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Apostolic Fathers of the Church Biographies & Writings of Notable Catholics Catholic News Commentary by Michael Voris, S.T.B.
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Effects of the French Revolution What happens when a country turns away from God, rejects the God-given authority of the Church and acts on the impulses of man? France experienced such a cultural and religious revolution during the 18th century. Although King Louis XVI and his wife, Marie Antoinette, were very much concerned about justice in Franceunlike most of the nobility of the timethey became victims of the French intellectuals who upheld the principles of Liberalism: the beliefs that man is responsible to no authority; that men owe nothing to God; and that the mind and will of man replaces the will of God. These three tenets have been the cause of much suffering throughout Europe from the 16th century onward, especially in France. The French Revolution began in July, A.D. 1789 when a mob stormed an old prison named the Bastille. This was more of a symbolic act than anything else. Inside the prison 120 guards were watching over seven prisoners, six of whom were petty thieves, and the other an insane nobleman who had been placed in the prison at the request of his family. Thereafter civil disorder was a common scene in both the cities and the countryside. There was no law and order in France for the next few years. The French liberals of the Revolution renounced God and issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man. In this document basic human rights were stated as coming from the state government rather than from God as traditional Catholic France had always believed. The Revolution forced Louis XVI to exchange his crown for a red cap of liberty. The crown had, at least in part, represented the authority of God entrusted to the "Catholic" king. The new liberty cap represented authority handed out from the state government.
The suppression of the
Church Consequently, most parishes stood empty. The faithful Catholics met with "non-juring priests," those priests who had not sworn the oath, in secret underground chapels for Masses and the sacraments. Knowing this to be the case, the legislature decreed that all Catholic priests who had refused the oath were to be arrested. Louis, however, knowing that hatred of Christ and His Church was at the heart of the Revolution, vetoed the decree and became even more despised with the revolutionaries who had seized control of the Church and the State.
The Reign of Terror A group called The Committee for Public Safety, headed by a man named Robespierre, came to power as the absolute dictatorship of France and instituted communist laws. One of their first acts was to outlaw worship of the true God. In A.D. 1793 Robespierre proclaimed that France was to have a new religion: emanating from his own deistic convictions, the short-lived cult centered about a "supreme being" and was intended to add spiritual content to the otherwise godless principles of the Revolution. The artist, Jacques Louis David designed an inaugural ceremony, in which the statue of Wisdom rose out of the smoke and ashes. Robespierre decreed the existence of the Supreme Being as the basis of rational Republican religion. In the autumn of A.D. 1793, the new dictatorship instituted a new calendar whose names would more closely correspond to the spirit of the time than the old Gregorian calendar which was based on the liturgical year of the Church. In line with other de-Christianizing actsmany churches had been gutted and converted to Temples of Reason, museums or other secular buildingsthe names of days and months were replaced by symbols of nature and other things related to the Republics principles. Thus the days were given names such as Lambs Lettuce, Plow, Billy Goat, and Spinach; the holidays were known as Opinion Day, Labor Day, and so on. The new system was implemented retroactively from September 22, 1792, which by coincidence was both the fall equinox and the day the French Republic was created. This calendar was observed by the French until Napolean reverted to the use of the Gregorian calendar in A.D. 1806. During the Reign of Terror, Robespierre ordered thousands of men to the guillotine. Anyone who had any special talent or made a good wage was seen as an enemy of the Revolution. The country, at that time, was governed by men who respected not even themselves. In a span of only seven weeks during A.D. 1794 they sent 1,376 people to the guillotine, the last of which were the Carmelite nuns of Compiegne. Even Robespierre was eventually executed by his own men.
Effects of the Revolution "All men of genius are French," proclaimed Napolean, "no matter in what country they may have been born." Napoleans men studied foreign guidebooks to find the richest treasures of art to steal, selecting the choicest pictures from palaces and churches so that the French public might enjoy the aesthetic pleasures once reserved for the aristocracy and clergy. The looting of cultural treasures, supervised by the "Governmental Commission for Research of Artistic and Scientific Objects in Conquered Countries" was led by the artist Vivant Denon was placed in charge of the looting. The value of all the treasures looted by the French during this time is estimated at 100 billion dollars. "The sovereignty of all the arts should pass to France," declared Napolean, "in order to affirm and embellish the reign of liberty." Inspired by the dictators pronouncements such as this, French art commissioners followed the revolutionary armies, systematically looting the art treasures of what is now Italy, Germany, Holland, Belgium and Luxembourg. The Louvre Museum in Paris was established in A.D. 1793 and was dedicated in A.D. 1798 when Italian art and cultural treasures were conducted into the new national museum.
The effect on fashion and
mores After the Reign of Terror, both men and women cropped their hair close to their scalp. Some wealthy Parisian men affected a look of the beggars. They wore broken spectacles, baggy trousers, and shirts that did not fit properly. Women began to dress immodestly; they wore fashions which imitated the thin gowns of the ancient Pagan Greeks. Doctors had to remind these ladies that the climate of France was much harsher than that of Greece, but the French ladies remained slaves to the fashions of the day. It was truly the disintegration of traditional Catholic society.
The effects on future
regimes
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