The writings of Pope Pius VI, head of the Catholic Church during
the most destructive period of the French Revolution, were compiled
in two volumes by M.N.S. Guillon and published in 1798 and 1800.
But during the Revolution, the reign of Napoleon, and the various
revolutionary movements of the 19th century, there were
extraordinary efforts to destroy writings that critiqued the
revolutionary ideology. Many books and treatises, if they survived
the revolution or the sacking from Napoleon's armies. To this day,
no public copy of Guillon's work exists in Paris.
Now, for the first time in English, these works comprising the
letters, briefs, and other writings of Pius VI on the French
Revolution are available. Volume I treats the first shock of the
Revolution and the efforts of the Pope in 1790 and 1791 to oppose
the Civil Constitution of the Clergy (which famous revolutionary
and shrewd diplomat Talleyrand referred to as "the greatest fault
of the National Assembly"). Volume II will be published later, and
deals with the aftermath of the Civil Constitution through Pius's
death in exile). Editor and translator Jeffrey Langan presents the
materials leading up to and directly connected with these decrees,
in which the National Assembly attempted to set up a Catholic
Church that would be completely submissive to the demands of the
Assembly. Volume I also covers Pius's efforts to deal with the
immediate aftermath of the Constitution after the National Assembly
implemented it, including his encyclical, Quod Aliquantum.
The letters will show how Pius chose to oppose the Civil
Constitution. He did so not by a public campaign, for he had no
real temporal power to oppose the violence, but by attempting to
work personally with Louis XVI and various archbishops in France to
articulate what were the points on which he could concede (matters
dealing with the political structures of France) and what were the
essential points in which he could not concede (matters dealing
with the organization of dioceses and appointment of
bishops).
Since the 1980s, with the writings and school that developed
around Francois Furet, as well as Simon Schama's Citizens, a new
debate over the French Revolution has ensued, bringing forth a more
objective account of the Revolution, one that avoids an excessively
Marxist lens and that brings to light some of its defects and more
gruesome parts - the destruction and theft of Church property, and
the sadistic methods of torture and killing of priests, nuns,
aristocrats, and fellow-revolutionaries.
An examination of the writings of Pius VI will not only help set
the historical record straight for English-speaking students of the
Revolution, it will also aid them to better understand the
principles that the Catholic Church employs when confronted with
chaotic political change. They will see that the Church has a
principled approach to distinguishing, while not separating, the
power of the Church and the power of the state. They will also see,
as Talleyrand himself also saw, that one of the essential elements
that makes the Church the Church is the right to appoint bishops
and to discipline its own bishops. The Church herself recognizes
that she cannot long survive without this principle that guarantees
her unity.
Pius VI's efforts were able to keep the Catholic Church intact
(though badly bruised) so that she could reconstitute herself and
build up a vibrant life in 19th-century France. (He did this in the
face of the Church's prestige having sunk to historic lows; some
elites in Europe thought there would be no successor to Pius and
jokingly referred to him as "Pius the Last.") He began a process
that led to the restoration of the prestige of the Papacy
throughout the world, and he initiated a two-century process that
led to the Church finally being able to select bishops without any
interference from secular authorities. This had been at least a
1,000-year problem in the history of the Church. By 1990, only two
countries of the world, China and Vietnam, were interfering in any
significant way in the process that the Church used to select
bishops.
Pius VI's papacy, especially during the years of the French
Revolution, was a pivotal point for the French Revolution and for
the interaction between Church and state in Western history. All
freedom-loving people will be happy to read his distinc-tions
between the secular power and the spiritual power. His papacy also
was important for the internal developments that the Church would
make over the next 200 years with respect to its self-understanding
of the Papacy and the role of the bishop.
General
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