fbpx
Wikipedia

First Vatican Council

The First Ecumenical Council of the Vatican, commonly known as the First Vatican Council or Vatican I, was convoked by Pope Pius IX on 29 June 1868, after four years of planning and preparation. It opened on 8 December 1869 and was adjourned on 20 October 1870 after the Capture of Rome. This was the 20th ecumenical council of the Catholic Church, held three centuries after the Council of Trent, Unlike the five earlier general councils held in Rome, which met in the Lateran Basilica and are known as Lateran councils, it met in Saint Peter's Basilica in the Vatican, hence its name. Its best-known decision is its definition of papal infallibility.[1][2]

First Vatican Council
Date1869–1870 (de facto)
1869-1960 (de jure)
Accepted byCatholic Church
Previous council
Council of Trent (1545–1563)
Next council
Second Vatican Council (1962–1965)
Convoked byPope Pius IX
PresidentPope Pius IX
Attendance744
TopicsRationalism, liberalism, materialism; biblical inspiration; papal infallibility
Documents and statements
Two constitutions:
Chronological list of ecumenical councils

The council was convoked to respond to the rising influence of rationalism, liberalism, and materialism.[3] Its purpose was, besides this, to define the Catholic doctrine concerning the Church of Christ.[4] There was discussion and approval of only two constitutions: the Dogmatic Constitution on the Catholic Faith (Dei Filius) and the First Dogmatic Constitution on the Church of Christ (Pastor aeternus), the latter dealing with the primacy (supremacy) and infallibility of the Bishop of Rome.[4] The first matter brought up for debate was the dogmatic draft of Catholic doctrine against what it considered as the manifold errors due to rationalism. The council condemned rationalism, anarchism, communism, socialism, liberalism, materialism, modernism, naturalism, pantheism, and secularism. The Catholic Church was on the defensive against the main philosophical trends of the 19th century. Another main goal of the council was to define the powers and role of the pope.[5]

Background

As early as late 1864, Pope Pius IX had commissioned the cardinals resident in Rome to tender him their opinions as to the advisability of a council. The majority pronounced in favour of the scheme, dissenting voices being rare. After March 1865 the convocation of the council was no longer in doubt. Special bulls were reportedly issued with invitations to Eastern Orthodox and Protestant clerics as well as to other non-Catholics, but apparently none accepted the invitations.[6]

The council was summoned by the pope by a bull on 29 June 1868.[7] The first session was held in St. Peter's Basilica on 8 December 1869.[8] Preliminary sessions dealt with general administrative matters and committee assignments. Bishop Bernard John McQuaid complained of rainy weather, inadequate heating facilities, and boredom.[9] Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley of Newark, New Jersey, noted the high prices in Rome.[9] When Lord Houghton asked Cardinal Manning what had been going on, he answered: "Well, we meet, and we look at one another, and then we talk a little, but when we want to know what we have been doing, we read The Times".[10]

Papal infallibility

The object of the council was a mystery for a while. The first revelation was given, in February 1869, by an article in La Civiltà Cattolica, a Jesuit periodical. It claimed, as the view of many Catholics in France, that the council would be of very brief duration, since the majority of its members were in agreement, and mentioned inter alia the proclamation of papal infallibility. Factions around the proposal arose across Europe, and some Italians even proposed setting up a rival council in Naples. However, before the council met all became quiet in view of the studied vagueness of the invitation.[6]

Pope Pius defined as dogma the Immaculate Conception of Mary, the mother of Jesus, in 1854.[11] However, the proposal to define papal infallibility itself as dogma met with resistance, not because of doubts about the substance of the proposed definition, but because some considered it inopportune to take that step at that time.[11] Richard McBrien divides the bishops attending Vatican I into three groups. The first group, which McBrien calls the "active infallibilists", was led by Henry Edward Manning and Ignatius von Senestrey. According to McBrien, the majority of the bishops were not so much interested in a formal definition of papal infallibility as they were in strengthening papal authority and, because of this, were willing to accept the agenda of the infallibilists. A minority, some 10% of the bishops, McBrien says, opposed the proposed definition of papal infallibility on both ecclesiastical and pragmatic grounds, because, in their opinion, it departed from the ecclesiastical structure of the early Christian church.[12] From a pragmatic perspective, they feared that defining papal infallibility would alienate some Catholics, create new difficulties for union with non-Catholics, and provoke interference by governments in ecclesiastical affairs. Those who held this view included most of the German and Austro-Hungarian bishops, nearly half of the Americans, one third of the French, most of the Chaldaeans and Melkites, and a few Armenians.[13] Only a few bishops appear to have had doubts about the dogma itself.[13]

