 Go backward to The Teresian Ideal Go up to Top Go forward to Poet and Spiritual Father
Conflicts of Jurisdiction
King Philip II was himself curiously involved in the reform of
religious orders and this led to a chain of misunderstandings,
to a dark night for the small friar. Fernández had
exercised
his authority prudently and in harmony with the Carmelite
provincial of Castile. In the south, proceeding independently,
Francisco Vargas requested the discalced friars to make
foundations in Sevilla, Granada, and La Peńuela (all in
Andalusia), an action contrary to the prior general's explicit
orders against the expansion of the discalced friars into that
region. At a chapter of the order convened in Piacenza (Italy)
in May 1575, the Carmelite order came to some strong decisions
about all that they had heard was taking place in Spain,
particularly in Andalusia. Unfortunately the two provincials
from Castile and Andalusia, who might have been able to cast
some light on the events, were absent. So the ordinances
stipulated that those who had been made superiors "against the
obedience due superiors within the order itself, or who had
accepted offices or lived in monasteries or places prohibited
by the same superiors should be removed, with the aid of the
secular arm if necessary. " Those resisting would be
considered
disobedient, rebellious, and contumacious, and were to be
severely punished. Jerónimo Tostado was appointed the
order's
visitator to Spain, with full powers to carry out the decrees
of the chapter.
In a papal brief in August of the previous year, at the
request of the Carmelite order Gregory XIII had declared an
end to the Dominican visitation and had ordained that from
then on the Carmelites should be visited by the prior general
and his delegates, leaving in effect what had been established
by the visitators. But the king was not pleased. Why hadn't
this matter been presented to him first for his royal placet?
In due time the papal nuncio Nicolás Ormaneto, working
closely
with the king, received assurance that as nuncio he still had
powers to visit and reform religious orders. Ormaneto
appointed Jerónimo Gracián (a learned priest from the
university of Alcalá who had entered the discalced
Carmelites
and became a close collaborator with Teresa in many of her
business affairs) as the new visitator to the Carmelites in
Andalusia.
After Teresa's term as prioress at the Incarnation ended, John
was ordered by the nuncio to remain at the Incarnation because
(it seems) of the excellent work he was doing there. In view
of the chapter of Piacenza, John realized that his presence
was a cause of tension and sought a change. In fact, he was
arrested by the Carmelites of the observance in January 1576,
but then released through the nuncio's intervention. Whatever
the reason, he remained on, and when Ormaneto, the nuncio,
died in June 1577, John was without a defender and his
presence in Avila was increasingly resented by those who held
that it contradicted the ordinances of Piacenza.
It wasn't long before something was done. On the night of
December 2, 1577, a group of Carmelites, lay people, and
men-at-arms broke into the chaplain's quarters, seized Fray
John, and took him away. By a secret journey, with orders from
Tostado, they carted him off, handcuffed and often
blindfolded, to the monastery in Toledo, the order's finest in
Castile, where nearly 85 friars lived. The acts of the chapter
in Piacenza were read aloud to John by which he stood accused
of being rebellious and contumacious. He would have to submit,
or undergo severe punishment. But the accused friar reasoned
that the chapter acts did not apply to him because he was at
the Incarnation by order of legitimate authority, and he
certainly was not obliged to renounce the way of life he had
embraced along with Teresa. The punishment he received was
imprisonment, according to the constitutions.
His accusers locked him first in the monastery prison, but at
the end of two months, for fear of an escape, they moved him
to another spot, a room narrow and dark, without air or light
except for whatever filtered through a small slit high up in
the wall. The room was six feet wide and ten feet long. There
John remained alone, without anything but his breviary,
through the terribly cold winter months and the suffocating
heat of summer. Added to all this were the floggings, fasting
on bread and water, wearing the same bedraggled clothes month
after month without being washed - and the lice. Teresa wrote
to
the king and pleaded that for the love of God he order Fray
John set free at once.
In the midst of this deprivation, Fray John was seeking relief
by composing poetry in his mind, leaving to posterity some of
the greatest lyric stanzas in Spanish literature - among them
a
major portion of The Spiritual Canticle. These verses suggest
that in that cramped prison, stripped of all earthly comfort,
he was touched with some rays of divine light. The cramped
conditions faded, the friar's awareness expanded. "My
beloved,
the mountains. " Here too, in the dark emptiness, a
spiritual
synthesis began to flower. "Faith and love will lead
you along
a path unknown to you, to the place where God is hidden.
Everything else gone, no one could divest him of these, and
they gave him God.
Taking advantage of a new jailer who was kinder and more
lenient, John managed to get paper and ink so as to write down
his poems. He also had the opportunity, during a daily
reprieve from his cell, to familiarize himself with the
monastery surroundings. Then, one hot night in August, after
being held prisoner for nine months, emaciated and close to
death, John chose life and undertook a dangerous escape he had
plotted during the short periods out of his cell. He had
discovered a window that looked down on the Tajo river, and
underneath the window was the top of a wall. But, of course,
there was a lock on his prison door. He solved that problem by
loosening the screws of the lock while his jailer was absent.
