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The Catholic Counter-Reformation
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The Counter-Reformation
“Counter-Reformation” a term invented by German Protestant historians. Not much liked by Catholic historians, but now generally accepted and used. Phases in papal reaction to Protestantism: Ignoring the problem (up to mid 1530s) Defensive (up to 1560s) Forward-looking, proactive (after 1560s)
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The Counter-Reformation
This was both a response to the gains of Protestantism and the repose to critics within the church that abuses needed to be reformed.
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Early 16th century Popes Leo X and the “Luther affair”
Adrian VI ( ), Dutch, starts serious reform efforts but dies after just 13 months Clement VII ( ). Great patron of the arts, learning, the Medici family and Florence. No attempts at reform. “He had no more sense than his uncle Leo X of the urgency and magnitude of what was happening in Germany.”
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Paul III ( ) Paul III ( ), the first “Counter-Reformation” pope Paul III, an “unlikely reformer, an old-fashioned nepotist who as a cardinal had a mistress who bore him four children.” Viewed the church “as a fortress to be guarded, defended, and kept on the alert”
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Paul III ( ) Reinstates the Roman Inquisition – means that “heretics” will go on trial. Public criticism of the church becomes dangerous Approves the Jesuit order in 1540 (more on this soon) And, importantly, convenes the first session of the Council of Trent in 1545
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Catholic Women Angela Merici – Ursuline Order
Foundation for the future of young girls in the church. Approved as religious community by Pope Paul III in 1544
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Council of Trent Three sessions: the first two “defensive,” the last one, from , the most important. Most attendees are Italian bishops.
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Council of Trent and Catholic doctrine
Index of Forbidden books strongly enforced No compromise with Protestant beliefs – i.e., “If anyone says that by faith alone the impious is justified, let him be anathema.” Tradition and the Bible for authority All seven sacraments are valid, transubstantiation is right, etc. Idea instead is to “define Catholic teaching much more sharply than it had been before.” Theological works of Thomas Aquinas are key
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Council of Trent and Catholic doctrine
Equal validity of Scripture, Church traditions and writings of Church fathers Monasticism, celibacy of the clergy and purgatory reaffirmed Church abuses such as simony, and the sale of indulgences curtailed
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“Tridentine” reforms Especially important: for the first time, seminaries are established for priests in every diocese. Every priest must be educated. Bishops are charged to make regular visitations Did not touch question of papal reform. No other council called for 300 years!
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Jesuits and the Counter-Reformation
Jesuits often called the “shock troops” of the Counter-Reformation. Extremely dedicated, well-educated, disciplined set of men focused on revival of Catholicism: “indefatigable preachers, great missionaries, and formidable polemicists.” They help reconvert southern Germany and Poland to Catholicism
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Loyola and the Society of Jesus
Ignatius Loyola ( ) Son of poor Basque nobleman, becomes a soldier until wounded at age 30. Religious conversion as he recovers. 1522, becomes pilgrim and then goes to a monastery
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Loyola and the Society of Jesus
1540, Formation of the Society of Jesus Paul III decides they should be allowed to start a new religious order. Initial idea: Preachers who are loyal only to the pope The Jesuit superior general lives in Rome and is elected for life. Much more centralized than the friars, for instance.
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The Jesuits In 1542 oversaw both the Spanish and Italian Inquisitions
Spain: persecution of “Moriscos” (Christian Moors) and Christian Jews who were suspected of backsliding to the original faiths Italy, Pope Paul IV issued a papal bull accusing Jews of killing Jesus and ordering that Jews be placed in Ghettos in the Papal States The persecution of Jews throughout Europe increased as a result.
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Jesuits and education Somewhat “accidental,” not part of the original mission, but quickly becomes very important Jesuits establish excellent schools across Europe 144 schools by 1579 372 schools by 1615 Many famous Europeans educated by Jesuits: both Descartes and Voltaire, for instance. Even Protestants attend. The Ratio studiorum “turned out to be the most significant single document in Jesuit educational history. It became the instrument that made the Jesuits, even in the eyes of their opponents, ‘the schoolmasters of Europe.’ They used the document in such a way that it lifted the mediocre to the level of the good, and the good to the level of the excellent. For four centuries, the Ratio impacted not just the Church, but the world. Never before or since have we seen such a comprehensive and effective universal educational program.“This success was even longer in the making than at first appears. It emerged from half a century of continuous experience and collaboration, but it was rooted in a far older, far wider web of evolving educational techniques and enterprises: the teaching style that Ignatius had found at the University of Paris, the Renaissance humanist movement, high medieval scholasticism, and earlier medieval training in manners at cathedral schools. There was also a definite classical background, namely, that ancient rhetorical training of Greco-Roman culture, especially as it had been systematized by the Latin-Spanish author Quintilian. But the Ratio did not, for all its pedigree, stand far from a rather large fund of contemporary common-sense and experience and practical wisdom. When the Society of Jesus added to this mixture a powerful evangelical orientation to final ends and a rapidly expanding international corporate effort, it transformed the entire pedagogical universe of early modernity.” (Claude Pavur, St. Louis University, The Great Ratio). [JESUITS]. Ratio atque Institutio Studiorum. Per sex patres ad idiussu R. P. Prapositi Generalis deputatos conscripta. Rome: Francisco Zanetti for Collegium Societatis Jesu, 1586.Cum Facultate Superiorum. Small octavo, nineteenth-century three-quarter morocco. $16,000. Extremely scarce 1586 first edition of the famous Ratio studiorum, outlining the educational system of the Jesuits. One of the foundational documents of modern thought: through its influence, the Ratio studiorum shaped and defined the system of higher education for the entire Western world.
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Jesuits and overseas missions
Jesuits not just in Europe – they go to China, Japan, north and south America, and beyond. Their letters are often the first European perspectives on other peoples of the globe
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Effects? Inadvertently will spark the Scientific Revolution - create even more formidable challenges to the Catholic Church's authority and very world-view. Specifically, efforts to reform the Julian calendar may have led to the Church's confrontation with Galileo and with the scientific world in general. (historian James Burke) Wars of Religion Baroque Art (influence) Catholic enthusiasm rekindled
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Baroque Style of Art & Architecture
Dramatic, emotional. Colors were brighter than bright; darks were darker than dark. Counter-Reformation art. Paintings & sculptures in church contexts should speak to the illiterate rather than to the well-informed. Ecclesiastical art --> appeal to emotions. Holland --> Real people portrayed as the
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St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City by Gialorenzo Bernini
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“The Ecstasy of St. Theresa of Avila” by Gianlorenzo Bernini 1647-52
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“The Assumption of the Virgin Mary” Egid Quirim Asam, 1692-1750
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“St. Francis in Ecstasy” Caravaggio, 1595
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“The Flagellation of Christ” by Caravaggio
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“David and Goliath” by Caravaggio
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“Salome with the Head of the Baptist” by Caravaggio
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“The Elevation of the Cross” by Peter Paul Reubens 1610-11
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Was the Counter-Reformation successful?
Was the Protestant Reformation successful? Which one was more successful?
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