Dei Filius

On 24 April 1870, the dogmatic constitution on the Catholic faith Dei Filius was adopted unanimously. The draft presented to the council on 8 March drew no serious criticism, but a group of 35 English-speaking bishops, who feared that the opening phrase of the first chapter, "Sancta romana catholica Ecclesia" ('Holy Roman Catholic Church'), might be construed as favouring the Anglican branch theory, later succeeded in having an additional adjective inserted, so that the final text read: "Sancta catholica apostolica romana Ecclesia" ('Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church').[14] The constitution thus set forth the teaching of the "Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church" on God, revelation and faith.[15]

Pastor aeternus

 
Catholic ecclesiastics of several countries gathered in Rome for the council

There was stronger opposition to the draft constitution on the nature of the church, which at first did not include the question of papal infallibility,[3] but the majority party in the council, whose position on this matter was much stronger,[11] brought it forward. It was decided to postpone discussion of everything in the draft except infallibility.[11] The decree did not go forward without controversy; Cardinal Filippo Maria Guidi [it], Archbishop of Bologna, proposed adding that the pope is assisted by "the counsel of the bishops manifesting the tradition of the churches". Pius IX rejected Guidi's view of the bishops as witnesses to the tradition, maintaining: "I am the tradition".[16]

On 13 July 1870, a preliminary vote on the section on infallibility was held in a general congregation: 451 voted simply in favour (placet), 88 against (non placet), and 62 in favour but on condition of some amendment (placet iuxta modum).[17] This made evident what the final outcome would be, and some 60 members of the opposition left Rome so as not to be associated with approval of the document. The final vote, with a choice only between placet and non placet, was taken on 18 July 1870, with 433 votes in favour and only 2 against defining as a dogma the infallibility of the pope when speaking ex cathedra.[3] The two votes in opposition were cast by Bishops Aloisio Riccio and Edward Fitzgerald.[18]

The dogmatic constitution states, in chapter 4:9, that the pope has "full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church" (chapter 3:9); and that, when he:

speaks ex cathedra, that is, when, in the exercise of his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians, in virtue of his supreme apostolic authority, he defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church, he possesses, by the divine assistance promised to him in blessed Peter, that infallibility which the divine Redeemer willed his Church to enjoy in defining doctrine concerning faith or morals.

None of the bishops who had argued that proclaiming the definition was inopportune refused to accept it. Some Catholics, mainly of German language and largely inspired by the historian Ignaz von Döllinger, formed the separate Old Catholic Church in protest; von Döllinger did not formally join the new group himself.[19]

Suspension and aftermath

 
Drawing showing the First Vatican Council

Discussion of the rest of the document on the nature of the church was to continue when the bishops returned after a summer break. However, in the meanwhile the Franco-Prussian War broke out. With the swift German advance and the capture of Emperor Napoleon III, French troops protecting papal rule in Rome withdrew from the city.[20]

Consequently, on 20 October 1870, one month after the newly founded Kingdom of Italy had occupied Rome, Pope Pius IX, who then considered himself a prisoner in the Vatican, issued the bull Postquam Dei munere, adjourning the council indefinitely.[21] While some proposed to continue the council in the Belgian city of Mechlin, it was never reconvened.[22] The council was formally closed in 1960 by Pope John XXIII, prior to the formation of the Second Vatican Council.[23]

Meanwhile, in reaction to the political implications of the doctrine of infallibility on the sovereignity of secular states, some of the European kingdoms and republics took rapid action against the Catholic Church. The Austrian Empire annulled the Concordat arranged with the Roman Curia in 1855. In the Kingdom of Prussia, the anti-Catholic Kulturkampf broke out immediately afterwards, and in the French Third Republic the synod so accentuated the power of ultramontanism (an emphasis on the powers of the pope), that Republican France took steps to curb it by revoking the Concordat of 1801, and therefore completely separating the Church from the State.[24]

