Everything about Peter Lombard totally explained
Peter Lombard or
Petrus Lombardus; (c.
1100–
July 20,
1160 in
Paris) was a
scholastic theologian and
bishop and author of
Four Books of Sentences, which became the standard textbook of theology, for which he's also known as
Magister Sententiarum.
Biography
Peter Lombard was born in
Lumellogno, now a
quartiere of
Novara,
Lombardy, to a poor family on the dole. His date of birth was likely between 1095 and 1100.
His education most likely began in Italy at the
cathedral schools of Novara and Lucca. The patronage of
Otto, bishop of Lucca, who recommended him to
Bernard of Clairvaux, allowed him to leave Italy and further his studies at
Reims and
Paris. Petrus Lombardus studied first in the cathedral school at Reims, where Magister Alberich and Lutolph of Novara were teaching, and arrived in Paris about 1134, where Bernard recommended him to the canons of the church of St-Victor. In Paris, where he spent the next decade teaching at the cathedral school of
Notre Dame, he came into contact with
Peter Abelard and
Hugh of St. Victor, who were among the leading theologians of the time. There are no proven facts relating to his whereabouts in Paris until 1142 when he became recognized as writer and teacher. Around 1145, Peter became a "magister", or professor, at the cathedral school of
Notre Dame in Paris. Peter's means of earning a living before he began to derive income as a teacher and from his
canon's
prebend is shrouded in uncertainty.
Lombard's dialectical style of teaching gained quick acknowledgment. It can be surmised that this attention is what prompted the canons of Notre Dame to ask him to join their ranks. He was considered a
celebrated theologian by 1144. The Parisian school of canons hadn't included among their number a theologian of high regard for some years. The canons of Notre Dame, to a man, were members of the
Capetian dynasty, relatives of families closely aligned to the Capetians by blood or marriage, scions of the
Ile-de-France or eastern
Loire Valley nobility, or relatives of royal officials. In contrast, Peter had no relatives, ecclesiastical connections, and no political patrons in France. It seems that he must have been invited by the canons of Notre Dame solely for his academic merit.
He became a
subdeacon in 1147, and was ordained priest some time before 1156. At the
Council of Reims (1148) and possibly at the consistory of Paris the year before, he took part as a theological expert. At some time after 1150 he became a
deacon, then an
archdeacon by 1156, or maybe as early as 1152. In 1159, he was named
bishop of Paris: a hostile witness,
Walter of St Victor accused Peter of obtaining the office by
simony, though he'd no sources of income; the more usual story is that Philip, younger brother of
Louis VII. and archdeacon of Notre-Dame was elected by the canons but declined in favor of Peter, his teacher. Peter was consecrated at the feast of SS. Peter and Paul,
28 July 1159.
His reign as bishop was brief. He died on either
July 21 or
22,
1160. Little can be ascertained about Lombard's administrative style or objectives because he left behind so few episcopal
acta. He was succeeded by
Maurice de Sully, the builder of the
Cathedral of Notre Dame. His tomb in the church of Saint-Marcel in Paris was destroyed during the
French Revolution, but a transcription of his epitaph survives.
Writings
Peter Lombard wrote commentaries on the Psalms and the Pauline epistles; however, his most famous work by far was
Libri Quatuor Sententiarum, or the
Four Books of Sentences, which became the standard textbook of theology at the medieval universities. From the 1220s until the 16th century, no work of Christian literature, except for the
Bible itself, was commented upon more frequently. All the major medieval thinkers, from
Albert the Great and
Thomas Aquinas to
William of Ockham and
Gabriel Biel, were influenced by it. Even the young
Martin Luther still wrote glosses on the
Sentences.
The
Four Books of Sentences is a compilation of biblical texts, together with relevant passages from the
Church Fathers and many medieval thinkers, on virtually the entire field of Christian theology as it was understood at the time. Lombard's
magnum opus stands out as the first major effort to bring together commentaries on the full range of theological issues, arrange the material in a systematic order, and attempt to reconcile them where they appeared to defend different viewpoints. The
Sentences starts with the
Trinity in Book I, moves on to
creation in Book II, treats
Christ, the savior of the fallen creation, in Book III, and deals with the
sacraments, which mediate Christ's grace, in Book IV.
Doctrine
Peter Lombard's most famous and most controversial doctrine in the
Sentences was his identification of
charity with the
Holy Spirit in Book I, distinction 17. According to this doctrine, when the Christian loves God and neighbor, this love literally is God; he becomes divine and is taken up into the life of the Trinity. This idea was never declared unorthodox, but few theologians have been prepared to follow Peter Lombard in his audacious teaching. Compare
Pope Benedict XVI's encyclical
Deus Caritas Est, 2006.
Also in the
Sentences was the doctrine that
marriage was consensual (and need not be consummated to be considered perfect, unlike
Gratian's analysis). Lombard's interpretation was later endorsed by
Pope Alexander III, and had a significant impact on Church interpretation of marriage.
Further Information
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