| Document Type: | 
 | ||
| Author/editor: | Thomas O'Brien Standard: O'Brien, Thomas [Thomas O'Brien] | ||
| 
		  	Title:
		   | Options for the poor in twelfth and thirteenth-century Europe Standard: | ||
| Periodical: | Horizons : the journal of the College Theology Society | ||
| Document Type: | 31 | ||
| Issue: | 2 | ||
| Date of Publication: | 2004 | ||
| Pages: | 302-321 | ||
| Subjects: | Franciscans - Conception of poverty - 1200-1300 Humiliates Movements of poverty - Middle Ages Poverty - Waldensian conception - 1100-1300 Voluntary poverty | ||
| Summary/Notes: | ABSTRACT This essay uses the lens of the "preferential option for the poor" to examine the unprecedented turn to poverty by religious movements in late twelfth and early thirteenth-century Western Europe. Three movements are selected from the many and various movements espousing poverty: the Humiliati, the Waldensians, and the Franciscans. The Humiliati developed a communal lifestyle that, in key ways, reflected the emerging urban working class. The Waldensians embraced a radical poverty that rejected all forms of property, but they were progressively marginalized from Catholicism and eventually became targets of the Inquisition. The Franciscans adopted a very similar sort of radical poverty, but their communities ultimately would be assimilated into mainstream Catholicism. The essay places these movements into a dialogue with the contemporary notion of the "preferential option for the poor" in order to discover the ways they might inform and illuminate one another. |