The Church of the Revolutionary Age: Facing New Destinies
By Henri Daniel-Rops
(NB: Product contains two individual volumes.)
The Church of the Revolutionary Age: Facing New Destinies is the eighth installment in Henri Daniel-Rops’ History of the Church of Christ.
Volume 1 focuses on the momentous political events of the age: (1) The French Revolution and its effects on the Church and influence across Europe in developing radical ideals and parties. (2) The bitter struggle for sovereignty between “sword and spirit” in the Napoleonic era, culminating in the kidnapping of Pope Pius VII. (3) The perilous effort to rebuild and restore society amid the ruinous aftermath of that conflict—a drama of concordats and counter-revolution; of restoration of religion and regimes of uneasy alliance between Throne and Altar; of emancipation and rebellion; with the voices of geniuses like de Maistre and Lamennais, Chateaubriand and Consalvi, Pope Gregory XVI and O’Connell, dictating and defying, in turn, the flow of the revolutionary currents.
Volume 2 focuses on major events in personality, intellectual history, and evangelization: (1) The great pontificate of Pius IX, contrasting total temporal defeat (loss of the Papal States) with spiritual triumph—the rebuke of modern errors, the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, and the convocation of the First Vatican Council. (2) The rise of irreligion in the form of scientific rationalism, its assaults on the Church’s basic teachings about the human person and release of new “gospels” like evolutionism and socialism. (3) The fruitful renewal of missionary efforts in North America, Asia, and Africa. (4) The “world that Christ makes visible”—the Church as the instrument of sanctification for history, and saints such as the Curé d’Ars, Newman, and John Bosco as assurances (among others) of that fact.
There is a widespread belief that the nineteenth century was the age of “God’s agony.” If it be true that Christianity then was subjected to one of the fiercest assaults in her long history, it is also true that she enjoyed a period of exceptional vitality and fulfilment. (Henri Daniel-Rops)
Henri Daniel-Rops (1901–1965), the nom de plume of Henri Petiot, was a French Catholic historian. His bibliography comprises seventy books—written over a span of just thirty years—and includes Sacred History, Jesus and His Times, and the monumental, ten-volume History of the Church of Christ. He also served as editor for the Twentieth Century Encyclopedia of Catholicism, which consisted of one hundred and fifty volumes. Phenomenally successful in his own time, Daniel-Rops made religious history accessible and popular; in 1955, he was elected to the Académie française and in 1956 he received the Order of St. Gregory from Pope Pius XII.
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Paperback: 322pp. (Vol. 1) and 326pp. (Vol. 2)
ISBN: 978-1685952990 (Vol. 1) and 978-1685953003 (Vol. 2)