Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
(Council of Trent (The Council of Trent was called by Paul Ill who was…
Council of Trent
The Council of Trent was called by Paul Ill who was pope from 1534 to 1549 and it first sat in December 1545.
The pope did not attend the meetings of the Council and he took no formal part in it.
The Council of Trent played an important part in determining the outcome of the Counter-Reformation.
700 bishops could have attended the Council but to start with only 31 turned up along with 50 theologians.
Lectures and Objectives
The Council of Trent (1545-1563) examined how the Catholic Church would reform for the better. It played a vital role in revitalizing the Roman Catholic Church in many parts of Europe.
The Catholic Church formed a new order called the Jesuits led by Ignatius Loyola and emphasized education.
The Catholic Church responded to the
with the Counter Reformation.
The baroque art, music, and architecture style was adopted by the Catholic Church to bring out the strong emotions of the Christian faith.
Baroque and the Counter Reformation
Under Loyola’s leadership, the Jesuit order became the
most influential missionary society of early modern times.
The Protestant Reformation created a religious upheaval
unlike any other in the history of Western Christianity
The Jesuit order was a fascinating amalgam of two
elements: mysticism and militant religious zeal.
Confronting Protestant challenge, the Roman Catholic Church pursued a path that ensured its survival in the modern world.
Jesuits and Ignatius Loyola
The Catholic Church formed a new order called the Jesuits led by Ignatius Loyola and emphasized education.
Over the years, Ignatius became expert in the art of spiritual direction.
St. Ignatius Loyola was born in 1491, one of 13 children of a family of minor nobility in northern Spain.
With a small group of friends, Ignatius Loyola founded the Society of Jesus, or the Jesuits.