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It is very probable that the Mother of God
did use St. Dominic
in some way to give the Rosary to the Church.
St. Dominic and the Rosary
By Paul A. Duffner
Most of us are familiar with the tradition that goes back many
centuries and which has been accepted in the writings of many Popes, as to the connection
of St. Dominic with the beginnings of the Rosary devotion. According to tradition, the
occasion was the Albigensian heresy which ravaged Christendom, particularly in southern
France during the latter part of the 12th and the beginning of the 13th centuries. St.
Dominic was distressed at his lack of success in his preaching in countering this heresy,
and in his desperation turned to the Mother of God for help. She appeared to him
(according to the tradition) and told him to use her Psalter in conjunction with his
preaching of the mysteries of our salvation, as an instrument in combatting the great
heresy of his day.
We do not have any historical documents dating from
that period expressly referring to St. Dominic and the Rosary. We will endeavor to show,
however, that there are a number of things that could be responsible for that silence.
The evolution of the Rosary
We have to keep in mind that over the centuries there
has been a considerable evolution in the form that this devotion called the Rosary has
taken. We have to remember that in the time of St. Dominic:
1) The HAIL MARY did not exist as we pray it today.
Only the first half of it was then used. The word JESUS was not added until the 14th
century, and the second half of the prayer came later still.
2) The OUR FATHER and the GLORY BE TO THE FATHER were
not then part of the Rosary.
3) The Mysteries of the Rosary were not fixed as they
are now. Even in the 15th century in the time of ALAN DE RUPE, O.P., who was responsible
for the revival of the Rosary devotion 250 years after the time of St. Dominic, the Rosary
he preached was the Marian Psalter of 150 Hail Marys and 150 mysteries. These were divided
into three groups of fifties dedicated to the Joyful, Sorrowful and Glorious mysteries.
The fifteen mysteries in use today were officially established by Pope Pius V in 1569.
4) There was no pendent (the cross and five extra
beads) as we have now.
5) The very word Rosary taken from the
Latin word rosarium meaning rose garden, or bouquet of roses, was not used in
the time of Dominic as applied to this devotion. So obviously there would be no reference
to that term in documents of his time.
The Marian Psalter
The custom of counting repeated prayers by the use of a
string of beads or knots, or pebbles in a bowl was prevalent long before the time of St.
Dominic. This was common among the Moslems, the Buddhists, and other non-Christian
religions as well as among Christians.
From time immemorial the 150 psalms of the Bible
comprised the most important part of the official liturgical prayers prayed by the clergy
and the monks in monasteries. Since, however, many of the common folk were illiterate,
there was an attempt to offer those who could not read (especially the Latin) a substitute
for the 150 psalms. The practice arose of substituting 150 OUR FATHERS in place of the
Latin psalms, using a string of beads to count them, dividing them into
fifties. This chaplet, or string of beads, came to be known as
Paternoster beads.
Little by little, the HAIL MARY took its place
alongside the CREED and the OUR FATHER as a standard prayer. But still, it was only the
first half that was used. In the course of time there came to be a parallel Psalter, i.e.,
one of 150 HAIL MARYS known as the MARIAN PSALTER.
The Albigensian heresy
The Albigensian heresy that plagued southern France in
St. Dominics time was based on a dual view of the world similar to that of the
Manicheans of the 3rd century, namely, that there are two supreme beings, a good God who
created the spirit world, and an evil god who created the material world. The spiritual
world is essentially good, and the material world (including the human body) is
essentially evil. The evil god (Satan) imprisoned spirits in material bodies, so whatever
one can do to be released from that prison (including suicide) is good. Since matter is
evil, marriage and the procreation of mankind is evil. The proponents of this heresy
rejected Catholic belief regarding the Trinity, the Incarnation, the sacraments, hell and
purgatory, but believed in the transmigration of souls. Christ was not truly a man, nor
therefore, was Mary truly the Mother of God. The crucifixion, death and resurrection of
Christ were only illusions, and the whole concept of the cross in the Christian life was
rejected.
