I merely want to know what you think is different between ‘authority’ in general and ‘religious authority,’ in plain and simple terms. — I like sushi
Well it has evolved over time
The 'early church' until about 150 AD operated rather like a commune. New members contributed their money upon joining, which supported the fiscal necessities of all members very well, because the early church grew in size slowly, yet exponentially. So it didnt have any authority. it was an early form of communism that you can idealize, or scorn, as much as you like.
After about 150 AD until Constantine, there were just too many Christians for a purely socialist system, and church leaders were chosen mostly according to literary skills and experience. Each church started to operate as an independent entity with its own rules and social organization that generally grouped into orders, much like the different monasteries of the catholic church in the later middle ages (Benedictines, Cluniacs, Cistercians, Carthusians, Premonstratensians, and Trinitarians, I find on quick search. There were also Franciscans, so I know the list is incomplete or evolved. Hm. Dominican too. Anyway, if you are really interested in religious authority, the maxims of the different monastic systems over the monks in them may be of particular interest to you, because they are different practices of religious authority over the religious alone
:)
Between Constantine and the reformation, the Roman empire increasingly tried to cling to more power by claiming religious authority over feudal states. during this time it infamously recruited soldiers for wars and raised money for wars by selling papal pardons. Also during this time, the church most famously in England excommunicated the supreme authority of a feudal nation, King John, in such a horrible scenario there has never been a second King John. The battle between the Church and King John is of especial interest to the Presbyterian church, which takes scholarly study of its own history and power very seriously, tracing its Protestantism back to this period. In the USA it is the best place to learn about church history I think.
During the reformation, most notably King Henry VIII in England who started much of it, church authority was totally redefined. Mostly its known for destroying statues because they idols, ripping representation of Christ off crosses, and so on. That was actually a continuation of a very long debate about iconery in the Eastern church empire, as to how much spiritual power is invested in a pictorial representation of a Godly nature. However more significantly in terms of authority, Henry VIII basically revolutionized history by rejecting the doctrines of Augustine, that individual salvation is more important than secular justice, as stated in City of God (for which I do have specific references to his rebuttal of the main form of secular law). At the time the main target was a system of natural law proposed by Cicero. Cicero's work well survived the purge of heretical texts because it was necessary to understand the doctrines of Augustine. Rather charmingly, Henry VIII wrote 'this boke is myne' on his own copy when he was a child.
Largely as a consequence of his interest in this book, the adult King Henry VIII started the process of resurrecting secular law as separate from church authority that has evolved into what we know today. After the reformation feuds, there was a real effort to draw a precise division between ecclesiastical and secular domains, where the church only had power over its own creed and wealth, just as if it is exactly the same as any other modern institution or business. There are some anomalies, such as the remaining separate city state of the Vatican in Rome, but overall this kind of division has taken over entirely.
When the USA was formed, for example, Jefferson based the natural rights, and the justification for rebelling against the British. as a violation of
theistic natural law defined in Locke's Essay on Human Understanding, mostly in the chapter 'On Power.' However from this, authority is seen to PROMULGATE from a natural divine law down to common law, such that religious authority is irrelevant to its secular action. Now it is an extremely hated fact, at least in the USA, that the nation's justification to rebel against the British, and the justification of its own secular power is entirely founded on a Christian hypothesis of a benign loving God who rewards those who act for the greater good in the afterlife. They can't even teach it in public schools or universities, so now almost no one knows it. Curious huh. The USA: best example of a successful religious authority in the world ever???? No!!!!!!! But yes, lol
The concept of PROMULGATION of power from divine law to common law is from the massive work of Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologicae, an absolutely huge set of volumes spanning all aspects of religious ideas that are astonishingly still close to what is practiced today. Aquinas is noted to be the first theologian to exercise rationalism to the fullest extent possible, at least for the scope of rational knowledge at the time. While some of what it says here in the wikipedia may appear too trite to be worth stating, it was never really stated like this before, and its become a rather widely accepted intuitive view, which is why it seems so trite to us now, haha.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Aquinas#Political_order
Thanks so much for the reference! Ill enjoy reading it, but in appreciation of your finding it, I did want to write something however inadequate it may be on the topic of interest to you.