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Five Jokes about the Medieval Church
Could medieval people joke about religion? Poggio Bracciolini proves it
to be true, and offers us five funny stories.
In 1470 the Italian scholar Poggio Bracciolini published his work
Facetiae. Poggio was an Italian scholar who spent most of his career
working for the Papacy, but he also wrote about a wide number of topics
and was seen as one of the brightest minds of his time. He explains that
he wrote the Facetiae because rCLit is proper, and almost a matter of necessity commended by philosophers, that our mind, weighed down by a
variety of cares and anxieties, should now and then enjoy relaxation
from its constant labour, and be incited to cheerfulness and mirth by
some humorous recreation.rCY Here are five of his jokes that poked fun at Christianity and the medieval church:
A Priest who, while preaching, made a mistake in his numbers, and
instead of a thousand, said a hundred
A Priest was expounding to his congregation the passage of the Gospel
wherein is recited that our Saviour fed five thousand people out of five loaves, and, by a slip of the tongue, instead of five thousand, said
five hundred. His clerk, in a low whisper, called his attention to the mistake, reminding him that the Gospel mentioned five thousand. rCLHold
your peace, you fool,rCY said the Priest; rCLthey will find it hard enough
to believe even the number I said.rCY
The Fat Abbot
The Abbot of Septimo, a very fat and corpulent man, on his way to
Florence one evening, enquired of a peasant he met, rCLDo you think I
shall be able to enter the gate?rCY Of course, he thus meant to ask
whether he was likely to reach the city before the closing of the gates.
But the peasant, looking at his stoutness, replied, rCLTo be sure, you
will; a cartload of hay gets through, why should not you?rCY
A Reply to the PriestrCOs words at the Offertory
A Florentine priest, during a solemn service, was receiving, as usual,
the gifts of the faithful at the Offertory, and to each he addressed the customary words, rCLIt shall be returned you a hundred-fold, and you shall enjoy life everlasting.rCY
Hearing which, an old nobleman, who was giving a silver coin, said, rCLI
shall be well satisfied if I only get back the capital, as they say.rCY
A Sensible Reply of the Cardinal of Avignon to the King of France
I have thought fit to recall, among these anecdotes, a tart reply of the Cardinal of Avignon, a most sensible man. When residing in Avignon, the
Popes used to have, in advance of their retinue, a number of led horses,
with gorgeous housings and trappings, to enhance the magnificence of
their train. The King of France, one day, indignantly asked the Cardinal
if the Apostles had ever resorted to such a display.
rCLBy no means,rCY replied the Eminence, rCLbut the Apostles belonged to a time when Kings also lived otherwise, being only shepherds and cowkeepers.rCY
A Good Joke on the Limited Number of GodrCOs Friends
One of our fellow citizens, a very witty man, was labouring under a
painful and lengthy illness, was attended by a Friar who came to comfort
him, and, among other words of solace, told him that God thus especially chastens those he loves, and inflicts his visitations upon them. rCLNo
wonder then,rCY retorted the sick man, rCLthat God has so few friends; if
that is the way he favours them, he ought to have still less.rCY
You can read more jokes from the Facetiae on Archive.org
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This post was inspired by this great clip from SCTV:
Top Image: A statue of a smiling Gabriel the Archangel at Jerpoint
Abbey. Photo by Marco / Flickr
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