'A Christian Mannes Bileeve' (CMB) is a vernacular prose commentary on
the Apostles' Creed likely composed in the first half of the fourteenth
century. It has received little attention and has not previously been
published. Growing out of a tradition of commentaries on the Creed, the
CMB is the longest and most substantial of the four known Middle English
versions. In the CMB, each article of faith is given in Latin with a
paraphrase in Middle English followed by a detailed explanation. It is
this feature that makes the CMB distinctive; the explanations include
Latin and English lyric poetry, scriptural verse, exempla, and a range
of material drawn from Latin theological writers such as Augustine,
Gregory the Great, Bernard of Clairvaux, and Bonaventure. The CMB was of
particular interest to women; of the four manuscripts, three are known
to have been in the possession of aristocratic laywomen and female
religious communities. In its introduction, this volume discusses the
manuscripts and their provenance, language and localization, date and
context of the CMB, and the lyrics that are embedded in the text. The
edited text is supported by an apparatus of variant readings,
commentary, and a glossary, followed by a bibliography.