Controversies and opposition

The dogma of papal infallibility raised considerable opposition in some liberal theological circles in the Netherlands, Austria, Germany and Switzerland; the most notable theologian opposing the new dogma was Ignaz von Döllinger, who was excommunicated in 1871 by Archbishop Gregor von Scherr of Munich and Freising, for refusing to accept the council's decision.[25]

Old Catholic schism

Following the council's decision, a minority of clergy and laity opposed to the newly proclaimed dogma united with the Jansenists, which had maintained a somewhat precarious existence in separation from Rome since the 18th century but had preserved an episcopal succession recognized by Rome as valid though illicit. The first consecration of the new order was that of Joseph H. Reinkens, who was made bishop in Germany by a sympathetic Jansenist bishop Johannes Heykamp of Utrecht. Such new group referred to itself as the Old Catholic Church (or the Christian Catholic Church in Switzerland). Old Catholics in Europe united into the Union of Utrecht in 1889, which entered into full communion with the Anglican Communion in 1931 through the Bonn Agreement.[26]

The Union of Utrecht still exists to this day and includes the Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands, the Catholic Diocese of the Old Catholics in Germany, the Old Catholic Church of Austria, the Old Catholic Church of the Czech Republic and the Polish-Catholic Church of the Republic of Poland. The Union of Scranton, formed by more theologically conservative Old Catholics, was formed in 2008 and currently includes the Polish National Catholic Church and the Nordic Catholic Church.[26]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Vatican Council, First" 2001.
  2. ^ E. E. Y. Hales, "The First Vatican Council." Studies in Church History 7 (1971): 329-344. online
  3. ^ a b c "First Vatican Council" 2014.
  4. ^ a b Tanner 1990.
  5. ^ John W. O'Malley, Vatican I: the council and the making of the ultramontane church (Harvard University Press, 2018).
  6. ^ a b Mirbt 1911, p. 947.
  7. ^ Kirch 1912, p. 303.
  8. ^ Nobili-Vitelleschi 1876, p. 1; Tanner 1990.
  9. ^ a b . America. 8 September 1962. Archived from the original on 15 September 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2018 – via Conciliaria.
  10. ^ Hare, Augustus (1896). The Story of My Life. Vol. II. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company. p. 504.
  11. ^ a b c d Burton & Woodruff 2014.
  12. ^ McBrien 1995, p. 1297.
  13. ^ a b Kirch 1912, p. 305.
  14. ^ Lacoste 2004, p. 1666.
  15. ^ De Mattei 2004, p. 137.
  16. ^ Duffy 2014, loc. 5428–5439.
  17. ^ Hughes 1961, pp. 342, 362.
  18. ^ Hughes 1961, pp. 364, 381; Kirch 1912, p. 307.
  19. ^ Hennesey 2009.
  20. ^ "French Military Forces in Rome, 1849 - 1870" (PDF). Frajola. (PDF) from the original on 16 March 2012. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  21. ^ Hennessy, Paul K. (1996). "The Infallibility of the Papal Magisterium as Presented in the Pastoral Letters of the Bishops of the United States after Vatican I". Horizons. 23 (1): 7–28. doi:10.1017/S0360966900029820. ISSN 0360-9669. S2CID 170213488.
  22. ^ Kirch 1912, p. 307.
  23. ^ "Vatican I". Vatican.com. 22 May 2018. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  24. ^ Mirbt 1911, p. 951.
  25. ^ "Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  26. ^ a b "Old Catholic church". Encyclopædia Britannica.

Bibliography

  • Hales, E. E. Y. "The First Vatican Council." Studies in Church History 7 (1971): 329-344. online
  • Hennesey, James (2009). . Encarta. Microsoft. Archived from the original on 31 October 2009. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  • Hennesey, James. "National Traditions and the First Vatican Council." Archivum Historiae Pontificiae (1969): 491-512. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23563715 online\
  • Nobili-Vitelleschi, Francesco (1876). The Vatican Council: Eight Months at Rome during the Vatican Council. London: John Murray. Retrieved 3 March 2018. This contains a detailed account of the course of the Council, and some commentary on the immediate political impact.
  • O'Malley, John W. Vatican I: the council and the making of the ultramontane church (Harvard University Press, 2018).
  • Tanner, Norman P., ed. (1990). "First Vatican Council (1869–1870)". Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils. Retrieved 2 March 2018 – via EWTN.
  • "Vatican Council, First". The Columbia Encyclopedia (6th ed.). New York: Columbia University Press. 2001. from the original on 18 June 2001. Retrieved 3 March 2018.

