the past. This is a
fundamentally different idea of time to that our ancestors were familiar
with. It is difficult to underestimate
how this linear concept of time, with its rejection of the importance of the
past, must have confused our ancestors.
Just as trying to understand their cyclical nature of time can be
difficult for us today steeped as we are in the Judeao
Christian tradition. However, in many respects,
the Germanic notion of time remained dominant throughout most of the middle
ages, particularly when related to the agricultural year. Christian festivals, with their emphasis on
events rather than natural cycles of time, in many respects succumbed to the
great pagan feasts of the natural year.
Indeed, the liturgical year itself became more relevant to the needs
and experiences of the North European farmer.
Notions of Wyrd, or fate, remain with us
even today. |
The Germanic and Christian
concepts of Hell
Germanic heathen religion
certainly had a concept of the afterlife.
Our modern word hell comes from that heathen religion, but its meaning
is very different. Usually using just
one ‘l’ to distinguish the two, the original ‘hel’
was seen as a place of healing and regeneration. Indeed, the word ‘hel’
is etymologically linked to our words healing, health and whole. In other Germanic languages, it means
‘light’. Something very odd happened
with the process of Christianization, resulting from the need to inculcate a
sense of sin requiring salvation through grace.
As the Middle Ages progressed, so the pre-Christian notions of the
afterlife as one of purification and paradise was gradually replaced by a Judeao-Christian concept of it as a terrifying place of
eternal torment. Medieval Christians
became obsessed with this imagery and with the need of salvation to avoid
it. To understand this, is to understand
the most important influence on the mind of the medieval European. Another key change to the Germanic world view
caused by the Christianizing process was the replacement of pre-Christian
notions of fate and destiny (Wyrd) with a world view
based on sin, repentance and salvation.
We therefore see a situation in which the pre-Christian ideas of the
afterlife as a pleasant place of regeneration and purification gave way to Judeao-Christian ideas of an afterlife dominated by a hell
of eternal torment and the consequent world view of sin, repentance and
salvation to avoid it. Whilst salvation
came from God through Christ, it was the Church that determined ones chance of
achieving it, giving it a powerful hold over people’s lives and leading to the
mediaeval custom of selling indulgences.
However, the older Germanic notion of hel as a pleasant place of purification, survived and
was absorbed into visions of paradise.
The development of Germanic
Arian Christianity
Arianism was first put forward
by Presbyter Arius of Alexander (a Greek living in modern day Egypt) who lived
between 250 and 336. He believed that
the Logos (Christ) was not consubstantial or co-eternal with God the Father,
being of a similar rather than the same nature to Him and being begotten by Him
at some time before creation – but nevertheless that there was a time when He
did not exist. This view conflicted with
the Trinitarian position that held that the Father, the Logos and the Spirit to
be separate personalities within a single unity of the Godhead; each
consubstantial and co-eternal. Commonly
known as the ‘Arian heresy’, this position became very popular within the
Eastern Church. The Council of Nicaea,
which produced the Nicene Creed repeated in Churches throughout the world, was
specifically held to counteract Arianism.
Whilst it eventually withered away, Arianism and its many off-shoots has never gone away and today forms the basis of non Trinitarian traditions such Unitarianism and the
Jehovah’s Witnesses. However, what is
important to this study is that as it was declining within the Eastern
Churches, Arianism took hold within several Germanic societies, though not
amongst the Saxons. As we shall see
though, the Germanic Arians were not defined so much by the non
Trinitarian doctrine of Arius, but rather by a folk adaptation of it
that enabled Germanic societies to maintain their separateness from Roman
Catholicism. It is this adaptation of an
alien creed into an ethno-centric Germanic folk faith that is interesting to
this study rather than to the doctrinal issues themselves.
The
first major contact between Christianity and a Germanic people occurred in 376
when the Visigoths, who had occupied the former Roman province of Dacia (modern
Romania) in the previous century, crossed the River Danube into the Roman
province of Moesia (in modern day Western Romania, Serbia and northern
Bulgaria) seeking refuge from the advancing Huns. Russell considers that the leader of one of
the larger Gothic tribes, the Tervingi, negotiated
with the Arian Christian Emperor of the Eastern Empire and adopted his religion
in return for asylum. The Gothic
‘conversion’ was therefore primarily political and, as we saw above, was not a
real conversion in the deeper meaning of the word.
Perhaps the most famous
exponent of Gothic Arianism was Bishop Wulfila (Ulfila) who had the bible translated into Gothic
Germanic. Arianism was spread to many
other Germanic tribes over the course of the next few centuries, though not
all. The reason many Germanic tribes did
accept Arianism had much to do with the fact that it was not the official
religion of Rome – which was Trinitarian Catholic Orthodoxy. If they had accepted this version of the
faith, they would have been quickly absorbed into the Roman culture – something
they had been resisting for centuries.
They would also have lost some of their freedom of organisation and
tribal power as Priests would have been subject to the Roman power structures,
ultimately the usually Italian Pope.
