Council of Trent

16th Ecumenical Council of the Catholic Church

The Council of Trent was the 19th Ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church.[1] Important members of the Catholic Church met in Trento three times between 13 December 1545 and 4 December 1563, in reaction to the Protestant Reformation.[1]

A session of the Council of Trent, from an engraving

It reinforced Catholic doctrine regarding salvation, the sacraments, and the Biblical canon, answering all Protestant disputes.[1]

The council often could not meet when they wanted to, and sometimes could not meet at all, because of resistance from the popes and revolt against the emperor.[2]Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor wanted the council to meet, and Pope Paul III summoned the council in 1537, but the plans fell through. In 1538, ideas for a council again failed.[2] The pope asked for the council to meet in 1542, but it did not actually meet until 1545. The council was not active between 1547 and 1551. It again met from 1551 to 1552, when it was suspended due to a revolt against the emperor.[2] Pope Paul IV (1555-59) strongly disliked Protestant ideas and the council could not start again until his succesor took office.[2] The council met for the last time from 1562-63.

The Council of Trent was part of the Counter-Reformation. It would be over 300 years until the next Ecumenical Council.

Pope Paul III saw that the Protestant Reformation was getting bigger. Before, a small number of priests were part of the reformation, but soon many princes, particularly in Germany, supported its ideas. Therefore, Pope Paul III desired a council. But the council could not meet until 1545 and met right before Martin Luther's death. The council was moved to Bologna in March 1547 with the excuse of avoiding a plague;[2] without any plans to meet again, 17 September 1549. The council was reopened at Trento, 1 May 1551, by Pope Julius III (1550–55); broken up 1552, recalled by Pope Pius IV (1559–65) for the last time, 18 January 1562, when it continued until 4 December 1563.

Objects and general results

Objects were:

  1. To stop the ideas and practice of Protestantism and to support the Catholic Church's ideas.
  2. To change the parts of the church and actions of church leaders that damaged or hurt the Catholic Church's ideas and image.

The results were:

  1. The church's interpretation of the Bible was final. Any Christian who did not agree with the interpretation was a heretic. Also, the Bible and Church Tradition had equal authority.
  2. The relationship of faith and works in salvation was defined, following disagreements over Martin Luther's doctrine of "justification by faith alone".
  3. Catholic practices such as pilgrimages, the veneration of saints and relics, especially the Virgin Mary were strongly reaffirmed.
  4. The selling and buying of false indulgences were banned.

The doctrinal decisions of the council are divided into decrees (decreta), which contain the positive statement of the conciliar dogmas, and into short canons (canones), which condemn the differing Protestant views with the concluding "anathema sit" ("let him be anathema").

List of dogmatic decrees

DoctrineSessionDateCanonsDecrees
On the Symbol of the Faith3February 4, 1546None1
The Holy Scriptures4April 8, 1546None1
Original sin5June 7, 154654
Justification6January 13, 15473316
The Sacraments in General7March 3, 1547131
Baptism7March 3, 154714None
Confirmation7March 3, 15473None
Holy Eucharist13October 11, 1551118
Penance14November 15, 15511515
Extreme Unction14November 4, 155143
Holy Eucharist, On Communion21June 16, 156243
Holy Eucharist, On the Sacrifice of the Mass22September 9, 156294
Holy Orders23July 15, 156383
Matrimony24November 11, 1563121
Purgatory25December 4, 1563None1
Cults: Saints Relics Images25December 4, 1563None3
Indulgences25December 4, 1563None1

Related pages

References

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