Evil bishop as tyrant in Isidore of Seville’s Sententiae
https://doi.org/10.22394/2412-9410-2020-6-2-259-291
Abstract
The article focuses on the figure of an evil bishop in Isidore of Seville’s Sententiae in connection with the image of a tyrant. Analysis of the text demonstrates that the notion of a bad bishop is noticeably determined by the image of a tyrant. Thus, the set of the key vices of a bad bishop (first of all, pride, anger and cruelty) corresponds within the Roman rhetorical tradition to the key characteristics of a tyrannus, which has already been reinterpreted in Christian terms. The activity of a bad bishop, like that of a tyrant, results in social disorganization and in the destruction of the populus. The image of a tyrant is applied to an evil primate because the figure of the bishop was rooted in a system of political values which already had been transformed significantly. The anger and pride of a wicked bishop placed him in the sphere of the secular and connected him with the devil, thereby destroying the very essence of episcopal ministry. As a result of desacralization the bishop ceased to be the center of all social ties of the community. The rhetoric associated with the image of a tyrant most adequately reflects this perception of the social role of the bishop.
Views:
17