Under-the-radar concordats
In secular France no one calls them concordats and most French people don't realise that they actually have 14 of them.
♦ Steady erosion of church-state separation in France today
♦ About the Trinity-of-the-Mountains concordats (1828, 1974, 1999, 2005)
♦ Concordat on church & convent of Trinity-of-the-Mountains, Rome (1999): text
♦ Higher education concordat (2008): text
to believe or not to believe....It is the neutrality of the public arena which permits the various religions to coexist harmoniously. [...] This is why it is not negotiable!
Concordat on the church & convent of Trinity-of-the-Mountains in Rome (1999): text | |
This concordat claims that this church and convent in Rome need a pact between teh French Government and the Vatican to aid their "secular expression". It further claims that it was founded in 1828 to teach French and diffuse French culture and talks of helping French pilgrims today. It's not clear what any of this has to do with secularism, but the Vatican seems eager to keep this concordat as a precedent-setting agreement. | |
Steady erosion of church-state separation in France today | |
Napoleon's concordat is not a dead. It lives on the fringes, poised to be extended throughout France whenever the political conditions allow. The Church has been urging the extension of the Napoleonic Concordat beyond Alsace-Moselle, quietly concluding concordats under other names, gradually acquiring state subsidies and even offering pilgrimage tourism to particularly pious regions. | |
About the Trinity-of-the-Mountains concordats (1828, 1974, 1999, 2005) | |
There are five concordats in this strange series: the first made by a bloodthirsty Bourbon in 1828, and subsequent ones in 1974, 1999, 2005 and 2016. The follow-up pacts look like foot-in-the-door concordats. Although the Vatican website correctly identifies these as “Concordats”, they are officially titled “Endorsements” (Avenants), which hides their function from the French public. | |
Higher education concordat (2008): Text and commentary | |
This is a wedge concordat which masquerades as a necessary consequence of Europe's harmonising of the recognition of academic degrees. Without a vote in the French legislature, President Sarkozy gave state recognition to Catholic theology diplomas, which opened the door for Protestants to get this, too. The ultimate aim appears to be to secure state funding for both Catholic universities and the study of Catholic theology and to overcome opposition by extending this to other religions. |
