The role of the Jansenists in the Civil Constitution of the Clergy (1750–1831), Jansenist priest and
revolutionary leader Among the early defenders of the
French Revolution were personalities known for their Gallicanism, sympathy for Jansenism and more or less marked adherence to the theology of
Edmond Richer. The role of the Jansenists in the Revolution was essentially a product of the ecclesiological character of late Jansenism, which was tinged with Gallicanism. The role of Jansenising priests was noted from the beginning of the Revolution. Indeed, without the addition of a few priests to the
Third Estate during the assembly of the
Estates General of 1789, it would not have been able to declare itself a
National Assembly on 17 June 1789. These priests were led by Abbot
Henri Grégoire, whose attachment to Port-Royal and Jansenism was known. Grégoire shared with the Jansenists a figurist vision of history, which underlay his statement that the Revolution was part of the fulfilment of God's will. Around Grégoire and the priests favourable to the Revolution mainly Gallicans and other Jansenists from the
parlements gathered together. Louis Adrien Le Paige was generally favourable to the Revolution. Likewise,
Armand-Gaston Camus and
Jean-Denis Lanjuinais, renowned parliamentarians, were heavily involved in Revolutionary events while remanining attached to the Jansenist cause. Lanjuinais was notably a member of the ecclesiastical committee which prepared the
Civil Constitution of the Clergy. The importance of Jansenists in the drafting of this constitution, so favourable to their demands on many points, meant that the Abbot
Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès attacked those who "seem to have seen in the Revolution merely a superb opportunity to lift up the theological importance of Port-Royal and to establish the apotheosis of Jansenius over the tomb of his enemies". The Civil Constitution of the Clergy satisfied the Jansenists on many points; it put an end to practices that were widely criticised, for example the residence of bishops outside of their dioceses or non-canonical
benefices. The Constitution reinstated diocesan
synods, considerably reduced the influence of the pope and reproved formulas such as
that of Alexander VII. Furthermore, it satisfied the wealthy fringe of the clergy by establishing election within the Gallican Church and by promoting cooperation between parish priests and
prelates, rather than a relationship of subordination. For these Jansenists, the Civil Constitution of the Clergy and all the ecclesiastical constitution that resulted from it were nothing other than the culmination of all the religious and parliamentary struggles of the 18th century.
Dale K. Van Kley lists five points which brought together the interests of Gallican Jansenists and those of France in the early Revolution, and which Camus in particular developed. Thus, in addition to Abbé Grégoire, bishop of
Blois and
de facto head of the Constitutional Church, were Claude Debertier, Jean-Baptiste Pierre Saurine, Louis Charrier de La Roche and about fifteen others who, without necessarily being
appelants, nevertheless identified themselves strongly with Jansenism and Richer. Laypeople and clerics joined the
Société de philosophie chrétienne ('Society of Christian philosophy'), which pursued religious studies during the Revolution in a strongly Jansenist spirit. In the final years of the Revolution, the Society published the
Annales de la religion ('Annals of religion'), a Gallican and Jansenist journal, which published the first version of Abbé Grégoire's
Ruines de Port-Royal des Champs en 1801 ('Ruins of Port-Royal-des-Champs in 1801'). Members of the Society frequently took residences for reflection at Port-Royal-des-Champs, and were in close contact with the Italian Jansenists and
Scipione de' Ricci. There were, however, a significant number of Jansenists who completely rejected the Revolution. As for clergymen, the best known were and . But others, like Abbots Mey, Dalléas and the
Oratorian clergy of
Lyon, were also very much in opposition to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy. They were supported by
canonists like Gabriel-Nicolas Maultrot, and by pious laypeople such as
Nicolas Bergasse in Lyon or in Paris. Some, like , a notable Jansenist, swore the oath of loyalty to the Constitution, but only with great hesitation. (Abbé Sicard,
The Old Clergy of France, 1893)Jansenism is often cited, if not as one of the causes of the Revolution, at least as having shaped the state of mind necessary for its outbreak. • Jansenism maintained a seditious spirit. Its revolts and resistance against popes and kings were a negative influence for the people, who could reproduce in politics the religious attitude of Jansenists. • Jansenism discouraged the faithful. They preferred to distance themselves from religion rather than satisfy the demands of Jansenist priests. This accusation is based on the correlation between the geographical distribution of the
appelants and
constitutional priests during the Revolution and the zones of
dechristianisation. However this correlation is difficult to interpret. • Through its association with Gallicanism, Jansenism was a source of
schism in France under the Revolution, between the constitutional clergy, favourable to a national church, and the 'refractory clergy' who followed the condemnation of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy by
Pope Pius VI. • Finally, Jansenism was often associated with
republicanism, because it dissociated itself from court life, with the
Solitaires giving an image of a 'Republic of Letters', and because leading figures during the Revolution, such as Abbé Grégoire, did not hide their attachment to Port-Royal. s being returned to the pope by France, strengthened by the
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789). The historical Jansenist opposition to papal bulls coincided with Revolutionary anti-clericalism. Among 19th-century republicans, who were quite favourable to Port-Royal and Jansenism as movements which fought against absolute monarchy and royal authority, there were also defenders of the theory according to which the Jansenists were largely responsible for the outbreak of the Revolution. Thus
Jules Michelet,
Louis Blanc,
Henri Martin and
Charles-Louis Chassin argued for a partly Jansenist origin of the Revolution. If it is possible to associate Jansenism and the Revolution outside the religious domain, it is because there was a tradition of protest among Jansenists and because socially, those who drove the Revolution (bourgeoisie of the legal and parliamentary worlds) were the same as those who embraced the
appelant cause in the 18th century. Some (mainly among the Jesuits) were convinced of the existence of a Jansenist plot aimed at overthrowing monarchical power. At the beginning of the 20th century, historians such as
Louis Madelin and
Albert Mathiez refuted this Jansenist conspiracy thesis and emphasised a conjunction of forces and demands as responsible for both the outbreak of the Revolution and the Civil Constitution of the Clergy. The theory that the explanation of the Revolution must appeal to several causes, of which Jansenism is only one among others, is now the consensus among historians. ==Jansenism outside France==