The
term "pauperes Christi" has been in use for
centuries. From the beginning it meant the involuntary poor,
the indigent who had no money or
property, who depended upon others for their sustenance, who
were on the rolls of a certain church and cared for by that
church. In Carolingian times "the poor of Christ" embraced
widows and orphans as well as indigents, all of whom made up
a sort of special class of people to be protected by the law
and supported by the Church. Thus, Jacques de Vitry in the
thirteenth century referred to all the poor, the sick, the
wretched, the starving, lepers, etc. as pauperes Christi.
In other words, pauperes Christi refers to the
little people, those called anawim in the Old
Testament, for that is exactly what pauper means:
one who has produced [peperit] little [paucum],
one who is considered a person of little worth.
From the beginning, however,
"poor of Christ" possessed within it the seeds of ambiguity.
It could extend to a spiritual reality that went beyond the
vulnerability of economic poverty. "Poor of Christ" became a
title for monks, the voluntary poor, whose communities might
or might not be poor. In the eleventh century the term also
included individual hermits, in the twelfth
century canons regular (clerics who lived in community
according to the Rule of Saint Augustine and served the
apostolic needs of the local Church), and in the early
thirteenth century a community of Carthusians.
The
Cistercians who, like the Carthusians, had adopted a very
strict form of poverty, also call themselves "the poor of
Christ" in their early documents. Saint Bernard adds the
significant word servus [servant, slave], calling
himself "the servant of Christ's poor at Clairvaux". Guigo
I, the fifth Carthusian prior after Bruno, also links servus
with pauper (although he does not join either
word with Christi). He calls himself "the useless
servant of the poor Carthusians", and he calls the community
the pope's "poor servants and sons at La Chartreuse". In the
Carthusians and Cistercians the terms indicate both a counter-cultural attitude and a profound
acceptance of the status of anawim. The fact that servitio
[service] appears along with pauperes Christi
sacerdotes in the first cum clause of Cum
ex plurium intimates that pauperes Christi
applies as a technical term to the companions. It
contains the idea of service of Christ through renunciation,
and is linked with the adage of St. Jerome, "naked, follow
the naked Christ". This is certainly what the companions had
in mind to do. In this respect Ignatius and his companions
are very much in line of these two renewal movements, the
Carthusians and the Cistercians.
The twelfth
and thirteenth centuries saw a burst of renewal activity
centering on poverty, most of it
coming from lay people, some of it orthodox and some quite
unorthodox, all of it an attempt to imitate the simplicity
of life of the apostles and the early Church. In France the
Waldensians or Poor men of Lyons
called themselves "poor of Christ" but strayed from the path
of orthodoxy. The poor Catholics of Durand de Huesca in
southern France and Spain, and the Humiliati in northern
Italy (Lombardy), both groups drawn from the Waldensians in
order to convert them, eventually foundered but helped
prepare the way for the Friars Minor, the Poor Clares, and
the Dominicans. Even the Cathars, for different reasons,
called themselves "poor of Christ". All these people lived
actual poverty.
Bonaventure calls Francis
"the poor man of Christ" [Christi pauper], and Francis calls all his followers "poor men
of Christ". The term does not appear in the Dominican
tradition, but the reality does, for Dominicans follow
the apostolic life that Augustine chose, which is "to leave
everything for the sake of Christ and to preach him while
serving him in poverty". Whereas the Franciscans were a part
of the poverty movement and differed from other groups by
reason of their orthodoxy and fidelity to the Church, the Dominicans stood over against those of
heretical bent even though they adopted the poverty found
amongst their adversaries. They were not part of the poverty
movement, but were the vanguard of a preaching movement that
saw poverty as a guarantee of fidelity to the Gospel.
source
: Impelling Spirit: Revisiting a Founding Experience, 1539,
Ignatius of Loyola ... By Joseph F. Conwell