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The History of the Christian Church

128-Backing Up

The History of the Christian Church

sanctorum.us

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.6790 Ratings

🗓️ 5 June 2016

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The title of this 128th Episode is Backing Up.… because once again we’re backtracking a bit to hop into the story of Church History earlier than where our last few episodes have taken us. We’re focusing this time on what happened in France during the late 17th and into the 18th century.This period saw a massive struggle between the French monarchy and two groups; Catholic  Jansenists and Protestant Huguenots. At stake was the throne’s claim that it alone had the power to determine the religion of the French people.France was the most populous and wealthy country in Europe. It was also the most feared,  admired, and imitated. By the time of the French Revolution in 1789, the population was 28 million.From the late 17th century to the Revolution, the Court at Versailles, the main residence of the French kings, was the center of political life. But a mix of disparate factors led to a growing disillusionment with the Crown. Philosophes engaged each other in Parisian salons in political discussions that implemented dangerous new ideas; to the Crown anyway. And once the King found out about these dangerous liaisons, they became downright lethal to those who engaged in them. As the power of the French court grew, Masonic lodges popped up all over, advocating more subversive ideas. Illegal books and broadsides were printed by a clandestine press. All these challenged Versailles’s political dominance in the second half of the 18th century. A powerful “court of public opinion” emerged to dare the status quo into change.France’s monarchs wanted to protect their inheritance rights while expanding the kingdom’s economic and political power over more of Europe and overseas. Continental Wars often spilled over into the colonies. Louis XIV occasionally referred to “French Europe” and France’s ongoing conflict with Spain. But after his passing, France often teamed with Spain in opposition to England and other European powers.After the American victory at the Battle of Saratoga in 1778 during the War for Independence, Louis XVI, to spite the English, supported the Americans in their quest to gain independence from the British. But this French aid took an ironic turn. Louis abetted revolutionaries who aimed to throw off a monarchy in favor of a democratic republic, while at the same time adding to France’s already massive debt.In Late Spring of 1789, Louis was forced to call a meeting of the French Parliament, called the Estates-General to deal with the now intense fiscal crisis. After intense debate, delegates of the French people declared they represented the “nation” choosing that word rather than ”kingdom” and invited members of the clergy and nobility to join them. Many did. On June 17, the Assemblée Nationale formed and claimed it, rather than the King, represented the realm.This was a severe blow to a principle that had found varying degrees of expression in Europe for hundreds of years; that is, the Divine Right of Kings.Earlier, in his work Politics Drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture, Jacques Bossuet [boo-sway], advisor to Louis XIV, justified the divine right of kings by citing Scripture. He wrote, “God is the King of kings: it is for Him to instruct them and to rule them as His ministers. Listen then, Monseigneur, to the lessons which he gives them in His Scripture, and learn from the examples on which they must base their conduct.” He said, “Rulers act as the ministers of God and as his lieutenants on earth. It is through them that God exercises his empire.” Bossuet argued the king’s power was absolute.  But the king wasn’t to act like a despot issuing arbitrary and selfish decrees. He was in covenant with his subjects and was called to care for them the way a father cares for his children.According to divine right theory, kingship was a sacred position, manned by someone uniquely called to occupy the center of the religious sphere. Without him, chaos would descend. His lineage stretc

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the history of the Christian Church, Season 1 with Lance Rolston.

0:16.2

The title of this episode is backing up.

0:19.6

Because once again, we're backtracking a bit to hop into

0:22.6

the story of church history earlier than where our last few episodes have taken us. We're focusing

0:28.5

this time on what happened in France during the late 17th and into the 18th centuries.

0:34.7

This period saw a massive struggle between the French monarchy and two groups,

0:39.7

Catholic Jansenists and Protestant Huguenots.

0:43.3

At stake was the throne's claim that it alone had the power to determine the religion of the French people.

0:49.8

France was the most populous and wealthy country of Europe at the time.

0:53.6

It was also the most feared,

0:55.1

admired, and imitated. By the time of the French Revolution in 1789, the population was right

1:01.1

around 28 million. From the late 17th century to the revolution, the court at Versailles,

1:07.9

main residents of the French kings, was the center of political life.

1:12.0

But a mix of disparate factors led to a growing disillusionment with the crown.

1:17.9

Philosophs engaged each other in Parisian salons in political discussions that implemented dangerous

1:23.5

new ideas. To the crown, anyway, and once the king found out about these dangerous liaisons,

1:29.7

and they became downright lethal to those who engaged them.

1:33.2

As the power of the French court grew,

1:35.4

Masonic Lodge has popped up all over,

1:37.3

advocating more subversive ideas.

1:39.5

Illegal books and broadsides were printed by a clandistine press.

1:46.0

All these challenged Versailles' political dominance in the second half of the 18th century. A powerful court of public opinion emerged

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