First Ecumenical Council: Nicaea I (325)
Second Ecumenical Council: Constantinople I (381)
Third Ecumenical Council: Ephesus (431)
Fourth Ecumenical Council: Chalcedon (451)
Fifth Ecumenical Council: Constantinople II (553)
Sixth Ecumenical Council: Constantinople III (680-681)
Seventh Ecumenical Council: Nicaea II (787)
Eighth Ecumenical Council: Constantinople IV (869)
Ninth Ecumenical Council: Lateran I (1123)
Tenth Ecumenical Council: Lateran II (1139)
Eleventh Ecumenical Council: Lateran III (1179)
Twelfth Ecumenical Council: Lateran IV (1215)
Thirteenth Ecumenical Council: Lyons I (1245)
Fourteenth Ecumenical Council: Lyons II (1274)
Fifteenth Ecumenical Council: Vienne (1311-1313)
Sixteenth Ecumenical Council: Constance (1414-1418)
Seventeenth Ecumenical Council: Basle/Ferrara/Florence (1431-1439)
Eighteenth Ecumenical Council: Lateran V (1512-1517)
Nineteenth Ecumenical Council: Trent (1545-1563)
Twentieth Ecumenical Council: Vatican I (1869-1870)
Twenty-first Ecumenical Council: Vatican II (1962-1965)
All of these councils were councils called by the Holy Father and attended by as many bishops as he could get there. They were all guided by the Holy Spirit and approved by Rome so that their decisions are binding on all of Christ's Church. Each and everyone of them was called to deal with various heresies. Many of their decisions involved the first time a doctrine was actually "defined" for the simple reason that it was the first time it had seriously been called into question. There was no new church after Trent, just as there was no new church after Nicaea. Despite other opinions to the contrary, the Church of Rome was established by Christ and remained faithful to Him throughout the centuries. There is no "church of Trent".
The meeting of church leaders in the 1500s that aimed to clearly define Catholic doctrines for the Catholic Reformation is known as the Council of Trent.
The Council, itself, published nothing except it's resolutions. However, as a result of the Council, the Church published a new Missal, a new Catechism, a new Breviary, etc. So we are mostly talking liturgical and religious books.
He was born in to the [Anglican,] Catholic Church and left to join the Holy Roman Church a product of the Council of Trent.
Trent. At that time it was the capital of the Prince-Bishopric of Trent, a part of the Holy Roman Empire but now it is Italy and known as Trento.
The Council of Trent
Council of Trent
St James Church New Chapel Stoke-on-Trent
The Church Reformation led to the beginning of new orders, such as the Company of St. Ursula that focused on educating girls. It also prompted an update to Church doctrines, how the Church was run, and the Council of Trent.
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Trent
The Council of Trent was a series of meetings of leaders of the Roman Catholic church during the 1500's.
council of trent
Reform
council of trent
.Catholic AnswersThe Jesuit Order was one of the major spearheads in enacting the reforms of the Council of Trent in the Catholic Church.
The Council of Trent was held to address the Protestant Reformation and to reform and clarify the teachings and practices of the Catholic Church. It aimed to define Catholic doctrine, address abuses within the Church, and assert the authority of the Pope.