Popular Ecclesiology in the Pre-Reformation : Reading the Pattern of Recourse to Church Courts

ThéoRèmes 18 (18) (2022)
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Abstract

The pattern of recourse to late medieval church courts suggests how late medieval Christians imagined their Church. Their choice of defendants, crimes, and punishments allowed them to define their communities. In the case of excommunication for debt, the use of procedural excommunications announced from the choir screen after the bidding prayers permitted the exclusion of debtors from the sacramental and economic community. Indeed, failure to pay one’s debts was as uncharitable as usury because the two communities were imperfectly distinguished – until c. 1500.

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