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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Roman Gauls and early Christianity  





1.2  Conversion of the Franks  





1.3  Medieval Christendom and Crusades  





1.4  Renaissance Church and Protestantism  





1.5  Catholicism under the Revolution  





1.6  Sexual abuse  







2 Marian apparitions  





3 Organisation  



3.1  Legal status  





3.2  Statistics  





3.3  Divisions  







4 Politics  





5 See also  





6 Notes  





7 Sources  














Catholic Church in France






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(Redirected from Catholicism in France)


Catholic Church in France
French: Église catholique en France
TypeNational polity
ClassificationCatholic
ScriptureBible
TheologyCatholic theology
GovernanceCEF
PopeFrancis
PresidentÉric de Moulins-Beaufort
Primate of the GaulsOlivier de Germay[1]
Apostolic NuncioCelestino Migliore[2][3]
RegionFrance, Monaco
LanguageFrench, Latin
HeadquartersCathedral Notre-Dame de Paris
FounderSaint Remigius
Originc. 177 Christianity in Gaul
c. 496 Frankish Christianity
Gaul, Roman Empire
SeparationsHuguenots (16th century)
Members27,000,000–58,000,000
Official websiteEpiscopal Conference of France

The French Catholic Church, or Catholic Church in France is part of the worldwide Catholic Churchincommunion with the PopeinRome. Established in the 2nd century in unbroken communion with the bishop of Rome, it was sometimes called the "eldest daughter of the church" (French: fille aînée de l'Église).

The first written records of Christians in France date from the 2nd century when Irenaeus detailed the deaths of ninety-year-old bishop Saint PothinusofLugdunum (Lyon) and other martyrs of the 177 AD persecution in Lyon. In 496 Remigius baptized King Clovis I, who therefore converted from paganism to Catholicism. In 800, Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, forming the political and religious foundations of ChristendominEurope and establishing in earnest the French government's long historical association with the Catholic Church.[4] In reaction, the French Revolution (1789–1799) was followed by heavy persecution of the Catholic Church. Since the beginning of the 20th century, Laïcité, absolute neutrality of the state with respect to religious doctrine, is the official policy of the French Republic.

Estimates of the proportion of Catholics in 2020 range between 47% and 88% of France's population, with the higher figure including lapsed Catholics and "Catholic atheists".[5][6] The Catholic Church in France is organised into 98 dioceses, which in 2012 were served by 7,000 sub-75 priests.[7] 80 to 90 priests are ordained every year, although the church would need eight times as many to compensate the number of priest deaths. Approximately 45,000 Catholic church buildings and chapels are spread out among 36,500 cities, towns, and villages in France, but a majority are no longer regularly used for mass. Notable churches of France include Notre Dame de Paris, Chartres Cathedral, Dijon Cathedral, Reims Cathedral, Saint-Sulpice, Paris, Basilique du Sacre-Coeur, Strasbourg Cathedral, Eglise de la Madeleine, and Amiens Cathedral. Its national shrine, Lourdes, is visited by 5 million pilgrims yearly.[8] The capital city, Paris, is a major pilgrimage site for Catholics as well.

In recent decades, France has emerged as a stronghold for the small but growing Traditionalist Catholic movement,[9] along with the United States, England and other English-speaking countries.[10][11][12] The Society of Saint Pius X, a canonically irregular priestly society founded by French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre has a large presence in the country, as do other traditionalist priestly societies in full communion with Rome such as the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter, Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest and others.[13]

Some of the most famous French saints and blesseds include St. Denis, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, St. Irenaeus, St. John Vianney (the Curé of Ars), St. Joan of Arc, St. Bernadette, St. Genevieve, Louis IX of France, St. Elizabeth of the Trinity, St. Vincent de Paul, St. Louise de Marillac, St. Catherine Labouré, St. Louis de Montfort, St. Jean-Baptiste de La Salle, St. Francis de Sales, St. Margaret Mary Alacoque, Bl. Nicholas Barré, St. Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort and St. Bernard of Clairvaux.

History

[edit]

Roman Gauls and early Christianity

[edit]

According to long-standing tradition, Mary, Martha, Lazarus (Marie, Marthe and Lazare in French) and some companions, who were expelled by persecutions from the Holy Land, traversed the Mediterranean in a frail boat with neither rudder nor mast and landed at Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer near Arles. Provençal tradition names Lazarus as the first bishop of Marseille, while Martha purportedly went on to tame a terrible beast in nearby Tarascon. Pilgrims visited their tombs at the abbey of VézelayinBurgundy. In the Abbey of the Trinity at Vendôme, a phylactery was said to contain a tear shed by Jesus at the tomb of Lazarus. The cathedral of Autun, not far away, is dedicated to Lazarus as Saint Lazaire.