When the friars seemed to be asleep and the house all still,
he pushed hard on the door of his prison and the lock came
loose. This enabled him to leave his prison and find his way
in the dark to the window. By means of a kind of rope made out
of strips torn from two old bed covers and attached to a lamp
hook, he escaped through the window onto the top of the wall.
The wall encircled the monastery and its garden, so he walked
around the top of it until he came to what he thought was the
street side. There he jumped from the wall, only to find
himself in another bad predicament. He had landed inside the
courtyard of the Franciscan nuns of the Conception monastery
that was adjacent to that of the Carmelites. Fortunately, in
one corner of the nuns' garden he found that the stones in the
wall could be used as steps, allowing him to climb over the
wall to the city street and to his freedom. Some claimed his
escape was miraculous. At any rate he was able to find refuge
first with Teresa's nuns in Toledo and then, through their
intervention, at the nearby hospital of Santa Cruz, where he
was cared for secretly.
The new nuncio, Felipe Sega, not at all like his predecessor,
showed displeasure with Teresa, and especially her friars, who
already numbered more than 300 members. With Tostado's help he
explored ways to bring about some kind of order. In October
1578, nearly desperate, the discalced friars convened a
chapter in Almodóvar del Campo, southwest of Toledo,
despite
doubts about its legality. They merely wanted, they claimed,
to execute what they had agreed on in a previous chapter
called by Gracián in 1576, while Ormaneto was still alive.
The
fugitive Fray John of the Cross was appointed vicar of El
Calvario, a monastery situated in a mountainous solitude near
Beas in Andalusia. Here he would be safer against any attempts
to recapture him.
When Sega learned of the chapter at Almodóvar he declared
it
null and void, angrily sent Gracián and others to prison,
and
placed the discalced friars and nuns under the authority of
the provincial of the observant Carmelites. But the king had
already set up a maneuver to dampen Sega's ardor: a commission
to study the accusations against the discalced. In April 1579
the commission reached its decision, appointing Angel de
Salazar, a former provincial of the observant Carmelites, in
charge of Teresa's friars and nuns. Teresa rejoiced in the
appointment, and Gracián praised Salazar as a gentle and
discreet man whose main concern was to console the afflicted
and promote peace.
Copyright ICS
Publications. Permission is hereby
granted for any non-commercial use, if this copyright notice is
included.
 Go backward to The Teresian Ideal Go up to Top Go forward to Poet and Spiritual Father
Conflicts of Jurisdiction
King Philip II was himself curiously involved in the reform of
religious orders and this led to a chain of misunderstandings,
to a dark night for the small friar. Fernández had
exercised
his authority prudently and in harmony with the Carmelite
provincial of Castile. In the south, proceeding independently,
Francisco Vargas requested the discalced friars to make
foundations in Sevilla, Granada, and La Peńuela (all in
Andalusia), an action contrary to the prior general's explicit
orders against the expansion of the discalced friars into that
region. At a chapter of the order convened in Piacenza (Italy)
in May 1575, the Carmelite order came to some strong decisions
about all that they had heard was taking place in Spain,
particularly in Andalusia. Unfortunately the two provincials
from Castile and Andalusia, who might have been able to cast
some light on the events, were absent. So the ordinances
stipulated that those who had been made superiors "against the
obedience due superiors within the order itself, or who had
accepted offices or lived in monasteries or places prohibited
by the same superiors should be removed, with the aid of the
secular arm if necessary. " Those resisting would be
considered
disobedient, rebellious, and contumacious, and were to be
severely punished. Jerónimo Tostado was appointed the
order's
visitator to Spain, with full powers to carry out the decrees
of the chapter.
In a papal brief in August of the previous year, at the
request of the Carmelite order Gregory XIII had declared an
end to the Dominican visitation and had ordained that from
then on the Carmelites should be visited by the prior general
and his delegates, leaving in effect what had been established
by the visitators. But the king was not pleased. Why hadn't
this matter been presented to him first for his royal placet?
In due time the papal nuncio Nicolás Ormaneto, working
closely
with the king, received assurance that as nuncio he still had
powers to visit and reform religious orders. Ormaneto
appointed Jerónimo Gracián (a learned priest from the
university of Alcalá who had entered the discalced
Carmelites
and became a close collaborator with Teresa in many of her
business affairs) as the new visitator to the Carmelites in
Andalusia.
After Teresa's term as prioress at the Incarnation ended, John
was ordered by the nuncio to remain at the Incarnation because
(it seems) of the excellent work he was doing there. In view
of the chapter of Piacenza, John realized that his presence
was a cause of tension and sought a change. In fact, he was
arrested by the Carmelites of the observance in January 1576,
but then released through the nuncio's intervention. Whatever
the reason, he remained on, and when Ormaneto, the nuncio,
died in June 1577, John was without a defender and his
presence in Avila was increasingly resented by those who held
that it contradicted the ordinances of Piacenza.