Further reading

  • De Cesare, Raffaele (1909). The Last Days of Papal Rome. Translated by Zimmern, Helen. London: Archibald Constable & Co.
  • Hales, E. E. Y. (1958). The Catholic Church in the Modern World: A Survey from the French Revolution to the Present. Garden City, New York: Doubleday.
  • Hales, E. E. Y. Pio Nono (1954) biography of Pope Pius IX; online
  • Hasler, August Bernhard (1981). How the Pope Became Infallible: Pius IX and the Politics of Persuasion. Garden City, New York: Doubleday. ISBN 9780385158510.
  • Hoppen, K. Theodore. "First Vatican Council, 1869-70" History Today (Oct 1969), Vol. 19 Issue 10, p713-720 online
  • Kadić, Ante. "Bishop Strossmayer and the First Vatican Council." Slavonic and East European Review 49.116 (1971): 382-409. online; he played a major role.
  • Noether, Emiliana P. "Vatican Council I: Its Political and Religious Setting." Journal of Modern History 40.2 (1968): 218-233. online.
  • Portier, William L. "The First Vatican Council, John Henry Newman, and the Making of a Post-Christendom Church." Newman Studies Journal 17.1 (2020): 123-144. excerpt
  • Prusak, Bernard P. (2004). The Church Unfinished: Ecclesiology through the Centuries. New York: Paulist Press. ISBN 978-0-8091-4286-6.
  • Raymond, John. "The First Vatican Council 1869-1870." History Today (Nov 1962) 12#11 pp 759–767. online.
  • Verhoeven, Timothy. "Transatlantic Connections: American Anti-Catholicism and the First Vatican Council (1869–70)." Catholic Historical Review 100.4 (2014): 695-720. Anti-Catholics were outraged. excerpt
  • Wallace, L. P. The Papacy and European Diplomacy, 1869-1878 (U North Carlina Press, 1948)

