[This is taken from History of the Catholic Church.]
The centralization movement, that began in the fifteenth century, and that
tended to increase the power of the sovereign at the expense of the lesser
nobles and of the people, was strengthened and developed by the religious
revolt. The Protestant reformers appealed to the civil rulers for assistance
against the ecclesiastical authorities, and in return for the aid given to them
so generously they were willing to concede to the king all power in civil and
ecclesiastical matters. Thenceforth the princes were to be so supreme in
spirituals as well as in temporals that their right to determine the religion of
their subjects was recognized as a first principle of government. During the
days of the Counter-Reformation, when religious enthusiasm was aroused to its
highest pitch, the Catholic sovereigns of Europe fought not so much for the
aggrandizement of their own power as for the unity of their kingdoms and the
defense of the religion of their fathers, threatened as it was with complete
overthrow.
But once the first fervor had passed away, and once it was recognized that
religious harmony could not be secured by the sword, Catholic sovereigns began
to understand that the Protestant theory of state supremacy meant an increase of
power to the crown, and might be utilized to reduce the only partially
independent institution in their kingdoms to a state of slavery. Hence they
increased their demands, interfered more and more in ecclesiastical matters, set
themselves to diminish the jurisdiction of the Pope by means of the Royal
Placet and other such legal contrivances, and asserted for themselves as
much authority as could be reconciled with Catholic principles interpreted in
their most liberal sense. They urged the bishops to assert their independence
against the Holy See, and the bishops, forgetful of the fact that freedom from
Rome meant enslavement by the State, co-operated willingly in carrying out the
programme of their royal masters. Men like Bossuet, carried away by the new
theories of the divine right of kings, aimed at reducing the power of Rome to a
shadow. They were more anxious to be considered national patriots than good
Catholics. They understood only when it was too late that in their close union
with the Holy See lay their only hope of resisting state aggression, and that by
weakening the authority of the Pope they were weakening the one power that could
defend their own rights and the rights of the Church. Their whole policy tended
to the realization of the system of national churches, and were it not for the
divine protection guaranteed by Christ to the society that He Himself had
founded, their policy might have been crowned with success.
The principle, too, of individual judgment introduced by the Reformers was soon
pushed to its logical conclusions. If by means of this principle Luther and his
disciples could reject certain doctrines and practices that had been followed
for centuries by the whole Catholic Church, why could not others, imitating the
example that had been given to them, set aside many of the dogmas retained by
Luther as being only the inventions of men, and why could their successors not
go further still, and question the very foundation of Christianity itself? The
results of this unbridled liberty of thought made themselves felt in religion,
in philosophy, in politics, in literature, and in art. Rationalism became
fashionable in educated circles, at the courts, and at the universities. Even
Catholics who still remained loyal to the Church were not uninfluenced by the
spirit of religious indifference. It seemed to them that many of the dogmas and
devotions of the Church were too old-fashioned, and required to be modernized.
The courts in many cases favored the spread of these anti-religious views
because they meant the weakening of the power of the Church. They joined with
the apostles of rationalism in attacking the Society of Jesus, because the
rationalists realized that the Jesuits were their strongest opponents, while the
politicians believed them to be the most strenuous supporters of the
jurisdiction of Rome. It was only when the storm of revolution was about to
burst over Europe that the civil rulers understood fully the dangerous tendency
of the movement which they had encouraged. They began to open their eyes to the
fact that war against Christianity meant war against established authority, and
that the unbridled liberty of thought and speech which had been tolerated was
likely to prove more dangerous to the cause of monarchy than to the cause of
religion.
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