It wasn't long before something was done. On the night of
December 2, 1577, a group of Carmelites, lay people, and
men-at-arms broke into the chaplain's quarters, seized Fray
John, and took him away. By a secret journey, with orders from
Tostado, they carted him off, handcuffed and often
blindfolded, to the monastery in Toledo, the order's finest in
Castile, where nearly 85 friars lived. The acts of the chapter
in Piacenza were read aloud to John by which he stood accused
of being rebellious and contumacious. He would have to submit,
or undergo severe punishment. But the accused friar reasoned
that the chapter acts did not apply to him because he was at
the Incarnation by order of legitimate authority, and he
certainly was not obliged to renounce the way of life he had
embraced along with Teresa. The punishment he received was
imprisonment, according to the constitutions.
His accusers locked him first in the monastery prison, but at
the end of two months, for fear of an escape, they moved him
to another spot, a room narrow and dark, without air or light
except for whatever filtered through a small slit high up in
the wall. The room was six feet wide and ten feet long. There
John remained alone, without anything but his breviary,
through the terribly cold winter months and the suffocating
heat of summer. Added to all this were the floggings, fasting
on bread and water, wearing the same bedraggled clothes month
after month without being washed - and the lice. Teresa wrote
to
the king and pleaded that for the love of God he order Fray
John set free at once.
In the midst of this deprivation, Fray John was seeking relief
by composing poetry in his mind, leaving to posterity some of
the greatest lyric stanzas in Spanish literature - among them
a
major portion of The Spiritual Canticle. These verses suggest
that in that cramped prison, stripped of all earthly comfort,
he was touched with some rays of divine light. The cramped
conditions faded, the friar's awareness expanded. "My
beloved,
the mountains. " Here too, in the dark emptiness, a
spiritual
synthesis began to flower. "Faith and love will lead
you along
a path unknown to you, to the place where God is hidden.
Everything else gone, no one could divest him of these, and
they gave him God.
Taking advantage of a new jailer who was kinder and more
lenient, John managed to get paper and ink so as to write down
his poems. He also had the opportunity, during a daily
reprieve from his cell, to familiarize himself with the
monastery surroundings. Then, one hot night in August, after
being held prisoner for nine months, emaciated and close to
death, John chose life and undertook a dangerous escape he had
plotted during the short periods out of his cell. He had
discovered a window that looked down on the Tajo river, and
underneath the window was the top of a wall. But, of course,
there was a lock on his prison door. He solved that problem by
loosening the screws of the lock while his jailer was absent.
When the friars seemed to be asleep and the house all still,
he pushed hard on the door of his prison and the lock came
loose. This enabled him to leave his prison and find his way
in the dark to the window. By means of a kind of rope made out
of strips torn from two old bed covers and attached to a lamp
hook, he escaped through the window onto the top of the wall.
The wall encircled the monastery and its garden, so he walked
around the top of it until he came to what he thought was the
street side. There he jumped from the wall, only to find
himself in another bad predicament. He had landed inside the
courtyard of the Franciscan nuns of the Conception monastery
that was adjacent to that of the Carmelites. Fortunately, in
one corner of the nuns' garden he found that the stones in the
wall could be used as steps, allowing him to climb over the
wall to the city street and to his freedom. Some claimed his
escape was miraculous. At any rate he was able to find refuge
first with Teresa's nuns in Toledo and then, through their
intervention, at the nearby hospital of Santa Cruz, where he
was cared for secretly.
The new nuncio, Felipe Sega, not at all like his predecessor,
showed displeasure with Teresa, and especially her friars, who
already numbered more than 300 members. With Tostado's help he
explored ways to bring about some kind of order. In October
1578, nearly desperate, the discalced friars convened a
chapter in Almodóvar del Campo, southwest of Toledo,
despite
doubts about its legality. They merely wanted, they claimed,
to execute what they had agreed on in a previous chapter
called by Gracián in 1576, while Ormaneto was still alive.
The
fugitive Fray John of the Cross was appointed vicar of El
Calvario, a monastery situated in a mountainous solitude near
Beas in Andalusia. Here he would be safer against any attempts
to recapture him.
When Sega learned of the chapter at Almodóvar he declared
it
null and void, angrily sent Gracián and others to prison,
and
placed the discalced friars and nuns under the authority of
the provincial of the observant Carmelites. But the king had
already set up a maneuver to dampen Sega's ardor: a commission
to study the accusations against the discalced. In April 1579
the commission reached its decision, appointing Angel de
Salazar, a former provincial of the observant Carmelites, in
charge of Teresa's friars and nuns. Teresa rejoiced in the
appointment, and Gracián praised Salazar as a gentle and
discreet man whose main concern was to console the afflicted
and promote peace.
Copyright ICS
Publications. Permission is hereby
granted for any non-commercial use, if this copyright notice is
included.
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