External links

    first, vatican, council, first, ecumenical, council, vatican, commonly, known, vatican, convoked, pope, pius, june, 1868, after, four, years, planning, preparation, opened, december, 1869, adjourned, october, 1870, after, capture, rome, this, 20th, ecumenical,. The First Ecumenical Council of the Vatican commonly known as the First Vatican Council or Vatican I was convoked by Pope Pius IX on 29 June 1868 after four years of planning and preparation It opened on 8 December 1869 and was adjourned on 20 October 1870 after the Capture of Rome This was the 20th ecumenical council of the Catholic Church held three centuries after the Council of Trent Unlike the five earlier general councils held in Rome which met in the Lateran Basilica and are known as Lateran councils it met in Saint Peter s Basilica in the Vatican hence its name Its best known decision is its definition of papal infallibility 1 2 First Vatican CouncilDate1869 1870 de facto 1869 1960 de jure Accepted byCatholic ChurchPrevious councilCouncil of Trent 1545 1563 Next councilSecond Vatican Council 1962 1965 Convoked byPope Pius IXPresidentPope Pius IXAttendance744TopicsRationalism liberalism materialism biblical inspiration papal infallibilityDocuments and statementsTwo constitutions Dei Filius Pastor aeternusChronological list of ecumenical councilsThe council was convoked to respond to the rising influence of rationalism liberalism and materialism 3 Its purpose was besides this to define the Catholic doctrine concerning the Church of Christ 4 There was discussion and approval of only two constitutions the Dogmatic Constitution on the Catholic Faith Dei Filius and the First Dogmatic Constitution on the Church of Christ Pastor aeternus the latter dealing with the primacy supremacy and infallibility of the Bishop of Rome 4 The first matter brought up for debate was the dogmatic draft of Catholic doctrine against what it considered as the manifold errors due to rationalism The council condemned rationalism anarchism communism socialism liberalism materialism modernism naturalism pantheism and secularism The Catholic Church was on the defensive against the main philosophical trends of the 19th century Another main goal of the council was to define the powers and role of the pope 5 Contents 1 Background 2 Papal infallibility 3 Dei Filius 4 Pastor aeternus 5 Suspension and aftermath 6 Controversies and opposition 6 1 Old Catholic schism 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground EditAs early as late 1864 Pope Pius IX had commissioned the cardinals resident in Rome to tender him their opinions as to the advisability of a council The majority pronounced in favour of the scheme dissenting voices being rare After March 1865 the convocation of the council was no longer in doubt Special bulls were reportedly issued with invitations to Eastern Orthodox and Protestant clerics as well as to other non Catholics but apparently none accepted the invitations 6 The council was summoned by the pope by a bull on 29 June 1868 7 The first session was held in St Peter s Basilica on 8 December 1869 8 Preliminary sessions dealt with general administrative matters and committee assignments Bishop Bernard John McQuaid complained of rainy weather inadequate heating facilities and boredom 9 Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley of Newark New Jersey noted the high prices in Rome 9 When Lord Houghton asked Cardinal Manning what had been going on he answered Well we meet and we look at one another and then we talk a little but when we want to know what we have been doing we read The Times 10 Papal infallibility EditMain article Papal infallibility The object of the council was a mystery for a while The first revelation was given in February 1869 by an article in La Civilta Cattolica a Jesuit periodical It claimed as the view of many Catholics in France that the council would be of very brief duration since the majority of its members were in agreement and mentioned inter alia the proclamation of papal infallibility Factions around the proposal arose across Europe and some Italians even proposed setting up a rival council in Naples However before the council met all became quiet in view of the studied vagueness of the invitation 6 Pope Pius defined as dogma the Immaculate Conception of Mary the mother of Jesus in 1854 11 However the proposal to define papal infallibility itself as dogma met with resistance not because of doubts about the substance of the proposed definition but because some considered it inopportune to take that step at that time 11 Richard McBrien divides the bishops attending Vatican I into three groups The first group which McBrien calls the active infallibilists was led by Henry Edward Manning and Ignatius von Senestrey According to McBrien the majority of the bishops were not so much interested in a formal definition of papal infallibility as they were in strengthening papal authority and because of this were willing to accept the agenda of the infallibilists A minority some 10 of the bishops McBrien says opposed the proposed definition of papal infallibility on both ecclesiastical and pragmatic grounds because in their opinion it departed from the ecclesiastical structure of the early Christian church 12 From a pragmatic perspective they feared that defining papal infallibility would alienate some Catholics create new difficulties for union with non Catholics and provoke interference by governments in ecclesiastical affairs Those who held this view included most of the German and Austro Hungarian bishops nearly half of the Americans one third of the French most of the Chaldaeans and Melkites and a few Armenians 13 Only a few bishops appear to have had doubts about the dogma itself 13 Dei Filius EditMain article Dei Filius On 24 April 1870 the dogmatic constitution on the Catholic faith Dei Filius was