The first written records of Christians in France date from the 2nd century when Irenaeus detailed the deaths of ninety-year-old bishop PothinusofLugdunum (Lyon) and other martyrs of the 177 persecution in Lyon.

The emperor Theodosius I (r. 379-95) makes Christianity the official state religion of the Roman Empire in 380.

Conversion of the Franks

[edit]
Baptism of Clovis

In 496, Remigius baptized Clovis I, who was converted from paganism to Catholicism. Clovis I, considered the founder of France, made himself the ally and protector of the papacy and his predominantly Catholic subjects.

Medieval Christendom and Crusades

[edit]
Pope Urban II at the Council of Clermont, given a late Gothic setting in this illumination from the Livre des Passages d'Outre-mer, of c. 1490 (Bibliothèque nationale)
The papal palaceinAvignon, where the popes resided from 1309 to 1376

On Christmas Day 800, Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, forming the political and religious foundations of Christendom and establishing in earnest the French government's longstanding historical association with the Catholic Church.[4]

The Council of Clermont, a mixed synod of ecclesiastics and laymen led by Pope Urban II in November 1095 at Clermont-Ferrand triggered the First Crusade.

The Kingdom of France and its aristocracy were prominent players in the Crusades in general. Following the Fourth Crusade, a period known as the Frankokratia existed where French Latin Catholics took over parts of the Byzantine Empire. A crusade also took place on French territory in the County of Toulouse (contemporary Languedoc) with the Albigensian Crusade in the 13th century, called by Pope Innocent III. This played out on local level with fighting between the Catholic White Brotherhood and the Cathar Black Brotherhood. The Cathars lost and were subsequently exterminated. In 1312, the French monarch Philip IV of France was involved in the suppression of the Knights TemplarbyPope Clement V; Philip was in deep financial dept to the Templars.

The Avignon Papacy was the period from 1309 to 1377 during which seven French popes, resided in Avignon.

Renaissance Church and Protestantism

[edit]
The crimes of the Huguenots in France; four Huguenots nailing a horseshoe to a Catholic on the left; three Huguenots executing a Catholic tied to a tree; men plowing the land with an ox; behind that another execution of two Catholics tied to a tree; Latin letterpress on verso; illustration to an edition of the Theatrum Crudelitatum Haereticorum Nostri Temporis (Richard Verstegen, 1588), 1588.

Prior to the French Revolution, the Catholic Church had been the official state religion of France since the conversion to Christianity of Clovis I, leading to France being called "the eldest daughter of the Church".[citation needed] The King of France was known as "His Most Christian Majesty". Following the Protestant Reformation, France was riven by sectarian conflict as the Huguenots and Catholics strove for supremacy in the Wars of Religion until the 1598 Edict of Nantes established a measure of religious toleration.

Catholicism under the Revolution

[edit]
Pope Pius VII and a legate to France, Cardinal Caprara at the Coronation of Napoleon in France. Rather than doing the coronation, the Pope is depicted merely blessing the proceedings. Detail from Jacques-Louis David's Coronation of Napoleon.

The French Revolution radically shifted power away from the Catholic Church. Church property was confiscated, and the church crop tax and special clergy privileges were eliminated. With the 1790 Civil Constitution of the Clergy, the clergy became employees of the State, and the Catholic Church became a subordinate arm of the secular French government. During the Reign of Terror, traditional Christian holidays were abolished and Catholic priests were brutally suppressed, locally through mass imprisonment and executions by drowning.[4]

Napoleon Bonaparte negotiated a reconciliation with the Church through the 1801 Concordat, whereby the State would subsidize Catholicism (recognized as the majority religion of the French), as well as Judaism, Lutheranism, and Calvinism.[14] After the 1814 Bourbon Restoration, the ultra-royalist government, headed by the comte de Villèle, passed the 1825 Anti-Sacrilege Act, which made stealing of consecrated Hosts punishable by death. Never enforced, this law was repealed in the July Monarchy (1830–1848).

