Financial Indulgence Saved Christianity in Europe

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Random Lucky, Not (Yet) Infected, Citizen: “Is that a wart?”
Unfortunate, Infected by the Bubonic Plague, Fellow: “No, those are my lymph nodes and they are swelling.”
These were rough times, with no cure and no avail; it was the time of the Black Death. The Black Death devastated everything that it touched. The Black Death was an event that is, currently, known to us as the epidemic of the bubonic plague all throughout Europe. Towns were laid to waste and even entire major cities were left as ghost towns. Even when entire cities were not wiped out, all businesses and shops were closed down. When there were people vending their goods it was as if they were part of a syndicate black market operation because of the outrageous prices that were charged for simple, bare, essentials. The Black Death ravaged Europe and left nothing remotely close to life or civilization in its wake with the exception of one, the churches, which continued to operate throughout this period. While faith was, and still is, the forerunner in what allows churches and religion to remain afloat, that was not the situation at hand during the time of the Black Death. Churches were able to stay open due to the financial indulgence of the clergy.
The Black Death claimed numerous lives, not only the sick and the elderly, but also the young and healthy. The greatest, and worst, obstacle with the infection of the bubonic plague was the lack of knowledge of what was actually afflicting the population (The Florentine Chronicle, Rubric 643). The people during the time of the Black Death where even mind boggled at how the disease had spread to Europe, let alone assessing what the disease actually was and how to cure the disease. According to Marchione di Coppo Stefani, “N...

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...st popular religion in the world. It was not faith or lofty ideals that pulled religion through the calamities of the Black Death, but the survival instinct of the the clergy. The financial indulgence that was practiced kept the clergy alive to tell the tale and continue to spread Christianity to what it is today.

Works Cited

Bisgaard, Lars, and Leif Søndergaard. Living with the Black Death. Odense: University of Southern Denmark, 2009. Print.
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Horrox, Rosemary. The Black Death. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1994. Print.
Mullett, Charles F. The Bubonic Plague and England. Lexington: University of Kentucky, 1956. Print.
"Historical Currency Conversions."Historical Currency Conversions. N.p., n.d. Web. 5 Mar. 2014. .

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