crises in the late medieval church

14

Upload: kalin

Post on 19-Mar-2016

60 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

DESCRIPTION

Crises in the Late Medieval Church. Specific Crises. New Heresies. Schism. Lay Reform. Conciliarism. Decline in the Medieval Church. Spiritual Authority. Temporal Authority. Political & Spiritual Poverty. Taxing the clergy [ clericis laicos ] - 1296 Royal courts vs. Church courts - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Crises in the Late Medieval Church
Page 2: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

Specific Crises1. New Heresies.2. Schism.3. Lay Reform.4. Conciliarism.

Page 3: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

Decline in the Medieval Church

Spiritual Spiritual AuthorityAuthority

TemporalTemporalAuthorityAuthority

Political &SpiritualPoverty

Taxing the clergy [clericis laicos] - 1296 Royal courts vs. Church courts Papal Bull [Unam Sanctam] - 1302 Marsilius of Padus [Defensor Pacis] -

1324

Page 4: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

Decline in the Medieval Church

Official ChurchOfficial ChurchBeliefsBeliefs HeresiesHeresiesTheological

Differences

John Wycliffe-• John Huss

Page 5: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

John Wycliffe and Jan Huss• John Wycliffe- followers called Lollards

– Wycliffe, English spokesman for rights of royalty against popes; challenged indulgences, papal infallibility, transubstantiation—anticipates Protestantism

• Jan Huss- proponent of Wycliffe in Bohemia. Hussites: followers of Huss– Rejected Wycliffe’s ideas on preisthood and sacrements.– Grafted Wycliffe’s other beliefs into an attack on German

dominance of their kingdom.– rector of University of Prague—expelled and fired, appeared

at the Council of Constance where he was tried and burned at the stake as a heretic.

Page 6: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

The Hussite Wars [1420-1436]

Page 7: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

Decline in the Medieval Church

PopesPopes Church CouncilsChurch Councils[Conciliarism][Conciliarism]

InternalChurch Power

Innocent III- Papal monarchy established by Pope Innocent III strengthened the church politically, but weakened it spiritually—undermined popular support

Boniface VIII The Avignon Papacy

[1309-1377]

Pisa Constance Basel

Page 8: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

Boniface VIII (r. 1294–1303) vs. Philip the Fair (r. 1285–1314)

• French & English kings raise taxes on clergy; Boniface decrees new taxes need papal consent

• French king Philip the Fair cuts off flow of money to Rome; Boniface concedes

• Boniface issues Unam Sanctam (1302), as confrontation with Philip ramps up, asserting subordination of temporal to spiritual power

• French army assault & molest Boniface, who later dies• Result: popes never again seriously threaten

European rulers

Page 9: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

The Avignon Papacy• Pope Clement V moves papal court

here to escape strife of Rome• To get needed revenue, papal taxes

go up, and sale of indulgences begins• Pope John XXII (r. 1316–1334)—most

powerful Avignon pope• In 1377 Pope Gregory DIED while in

Rome, Italians, afraid the French would appoint a new pope, so they surrounded the church and demanded an Italian be named- the scared Cardinals obeyed.

Page 10: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

The Avignon Papal Complex

Page 11: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

The Great Schism• Urban VI and Clement VII—rival popes; England & allies support

Urban, France & allies support Clement• Conciliar Theory: idea that a representative council could regulate

actions of pope- Popes didn’t like the idea that their authority was second to a council

• Council of Pisa (1409–1410): deposed Urban & Clement (who refused to step down), elected Alexander V—three contending popes

• Council of Constance (1414–1417): provided for regular councils every few years

• Council of Basel (1431–1449): height of conciliar government of church; negotiated directly with heretics (Hussites)

• Results of conciliar movement: greater religious responsibility to laity & secular governments

Page 12: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

The Great Schism: 1378-1417

Page 13: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

WHAT WERE THE EFFECTS OF THE GREAT SCHISM ON THE CHURCH AND SOCIETY??

Page 14: Crises in the Late Medieval Church

Decline in the Medieval Church

FAITHFAITH[Scholasticism][Scholasticism]

REASONREASON[Roger Bacon & [Roger Bacon &

William of William of Ockham]Ockham]

IntellectualInquiry

Peter Abelard [Sic et Non]

Thomas Aquinas [Summa Theologica]

Balance between faith and reason disintegrated in the 13th century.

• Responsible for the new intellectual climate in Europe.

• Dedicated Franciscan.• Believed in extreme poverty, that

power to rule didn’t come from pope but from people,

• Gov’t should be entirely secular• denied pope’s absolute authority in

spiritual matters too.• Developed nominalism- denies that

human reason can aspire to certain truth

• Died of the plague but his ideas lived on, esp the Church being governed by a council