The Role of the Roman Catholic Church During the Enlightenment

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Proving to be the paramount of the conflict between faith and reason, the European Enlightenment of the eighteenth century challenged each of the traditional values of that age. Europeans were changing, but Europe’s institutions were not keeping pace with that change.1 Throughout that time period, the most influential and conservative institution of Europe, the Roman Catholic Church, was forced into direct confrontation with these changing ideals. The Church continued to insist that it was the only source of truth and that all who lived beyond its bounds were damned; it was painfully apparent to any reasonably educated person, however, that the majority of the world’s population were not Christians.2 In the wake of witch hunts, imperial conquest, and an intellectual revolution, the Roman Catholic Church found itself threatened by change on all fronts.3 The significant role that the Church played during the Enlightenment was ultimately challenged by the populace’s refusal to abide by religious intolerance, the power of the aristocracy and Absolutism, and the rising popularity of champions of reform and print culture, the philosophes, who shared a general opposition to the Roman Catholic Church.

By the end of the seventeenth century, the fanatical witch hunts of Western Europe led by the Church had begun to die away.4 Although "witches" were still tried by the clergy and clergy-controlled governments, the massive witch hunts of the Middle Ages had been abandoned in search of more reasonable and plausible explanations of the unknown. The Roman Catholic Church, however, held on to their beliefs of the supernatural. Since the Church disallowed magic, only a saint with his or her rituals could still reach some level of "magic...

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15 Cassirer, 15

16 Cassirer, 171

17 Cassirer, 136

18 Cassirer, 164

19 Cragg, Gerald R. The Church and the Age of Reason, 1648-1789. (London: Penguin

Books, 1974), 19.

20 Powell

21 Cragg, 21

22 Cragg, 15

23 Cassirer, 47

24 Cragg, 15

25 Brians

Bibliography

1. Brians, Paul. "The Enlightenment." 11 March 1998.

http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/hum_300/enlightenment.html (29 February 2000).

2. Cassirer, Ernst. The Philosophy of the Enlightenment. Boston: Beacon Press,

1965.

3. Cragg, Gerald R. The Church and the Age of Reason, 1648-1789. London:

Penguin Books, 1974.

4. Powell, Shantell. "The Witching Hours." 1995.

http://www.goth.net/~shanmonster/witch (29 February 2000).

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