4.8 • 729 Ratings
🗓️ 16 August 2022
⏱️ 72 minutes
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Prof. Eire's slides can be found here: https://tinyurl.com/yw558acx https://tinyurl.com/ydam72nn This lecture was given on June 13, 2022 at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, D.C. as part of The Civitas Dei Summer Fellowship: "The City of God in Modernity: Culture and Ecclesiology." For more information on upcoming events, please visit our website at www.thomisticinstitute.org. About the speaker: Carlos Eire, who received his PhD from Yale in 1979, specializes in the social, intellectual, religious, and cultural history of late medieval and early modern Europe, with a focus on both the Protestant and Catholic Reformations; the history of popular piety; and the history of the supernatural, and the history of death. Before joining the Yale faculty in 1996, he taught at St. John’s University in Minnesota and the University of Virginia, and was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton for two years. He is the author of War Against the Idols: The Reformation of Worship From Erasmus to Calvin (1986); From Madrid to Purgatory: The Art and Craft of Dying in Sixteenth Century Spain (1995); A Very Brief History of Eternity (2010); Reformations: The Early Modern World (2016); and The Life of Saint Teresa of Avila: A Biography (2019). And he is co-author of Jews, Christians, Muslims: An Introduction to Monotheistic Religions (1997). He has also ventured into the twentieth century and the Cuban Revolution in the memoir Waiting for Snow in Havana (2003), which won the National Book Award in Nonfiction in the United States and has been translated into more than a dozen languages. His second memoir, Learning to Die in Miami (2010), explores the exile experience. A past president of the Society for Reformation Research, he is currently researching attitudes toward miracles in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. His recent book Reformations won the R.R.Hawkins Prize for Best Book of the Year from the American Publishers Association, as well as the award for Best Book in the Humanities. It was also awarded the Jaroslav Pelikan Prize by Yale University Press. All of his books are banned in Cuba, where he has been proclaimed an enemy of the state – a distinction he regards as the highest of all honors.
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0:00.0 | This talk is brought to you by the Thomistic Institute. |
0:04.0 | For more talks like this, visit us at tamistic institute.org. |
0:11.2 | My three lectures are linked, of course, and they have to do with the early modern church. |
0:17.5 | And today's lecture is on Catholic reform. Tomorrow's lecture will be on the Protestant |
0:25.1 | challenge, the 16th and 17th century. And then the third lecture will be on sort of the religious |
0:34.0 | culture of the Catholic Church in the early modern period and one of the aspects |
0:39.7 | that made it quite different from the Protestant churches that had emerged. One of my |
0:48.4 | central arguments in my Reformation's book is that whenever there's a challenge to one's identity, |
1:01.0 | so let's talk about the church. |
1:04.0 | Challenge to the church's identity and very being, the church has to shape itself, not just internally from its own principles and |
1:14.1 | traditions, but has to shape itself over and against the challenge. So the challengers actually |
1:22.1 | affect the self-definition of the church. But today, we're dealing with the big fix, capital B, capital F. |
1:35.3 | And I'll preface my lecture by saying this, that in standard histories of this period, it used to be up until about the 1970s or 1980s, |
1:50.6 | that if you read about the medieval church in any textbook, that wasn't a Catholic textbook, |
1:59.9 | you would basically get a description of the pathology |
2:03.5 | of the medieval church, of everything that was wrong with it as for reason for the |
2:11.1 | Protestant challenge emerging. But what I have today here is focused to a great extent on the Council of Trent. |
2:22.8 | And here, that's the big fix, capital B, capital F. |
2:27.9 | And I am one of those dinosaurs that remembers the Catholic Church before the second Vatican Council. |
2:37.5 | And boy, that's why it was a big fix. |
2:40.2 | And it happened literally in some cases overnight. |
2:44.8 | What I'm about to talk about did not happen overnight. |
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