This heresy was deeply rooted in southern France in the
first part of the 13th century. Its rapid growth was nourished, among other things, by the
moral laxity and worldliness of the clergy. In addition, most of the nobility fostered the
heresy because of their hope to take over the lands and goods of the Church.
This is the situation that St. Dominic encountered when
he began his missionary labors in southern France. This was the situation (according to
tradition) that occasioned a special intervention on the part of the Mother of God. In
view of Our Ladys apparitions at crucial times in the centuries that followed, would
not the intervention of our Blessed Mother at this period in history seem most likely,
when the Church in western Europe was so seriously threatened? How fruitful would be the
introduction of the Marian Psalter in conjunction with preaching to those who denied the
Incarnation of the Word, the motherhood of Mary and the sanctity of marriage. For mingled
with the explanation of the mysteries of our salvation would be the prayerful repeating
over and over: Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb.
Cardinal Luigi Ciappi, O.P., who for many years was the
theologian of the papal household (the Popes personal theologian), in 1975, a few
years before he was made a cardinal, published an article entitled A Deepening of
the Faith by Means of the Rosary. In that article he referred to St. Dominic as an
ardent promoter of the Marian Psalter, for he preferred a form of instruction in which he
alternated his preaching on the mysteries of the life, passion and death, and resurrection
of Christwith the Psalter of HAIL MARYS.
The Bollandists
The tradition of St. Dominic and the Rosary was more or
less universally accepted, especially in documents of many Popes, until the work of the
Bollandists in the 17th century. This was a group of learned scholars (Belgian Jesuits)
who were charged with the work of publishing the Acta Sanctorum covering the
life of Christ and of the saints included in the liturgical calendar. These were men of
undeniable scholarship who set out to rewrite the lives of the saints, so as to preserve
in them all that could be established by historical sources, and to weed out legends that
surround the lives of many saints.
This group concluded that there was not sufficient
evidence to support the tradition of St. Dominic and the Rosary, that this tradition
stemmed only from the testimony of Alan de Rupe, O.P. (d. 1475), and that his claims
(written 250 years after St. Dominic) cannot be substantiated by any documents dating from
the time of St. Dominic.
Yet, it appears that this argument of silence put forth
by the Bollandists did not seem to outweigh (in the mind of succeeding Popes) the impact
of the centuries-old tradition concerning St. Dominic and the Rosary; for Popes coming
after the 17th century continued to refer to St. Dominic in connection with the beginnings
of the Rosary.
Around the beginning of this present century an English
Jesuit, Herbert Thurston, a prolific writer and for many years a member of the staff of
the English periodical The Month, followed the lead of the Bollandists. Through the medium
of that publication he published many hundreds of articles, and had more than 100 entries
in the original Catholic Encyclopedia. Among the topics he wrote on, some dealt with the
Rosary, its history and origin. Looking at the origin of the Rosary from the viewpoint of
scientific research, the lack of documents dating from the time of St. Dominic linking him
with the Rosary led him to the conclusion that this tradition had no historic foundation.
His conclusions have influenced many of the writers of the present century dealing with
this topic, such as Richard Gribble, C.S.C. in his recently published The History and
Devotion of the Rosary.
While documents from St. Dominics day expressly
linking him with the Rosary are lacking, there are many things pointing in that direction
that taken together tend to substantiate that tradition.
The Militia of Jesus Christ
Fr. Francis Willam, in his book The Rosary, Its History
and Meaning (p. 26), speaks of the Militia of Jesus Christ founded by St.
Dominic, the members of which recited daily the Psalter of Our Lady. He refers also to the
Confraternity of Prayer founded by the Dominicans in Piacenza in 1259 (38
years after the death of St. Dominic), the members of which also prayed the 150 HAIL MARYS
daily. Fr. Benedict Ashley, O.P., in his book The Dominicans, speaks of this Militia as
having been found by a Dominican Bishop of Breganza who died in 1271.
At any rate, we have the Marian Psalter actively
employed during the life of St. Dominic and shortly after. In this we have the 150 HAIL
MARYS which constitute the body of the Rosary, i.e., the vocal prayer. What is
wanting is the soul of the Rosary, i.e., the praying of these Hail Marys
joined with reflection on the mysteries of our salvation. And yet, as Fr. Ciappi pointed
out, a common method of preaching of St. Dominic was to preach on the life of Christ,
interspersing his reflections with the Marian Psalter.
