Although the focus of this class is on the history of Protestants of various stripes, it’s also important to realize that Catholicism changed a good deal during the last five hundred years. In this lecture, you’ll get a brief sketch of the history of significant Catholic movements and doctrinal declarations during this period, including the inquisition, Council of Trent, the Jesuits, doctrines about Mary, the first and second Vatican Councils, and much more.
This is lecture 11 of a history of Christianity class called Five Hundred: From Martin Luther to Joel Osteen.
All the notes are available here as a pdf.
—— Notes ——
Initial Responses to Reformation
Pope Leo X thought Reformation was just a drunken brawl among German monks
1541 Regensburg Colloquy
Inquisition
started in 12th France to combat heresy of Cathars and Waldensians
The 1578 handbook for inquisitors spelled out the purpose of inquisitorial penalties:”… for punishment does not take place primarily and per se for the correction and good of the person punished, but for the public good in order that others may become terrified and weaned away from the evils they would commit.”
1821 Inquisition abolished in Portugal; 1834 Inquisition outlawed in Spain
1908 Inquisition renamed to The Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office
1965 Inquisition renamed to The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF)
Council of Trent (1545-1563)
response to Protestant movement
Catholicism after Trent is called Tridentine Catholicism
7 sacraments, recognized Apocrypha as canon, Scripture and Tradition determine doctrine
bishop as pastor of diocese rather than prince of the church: have to live in their diocese, preach regularly, inspect clergy to insure proper teaching, meet regularly at synods
support of Baroque style of art, music, and architecture
1559 Index of Prohibited Books
list had circulated since 1521 in Paris and Louvain
1966 Index of Prohibited Books abolished
still to this day the word Imprimatur (let it be printed) is on approved Catholic books
2011 imprimatur first applied to iPhone app
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
Ignatius of Loyola (1491-1556)
1521 severely wounded by a cannon ball
1522 stayed in a cave for a while practicing severe asceticism
1523 pilgrimage to the holy land
1524 finished Spiritual Exercises (Ignatian Contemplation)
returned to Spain and preached on street corners
1528 attended University of Paris and got master’s degree
1534 started Jesuits with 6 companions, taking solemn vows
1540 Society of Jesus approved by pope
Rules of the Order: vows of poverty, chastity, obedience to pope, go anywhere in the world
Rule 13 “That we may be altogether of the same mind and in conformity … if [the Church] shall have defined anything to be black which to our eyes appears to be white, we ought in like manner to pronounce it to be black.”
Missionary Activity
Francis Xavier (1506-1552) preached in India and had success in Japan
Matteo Ricci (1522-1610) dressed as Confusion scholar, brought Christianity to China
Robert Nobili (1577-1656) brought Christianity to Brahman caste in India
Alexander de Rhodes (1591-1660) preached in Vietnam
Colonialism
1493 Pope Alexander VI awarded colonial rights to Spain and Portugal
1519-21 Spain conquers Aztecs; 1531-6 Spain conquers Incas
treated natives as barbarians and enslaved many
economic exploitation and conversion of people to Catholicism
Teresa of Avila (1515-1582)
Spanish mystic: had visions of Christ
founder of Discalced Carmelites
Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith (1622)
Pope Gregory XV founded organization to supervise missionary work
put international Christians under papal authority
no longer under authority of kings
1627 Pope Urban VIII established a missionary training school
Chinese Rites Controversy
controversy over veneration of Chinese ancestors
1645 Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith (SCPF) banned it
1656 SCPF sided with Jesuits and lifted ban
1659 SCPF instructed missionaries to distinguish culture from religion
1704 Pope Clement XI condemned Chinese rites and outlawed further discussion
1715 Pope Clement XI issues Papal bull officially condemning the rites
French Revolution (1789-1799)
from monarchical absolutism to constitutional monarchy to a radical republic to five person directory to an eventual dictatorship
people cried, “Liberté, égalité, fraternité” = “liberty, equality, brotherhood”
changed relationship of the church to the state
king became figurehead, nobility lost lands, church lost monasteries
social revolution against feudal system
Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815)
wars between France and coalition (England, Austria, Prussia, Russia)
Pope Pius VI condemned the French Revolution
Napoleon Bonaparte’s general invaded Italy and imprisoned Pope Pius VI
1800 Napoleon allowed Pius VI too be buried and tried to bring Catholic Church back to France
1801 Napoleon compromised and restored traditional roles to Catholic Church but not its power
1804 Pope Pius VII crowned Napoleon emperor at Notre Dame de Paris
Immaculate Conception of Mary (1854)
1571 Battle of Lepanto against Ottoman Turks
1617 Pope Paul V said Mary was conceived w/o original sin
1622 Pope Gregory XV also said Mary was conceived w/o original sin
1661 Alexander VII declared Mary’s soul was free from original sin
1708 Pope Clement XI celebrated Feast of the Immaculate Conception
1854 Pope Pius IX proclaimed Immaculate Conception of Mary as dogma
First Vatican Council (1869-70)
convoked by Pope Pius IX
three centuries after Council of Trent
affirmed doctrine of papal infallibility
respond to rationalism, liberalism, and materialism
1870 a group called the Old Catholic Church broke away
Unification of Italy (1870)
King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy seized most of the Papal States
Emmanuel II seized Rome and Pope Pius XI became the prisoner in the Vatican
Vatican City (1929)
declared sovereign nation by Benito Mussolini
Assumption of Mary (1950)
Pope Pius XII asserted as dogma that Mary having completed the course of her earthly life, was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory
Second Vatican Council (1962-1965)
Paul VI proclaimed Mary the Mother of the Church
make teachings clear to a modern world
allowed use of vernacular languages during mass and sacraments
caused a breakaway of “traditional Catholics” who wanted to keep the liturgy in Latin
Encyclical Humane Vitae (1968)
Pope Paul VI condemned birth control, abortion, and euthanasia
Liberation Theology (1971)
coined by Gustavo Gutierrez in his book A Theology of Liberation
Leonard Boff of Brazil, John Sobrino of Spain, Oscar Romero of El Salvador, Juan Luis Segundo of Uruguay
fight poverty by addressing source, political activism, social justice
Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI denounced the movement
Ordination for Men Only (1994)
affirmed by Pope John Paul II in Ordinatio Sacerdotalis
2001 sex abuse cases
major lawsuits claimed priests sexually abused minors
some priests resigned, others were defrocked, others jailed
financial settlements with many victims
4% of priests in the US from 1950-2002 had been accused of sexual misconduct
2013 Pope Benedict XVI resigned
first pope to relinquish office since Pope Gregory XII in 1415
Pope Francis elected (first Latin American, first Jesuit)
—— Links ——
See all the episodes of Five Hundred: From Martin Luther to Joel Osteen.
The three main textbooks for this class include:
The European Reformations by Carter Lindberg
The Radical Reformation by George Williams
Modern Church History by Tim Grass
Check out these other Restitutio historical podcasts
Intro music: “District Four” by Kevin MacLeod. Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License.