|
Table of Contents
Book OneBook
Two
Book Three
Ch. I-XXV Book Three
Ch. XXVI-XLIX
Book Three
Ch. L-LIX
Book Four
Return to Roman Catholic Resource Index
Return to Main Page
|
The Imitation of Christ
The treatise "Of the Imitation of Christ"
appears to have been originally written in Latin early in the fifteenth
century. Its exact date and its authorship are still a matter of
debate. Manuscripts of the Latin version survive in considerable numbers
all over Western Europe, and they, with the vast list of translations and
of printed editions, testify to its almost unparalleled popularity.
One scribe attributes it to St. Bernard of Clairvaux; but the fact that
is contains a quotation from St. Francis of Assisi, who was born thirty
years after the death of St. Bernard, disposes of this theory. In
England there exist many manuscripts of the first three books, called "Musica
Ecclesiastica," frequently ascribed to the English mystic Walter Hilton.
But Hilton seems to have died in 1395, and there is no evidence of the
existence of the work before 1400. Many manuscripts scattered throughout
Europe ascribe the book to Jean le Charlier de Gerson, the great Chancellor
of the University of Paris, who was a leading figure in the Church in the
earlier part of the fifteenth century. The most probable author,
however, especially when the internal evidence is considered, is Thomas
Haemmerlein, known also as Thomas a Kempis, from his native town of Kempen,
near the Rhine, about forty miles north of Cologne. Haemmerlein,
who was born in 1379 or 1380, was a member of the order of the Brothers
of Common Life, and spent the last seventy years of his life at Mount St.
Agnes, a monastery of Augustinian canons in the diocese of Utrecht.
Here he died on July 26, 1471, after an uneventful life spent in copying
manuscripts, reading, and composing, and in the peaceful routine of monastic
piety.
With the exception of the Bible, no Christian writing
has had so wide a vogue or so sustained a popularity as this. And
yet, in one sense, it is hardly an original work at all. Its structure
it owes largely to the writings of the medieval mystics, and its ideas
and phrases are a mosaic from the Bible and the Fathers of the early Church.
But these elements are interwoven with such delicate skill and a religious
feeling at once so ardent and so sound that it promises to remain, what
it has been for five hundred years, the supreme call and guide to spiritual
aspiration.
This work is in the public domain |