B
boomerang
Guest
I attended a display of Eucharistic miracles last year and I noticed that the great bulk of miracles occurred in the 1200’s and 1300’s. They mostly revolved around the priest’s lack of belief in the real presence. Then I read a short essay written in France in the 1300’s about the enforcement of clerical celibacy in which the bishop of the diocese and his soldiers took clubs and beat the you-know-what out of the priests in town to force them to give up their women. Sounds like there was a lot of sinning going on amongst the clergy. And then there’s St. Francis in the 1200’s who was told by our Lord to “rebuild my church”. So now we’re approaching the Reformation period in which there was a lot of corruption that had to be addressed. All these things have one thing in common: the Middle Ages, 1200-1400 mostly. What was going on then? Was there some huge lack of faith/gross sinning/heresy etc. at that time that had reduced Christendom to some kind of perverted wild west?