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The History of the Christian Church

76-The Long Road to Reform 01

The History of the Christian Church

sanctorum.us

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.6790 Ratings

🗓️ 15 February 2015

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This episode is the first of several I’m calling “The Long Road to Reform.” As I mentioned at the end of the last episode, we’ll track the Church’s long march to the Reformation, then pause before picking it up acwith THE Reformation by doing some episodes tracking Church History into the East.Until recently, most treatments of the History of Christianity have focused almost exclusively on the Church in Europe and what’s often called “Western” Christianity. Mention is made of the Church’s growth into other regions like North Africa, and the Middle and Far East. But it’s barely a nod in that direction. For every 10,000 words devoted to the Church in Europe, 10 are given to the Church of the East. What’s sad is that this Church has a rich history. We won’t make up for the lack of reporting on the history of the church in these regions, but we will seek to fill in some of the gaps and give those interested resources for learning more.Okay, here we go. We embark now on The Long Road to Reform.At the dawn of the 13th C with Innocent III, the papacy reached the zenith. The Dominicans and Franciscans carried the Gospel far and wide, new universities were hotbeds of theological enterprise, and Gothic Cathedrals seemed to defeat the law of gravity.Europe was united under the pope and the emperor; in theory at least. Because the Crusaders had taken Constantinople, the breach between East and West looked to have been finally healed. Yeah – it looked like Christendom was about to enter a Golden Age.As is often the case, looks can be deceiving. These were.By 1261, the West’s influence in Constantinople was over as well as the bogus union the 4th  Crusade claimed to have forged. Over the next 2 centuries, Europe saw several changes that set the scene for the modern world.One of the most important was in the realm of economics.When we think of the Middle Ages in Europe, we remember feudalism with its strict rules of class. There was the land-owning nobility and the commoners, serfs who worked the land for nobles in exchange for protection. We don’t have time to go into it here, but feudalism was largely the result of developments in the technology of warfare. Armored warriors, called knights, were expensive. It took a vast economic base to field them. So serfs worked lands in exchange for protection by knights. These serfs gave loyalty, called fealty, to nobles in ever higher levels from counts and barons to dukes and earls, with the king at the top. A third class in this tiered structure of medieval society were the clergy. The Church also owned lands and had serfs who worked for them. This made priests and abbots responsible for the secular rule of church and monastery estates. But toward the end of the Middle Ages, the cities of Europe began to grow and a new class of commoner emerged – the merchant.There were several reasons for the proliferation of merchants and the growth of villages into town and towns into cities. One of the most important was the boom in trade. The Crusades stimulated Europe’s taste for new things. Someone needed to buy up what Europe produced, which was a lot of wool, and take it to the East were all the goodies were. Increased trade meant increased wealth for merchants, who weren’t land-owners but who did buy themselves nice homes in the growing cities. Those houses needed furniture and art and all the other luxuries that mark a successful merchant so industries popped up to supply those wants – bringing even MORE to the cities. New credit systems were developed as extra money meant people looking to invest for a profit. And slowly but surely, a NEW social class developed – the middle-class who didn’t fit the strict class structure that had dominated Europe for several hundred years. When nobles began taxing the trade crossing their land, the merchants protested and called for a stronger central government that would reign in the nobles. A king could protect trade, quash the ba

Transcript

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0:00.0

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

0:15.3

This episode is the first of several that I'm calling the long road to reform.

0:22.4

As I mentioned at the end of the last episode, we'll track the church's long march to the Reformation, then pause before picking it up

0:28.1

with the Reformation by doing some episodes tracking church history into the east. Until recently,

0:34.0

most treatments of the history of Christianity have focused almost exclusively

0:37.7

on the church in Europe and what's often called Western Christianity. Mention is made of

0:43.4

church growth into other regions like North Africa and Middle and the Far East. But it's

0:49.1

barely a nod in that direction. For every 10,000 words devoted to the church in Europe, 10 are given to the

0:55.9

Church of the East. What's sad is that this church has a rich history. We're not going to make up for

1:02.4

the lack of reporting on the history of the church in these regions, but we will seek to fill in

1:06.4

some of the gaps and give those who are interested resources for learning more. Okay, here we go. We now embark on

1:13.6

the long road to reform. At the dawn of the 13th century of Pope Innocent III, the papacy reached

1:20.6

its zenith. The Dominicans and Franciscans carried the gospel far and wide. New universities

1:26.6

were hotbeds of theological enterprise,

1:28.3

and Gothic cathedrals seemed to defeat the law of gravity.

1:32.3

Europe was united under the Pope and the Emperor, in theory at least.

1:37.3

Because the Crusaders had taken Constantinople,

1:40.3

the breach between East and West looked to have finally healed. It looked like Christendom was about to enter a golden age.

1:48.9

But as is often the case, looks can be deceiving. These were. By 1261, the West influence in Constantinople was over, as well as the bogus union the Fourth Crusade claimed to have forged.

2:02.2

Over the next two centuries, Europe saw several changes that set the scene for the modern world.

2:08.0

One of the most important of those was in the realm of economics.

2:12.4

When we think of the Middle Ages in Europe, we remember feudalism, with its strict rules of class. There was the

...

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