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Old Friday, March 2nd, 2007
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Default Cardinal Johannes de Turrecremata and the Defense of the Institutional Church

Protector of the Faith

Cardinal Johannes de Turrecremata
and the Defense of the Institutional Church


Thomas M. Izbicki



PREFACE

Catholic historians have often described the conciliar era (1413-50) in melodramatic terms. The Council of Constance (1414-18) healed one schism but opened the way for another. The Council of Basel (1431-49) was the villain of the piece; it tried, unsuccessfully, to usurp papal prerogatives. Heroic roles have been assigned to defenders of the Roman primacy: Nicholas of Cusa was called "the Hercules of the Eugenians"; the sobriquets "defender of the faith" or "protector of the faith" have been assigned to the Dominican cardinal Johannes de Turrecremata.
1 In fact, papalist historians have produced a distorted picture of Turrecremata's career, dissolving the outlines of his personality and intellect into the image of a single-minded champion of papal absolutism. Such an approach leaves open only one question: to what extent was Turrecremata a precursor of the First Vatican Council"

Recent scholarship has raised serious questions about this portrait. One notable challenge has been the demonstration that Turrecremata's papalism did not spring full grown from his forehead. Born into the Creat Schism, and a participant in the Council of Constance, Turrecremata initially shared many conciliarist ideas common in his day. He arrived at his highly influential refutation of them only after years of struggle and hard labor/
1 Moreover, new light has been cast on Turrecremata's entire career, highlighting the breadth of his interests; the Dominican cardinal was an active reformer, an opponent of heresy, and a patron of the arts, as well as a papal apologist. 1

In certain respects, none of these recent works doesjustice to Turrecremata's ecclesiology, his doctrine of the nature and government of the Church. Certainly, no one work explores all the riches of cardinal's thought. 5 The best and most comprehensive recent studies, those of Karl Binder, tend to summarize the Suntma dc ecdesia and to treat the cardinal's doctrines as agreeing always with modern Roman Catholicism. 1 ' A different problem appears in the works of Antony Black, who has discussed Turrecremata's thought in almost purely political terms. Such an analysis omits a crucial dimension of Turrecremata's ecclesiology, namely, his lively concern with the Church's saving mission; no study that ignores this basically religious aspect can be deemed nearly accurate. 7 The present book attempts to steer between these two poles, presenting a balanced assessment of Turrecremata's ecclesiology within a chronological framework. Primarily institutional questions will be raised, those concerned with the defense of the visible Church and of papal power. However, each answer will consider the spiritual dimension of the problems treated, even when purely spiritual matters are allocated less space in the text. Only thus can we hope to comprehend the doctrines of one of the papacy's greatest apologists, a figure whose authority has been invoked in discussions of the Roman primacy to the present day. Indeed, an accurate understanding of Turrecremata's ecclesiology, with its matching concern for the right order of the institutional Church and the right discipline of clergy and laity, sheds light on the formation of the Catholic position that came to dominate the Counter-Reformation. 8

The author accepts blame for any blunders he may have made, but he wishes to thank teachers, colleagues, and friends for their indispensable aid and support. Foremost among these is Professor Brian Tierney of Cornell University, who directed the doctoral thesis from which this volume derives. Subsequent drafts were written in Berkeley, where the author was a Robbins Fellow in the University of California Law School, and were retyped with patience and skill by Maria Elena Romo. Both at the Robbins Collection and in the Institute of Medieval Canon Law, Professor Stephan Kuttner created the atmosphere conducive to research and scholarly writing. Drafts of the book
have been read by Mr. John Kenney, formerly of the Institute staff, Father John Hilary Martin, O.P., and, for the last go-around, Helen Rand Parish. Finally, theauthorparticularly thanks Mrs. Leonardo Olschki and ProfessorWalter Ullmann. To the latter, despite disagreements, he owes a large intellectual debt.

Notre Dame, Indiana
December 1, 1980



CONTENTS

ABBREVIATIONS xiii

1 LIFE AND WORKS
At Three Councils—Serving Eugenius IV 1
Service under Later Popes 17

2 THE CHURCH AS INSTITUTION
The Membership, ' 'Congregatio Fidelium" 31
The Structure, Congregation or Corporation 41

3 THE POWERS OFTHE CLERGY
Orders and Jurisdiction 53
Magisterium and Infallibility 60
The Doctrine of Hierarchy 72

4 THE PAPACY
A Papalist View ofthe 'Roman Church' 75
The Office of Vicar ofChrist 82
The Limits ofPapal Power 87

5 THE GENERAL COUNCIL
Debating the Constance Decrees 95
The Desirability ofa Council 99
The Nature ofthe Council 100

6 CHRISTENDOM
The Temporal Sphere 107
Papal Power in Temporal Affairs 112
Lay Intervention in Ecclesiastical Affairs 116

CONCLUSION 121

NOTES 125

BIBLIOGRAPHY 193

INDEX ..201



Full work: Protector of the Faith
__________________

"Do not be suprised, my friend, that I long so much for remote lands in which people feel immensely rich with very little; it is true that I live in Rome enjoying a life of fame and prestige, but it is also true that I was born from Celts and Iberians."


--Marcus Valerius Martialis, Epigrammata

Last edited by Ferran; Friday, March 2nd, 2007 at 16:17.
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