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Home > Civil Constitution of the Clergy


 

The law of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy (Fr. "Constitution Civile du Clerge"), passed July 12, 1790 during the French Revolution, subordinated the Roman Catholic Church in France to the French government.

It is often erroneously stated that this law confiscated the Church's French land holdings or banned monastic vows. In fact, that had already been accomplished by earlier legislation. It did, however, complete the destruction of the monastic orders, legislating out of existence "all regular and secular chapters for either sex, abbacies and priorships, both regular and in commendam, for either sex", etc. [1]

Perhaps surprisingly, some of the support from this came from figures within the Church, such as the priest and parliamentarian Pierre Claude François Daunou, and, above all, the revolutionary priest Henri Grégoire. The measure was opposed, but ultimately acquiesced to, by King Louis XVI.

1 Status of the Church in France before the Civil Constitution

Even before the Revolution and the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, the Catholic Church in France (the Gallican Church) had a status that tended to subordinate the Church to the State. Under the Declaration of the Clergy of France ( 1682) privileges of the French monarch included the right to assemble church councils in their dominions and to make laws and regulations touching ecclesiastical matters; furthermore, papal authority within France was severely limited by requirements of royal consent, and it was lawful to appeal from the Pope to a future council of the Gallican Church or to have recourse to the "appeal as from an abuse" ("appel comme d'abus") against acts of the ecclesiastical power.

Even prior to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy:

Thus, the changes brought about in the Civil Constitution of the Clergy were as much at the expense of the monarchy as that of the papacy.

2 Motivation of the Civil Constitution

The following interlinked factors appear to have been the causes of agitation for the confiscation of church lands Civil Constitution of the Clergy:

  1. The French government in 1790 was nearly bankrupt; this fiscal crisis had been the original reason for the king's calling the Estates-GeneralThe Estates-General of 1789 was the first meeting of the French Estates-General, a general assembly consisting of representatives from all but the poorest segment of the French citizenry, since 1614; the independence which it displayed from the crown pave in 1789.
  2. Church lands represented 10-15% of the land in France. In addition the Church collected tithes.
  3. Owing, in part, to abuses of this system (especially for patronage), there was enormous resentment of the Church, taking the various forms of atheismAtheist" redirects here. For the music group, see Atheist (band). Atheism is the condition of lacking theistic belief. Etymology The term atheism (French atheisme from athee meaning atheist, from Greek atheos, meaning godless : a-, without; + , theos, mea, anticlericalism, and anti-CatholicismAnti-Catholicism is religious or political opposition to the Roman Catholic Church. Religious anti-Catholicism Traditional Anti-Catholicism (which originated during the Reformation) is promoted by Protestant Fundamentalists like Jack Chick while the new S.
  4. Many of the revolutionaries viewed the Catholic Church as a retrograde force.
  5. At the same time, there was enough support for a basically Catholic form of Christianity that some means had to be found to fund the Church in France.
  6. Presumably, another factor, at least indirectly was Jansenist rejection of the cult of kingship and absolutism. [3]


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