Sexual abuse

[edit]

On 5 October 2021, a report was published by the Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Church (CIASE) which showed that 330,000 children had become victims of sexual abuse within the church in France over a period spanning 7 decades (1950-2020). This constitutes 6% of total sexual abuse in France, since the same report notes that there are a total of 5.5 million cases of sexual abuse of people under 18 in France. These crimes were committed by between 2900 and 3200 priests and community members.[15][16]

Marian apparitions

[edit]

A number of alleged Marian apparitions are associated with France. The best known are the following:

Organisation

[edit]
[edit]
Retable de saint DenisbyHenri Bellechose, c. 1416. St. Denis is the patron saint of France.
Chartres Cathedral

The 1905 French law on the separation of Church and State removed the privileged status of the state religion (Catholic Church) and of the three other state-recognised religions (Lutheranism, Calvinism, Judaism), but left to them the use without fee, and the maintenance at government expense, of the churches that they used prior to 1905.

A notable exception is Alsace-Lorraine, which at the time of the separation was part of Germany, and where the pre-1905 status, including the concordat, is still in force. This was negotiated in 1918 when Alsace-Lorraine was returned to France at the end of the first World War, and approved by both France and the Holy See with the Briand-Ceretti Agreement. As a consequence, and although France is one of the countries in the world where the state and church are most separated, the French head of state is paradoxically the only temporal power in the world still nominating Catholic bishops, namely the bishop of Metz and the archbishop of Strasbourg. They are approved by the Pope and in practice selected by him, but formally nominated by the French president following diplomatic exchanges with the Holy See through the nunciature.

During the application of the 1905 law, prime minister Emile Combes, a member of the Radical-Socialist Party, tried to strictly enforce measures which some Catholics considered humiliating or blasphematory, leading to clashes between the Congregationists and the authorities. Anti-clericalism slowly declined among the French left-wing throughout France in the twentieth century, while the question of religion and of freedom of thought seemed to have been resolved. However, it is still present as a defining trait of the left-wing, while most right-wing Frenchmen describe themselves as Catholics (although not necessarily practicing). Thus, the draft laws presented by François Mitterrand's government in the early 1980s, concerning restrictions on the state funding of private (and in majority Catholic) schools, were countered by right-wing demonstrations headed by the then mayor of Paris, the Gaullist Jacques Chirac, who was to be his prime minister in 1986 and would succeed him in 1995 as president. In the same way, the 2004 law on secularity and conspicuous religious symbols in schools, revived the controversy twenty years later, although the dividing lines also passed through each political side due to the complexity of the subject. On this occasion, several Muslim associations have allied themselves with conservative Catholics to reject the law. One consequences of the law was that some Muslim middle and high school students who refused to remove their veils or "conspicuous religious symbols" withdrew from the public school system in favour of the private, but publicly funded, Catholic schools (where the law does not apply, being restricted to the public education system).

In any case, since the 1905 law on the separation of the Church and State, the prevailing public doctrine on religion is laïcité – that is, neutrality of the state with respect to religious doctrine, and separation of the religious and the public spheres, except in Alsace-Lorraine and in some oversea territories. This state neutrality is conceived as a protection of religious minorities as well as the upholding of freedom of thought, which includes a right to agnosticism and atheism. Although many Catholics were at first opposed to this secular movement, most of them have since changed opinions, finding that this neutrality actually protects their faith from political interference. Only some minority traditionalist Catholic groups, such as the Society of St. Pius X, push for the return to the Ancien Régime or at least pre-separation situation, contending that France has forgotten its divine mission as a Christian country (an argument already upheld by the Ultras presenting the 1825 Anti-Sacrilege Act).[citation needed]

Statistics

[edit]

2006 Statistics from the Catholic Church in France:[17]

Source: Catholic Church[18]
1996 2001 2006 Change in absolute numbers 1996–2006 Change in % 1996–2006
Total baptisms 421,295 391,665 344,852 -76,443 -19.1%
Total confirmations 80,245 55,916 51,595 -28,650 -35.3%
Total Catholic marriages 124,362 118,087 89,014 -35,348 -28.4%
Total priests 27,781 24,251 20,523 -7,530 -26.1%
Total deacons 1,072 1,593 2,061 +989 +92.2%
Total nuns Approx. 53,000 49,466 40,577 -13,000 -23.4%
Total religious institute members including monks Approx. 15,000 Approx. 10,000 8,388 -7,000 -44%
Notre-Dame de l'Immaculee-Conception, Lourdes

74% of French Catholics support same-sex marriage and 24% oppose it. 87% of French Catholics believe society should accept homosexuality, while 10% believe society should not accept homosexuality.[19]

Divisions

[edit]
Dioceses of metropolitan France.