So it seems that the heart of what the Rosary is (the
combination of vocal and mental prayer) was practiced by St. Dominic, not as we have the
Rosary today, but in such a way that what he did then in time evolved into what we have
now; i.e., that his form of preaching interspersed with prayer eventually evolved into
what the Rosary is today.
We know from his biographers that St. Dominic had a
great devotion to the Mother of God. And it could well be that the inspiration to preach
as he did came from her, as tradition says it did, i.e., the combining of her prayer (the
Hail Mary as it existed then) with the reflection on the mysteries of our salvation. Pope
Pius XII, in his encyclical on the Rosary, seems to imply this when he states that this
devotion in its origin and the wisdom of its constitution is more divine than
human.
Alan de Rupe
History well documents the fact that Alan de Rupe (also
known as Alan de la Roche) (1428-1475) was a great apostle of the Rosary. There must be
some basis for his claims that St. Dominics connection with the Rosary is proved
both from tradition and from the testimony of writers. I find it hard to
believe that he just made it up. He was not a dreamer. He was a Master of Sacred Theology,
wrote a commentary on the Sentences of Peter Lombard, lectured in Paris, was visitator of
his Order in central Europe, wrote his APOLOGIA for the Rosary, and preached in widely
spread places. He founded the Rosary Confraternity in 1470 in Douai, and did much to
popularize the Rosary.
It could well be that sources to which Alan de Rupe had
access did not exist in later centuries. Even if documents did originally exist connecting
St. Dominic and the Rosary, countless religious houses and convents were destroyed (with
their libraries) in the wars of religious persecution that ravaged Europe over the
centuries.
We find this thought clearly expressed by John S.
Johnson in his book The Rosary in Action (ch. 3):
The critics relied mainly on the argument of silence to question the
ancient tradition that the Blessed Virgin gave the Rosary to St. Dominic. They should have
known that many documents referred to by Alan de Rupe may have existed, but did not
survive the burning scourge of the Huegenots, who destroyed convents, monasteries,
libraries among the countless institutions they committed to the flames. The critics went
so far as to say that Alan had invented the Rosary devotion . . . and had attributed it to
St. Dominic to tie it in with a famous name. But the two persons Alan relies on for his
story of the origin of the Rosary had their Mariales preserved at the Convent
of Gand: which library was burnt during the wars on religion. There are other documents
which have been discovered in later years which were from before Alan de Rupes time.
The long poem Rosarius antedates him by 100 years or so, and clearly refers to
St. Dominic and the battle of Muret. This removes Alan from all suspicion of inventing his
sources. The elements were all in place at the time of St. Dominic; how did they get
together in the Rosary? (p. 26)
We might put this question in another way: Were these
elements brought together by the preaching of St. Dominic? We cannot prove with certainty
that they were; but neither does the lack of documents prove that they were not.
Masie Ward further undermines the argument of
silence when she writes in her book The Splendor of the Rosary: Discussions of
what happened in the middle ages are apt to be obscured by the fact that so many documents
have been lost, especially during the ravages of the Black Plague (p. 34).
Fr. Guy Bedouelle, O.P., in his book St. Dominic, the
Grace and the Word, includes this important comment about a contemporary of St. Dominic:
Blessed Romee of Livia, one of St. Dominics companions, Prior of
the Convent of Lyons, France in 1223, and later Provincial of Provence, was said to have
died, according to the medieval chronicler Bernard Gui, holding tightly in his fingers the
little knotted cord on which he counted his AVES. Historians regard this as one of the
earliest texts describing our present Rosary in its embryonic form (p. 254).
Fr. Ludovicus Fanfani, O.P. states in his book De
Rosario B. M. Virginis that some years after the death of St. Dominic, the devotion of the
Rosary (as he promoted it) began to decline. Among the causes of the decline were the
great plague of the Black Death which swept through Europe wiping out great portions of
the population, and the great Western Schismwhich split Europe into various
factions. The devotion did not completely disappear, however, as traces of it remained
among the people; and, says Fr. Fanfani, documents are not wanting to establish that the
devotion was kept alive in England during the 13th and 14th centuries (p. 27).
