The Proper Meaning
The Proper Meaning
The Proper Meaning
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THE PROPER MEANING OF CUM NIMIS ABSURDUM
DAVID BERGER OF BROOKLYN COLLEGE faults my translation of the
papal bull Cum nimis, the elimination of which will rob it of the unique
importance I claim for it, namely, that it introduces a new theory, viz.,
of oppressing the Jews as a means of converting them. I think I am
right and he is wrong in the English rendition of the Latin document.
For one thing, medieval and especially ecclesiastical Latin regularly
use "convenire" in the active sense of "to agree" (my translation);
the verb need not be confined in usage to the more classical "it is
fitting" (Berger). My syntactical reading "convenire ... pervenire
satagant" ("make all haste to arrive ... and agree") is no less valid.
Beyond that, my interpretation rests on more than a reading of the
Cum nimis alone. Rather, it is based on a thorough knowledge of the
origins of the various clauses the bull contains. As will be apparent
from my forthcoming study, Taxation, Community, and State 1, a clause
stating explicitly that the Jews were "tolerated so that (ut) they
convert" was in regular use from some time in the I520's. And it
appeared in literally hundreds of letters granting extensive privileges
to Jews on the ground of the traditional theology of Gregory the
Great that "the sweetness of lips is the most effective agent for pro-
moting conversion." Paul IV identified with this goal; but following
the example of Benedict XIII, he disdained a method based on
kindness. Cum nimis announced this change in favor of conversion
through restriction and pressure by taking clauses of the earlier
letters of privilege and calculatingly reversing them one by one,
leaving only the concept "tolerated ut" intact.
Apart from this, as I wrote pointedly at the end of the first chapter
in Catholic Thought and Papal Jewry Policy, I5 5 5- I5 9 3, the bulls of
the later sixteenth century popes provide only a "rudimentary
understanding" of papal programs. "Other tools are required" to see
the issues in full. Despite Berger's claim, therefore, Cum nimis was
hardly intended to supply the "clinching evidence" for my thesis, if
for no other reason than that the novel formulae of Cum nimis are
rooted in tradition; and the only way to grasp the changes in tradi-
tional formulae and policies which Cum nimis put into effect is to
place the bull in context. This Berger failed to do. In Catholic Thought,
however, it is just such a broad context which provides the "clinching
evidence." In particular, that evidence came from the materials
found in chapters IO and 11, which explicitly dealt with conversion
I Stuttgart, I98I (Papste und Papsttum, I9).
I6*
252 THE JEWISH QUARTERLYREVIEW