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The Decline of Church Power

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Presentation on theme: "The Decline of Church Power"— Presentation transcript:

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2 The Decline of Church Power

3 The Role of the Church in the Middle Ages
Only 1 Christian Church: The Catholic Church + Church has its own laws, land (1/3 of all the land in Western Europe), and taxes People who disagreed with church law or criticized the church were called heretics and were severely punished = The Catholic Church is a very powerful institution!

4 In the centuries after the fall of Rome, the Church carved out a unique position in Western Europe.
It not only controlled the spiritual life of Christians but gradually became the most powerful secular force in medieval Europe. middle-ages.org.uk

5 What does this mean in your own words?
During the Middle Ages, the pope was the spiritual leader of the Roman Catholic Church. As representative of Christ on Earth, medieval popes eventually claimed papal supremacy over all secular rulers. What does this mean in your own words? stsmarthaandmary.org

6 The medieval Christian Church was dedicated to the worship of God
The medieval Christian Church was dedicated to the worship of God. The only way to avoid the tortures of hell was to believe in Christ and participate in the sacraments. Because the medieval Church administered the sacraments, it had absolute power in religious matters. english.cam.ac.uk

7 Church officials were closely linked to secular rulers
Church officials were closely linked to secular rulers. Because churchmen were often the only educated people, they were often appointed to high government positions – giving the church even more power. forum.paradoxplaza.com

8 Seeing a need for reform, in 1703 Pope Gregory VII, a former monk, outlawed marriage for priests and prohibited simony, the selling of Church positions. He insisted that the Church, not kings or nobles, choose Church officials. medievalfamilyck.blogspot.com

9 In the early 1200s, Francis of Assisi and Dominic took it upon themselves to change the church as well. They set up orders of friars, monks who did not live in isolated monasteries but traveled around Europe’s growing towns preaching to the poor. conservation.catholic.org

10 Francis of Assisi set up the Franciscan Order, preaching poverty, humility, and love of God. Soon after, Dominic set up the Dominican Order. Its chief goal was to combat heresy, the denial of basic Church beliefs. freerepublic.com

11 THE INQUISITION The Church created their own solution to deal with heretics: The Inquisition A court designed to find and try heretics Dominican monks served as examiners of people suspected of heresy The church utilized public penance, physical punishments, torture, and even execution Shortly after the Inquisition is founded, the Church’s power declined…

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13 King Philip IV Pope Boniface VIII Claims he has the right to tax the clergy. Philip rejects the pope, sends French forces to Italy to bring him in for trial. Boniface escapes, but dies shortly after. Boniface says Philip cannot do this without pope’s consent, since the pope is supreme over both Church & state.

14 Philip IV engineered the election of a Frenchman, Clement V, as the new pope. Clement resides in Avignon, France, rather than Rome. From 1305 to 1377, the popes continued to reside in Avignon The pope is the bishop of Rome, and the city was the traditional capital of the church  the pope’s residency in France led to an increase in antipapal sentiment.

15 The Great Schism - 2 popes as head of 1 church
Papacy returned to Rome in 1377 with Gregory XI Italian/English cardinals elect Pope Urban VI - Rome French cardinals elect Pope Clement VII – Avignon

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17 IMPACT OF THE GREAT SCHISM
Divided Europe Damaged Christians’ faith in the Church and the papacy Despite being resolved in 1417, the Church lost much of its power and prestige


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