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Attempts at Internal Reform

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Title: Attempts at Internal Reform


1
Attempts at Internal Reform
  • Recommended source Earle E. Cairns, Christianity
    Through the Centuries. Grand Rapids Zondervan,
    1996.

2
The Failure of the Clergy
  • Between 1309 and 1439, the hierarchical
    organization, with its demands for celibacy and
    absolute obedience to the pope, and the
    feudalization of the Roman church led to a
    decline in clerical morals.
  • Many priests took concubines or indulged in
    illicit love affairs.
  • Others, especially during the Renaissance,
    enjoyed luxurious living.

3
The Babylonian Captivity
  • Clement V, a Frenchmen chosen as pope in 1305,
    was weak, of doubtful morality and dominated by
    strong French kings.
  • He moved to Avignon, France in 1309.
  • Catherine of Siena (1347-80) strongly urged
    Gregory XI to return to Rome to restore and
    regain prestige for the papacy as an independent
    international authority.
  • Early in 1377, he ended the Babylonian
    Captivity.

4
The Great Schism
  • Urban VI was elected following Gregory XI.
  • His bad temper and arrogant manner led to the
    election of Clement VII (1378).
  • Clement moved back to Avignon.
  • Both men claimed to be pope.
  • Northern Italy, Germany, Scandinavia and England
    followed the Roman pope.
  • France, Spain, Scotland and southern Italy
    followed the pope at Avignon.

5
Papal Taxation
  • Supporting two papal courts became an onerous
    burden.
  • Income came from papal estates tithes, annates
    (payment of 1st years salary by church
    official) the right of purveyance (popes travel
    expenses in ones area) the right of spoil
    (monies of deceased upper clergy) Peters pence
    (paid annually by laity in many lands) the
    income from vacant offices and numerous fees.

6
The Rise of National States
  • The king and middle class cooperated.
  • The king and his national army gave security
    which allowed the middle class to carry on
    business in safety.
  • The middle class gave money so the king could run
    the state.
  • This resulted in a strong centralized
    nation-state able to defy the pope and make the
    church subject to national interests.

7
The Mystics
  • Scholasticism contributed to the rise of
    mysticism because it emphasized reason at the
    expense of mans emotional nature.
  • Nominalism, which denied the real existence of
    universals, led to an emphasis on the individual
    as the source of reality and on experience as the
    way to gain knowledge.
  • They were also a reaction to troubled times
    arising from things like the Black Death
    (1348-49).

8
Mysticism
  • Latin mystics emphasized mysticism as a personal
    emotional experience of Christ.
  • Catherine of Siena fearlessly denounced clerical
    evils.
  • Teutonic mystics stressed a more philosophical
    approach to God, sometimes leading to pantheism.

9
Mysticism
  • Mysticism entered the Dominican order, likely
    through Meister Eckhart (ca. 1260-1327).
  • He believed only the divine was real and taught a
    fusion of the human essence with the divine
    during an ecstatic experience.
  • He emphasized the need for Christian service as
    the fruit of mystical union with God.

10
Friends of God
  • A group of Dominicans known as the Friends of
    God, headquartered in the Rhine Valley, carried
    on Eckharts teaching.
  • John Tauler (ca. 1300-61) emphasized an inward
    experience of God as being much more vital to the
    souls welfare than external ceremonies.
  • The little mystical volume German Theology is
    usually associated with the group.

11
Brethren of the Common Life
  • This less pantheistic and more practical group
    formed in the Netherlands.
  • John of Ruysbroeck (1293-1381), who was
    influenced by Eckhart, influenced the mystical
    movement in Holland.
  • He helped Gerard Groote (1340-84) to emphasize
    the NT in the development of the mystical
    experience.
  • A group of laymen lived in a house at Windesheim
    under a rule in community and devoted their lives
    to teaching and other practical service.

12
Brethren of the Common Life
  • Like the Friends of God, the Brethren of the
    Common Life emphasized the education of young
    people and built large, excellent schools.
  • The Imitation of Christ is associated with the
    name Tomas a Kempis (1380-1471).
  • It reflects a more practical emphasis.
  • It renounces the world and asserts the need of a
    positive love for Christ and service for him in
    humble practical ways.

