Lentorama 2025: Perfunctory Popes
Day 21: Celestine V
We end out run of Celestines today with the most recent of the group (recent being a relative term, as he served in 1294). So out of five popes named Celestine, three served for less than a year. Which explains why no one has decided to become Celestine VI.
In any case, Pietro Angelerio lost his father at a young age, and his mother encouraged him into spiritual pursuits. He took to study, and became a Benedictine monk as a teenager. He became a hermit and moved to a cave on a local mountain, where his ascetic lifestyle and rumored miracle working gave him a following among the locals.
Pietro then founded a new monastic order in 1244 that merged his spiritual practice with the Benedictine rule and some of the beliefs of a reformist group of Franciscans. He had to come off his mountain and travel to Lyon in order to make sure Pope Gregory X would approve of the order, which he did. At its height, the new order (eventually named the Celestines) would have over 600 monks in 36 monasteries.
Fast forward to 1294. For two years, the cardinals had been trying to elect a success to Nicholas IV, but to no avail. The cardinals then get a letter from Pietro, warning them of divine displeasure if they don't come up with a pope soon. The dead of the college of cardinals called for Pietro's election, which was quickly ratified.
Not that he wanted the job. Pietro steadfastly refused it, and it took a delegation of cardinals, the king of Naples, and the pretender to the throne of Hungary to talk him into the job. He was crowned August 29, 1294, taking the name Celestine V.
Celestine probably should have stuck to his initial instincts, as he was not a great pope. He ruled from the Kingdom of Naples, which both weakened his influence over the Curia and made him prone to appointing the king's favorites to various positions. He also kept trying to go back to his austere lifestyle, which was largely incompatible with running the church.
Aware of the problems he faced (and largely created), Celestine passed one final degree that gave the pope the right to resign. He exercised that right on December 13, 1294, after a little more than five months in office. For his trouble he did not get to go back to his mountain, but was held in captivity by his successor, Boniface VIII, who feared Celestine could be made an antipope. Celestine died in captivity 10 months later, and was made a saint in 1313 (both for his piety and as a snub to Boniface).
For his short term in office and mostly ineffectual papacy, Celestine did manage a couple of important things. He reaffirmed the stricter rules for conclaves that Gregory X first promoted, and which are largely followed today. He also formalized papal abdication, which became noteworthy when Benedict XVI resigned in 2013.