B. The Pseudo-Reformation and the Renaissance
This
new state of soul contained a powerful although more or less unacknowledged
desire for an order of things fundamentally different from that which had
reached its heights in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
An
exaggerated and often delirious admiration for antiquity served as a means for
the expression of this desire. In order to avoid direct confrontations with the
old medieval tradition, humanism and the Renaissance frequently sought to
relegate the Church, the supernatural, and the moral values of religion to a
secondary plane. At the same time, the human type inspired by the pagan
moralists was introduced by these movements as an ideal in Europe. This human
type and the culture and civilization consistent with it were truly the precursors
of the greedy, sensual, secularist, and pragmatic man of our days and of the
materialistic culture and civilization into
which we are sinking deeper and deeper. Efforts to effect a Christian
Renaissance did not manage to crush in the germinal stage the factors that led
to the gradual triumph of neopaganism.
In
some parts of Europe, this neopaganism developed without leading to formal
apostasy. It found significant resistance. Even when it became established
within souls, it did not dare ask them - at least in the beginning - to
formally break with the Faith.
However, in other countries, it openly attacked the Church. Pride and
sensuality, whose satisfaction is the pleasure of pagan life, gave rise to
Protestantism.
Pride
begot the spirit of doubt, free examination, and naturalistic interpretation of
Scripture. It produced insurrection against ecclesiastical authority, expressed
in all sects by the denial of the monarchical character of the Universal
Church, that is to say, by a revolt against the
Papacy. Some of the more radical sects also denied what could be called
the higher aristocracy of the Church, namely, the bishops, her princes. Others
even denied the hierarchical character of the priesthood itself by reducing it
to a mere delegation of the people, lauded as the only true holder of priestly
power.
On
the moral plane, the triumph of sensuality in Protestantism was affirmed by the
suppression of ecclesiastical celibacy and by the introduction of divorce.
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