13
Developments in England
  • English people resented sending money to a pope
    in Avignon, France.
  • The royal and middle class resented money lost to
    the English treasury.
  • Statute of Provisors (1351) banned appointment by
    the pope of clergymen to offices in the Roman
    church in England.
  • Statute of Praemunire (1353) forbade the practice
    of taking cases concerning clergymen out of the
    English courts for trial in papal court.
  • Payment of the annual tribute of 1,000 Marks,
    which was started by John, was stopped by
    Parliament.

14
John Wycliffe
  • Studied and taught at Oxford.
  • Until 1378, he wanted to reform the Roman church
    by elimination of immoral clergymen and stripping
    it of property, which he felt was the root of
    corruption.
  • In Of Civil Dominion (1376) he asserted a moral
    basis for ecclesiastical leadership.
  • God gave the use and possession of property, but
    not the ownership, to church leaders as a trust
    to be used for His glory.

15
John Wycliffe
  • Failure on the part of ecclesiastics to fulfill
    their proper functions was a sufficient reason
    for the civil authority to take the property from
    them and to give it to someone who would serve
    God acceptably.
  • John of Gaunt championed Wycliffe so the Church
    of Rome did not dare touch him.
  • Disgusted with the Captivity and the schism, he
    attacked the authority of the pope in 1379 by
    insisting in writing that Christ and not the pope
    was the head of the church.

16
John Wycliffe
  • He asserted the Bible instead of the church was
    the sole authority for the believer and the
    church should model itself after the NT pattern.
  • Wycliffe made the Bible available to the people
    in their own tongue.
  • Complete NT manuscript in English by 1382
  • Nicholas of Hereford completed the translation of
    most of the OT in 1384.

17
John Hus
  • Students from Bohemia came to England to study
    when Anne of Bohemia married Richard II.
  • John Hus read and adopted Wycliffes ideas upon
    their return.
  • He proposed to reform the church in Bohemia along
    lines similar to Wycliffe.
  • He was ordered to go to the Council of Constance
    under a safe-conduct from the emperor.
  • Hus refused to recant and was burned at the
    stake, but his book De Ecclesia (1413) lived on.

18
Followers of John Hus
  • The Taborites, the more radical of Hus
    followers, rejected all in the faith and practice
    of the Roman church that could not be found in
    Scripture.
  • The Utraquists took the position that only that
    which the Bible actually forbade should be
    eliminated and the laity should receive both
    bread and wine in the Mass.

19
Followers of John Hus
  • Some of the Taborite group formed what was known
    as United Brethren (c. 1450).
  • The Moravian church developed out of this group
    in Germany.
  • One of the most missionary minded groups in
    church history.
  • Helped lead Wesley to the light in London.

20
Girolamo Savonarola
  • In 1474, he became a Dominican in Bologna.
  • He began work in Florence 8 yrs. later.
  • After a slow beginning, he began to speak with
    immense popular effectiveness which was
    heightened by the general conviction that he was
    a divinely inspired prophet.

21
Girolamo Savonarola
  • The French invasion of 1494 led to a popular
    revolution against the Medici and Savonarola
    became the real ruler in Florence.
  • He sought to transform it into a penitential
    city.
  • A semi-monastic life was adopted by many of the
    inhabitants.
  • At the carnival season of 1496 and 1497, masks,
    indecent books and pictures were burned.

22
Girolamo Savonarola
  • He denounced the evil character of Pope Alexander
    VI.
  • The pope excommunicated him and demanded he be
    punished, but his friends were able to shield him
    for a time.
  • In April, 1498, the fickle populace turned
    against him and he was arrested, cruelly
    tortured, hanged and his body burned by the city
    government (Williston Walker, p. 285).

23
The Great Schism of 1378
  • In 1378, Urban VI and Clement VII each claimed to
    be the legitimate successor to Peter, which
    resulted in the Great Schism.
  • Europe began to be split ecclesiastically and
    politically.
  • Both men had been chosen by the college of
    cardinals.

24
Proposing a Council
  • Leading theologians of the University of Paris
    proposed a council of the Roman Catholic church
    should decide the matter.
  • Marsilius of Padua (ca. 1275-1342) and John of
    Jandun set forth a rationalization for reform
    through a council in Defensor Pacis (1324).
  • They supported Louis of Bavaria against the pope.