Arianism as practised by the Gothic and other Germanic tribes was not as
centralised, being organised into more local and independent Churches.
Theology, specifically the
Arian denial of the Trinity, was not a central concern to the Germanic
Arians. Germanic people in general as
noted above, were not especially interested in the convoluted theological arguments
of the eastern Churches. They were more
interested in the practical benefits of the new religion and these were
essentially social and political.
Because of this, and because of a lack of any real conversion, Arian
Christianity was slow to penetrate the pagan cult practice so long a part of
agrarian life. It allowed them the
advantages of being part of the wider Christian world whilst retaining a great
deal of distinctiveness, their Gothic identity and pride in their
ancestors.
Martin of Braga’s catechetical
guide, De Correctione
Rusticorum (c.574), reveals an interesting
insight into ecclesiastical concerns about the considerable heathen survival
and recidivism amongst the common folk of the Germanic Suevic
Kingdom. Russell argues that, in terms
of universal and folk religions discussed above, Germanic Arianism can be
considered ‘ a thoroughly indigenous reinterpretation
of a universal religion, a Germanization of Arian
Christianity’.
Conclusion
As this
article has unfolded, it has become difficult to avoid a number of
conclusions. The first and most obvious
is that contrary to received wisdom, the introduction of Christianity into the
Germanic lands produced a fusion of sorts and to the development of a unique
folk Christianity that was fundamentally different to the original Judeao Christianity that evolved in the middle
east. This fusion produced a form
of Christianity that was strongly influenced by Germanic notions of honour,
heroism, social structure and devotion to magico
religious practices such as votive masses.
However, it is hard to escape the conclusion that some aspects of the
original pagan religion were incorporated into this folk Christianity in a way
that became quite negative and even terrifying.
The pagan notion of the afterlife was a place of refreshment and
healing, but it became a place or torment and fear for medieval Germanic
Christians.
Germanic
Christianity was also characterised by hierarchical social structures and
unswerving loyalty to one’s superiors.
This can be both very effective and very damaging to an organisation
depending on the calibre of the leadership.
It also led to monarchy as a natural system of Government – not the
constitutional monarchies of modern Europe, but the dictatorship of earlier
centuries.
One of
the most profound consequences of this fusion is that of militarism and the
incorporation of the warrior cult. The
heroic nature of Germanic culture was in itself a positive aspect of Germanic
Christianity and the Germanic Churches sought to use these codes to the good by
defining an ethical basis for warfare.
However, it cannot be denied that it also led to a sometimes cruel,
intolerant and excessive use of force and killing. Many modern pagans like to emphasise the
positive elements of the heroic codes of conduct and point to the cruelness of
Christian militarism. However, such
cruelness is entirely alien to true Christianity and so any tradition that
draws from Germanic Christianity needs to clearly address the ethical basis of
warfare and of the warrior tradition.
Whilst
medieval Christians became obsessed with death and the horrors of hell, a
modern faith inspired by this fusion can draw more directly from the
pre-Christian Germanic ‘world accepting’ ideas that the world is not inherently
bad and that we should enjoy life in the here and now and not worry too much
about what waits us in the afterlife.
Furthermore, it can and should, look to the original meaning of hel rather than the place of
torment it was turned into. The notion
of hel as a place of
regeneration fits in better with the view of time as being cyclical and the
‘birth, death, rebirth’ cycle that follows from this.
Any
modern faith that draws from the syncretism of Germanic Christianity can also
be more open about spirit beings, Elfs, land and water spirits and even the old
gods themselves as angelic beings. It
can honour our ancestors and see them as being able to intercede for us in the
next world. Germanic notions of folk and
identity – linking ourselves to our ancestors and those of us yet to come – is
also an extremely important legacy that our pagan past has brought to Germanic
Christianity. In short, the notion of a
folk centred ethnic religion that grew out of the contact between Christianity
and our ancestors’ pre-Christian traditions is something that will appeal to
many people in our modern day.
The
following principles emerge as elements of Germanic Folk Christianity:
1.
A love
of God and His creation without being overly dogmatic
2.
An
ethno-centric world view based around the patrilineal extended family, clan and
folk group
3.
A deep
regard for ancestors and the continuum of past members of the folk group with
the present and those yet to come
4.
A deep
love of the folk lands and its spirits, saints and legends
5.
Loyalty
to the head of the extended family, clan and folk group. However, this is a reciprocal arrangement in
which the elder or leader has specific duties to the family, clan or folk group
in return for that loyalty and headship position
6.
Moral
code based on modesty that is not weakness, strength that is not arrogance,
integrity, courage, industriousness, generosity, fair mindedness and loyalty to
family, clan and folk
7.
A
willingness to fight to defend family, clan and folk when necessary
8.
An
acceptance of the will of Wyrd, but always in the
knowledge that it can be influenced by actions and by trust in Our Lord
go back to lorehoard
go back to contents