April 10th-15th Centuries A.D. The Bogomils
April 10th-15th
Centuries A.D. The Bogomils
Editors. “Bogomil.” Encyclopedia Britannica. N.d. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/71461/Bogomil. Accessed 19 Mar 2015.
Bogomil, member of a dualist religious sect that flourished
in the Balkans
between the 10th and 15th centuries. It arose in Bulgaria toward the middle of
the 10th century from a fusion of dualistic, neo-Manichaean doctrines imported
especially from the Paulicians, a sect of Armenia and Asia Minor, and a local
Slavonic movement aimed at reforming, in the name of an evangelical Christianity, the
recently established Bulgarian Orthodox Church. The Bogomils were so called after their founder, the priest Bogomil.
The
Bogomils’ central teaching, based on a dualistic
cosmology, was that the visible, material world was created by the devil. Thus,
they denied the doctrine of the incarnation and rejected the Christian
conception of matter as a vehicle of grace. They rejected Baptism, the
Eucharist, and the whole organization of the Orthodox Church. The moral
teaching of the Bogomils was as consistently dualistic. They condemned those
functions of man that bring him into close contact with matter, especially
marriage, the eating of meat, and the drinking of wine. In fact, the moral
austerity of the Bogomils invariably was acknowledged by their fiercest
opponents.
During the
11th and 12th centuries Bogomilism spread over many European and Asian
provinces of the Byzantine
Empire. Its growth in Constantinople resulted, about 1100, in the
trial and imprisonment of prominent Bogomils in the city and in the public
burning of their leader, Basil. In the second half of the 12th century, it
spread westward. The Serbian ruler Stefan Nemanja was obliged to summon a
general assembly of his land to check it. Roman Catholic authorities were
greatly disturbed by reports of heresy in Dalmatia and Bosnia
(though modern scholarship casts doubt on the theory that the Bosnian church ever
adopted the dualist theology of the Bogomils). By the early 13th century the
dualistic communities of southern Europe—comprising the Paulicians and Bogomils
in the east and the Cathari in the west—formed a network stretching from the
Black Sea to the Atlantic.
In the 13th
and 14th centuries, Rome dispatched several legations and Franciscan
missionaries to convert or expel Bosnian heretics, among whom there may have
been some Bogomils. In the country of its birth Bogomilism remained a powerful
force until the late 14th century. The Bulgarian
authorities convened several church councils to condemn its teachings. With the
Ottoman conquest of southeastern Europe in the 15th century, obscurity
descended upon the sect. Traces of a dualistic tradition in the folklore of the
South Slavs are all that remain today of the most powerful sectarian movement in
the history of the Balkans.
Comments
Post a Comment