Testimony of the Popes
Pope Benedict XIV (1740-58) was a renowned scholar and
a promoter of historical studies and research. When he was an official of the Sacred
Congregation of Rites, he was asked about the tradition of St. Dominic and the Rosary. The
following is his response, a century after the work of the Bollandists:
You ask whether St. Dominic was the first institutor of the Rosary,
and show that you yourselves are bewildered and entangled in doubts on the matter. Now,
what value do you attach to the testimony of so many Popes, such as Leo X (1521), Pius V
(1572), Gregory XIII (1585), Sixtus V (1590), Clement VIII (1605), Alexander VII (1667),
Bl. Innocent XI (1689), Clement XI (1721), Innocent XIII (1724) and others who unanimously
attribute the institution of the Rosary to St. Dominic, the founder of the Dominican
Order, an apostolic man who might be compared to the apostles themselves and who,
undoubtedly due to the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, became the designer, the author,
promoter, and most illustrious preacher of this admirable and truly heavenly instrument,
the Rosary?
After quoting the above, Fr. Anthony N. Fuerst, in his
well-documented book, This Rosary, states: To reject this tradition in its entirety,
without strong arguments would be very rash (p. 20).
To the above list of Popes accepting the tradition of
St. Dominic and the Rosary could be added many more coming after the time of Benedict XIV.
But this is not the main argument supporting the tradition. It is the coming together of
many pieces of a puzzle pertaining to the essentials of the tradition as handed down. For
example:
1) given the fact that the members of the Militia of
Jesus Christ founded by St. Dominic, or by a Dominican of his day, prayed the 150 Hail
Marys daily . . . .
2) given the fact of St. Dominics devotion to
Mary and his ardent prayer in combatting the great heresy of his day . . . along with the
testimony of ALAN DE RUPE that St. Dominic did receive some communication from the Mother
of God as to how to combat the errors of his time . . . .
(If Our Lady at Fatima gave us a remedy in this century
for overcoming Communism and attaining peacewhich remedy included the
Rosarydoes it not seem probable that she would have intervened in the 13th century
offering a means of combatting the devastating heresy of Albigensianismas tradition
assures us she did?)
3) given the fact that, as some of his biographers
explain, a common manner of preaching of Dominic was the frequent alternating of his
instruction on the mysteries of our faith with prayer . . . .
4) given the fact that the first beginning of this
devotion in the time of Dominic was vastly different from its present structure, that then
there was no set sequence of the mysteries, and that even the name Rosary had
not yet been established . . . .
5) given the fact that many convents with their
libraries were destroyed in the religious persecutions that followed the 13th century . .
. .
In the light of the above, it seems to me that the
negative argument (the absence of documents) is outweighed by the presence of the
essential components that constitute the heart of what the Rosary is. It seems to me, not
merely possible, but very probable, that the Mother of God (as Alan de Rupe testified) did
use St. Dominic in some way to give this devotion to the Church. One source of
misconception in this regard is religious art, which portrays St. Dominic receiving from
Our Lady the Rosary such as we use today. This would not have been. But then, if artists
are to portray this tradition, how else would they do it?
And too, what Dominic did could have been done in such
a way that it did not stand out as an innovation, as something new; for it was simply
taking the Psalter of Our Ladyalready in existenceand using it as a means of
making his preaching fruitful. It could be that for this reason it was not commented on by
the chroniclers of his day. And yet, the combining of the HAIL MARY with reflection on the
life of Christ is the essence of the Rosary devotion.
Reverend Paul A. Duffner, O.P., was ordained in 1940, having completed
his studies at St. Alberts College in Oakland, Calif. He has labored in parish and
retreat work, and as a missionary in Central America. He served as Master of Novices for
the Western Dominican Province for fifteen years, and since 1983 has been director of the
Rosary Center, the western headquarters for the Rosary Confraternity. In that capacity he
publishes bi-monthly The Rosary, Light and Life, the voice of the Rosary Confraternity.
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