25
Proposing a Council
  • Marilius believed the people in a state and
    Christians in the church were the repository of
    sovereignty and they could through representative
    bodies elect the emperor and the pope but the
    emperor was over the pope.
  • The church in general council guided by the New
    Testament alone could proclaim dogma and appoint
    its officials.

26
The Council of Pisa (1409)
  • The council was called to end the schism in the
    leadership of the Roman church, to reform the
    church from within and put down heresy.
  • Benedict XIII was safely in control of Avignon
    and Gregory XII held the papal chair in Rome.
  • The council, called by the cardinals, stated that
    the cardinals had the authority to call it and
    that it was competent even to call the popes to
    account for the Great Schism.

27
The Council of Pisa (1409)
  • It deposed both Benedict XIII and Gregory XII and
    appointed as rightful pope the man who became
    Alexander V.
  • The other two refused to step down.
  • John XXIII was elected when Alexander died.

28
The Council of Constance(1414-18)
  • Called by Sigismund, the emperor of the Holy
    Roman Empire, and John XXIII to end the Great
    Schism, end heresy and reform the church in head
    and members.
  • To frustrate Johns attempt to control the
    council, over 350 high officials agreed to vote
    as national groups of clergymen.

29
The Council of Constance(1414-18)
  • Each national group was allotted one vote and a
    unanimous vote of the five nations represented
    was necessary for binding action by the council.
  • The council declared its legality and its right
    to supreme authority in the Roman church.
  • This decree which substituted conciliar control
    of the Church of Rome for papal absolution was
    given the title Sacrosanct.

30
The Council of Constance(1414-18)
  • Gregory XII resigned and, after some negotiation,
    both Benedict XIII and John XXIII were deposed by
    1415.
  • Martin V was elected by the council as the new
    pope.
  • They dealt with the problem of heresy by
    condemning the ideas of Wycliffe and burning Hus
    at the stake.

31
The Council of Constance(1414-18)
  • A decree of the council, called Frequens,
    provided for the meeting of general councils at
    stated times in the future to keep order in the
    Roman church (after 5 years, after 7 years and
    then once a decade).
  • They would deal with the problems of schism,
    heresy and reform.

32
The Councils of Basel and Ferrar/Florence
(1431-49)
  • Unrest in Bohemia after the martyrdom of Hus and
    the need for continued reform brought about the
    Council of Basil (1431-49).
  • Eugenius IV was deposed by the council in 1439,
    just one year after the rival council, which he
    had called, met at Ferrara.
  • Because of the plague, the rival council was
    moved to Florence in 1439.

33
The Councils of Basel and Ferrar/Florence
(1431-49)
  • The Council of Florence made an unsuccessful
    attempt to reunite the Greek and Roman Catholic
    churches.
  • Unrest in Bohemia after the martyrdom of Hus and
    the need for continued reform brought about the
    Council of Basil (1431-49).
  • Eugenius IV was deposed by the council in 1439,
    just one year after the rival council, which he
    had called, met at Ferrara.

34
The Councils of Basel and Ferrar/Florence
(1431-49)
  • Because of the plague, the rival council was
    moved to Florence in 1439.
  • The Council of Florence made an unsuccessful
    attempt to reunite the Greek and Roman Catholic
    churches.
  • They declared the seven sacraments to be accepted
    by the Roman church.
  • This was promulgated by Eugenius IV in a papal
    bull in 1439.

35
The Councils of Basel and Ferrar/Florence
(1431-49)
  • The Council of Basel acknowledged defeat by
    dissolving in 1449.
  • The papacy thus reverted to the despotism it had
    followed for centuries.
  • Pius II in a papal bull entitled Execrabilis
    (1460) condemned any appeals to future general
    councils.

36
The Councils of Basel and Ferrar/Florence
(1431-49)
  • The French clergy concurred with the French ruler
    in the proclamation of the Pragmatic Sanction of
    Bourges in 1438, which made the French church
    independent of the pope, but which in turn put it
    under the power of the state.
  • The reforming council had saved the church from
    the disorder of the Great Schism.
  • The lack of success in securing effective reform
    destroyed the last chance of reform of the Roman
    Catholic church from within.
  • The Protestant Reformation became inevitable.
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