- Charles-Maurice Le Tellier
Charles-Maurice Le Tellier (b. at
Turin , 1642; d. atReims , 1710) was a FrenchArchbishop of Reims .The son of
Michel Le Tellier and brother ofLouvois , both ministers ofLouis XIV . he studied for the Church, won thedoctorate of theology at theSorbonne , and was ordained priest in 1666. Provided, even before his ordination, with several royal abbeys, he rapidly rose to the coadjutorship ofLangres , then to that ofReims , and became titular of that see at the age of twenty-nine.His administration was marked by zeal and success along the lines of popular education, training of clerics, parochial organization, restoration of ecclesiastical discipline, extirpation of Protestantism from the Sedan district, etc. The importance of his see together with the royal favour brought him to the front in the affairs of the Church in France.
As secretary of the "
Petite Assemblée " of 1681, he reported for the king and against the pope on all disputed points: the extension of the royal claim called "régale", the forcible placing of aCistercian abbess over theAugustinian nuns ofCharonne , and the expulsion of the canonically electedvicars capitular ofPamiers .The famous Gallican Assembly of 1682 was convened at his suggestion. Elected president with
Harlay , he caused the bishops to endorse the royal policy of encroachment on church affairs, and even memorialized the pope with a view to make him accept the "régale". His comparative moderation in the matter of the four Gallican propositions was due toBossuet , who remarked that "the glory of the "régale" would only be obscured by those odious propositions."As president of the Assembly (1700) which undertook to deal with
Jansenism andLaxism already judged by the pope, Le Tellier was lenient with the Jansenists and severe with theologians of repute. The same holds true of the various controversies in which he took part: the "Version of Mons ," the theory ofphilosophical sin ,Molinism , etc. ILe Tellier is remembered as a successful administrator, an orator of some merit, a promoter of letters, a protector of Saint
John Baptist de la Salle ,Mabillon ,Ruinart , etc., and a bosom friend of Bossuet, whom he consecrated, and visited on his deathbed, and whom he induced to write the "Oraison funèbre de Michel Le Tellier." His manuscripts, in sixty volumes, are at the Bibliothèque Nationale of Paris, and his library of 50,000 volumes at the Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève.References
*Gillet, "Charles-Maurice Le Tellier", with an exhaustive bibliography (Paris, 1881), p. xii and passim
*Charles Sainte-Beuve , "Port-Royal" (ed. 1900), index.
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