level 5
Bernard of Clairvaux
DE LAUDE NOVAE MILITIAE (1128-1131)
Prologue
To Hugh, Christ's knight and master of Christ's knighthood, Bernard, Abbot of Clairvaux in name only, sends his greeting: fight the good fight.
Once, twice and now a third time, unless I am quite wrong, you have asked me, dear Hugh, to write an exhortation for you and your knightly companions and to fling my pen, since I am not allowed a lance, against your tyrannical enemy; you maintain that it would be of some help to you if I were to fortify with my writing men whom I cannot with arms. I know I have been putting you off for some time now, not because your request seems improper but for fear that assent to it on my part would prove to be careless and imprudent, if in my ignorance I were to take on something that a better man would do a better job of; the job would still remain to be done, and I would perhaps have made it less easy for someone else to do. Finally, I realized that I was only wasting a great deal of time with such speculations, and in order not to seem more unwilling than incapable, I have done what little I could: it is for the reader to judge whether or not I have done satisfactorily. Even if some should find inadequacy in it or little pleasure, it matters not to me, who have not failed to make your desire my own.
1. Exhortation for the Knights Templar
1. We hear that a new kind of chivalry has risen on earth, and that it has risen on the very region of it which the rising Son Himself, present in flesh, once visited from on high; as He then, by the strength of His mighty hand, threw down the princes of darkness, so now He exterminates their followers, those sons of misplaced faith, put to flight-by a band of His mighty ones, bringing about even now His people's redemption and raising again the cup of salvation for us in the house of His servant David. A new kind of chivalry, one ignorant of the ways of the ages, which fights a double fight equally and tirelessly, both against flesh and blood and against the spiritual forces of iniquity in the heavens. When a man mightily resists a bodily foe by strength of his body alone, I no more think it a wonder than I believe it to be a rare occurence; nor is it marvelous, though I might call it praiseworthy, when a man declares war on vice or demons with the power of his soul, since the world is full of monks. But when both of these kinds of men are girded with their own particular powerful sword and distinguished with their own particular noble belt in a single man, who would not judge this, which is as yet an unfamiliar thing, to be most worthy of all admiration? He indeed is a fearless knight, and one secure from any quarter, since his soul is dressed in an armor of faith just as his body is dressed in an armor of steel. Since he is well protected by both kinds of arms, he fears neither the demon nor man. Nor is he afraid of death, since he longs to die. Why should he fear whether he lives or dies, since for him life is Christ and death is a reward? Faithfully and freely does he go forth on Christ's behalf, but he would rather be dissolved and be with Christ: such is the obviously better thing. So go forth in safety, knights, and drive out the enemies of the cross of Christ with fearless intention, certain that neither death nor life can separate you from God's love, which Jesus Christ embodies; in every moment of danger, fulfill through your own actions the principle: 'Whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord's.' {1} How glorious the victors returned from battle! How blessed those martyrs who died in battle! Rejoice, brave fighter, if you live and conquer in the Lord; but rather exult and glory, if you die and are joined to the Lord. Life can be fruitful and victory can be glorious; but sacred death is properly to be preferred to either, for if 'they are blessed who die in the Lord,' are they not much more so who die on the Lord's behalf?
2011年08月15日 10点08分