登陆注册
14812400000131

第131章

Crowds flocked to pray at his tomb, and it was alleged that wonderful cures were being wrought by his intercession. One of the earliest and most striking of these miracles was investigated by the Archbishop of Paris and was proved to be without foundation, but others still more remarkable were broadcast by the party, with the result that hosts of invalids were brought from all parts of France in the hope of procuring recovery. Many, especially women, went into ecstasies and violent convulsions round the tomb, and while in this state they denounced the Pope, the bishops, and in a word all the adversaries of Jansenism. Owing to the unseemly and at times indecent scenes that took place the cemetery was closed by the civil authorities (1732), but the /Convulsionnaires/, as they were called, claimed that similar miracles were wrought in private houses, in which they assembled to pray, and to which clay taken from the tomb of the Deacon of Paris had been brought. The great body of the people ridiculed the extravagances of the sect, and many of the moderate Jansenists condemned the /Convulsionnaires/ in unsparing terms. Instead of doing Jansenism any good these so-called miracles, utterly unworthy as they were of divine wisdom and holiness, served only to injure its cause, and indeed to injure the Christian religion generally, by placing a good weapon in the hands of its rationalist adversaries.

But even though heaven had not declared in favour of the Jansenists the Parliament of Paris determined to protect them. It defended bishops who refused to accept the Bull /Unigenitus/ against the Pope, tried to prevent the orthodox bishops from suspending appellant priests, and forbade the exclusion of appellant laymen from the sacraments. The Parliament of Paris condemned the action of the clergy in refusing the last sacraments to the dying unless they could prove they had made their confession to an approved priest. Though the privy council annulled this condemnation Parliament stood by its decision, and challenged the authority of the Archbishop of Paris by punishing priests who refused the sacraments (1749-52). The bishops appealed to the king to defend the liberty of the Church, but the Parliament asserted its jurisdiction by depriving the Archbishop of Paris of his temporalities and by endeavouring to have him cited before the civil courts. Louis XIV. annulled the sentence of the Parliament, and banished some of the more violent of its members from the capital (1753). They were, however, soon recalled, and a royal mandate was issued enforcing silence on both parties. For infringing this order de Beaumont, Archbishop of Paris, was banished from his See, and several other bishops and priests were summoned before the legal tribunals.

The Assembly of the Clergy in 1755 petitioned the king to give more freedom to the Church, and to restore the exiled Archbishop of Paris to his See. A commission was established to examine the whole question of the refusal of the sacraments, and as the Commission could not arrive at any decision, the case was submitted to Benedict XIV., who decided that those who were public and notorious opponents of the Bull, /Unigenitus/, should be treated as public sinners and should be excluded from the sacraments (1756). The Parliament of Paris and some of the provincial parliaments forbade the publication of the papal decision, but a royal order was issued commanding the universal acceptance of the Bull, /Unigenitus/, even though it might not be regarded as an irreformable rule of faith. According to this mandate the regulation for allowing or refusing the administrations of the sacraments was a matter to be determined by the bishops, though any person who considered himself aggrieved by their action might appeal against the abuse of ecclesiastical power. This decree was registered by the Parliament (1757), whereupon the Archbishop of Paris was allowed to return. From that time Jansenism declined rapidly in France, but the followers of the sect united with the Gallicans of the Parliament to enslave the Church, and with the Rationalists to procure the suppression of the Jesuits, whom they regarded as their most powerful opponents.

Many of the Jansenists fled to Holland, where the Gallicans were only too willing to welcome such rebels against Rome. The old Catholic hierarchy in Holland had been overthrown, and the Pope was obliged to appoint vicars apostolic to attend to the wants of the scattered Catholic communities. One of these appointed in 1688 was an Oratorian, and as such very partial to Quesnel and the Jansenists. Owing to his public alliance with the sect he was suspended from office in 1702 and deposed in 1704, but not before he had given Jansenism a great impetus in Holland. About seventy parishes and about eighty priests refused to recognise his successor, and went over to the Jansenist party. In 1723a body of priests calling themselves the Chapter of Utrecht elected Steenhoven as Archbishop of Utrecht, and a suspended bishop named Varlet, belonging formerly to the Society for Foreign Missions, consecrated him against the protests of the Pope. Supported by the Calvinist government the new archbishop maintained himself at Utrecht till his death, when he was succeeded by others holding similar views.