adopted unanimously The draft presented to the council on 8 March drew no serious criticism but a group of 35 English speaking bishops who feared that the opening phrase of the first chapter Sancta romana catholica Ecclesia Holy Roman Catholic Church might be construed as favouring the Anglican branch theory later succeeded in having an additional adjective inserted so that the final text read Sancta catholica apostolica romana Ecclesia Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church 14 The constitution thus set forth the teaching of the Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church on God revelation and faith 15 Pastor aeternus EditMain article Pastor aeternus Catholic ecclesiastics of several countries gathered in Rome for the council There was stronger opposition to the draft constitution on the nature of the church which at first did not include the question of papal infallibility 3 but the majority party in the council whose position on this matter was much stronger 11 brought it forward It was decided to postpone discussion of everything in the draft except infallibility 11 The decree did not go forward without controversy Cardinal Filippo Maria Guidi it Archbishop of Bologna proposed adding that the pope is assisted by the counsel of the bishops manifesting the tradition of the churches Pius IX rejected Guidi s view of the bishops as witnesses to the tradition maintaining I am the tradition 16 On 13 July 1870 a preliminary vote on the section on infallibility was held in a general congregation 451 voted simply in favour placet 88 against non placet and 62 in favour but on condition of some amendment placet iuxta modum 17 This made evident what the final outcome would be and some 60 members of the opposition left Rome so as not to be associated with approval of the document The final vote with a choice only between placet and non placet was taken on 18 July 1870 with 433 votes in favour and only 2 against defining as a dogma the infallibility of the pope when speaking ex cathedra 3 The two votes in opposition were cast by Bishops Aloisio Riccio and Edward Fitzgerald 18 The dogmatic constitution states in chapter 4 9 that the pope has full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church chapter 3 9 and that when he speaks ex cathedra that is when in the exercise of his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians in virtue of his supreme apostolic authority he defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church he possesses by the divine assistance promised to him in blessed Peter that infallibility which the divine Redeemer willed his Church to enjoy in defining doctrine concerning faith or morals None of the bishops who had argued that proclaiming the definition was inopportune refused to accept it Some Catholics mainly of German language and largely inspired by the historian Ignaz von Dollinger formed the separate Old Catholic Church in protest von Dollinger did not formally join the new group himself 19 Suspension and aftermath Edit Drawing showing the First Vatican Council Discussion of the rest of the document on the nature of the church was to continue when the bishops returned after a summer break However in the meanwhile the Franco Prussian War broke out With the swift German advance and the capture of Emperor Napoleon III French troops protecting papal rule in Rome withdrew from the city 20 Consequently on 20 October 1870 one month after the newly founded Kingdom of Italy had occupied Rome Pope Pius IX who then considered himself a prisoner in the Vatican issued the bull Postquam Dei munere adjourning the council indefinitely 21 While some proposed to continue the council in the Belgian city of Mechlin it was never reconvened 22 The council was formally closed in 1960 by Pope John XXIII prior to the formation of the Second Vatican Council 23 Meanwhile in reaction to the political implications of the doctrine of infallibility on the sovereignity of secular states some of the European kingdoms and republics took rapid action against the Catholic Church The Austrian Empire annulled the Concordat arranged with the Roman Curia in 1855 In the Kingdom of Prussia the anti Catholic Kulturkampf broke out immediately afterwards and in the French Third Republic the synod so accentuated the power of ultramontanism an emphasis on the powers of the pope that Republican France took steps to curb it by revoking the Concordat of 1801 and therefore completely separating the Church from the State 24 Controversies and opposition EditThe dogma of papal infallibility raised considerable opposition in some liberal theological circles in the Netherlands Austria Germany and Switzerland the most notable theologian opposing the new dogma was Ignaz von Dollinger who was excommunicated in 1871 by Archbishop Gregor von Scherr of Munich and Freising for refusing to accept the council s decision 25 Old Catholic schism Edit Following the council s decision a minority of clergy and laity opposed to the newly proclaimed dogma united with the Jansenists which had maintained a somewhat precarious existence in separation from Rome since the 18th century but had preserved an episcopal succession recognized by Rome as valid though illicit The first consecration of the new order was that of Joseph H Reinkens who was made bishop in Germany by a sympathetic Jansenist bishop Johannes Heykamp of Utrecht Such new group referred to itself as the Old Catholic Church or the Christian Catholic Church in Switzerland Old Catholics in Europe united into the Union of Utrecht in 1889 which entered into full communion with the Anglican Communion in 1931 through the Bonn Agreement 26 The Union of Utrecht still exists to this day and includes the Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands the Catholic Diocese of the Old Catholics in Germany the Old Catholic Church of Austria the