Within France the hierarchy consists of:

Immediately subject to the Holy See:

Other:

France is the location of one of the world's major Catholic pilgrim centres at Lourdes.

Politics

[edit]

Growing discontent with respect to the influence of the Catholic Church in education and politics led to a series of reforms during the Third Republic reducing this influence, under the protests of the Ultramontanists who supported the Vatican's influence.

Anti-clericalism was popular among Republicans, Radicals, and Socialists, in part because the Church had supported the counterrevolutionaries throughout the 19th century. After the 16 May 1877 crisis and the fall of the Ordre Moral government led by Marshall MacMahon, the Republicans voted Jules Ferry's 1880 lawsonfree education (1881) and mandatory and secular education (1882), which Catholics felt was a gross violation of their rights. The 1905 French law on the Separation of the Churches and the State established state secularism in France, led to the closing of most Church-run schools.

Since the Fifth Republic, most of the participating Catholics in France support Gaullist and Centrist Christian democratic parties.

See also

[edit]
  • 1905 French law on the separation of Church and State
  • Action Française headed by Charles Maurras
  • Anti-Catholicism in France
  • Briand-Ceretti Agreement
  • Calvinism and French Wars of Religion
  • Catholic congregations in France
  • Dechristianisation of France during the French Revolution
  • France-Holy See relations
  • History of the Catholic Church
  • Hospitalité Notre Dame de Lourdes
  • List of cathedrals in France
  • List of Catholic dioceses in France
  • Persecution of Christians
  • Protestantism in France
  • Religion in France
  • Secularism in France
  • Notes

    [edit]

    Sources

    [edit]
    1. ^ "Former paratrooper is the new Archbishop of Lyon". 23 October 2020.
  • ^ "Celestino Migliore, nuevo Nuncio Apostólico en Francia". Religión Digital. 11 January 2020.
  • ^ "Pope appoints new envoy to France after abuse claims". www.thenews.com.pk.
  • ^ a b c "France". Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs. Archived from the original on 6 February 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011. See drop-down essay on "Religion and Politics until the French Revolution"
  • ^ "France - The World Factbook". www.cia.gov. 7 June 2022.
  • ^ US State Dept 2022 report
  • ^ "L'Église face à la pénurie des prêtres". Le Figaro. 28 June 2012.[permanent dead link]
  • ^ Every pilgrim's guide to Lourdes by Sally Martin 2005 ISBN 1-85311-627-0 page vii
  • ^ "Survey finds fervor among young French Catholics". The Pillar. 26 May 2023. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  • ^ Allen, John (14 September 2008). "Pope in France: Traditionalists deserve a place in the Church". National Catholic Reporter. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  • ^ "French Catholic Bishops Express 'Esteem' for Traditional Latin Mass Communities". National Catholic Register. 19 July 2021. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  • ^ Wooden, Cindy (20 July 2021). "Traditional Latin Mass 'movement' sows division, archbishop says". National Catholic Reporter. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  • ^ Tadié, Solène. "How French Catholics are responding to Pope Francis' Traditional Latin Mass restrictions". Catholic News Agency. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  • ^ "France". Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs. Archived from the original on 6 February 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011. See drop-down essay on "The Third Republic and the 1905 Law of Laïcité"
  • ^ "Pope prays for victims following report on clerical sexual abuse in France - Vatican News". www.vaticannews.va. 5 October 2021. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  • ^ "Église : 330 000 victimes d'abus sexuels selon la commission Sauvé". Franceinfo (in French). 5 October 2021. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  • ^ (in French) 2006 Statistics from the Catholic Church in France Archived 29 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine, consulté le 08 février 2009.
  • ^ "source" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 February 2009.
  • ^ How Catholics around the world see same-sex marriage, homosexuality Pew Research Center 2020
  • ^ Pope Benedict XVI elevated the Diocese of Lille to a Metropolitan Archdiocese. Cambrai (the former Metropolitan) became its suffragan, while retaining the title "Archdiocese" (see "Daily Bulletin - Elevazione di Lille (Francia) a Chiesa Metropolitana e Nomina del Primo Arcivescovo Metropolita" (in Italian). Holy See Press Office. 29 March 2008. Archived from the original on 7 June 2008. Retrieved 30 March 2008.).

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