Later on the Bishoprics of Haarlem (1742) and of Deventer were established as suffragan Sees to Utrecht. The Catholics of Holland refused to recognise these bishoprics as did also the Pope, whose only reply to their overtures was a sentence of excommunication and interdict. The Jansenist body of Holland, numbering at present about six thousand, have maintained their separate ecclesiastical organisation until the present day. They resisted the establishment of the hierarchy in Holland (1853), opposed the definition of Papal Infallibility, and allied themselves definitely with the old Catholic movement in Germany.

----------

同类推荐
  • The Haunted Hotel

    The Haunted Hotel

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 乐邦遗稿

    乐邦遗稿

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 庶斋老学丛谈

    庶斋老学丛谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 雪堂行拾遗录

    雪堂行拾遗录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 天尊说阿育王譬喻经

    天尊说阿育王譬喻经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 帝少的囚妻

    帝少的囚妻

    一如五年前,他依旧爱她不悔。他曾失去过,这次他不会放手了
  • 隐刃

    隐刃

    命运曾经与他开了个玩笑让他一生只有一件事情想做,而似乎命运怕他乏味又给了他其他的事情去做,但是最终他还是只剩下一件事情需要去完成。
  • 穿越之傻妃如此多娇

    穿越之傻妃如此多娇

    千年女婴被封印在所谓的“仙灵”玉上!被放出后女婴的身体竟然带着魔力!“爱妃,本王的命就是你救的,那本王是不是该以身相许了!”'哎~下次救人也点长点眼神,谁tm说这个王爷不进女色的,老娘去杀了它!'米仙软望着脖子上的“草莓”想……
  • 位面穿越之王

    位面穿越之王

    宅男汪诚得到了一个“位面穿越神器”,拥有了能够穿越到电影、小说以及游戏位面的能力。在每次完成位面之旅后,根据相应的评价度,他还能获得一些人物技能或者特定物品的奖励。不过在穿越各个位面的过程中,汪诚发现现实世界中竟然还有其他位面过来的穿越者,他们有的想要破坏地球,有的甚至想要统治地球,汪诚能够战胜这些强大的穿越者们,守护地球,最终成为位面穿越之王吗?
  • 我们如初

    我们如初

    一个男生和三个男生一起闯荡校园的生活,他们成绩优秀,有胆子,在这期间分别与其他女孩女关系有所变化(暗恋,表白…)
  • 九玄天帝

    九玄天帝

    沉寂四年,一朝突破,从此的修炼之路风生水起,虐人渣,斩妖魔,收师姐,得至宝……有的时候,天降大任,也可以顺风顺水!可我到底是谁?不管千难万险,也要找到我的家族,披荆斩棘,肩头上的重任一点点加重,为了众生,一步步登上那巅峰王座!
  • 穿越重生之傻王爷追爱记

    穿越重生之傻王爷追爱记

    小雅本来是一名现代女性,没想到遭到老公的背叛离婚,回家的路上一遭穿越到一个历史上没有的国家,本不相信爱情的她经历了一场场尔虞我诈,最终收获纯真甜美至死不渝的爱情。
  • 你不知道的我

    你不知道的我

    我们的命运像是掉入宇宙的尘埃,迷茫、失重、交错永远没有尽头,猜不到下一秒会发生什么,永远都是站在十字路口,抉择成了习惯,一代人的故事,两代人的爱情
  • 带着世界混异界

    带着世界混异界

    我是来给做小众写手的,就这么简单。
  • 月影飘摇

    月影飘摇

    何夜无月?何处无竹柏?但少闲人如吾两人者耳。