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Andrew Willard Jones - Before Church and State: A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St. Louis IX

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Andrew Willard Jones Before Church and State: A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St. Louis IX
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Before Church and State: A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St. Louis IX: summary, description and annotation

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Before Church and State: A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St. Louis IX explores the problem of Church and State in thirteenth century France by taking a detailed look at the lives of two men, Gui Foucois (Pope Clement IV) and Louis IX and the institutions they helped build. It argues that the problem of Church and State did not exist in the thirteenth century. The spiritual and temporal powers existed, to be sure, but these were not parallel structures attempting to govern the same social space in a contest over sovereignty. Rather, the spiritual and the temporal powers were wrapped up together in a differentiated and sacramental world, and both included the other as aspects of their very identity. Government happened through networks of consilium et auxilium that cut across lay/clerical lines. These networks necessarily included both spiritual and temporal powers. During the reign of Louis IX the kings network expanded to encompass the majority of the social space. This network had integral to it both the papal fullness of power and the royal fullness of power without any contradiction. The book reconstructs how such government actually happened and not simply the arguments that intellectuals had about how it ought to happen. This reconstruction is, furthermore, presented as a response to how modern historians and scholars of politics often suppose government to have happened. The book is, therefore, directly aimed at engaging and challenging the consensus of contemporary scholarship. What is more, it brings contemporary thought concerning the definition of religion, secular, and politics into the study of the Middle Ages, something that is long overdue. Up to this point, scholars interested in challenging modern conceptions of religion have, when treating the Middle Ages, had to rely largely on historical scholarship written from within the conventional paradigm. This book aims to provide these scholars with a methodologically and technically rigorous alternative. If the books thesis is widely accepted, it will call for the reconsideration of the accepted narrative of medieval Church and State.

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ENDORSEMENTS

Scholars over the last few decades have challenged the construction of the religious/secular duality from a theoretical point of view. That was the easy part. In this fascinating volume, Andrew Jones does the hard work of historical analysis to deconstruct the religious/secular divide. In a richly detailed study of Louis IXs reign, Jones shows how anachronistic our categories of religious/secular, religion/politics, and Church/ State are when we talk about the medieval period. Even more importantly, Jones suggests how those same categories operate ideologically when we talk about our own period, because they help to reinforce the notion that the way we divide up the world is natural, inevitable, and the summit of a process of evolution begun with our benighted medieval forebears. Jones work is history at its best, helping us to understand not only the past, but ourselves, better.

WILLIAM T. CAVANAUGH, DEPAUL UNIVERSITY

Even many of the best scholars still construe the Middle Ages in terms of tensions between Church and State that prefigure those of modernity and modern tensions between the religious and the secular. But in this exciting and scholarly new book Andrew Jones amply shows that in the thirteenth century the secular time of this world and its concerns was still governed by processes of sacramental mediation. The West was originally more integrated than we like to think, in a way that may allow us to see that, if our legacy is significantly different from that of Islam, it may not be different in quite the way that we think. For this reason, amongst others, this book could not be more timely.

JOHN MILBANK, UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM

For the past half-century, social historians have been recovering a lost world of pre-modern, organic social relations. This scholarship has challenged modern readers to re-think basic modern assumptions about a range of social phenomena, most especially organization of work and family life. With Before Church and State , Andrew Willard Jones accomplishes a similar feat with respect to pre-modern politics. Here he challenges perhaps the most sacred cow of modernity: the privatization of religion. Building on the theoretical insights of historians and theologians who have identified religion as itself a modern construct, Jones draws on extensive research to provide a masterful reconstruction of the political/religious imaginary of medieval Christendom at its peak in thirteenth-century France. He reveals a world in which there is no problem of Church and State because there is no clear distinction between Church and State. Even more importantly, he shows that this organic integration of the Church into every aspect of political life was no theocracya rule of the State by the Churchbut rather a reflection of incarnational and Trinitarian theology. Medievals understood the temporal and the spiritual as distinct-yet-united by analogy to the human and divine natures of Christ, while they understood society as a communion of persons by analogy to the Trinity. By these standards, modernity has separated not only Church and State, but every person from every other person, leaving us with a peace that is merely a cessation of hostilities rather than true concord.

CHRISTOPHER SHANNON, CHRISTENDOM COLLEGE

It is often said, and rightly, that the past is a foreign country. Implicit in this statement is the conviction that when a genuine encounter takes place between the past and the present, the time-traveler returns home enriched, with a capacity to see both the past and the present anew. While there are many books on medieval history that accomplish this task to a limited degree, I would place Andrew Jones study of the sacramental kingdom of King Louis IX among an elite category of books that open up genuinely new ways of seeing both past and present.

To effect such an encounter is not easy; for all too often, the travelers own habits of thought and action render the foreignness of the past invisible. With a keen and sympathetic eye for both medieval and modern ways of seeing, Jones carefully measures the distance between the two. Then, drawing on an impressive range of sources, he lets the past speak with its own voice, without being pre-empted or colonized by modern habits of perception. The reader wins a double prizethe political and religious world of thirteenth-century France, in all its exotic otherness; and a new standpoint from which to see, perhaps for the first time, the exotic otherness of todays political and religious landscape.

DAVID FOOTE, UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS

Dr. Jones has done the world of scholarship an immense service with the publication of Before Church and State . Thomas Kuhn famously spoke of paradigm shifts within science. Dr. Jones volume has the potential to do just that: shift an entire paradigm within the history of the medieval period, which would have a ripple effect in a host of other fields: history of law, politics, theology, and philosophy. What Jones has done is shown the complexity of medieval Christendom which problematizes the universally assumed dichotomy between the sacred and the secular. With his thorough treatment of the historical context to St. Louis IX and Pope Clement IV, including copious primary sources, Jones has demonstrated that far from a raging battle between throne and altar, the evidence indicates a unified Christian society. Modern scholars have anachronistically read back into the historical record post-Enlightenment divisions between secular and sacred, where no such divisions actually existed. Instead, conflicts were aimed at the shared twin goal of both laity and clergy, namely the common temporal good and the eternal good of souls. Jones immensely important volume represents a masterful treatment of the historical data which promises to have a profound impact on a number of disciplines, especially history, politics, and theology. Extremely well-written, erudite, and perspicacious, Before Church and State is a gripping historical narrative and should be read widely by any intellectual concerned with our common past, present, and future.

JEFFREY L. MORROW, SETON HALL UNIVERSITY

BEFORE CHURCH AND STATE

BEFORE CHURCH AND STATE

A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St. Louis IX

ANDREW WILLARD JONES

Before Church and State A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St Louis IX - image 2

Steubenville, Ohio

www.EmmausAcademic.com

Before Church and State A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St Louis IX - image 3

Steubenville, Ohio

www.emmausacademic.com

A Division of The St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology

Editor-in-Chief: Scott Hahn

1468 Parkview Circle

Steubenville, Ohio 43952

2017 Andrew Willard Jones

All rights reserved. Published 2017

Printed in the United States of America

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Jones, Andrew Willard, 1980- author.

Title: Before church and state : a study of social order in St. Louis IXs sacramental kingdom / Andrew Willard Jones.

Description: Steubenville : Emmaus Academic, 2017. | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.

Identifiers: LCCN 2017008738 (print) | LCCN 2017010988 (ebook) | ISBN 9781945125409 (ebook) | ISBN 9781945125140 (hardcover)

Subjects: LCSH: Church and state--France--History--To 1500. | Church and state--History of doctrines--Middle Ages, 600-1500. | Louis IX, King of France, 1214-1270.

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