FRENCH PROTESTANT PIONEERS
Few opinion makers of 16th century France questioned the need for reform of the Church. Monks denounced the avarice of bishops. Priests denounced the lechery of monks. The writer, Pierre Brantôme (1540?-1613), quotes a phrase then popular in France: "As avaricious or lecherous as a priest or a monk".

The first sentence of Margarite's Heptameron describes the Bishop of Sées as lusting to seduce a married woman, and a dozen of the tales in the book describe similar adventures of various monks. One character in Heptameron exclaims, "I have such a horror of the very sight of a monk that I could not even confess to them, believing them to be worse than all other men."

It was due to King François I -- under influence of mother Louise and sister Marguerite -- that The Reformation began in France a year before "The Reformation" is supposed to have begun in Germany.

In 1516 (one year after ascending the throne), François I obtained from Pope Leo X a Concordat empowering François to appoint French bishops and abbots, making the French Church independent of the Papacy and dependent upon l'État. Thus, François I (a year before Martin Luther posted his "Theses") achieved what the German princes and Henry VIII later won by war or revolution: the nationalization of Christianity, bringing French Protestants "out of hiding".

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