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to reconcile all sides—really Rome and the French government—with a compromise document. Dialogue, if it ever existed, certainly ended when an oath of allegiance to the nation, the law, and the king was imposed on all priests engaged in active apostolates; swearing the oath meant acceptance of the Civil Constitution at the Clergy. Anticipating resistance, the government, at the beginning of January 1791, ordered the clergy to take the oath of allegiance on the next day. The French Catholic Church as envisaged by the authors of the Civil Constitution was now a reality, albeit with a major problem: only a small handful of French bishops agreed to be part of this reformed Catholicism. Finally, the minimally religious maverick bishop of Autun, Charles Talleyrand, along with two auxiliary bishops, agreed to consecrate new bishops, and followed conscientiously the time-honored church ritual for these consecrations. Roman authorities rejected these consecrations as illegitimate (but valid), with the pope finally and officially condemning the Civil Constitution.

      Whether in response or on their own, legislators passed laws proclaiming religious liberty—hitherto limited in Catholic France—and restricting professional organizations in a way that could neutralize the efforts of the French clergy who refused to take the oath.

      Priests and Bishops

      Chapter 1. Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès and Henri Grégoire, two priests with strong and visible personalities, worked for government reform in the months of preparation for the Estates General, France’s first parliamentary assembly since 1614. Their personal orientations reveal the polarities of revolutionary priesthood in 1789: the cranky and secular Sieyès, in fact minimally a priest, trying to bracket religion to bring about a new political era; and the imposing and pastoral Grégoire trying to reform religion to bring about a new political era as well. As a seminarian, Sieyès had developed a distinct philosophy, or rhetoric, of religion, as well as a refined musical taste. His tract Sur Dieu ultramètre et sur la fibre religieuse de l’homme (On God beyond Measure and on Man’s Religious Fiber) is a suggestive dialogue on religion that bears comparison with later German philosophy. Grégoire, three years before ordination, produced an essay on poetry as a way to beauty, truth, and, through scripture, to God. Their early lives and seminary educations gave both of them the opportunity to develop the roles they played as members of the Estates General and thereafter.

      Chapter 2. The political efforts of Sieyès and Grégoire were abetted by the great numbers of priests in France who demanded reforms in the clerical cahiers de doléances, collected and submitted as part of the national program to inform the deputies to the Estates General of the complaints and demands of their constituencies. When the priests who were actual deputies to the Estates General began their own official discussions of religious and political change, they took sides, for and against this change, in weeks of clerical haggling recorded best by the abbé Jacques Jallet but also by other priests who were present at the Assembly meetings. The decision of these members of the First Estate, the clergy, to join the Third Estate, the commoners, in a new National (Constituent) Assembly was a confused affair: a wide range of assumptions and misunderstandings was behind the actual move. Subsequently, priests and bishops on the Ecclesiastical Committee, appointed by the National Assembly, were dominated by lay canon lawyers. Together, they were responsible for the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, the founding document for the July 1790 revolutionary reorganization of French Catholicism in the Constituent Assembly.

      Chapter 3. Henri Grégoire’s highly influential colleagues were Claude Fauchet, the most visible of the revolutionary priests in Paris, and Adrien Lamourette, mentor to Grégoire across the years and a theological adviser to key members of the Constituent Assembly. The derring-do of Fauchet as he scampered about in a rain of gunfire during the taking of the Bastille can be partly explained by his theology, but more from his personal and political engagement in the new political era. His major book, De la religion nationale, had been published a month and a half before the attack on the Bastille. In the very first years of the Revolution, he was at the center of radical political dialogue and journalism. But he was above all a constitutional bishop, high profile of course, given his earlier deeds and publications, and creative in his response to opponents of the Constitutional Church with its new bishops.

      Chapter 4. Lamourette’s work alongside a leading figure of the early Revolution, the comte de Mirabeau, is displayed both by his theology and by his day-to-day practical ministry. He articulated both the role of the church for a new political era and a more-or-less systematic theology—“ecclesiology” is the technical label—for a renewed and enlightened church. Lamourette should be situated between Mirabeau, whom he advised, and Camus, the lay canon lawyer, whose work was one of the bases of his own theology. Elected as constitutional bishop of the primatial see (first in dignity of the French dioceses) of Lyon, he is best known for his intervention as a delegate to the successor to the Constituent Assembly, the so-called Legislative Assembly; it was a passing moment of reconciliation in 1792, and so, a flash forward in this part of the narrative (see Chronology, Part II: Survival, 1791–1795) on behalf of a constitutional monarchy, only a month before both assembly and monarchy disappeared.

      Chronology

      1789

24 JanuaryModalities of election to the Estates General officially set up.
FebruaryPublication of Sieyès’s What Is the Third Estate?
4 MayProcession and Mass for opening of Estates General.
30 MayPublication of Fauchet’s De la religion nationale.
13 JuneThree curés led by Jallet join the Third Estate.
17 JuneThe Third Estate led by Sieyès proclaims itself the National Assembly.
19 JuneVote of the clergy to join the National Assembly.
20 JuneTennis Court Oath, with Grégoire and Sieyès in attendance.
9 JulyThe National Assembly proclaims itself the Constituent Assembly.
14 JulyFall of the Bastille.
4 AugustRenunciation of aristocratic privileges by members of the former Second Estate.
11 AugustClergy abandon the tithe, which was paradoxically defended by Sieyès.
26 AugustDeclaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen.
2 NovemberNationalization of church lands.

      1790

5 FebruaryThe Assembly adds new members to its Ecclesiastical Committee.
13 FebruaryLaw proposed by Jean-Baptiste Treilhard, a delegate especially engaged in church reform, withdrawing official recognition of monastic vows.
12 AprilMotion of the Carthusian Dom Gerle to recognize Catholicism as the religion of the French.
12 JuneAvignon, the papal enclave, asks to be attached to France.
13 JuneCounterrevolutionary insurrection at Nîmes with massacre of Protestants.
12 JulyText of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy approved.
14 JulyFirst revolutionary festival, supported by both revolutionary and conservative clergy.
30 OctoberArchbishop Boisgelin’s Exposition des principes attempts to bridge gap between Rome and the Constituent Assembly.
27 NovemberDecree imposing clerical oath of allegiance to the nation, the law, and the king, implying acceptance of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy.
26 DecemberKing sanctions the decree of 27 November.

      1791

3 JanuaryClergy ordered to take the oath of allegiance to the nation, the law, and the king within twenty-four hours.
FebruaryBeginning of election and consecration of the constitutional bishops (through May), the first consecration performed by Talleyrand of Autun with two auxiliary bishops.
10 MarchPius VI condemns the Civil Constitution.
2 AprilDeath of Mirabeau.
13 AprilPope reiterates his condemnation of the Civil Constitution.
7 MayProclamation of religious liberty.
14 JuneLe Chapelier Law forbidding worker/professional organizations and strikes is invoked by constitutional bishops to control refractory clergy.

       Chapter One

       THE

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