Old Catholic Church of the Czech Republic and the Polish Catholic Church of the Republic of Poland The Union of Scranton formed by more theologically conservative Old Catholics was formed in 2008 and currently includes the Polish National Catholic Church and the Nordic Catholic Church 26 See also EditSecond Vatican CouncilReferences EditNotes Edit Vatican Council First 2001 E E Y Hales The First Vatican Council Studies in Church History 7 1971 329 344 online a b c First Vatican Council 2014 a b Tanner 1990 John W O Malley Vatican I the council and the making of the ultramontane church Harvard University Press 2018 a b Mirbt 1911 p 947 Kirch 1912 p 303 Nobili Vitelleschi 1876 p 1 Tanner 1990 a b The First Vatican Council America 8 September 1962 Archived from the original on 15 September 2015 Retrieved 2 March 2018 via Conciliaria Hare Augustus 1896 The Story of My Life Vol II New York Dodd Mead and Company p 504 a b c d Burton amp Woodruff 2014 McBrien 1995 p 1297 a b Kirch 1912 p 305 Lacoste 2004 p 1666 De Mattei 2004 p 137 Duffy 2014 loc 5428 5439 Hughes 1961 pp 342 362 Hughes 1961 pp 364 381 Kirch 1912 p 307 Hennesey 2009 French Military Forces in Rome 1849 1870 PDF Frajola Archived PDF from the original on 16 March 2012 Retrieved 7 August 2022 Hennessy Paul K 1996 The Infallibility of the Papal Magisterium as Presented in the Pastoral Letters of the Bishops of the United States after Vatican I Horizons 23 1 7 28 doi 10 1017 S0360966900029820 ISSN 0360 9669 S2CID 170213488 Kirch 1912 p 307 Vatican I Vatican com 22 May 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2019 Mirbt 1911 p 951 Johann Joseph Ignaz von Dollinger Encyclopaedia Britannica a b Old Catholic church Encyclopaedia Britannica Bibliography Edit Burton Ivor F Woodruff Douglas 2014 Pius IX Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2 March 2018 De Mattei Roberto 2004 Pius IX Translated by Laughland John Leominster England Gracewing Duffy Eamon 2014 Saints and Sinners A History of the Popes 4th ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11597 0 First Vatican Council Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica 2014 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Hales E E Y The First Vatican Council Studies in Church History 7 1971 329 344 online Hennesey James 2009 First Vatican Council Encarta Microsoft Archived from the original on 31 October 2009 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Hennesey James National Traditions and the First Vatican Council Archivum Historiae Pontificiae 1969 491 512 https www jstor org stable 23563715 online Hughes Philip 1961 The Church in Crisis A History of the General Councils 325 1870 Garden City New York Hanover House Retrieved 3 March 2018 Kirch J M Konrad 1912 Vatican Council In Herbermann Charles G Pace Edward A Pallen Conde B Shahan Thomas J Wynne John J eds Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 15 New York The Encyclopedia Press published 1913 pp 303 309 Lacoste Jean Yves 2004 Vatican I Council of Encyclopedia of Christian Theology New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 57958 250 0 McBrien Richard P ed 1995 The HarperCollins Encyclopedia of Catholicism New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 065338 5 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Mirbt Carl Theodor 1911 Vatican Council The In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 947 951 Nobili Vitelleschi Francesco 1876 The Vatican Council Eight Months at Rome during the Vatican Council London John Murray Retrieved 3 March 2018 This contains a detailed account of the course of the Council and some commentary on the immediate political impact O Malley John W Vatican I the council and the making of the ultramontane church Harvard University Press 2018 Tanner Norman P ed 1990 First Vatican Council 1869 1870 Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils Retrieved 2 March 2018 via EWTN Vatican Council First The Columbia Encyclopedia 6th ed New York Columbia University Press 2001 Archived from the original on 18 June 2001 Retrieved 3 March 2018 Further reading EditDe Cesare Raffaele 1909 The Last Days of Papal Rome Translated by Zimmern Helen London Archibald Constable amp Co Hales E E Y 1958 The Catholic Church in the Modern World A Survey from the French Revolution to the Present Garden City New York Doubleday Hales E E Y Pio Nono 1954 biography of Pope Pius IX onlineHasler August Bernhard 1981 How the Pope Became Infallible Pius IX and the Politics of Persuasion Garden City New York Doubleday ISBN 9780385158510 Hoppen K Theodore First Vatican Council 1869 70 History Today Oct 1969 Vol 19 Issue 10 p713 720 onlineKadic Ante Bishop Strossmayer and the First Vatican Council Slavonic and East European Review 49 116 1971 382 409 online he played a major role Noether Emiliana P Vatican Council I Its Political and Religious Setting Journal of Modern History 40 2 1968 218 233 online Portier William L The First Vatican Council John Henry Newman and the Making of a Post Christendom Church Newman Studies Journal 17 1 2020 123 144 excerptPrusak Bernard P 2004 The Church Unfinished Ecclesiology through the Centuries New York Paulist Press ISBN 978 0 8091 4286 6 Raymond John The First Vatican Council 1869 1870 History Today Nov 1962 12 11 pp 759 767 online Verhoeven Timothy Transatlantic Connections American Anti Catholicism and the First Vatican Council 1869 70 Catholic Historical Review 100 4 2014 695 720 Anti Catholics were outraged excerpt Wallace L P The Papacy and European Diplomacy 1869 1878 U North Carlina Press 1948 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to First Vatican Council Text of the council s ruling Portals Catholicism Vatican CityFirst Vatican Council at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First Vatican Council amp oldid 1143851100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.