December 1545 A.D. Council of Trent Seated for 1st Session
No author.
"The
Council of Trent". HistoryLearningSite.co.uk. 2006. http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/council-of-trent.htm. Accessed 17 Aug 2014.
The
Council of Trent
The Council of Trent played an important part in
determining the outcome of the Counter-Reformation. Along with the part played by the Jesuits and certain individuals, the Council of Trent was
a central feature of the Counter-Reformation. But whether Trent represented a
positive move by the Catholic Church remains contentious.
Any long term change in the Catholic Church
depended on the attitude of the pope in power at one particular time. If there
was no desire for change, then there would be no change! Julius III (1550 to
1555) showed little interest in reform. There were those popes who were the
opposite and were truly interested in moving forward the Catholic Church such
as Sixtus V (1585 to 1590).
The Council of Trent was called by Paul Ill who was
pope from 1534 to 1549 and it first sat in December 1545. It was finally
disbanded in 1563 but though it would appear to have a life span of 18 years,
it was only engaged in talks for four and a half years. Most of the popes at
this time did not want to lose power and "they did not feel any enthusiasm
for the abolition of abuses which were lucrative for the Papacy." (Cowie)
The pope did not attend the meetings of the Council
and he took no formal part in it. But his legates ensured that the pope’s views
would always be put forward and this meant that there was no danger in the
revival of conciliarism (the Council being superior to the pope).
700 bishops could have attended the Council but to
start with only 31 turned up along with 50 theologians. By 1563, a total of 270
bishops attended and the vast majority of them were Italian which was a great
bonus for the pope as they were under his control and it was the pope who
effectively controlled promotion to cardinal etc. and these men would not be
seen in public doing anything other than what the pope wanted. The bishops also
insisted that they vote as individuals rather than as a block-country vote and
as there were 187 Italian bishops, 32 Spanish, 28 French and 2 German the
Italians vastly outnumbered the other three countries put together! As such what
was to be passed at Trent was what the pope accepted as being acceptable to
him.
The Council had been called to examine
doctrine and reform. Charles V had wanted abuses looked at first in an attempt
to please the Protestants and hopefully tempt them back to the church. Once
they were back they could look at doctrine. Paul III did not want this as
reforms could financially damage him and concessions could diminish his
authority. The result was that two separate sections dealt with reform and
doctrine simultaneously.
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