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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: Branches, Schisms, And Heresies > Roman Catholic Church
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Roman Catholic Church, Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: Branches, Schisms, And Heresies

Related Category: Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: Branches, Schisms, And Heresies

For the first centuries of the church's history, see Christianity.

The Church in the Middle Ages

From the 9th cent. to 1520 the church was simply Western Europe taken in its religious aspect, and emporal life. In the West (unlike the East) the religious organization was free for centuries from grave interference from civil rulers. Charlemagne was an exception, but his influence was benign. In the chaotic 9th and 10th cent. every part of the church organization, including the papacy, became the prey of the powerful.

The restoration of order began in monasteries; from Cluny a movement spread to reform Christian life (see Cluniac order). This pattern of decline of religion followed by reform is characteristic of the history of the Roman Catholic Church; the reform goals have varied, but they have included the revival of spiritual life in society and the monasteries, and the elimination of politics from the bishops' sphere and venality from the papal court. The next reform (11th cent.) was conducted by popes, notably St. Gregory VII and Urban II. Part of this movement was to exclude civil rulers from making church appointments : the first, bold chapter in a 900-year battle between the church and the "Catholic princes" (see church and state; investiture).

The 12th cent. was a time of great intellectual beginnings. St. Bernard of Clairvaux and the Cistercians revived practical mystical prayer. Gratian founded the systematic study of the canon law, and medieval civil law began its development. This double study was to provide weapons to both sides in the duel between the extreme papal claims of Innocent III and Innocent IV, and the antipapal theories of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II. Also in the 12th cent., Peter Abelard and other thinkers pioneered in rationalist theology.

From early rationalist theology and from the teachings of Aristotle developed the philosophies and theologies of St. Bonaventure and St. Thomas Aquinas (see also scholasticism). This was the work of the new 13th-century universities; to them, and to the friars : the Dominicans and Franciscans : who animated them, passed the intellectual leadership held by the monasteries. St. Dominic's order was formed to preach against the Albigenses (a campaign that also produced the Inquisition). The vast popular movement of St. Francis was a spontaneous reform contemporary with the papal reform of the Fourth Lateran Council. The 13th cent. saw also the flowering of Gothic architecture.

The contest between church and state continued, ruining the Hohenstaufen dynasty and, in the contest between Boniface VIII and Philip IV of France, bringing the papacy to near ruin. Then came the Avignon residence : the so-called Babylonian captivity of the papacy (1309–78), a time of good church administration, but of excessive French influence over papal policy. Except for isolated voices, such as that of St. Catherine of Siena, the church seemed to lose energy, and a long period devoid of reform began. A long-enduring schism and a series of ambitious councils (see Schism, Great) involved most churchmen in a welter of politics and worldliness.

There were popular religious movements, characterized by revivalism and a tendency to minimize the sacraments (along with church authority); they encouraged private piety, and one group produced the inspirational Imitation ascribed to Thomas A Kempis. The popular tendencies were extreme in John Wyclif, who developed an antisacramental, predestinarian theology emphasizing Bible study : a "protestant" movement 150 years before Protestantism.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Peter Abelard
Albigenses
apostolic succession
Aristotle
Armenian Church
Saint Bernard of Clairvaux
Bible
Saint Bonaventure
Boniface VIII
John Calvin
canon law
cardinal, in the Roman Catholic Church
catholic church
Saint Catherine of Siena
Charlemagne
Christianity
church, aggregation of Christian believers
church and state
Cistercians
Cluniac order
Copts
council, ecumenical
Counter Reformation
creed
Saint Dominic
ecumenical movement
Eucharist
fasting
Saint Francis de Sales
Saint Francis
Frederick II, Holy Roman emperor and German king
Gallicanism
Gothic architecture and art
grace
Gratian, Italian legal scholar
Saint Gregory VII
heaven
hell
Hohenstaufen
Saint Ignatius of Loyola
infallibility
Innocent III
Innocent IV
Inquisition
investiture
Schism of East and West
Jacobite Church
Cornelis Jansen
Jesus, Society of
John XXIII, pope
John Paul II
Joseph II
Kulturkampf
Lateran Council, Fourth
Lent
Leo XIII, pope
liturgy, Christian
Martin Luther
Maronites
Mary, the mother of Jesus
Mass, in Christianity
Melchites
missions
monasticism
mysticism
Nestorian Church
orders, holy
Orthodox Eastern Church
papacy
papal election
Papal States
patriarch, in Christian churches
Paul VI
penance
Saint Peter
Philip IV, king of France
Pius XII
Pius IX
purgatory
Reformation
resurrection
rosary
Ruthenia
sacrament
saint, in Christianity
Schism, Great
scholasticism
sin, in religion
Thirty Years War
Thomas A Kempis
Saint Thomas Aquinas
Trent, Council of
Trinity, doctrine in Christianity
Urban II
Vatican Council, First
Vatican Council, Second
Vatican
Saint Vincent de Paul
John Wyclif

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Philosophy and Religion > Christianity


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