

Controversies in Church History
Darrick N Taylor
My name is Darrick Taylor, and I am the founder and proprietor of Controversies in Church History, a podcast that takes an in depth look at difficult, even disturbing, issues in the history of the Catholic Church. My perspective is unique, in that I am a faithful Roman Catholic, yet trained as a secular historian. Designed for Catholics but accessible for anyone interested in history, it balances storytelling with an academic sensibility.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jun 11, 2019 • 13min
Catholic Lives Ep. 5: The Man Who Volunteered for Auschwitz
In this episode of Catholic Lives, we discuss the heroism of Witold Pilecki (pronounced Vitold Piletski, 1901-1948), a member of the Polish resistance against the Nazi occupation of Poland who volunteered to enter the concentration camp of Auschwitz to gain information. Captain Pilecki wrote a hundred page report on the camp, and both it and his life testify to the enduring power of the Catholic faith and the human spirit.
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Jun 7, 2019 • 1h 33min
The Protestant Reformation
*Recorded January 29 2018*
This episode covers one of the most divisive events in all of Church history: the Protestant Reformation. Why did the Reformation happen? Is it still important for Catholics today? This talk will address some of these basic questions, and provide some basic historical background for those still unfamiliar with the great divide within the Western Christian world.
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May 29, 2019 • 13min
Catholic Lives Ep. 4: The Last Roman Emperor
Today we take a brief look at the life of Constantine XI Dragases Palaiologos (1404-1453), the last Emperor of the Romans, who came to the throne of Constantinople at the very end of the Roman (i.e. "Byzantine") empire's life, and fought a heroic 52 day siege against Ottoman forces before succumbing in May of 1453.
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May 21, 2019 • 1h 8min
The Inquisition
*Recorded November 27 2017*
This episode addresses the origins and function of the various institutions that that have gone under the name of "inquisition" in the Catholic Church since the Middle Ages, and separates the history of those institutions from the many myths surrounding them in our popular culture. It give a broad overview of how the Church has treated heretics, how an "inquisition" as a legal process was established in the Middle Ages, debunks some myths about its destructiveness, and explains how it came to used in propaganda against the Church from the Reformation onward.
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May 16, 2019 • 19min
Catholic Lives Ep. 3: A Woman Author in Charlemagne's Empire
The latest episode focuses on Dhuoda, the 9th noble woman known to us only through her Handbook, the work she wrote for her eldest son William. Dhuoda's handbook instructs her son on how to live a Christian life, and prepare him for public life as an aristocrat. Written during a time of war an turmoil during the Carolingian period, Dhuoda's handbook is a testament to a life filled with grief but also a strong and enduring Catholic faith.
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May 9, 2019 • 1h 14min
The Crusades
*Recorded October 30 2017*
What were the Crusades? Were they merely wars of conquest? Did they represent a perversion of Christian teachings? Were the Crusades "holy wars," the way they are often presented in popular culture? This episode provides an overview of the origins, outcome and meaning of the Crusading movement of the Middle Ages.
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May 4, 2019 • 42min
Deaconesses in the Early Church
In this podcast, we discuss the evidence for the ordination of Deaconesses in the early Church, and the arguments for whether or not they were ordained in the same way men were in the early Church.
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Apr 30, 2019 • 12min
Catholic Lives Ep. 2: Konrad Adenauer (1876-1967)
Konrad Adenauer, Chancellor of the Federal Republic of West Germany, from 1949-1963, is the subject of this episode of Catholic Lives.
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Apr 30, 2019 • 1h 14min
Liturgy Wars: Catholic Liturgy Since Vatican II
Within living memory, the liturgy of the Latin rite provided a visible focus of unity for Catholics. It possessed a universal liturgical language that distinguished Catholicism wherever it was present, supplemented by devotional practices such as processions, Eucharistic adoration and other aids to faith. To many Catholics, it appeared the embodiment of the Church's unchanging nature. By contrast, today the liturgy of the Latin Church is a source of controversy, over virtually every aspect of the liturgy, whether it be which direction the priest faces, the music played, or the vestments worn by the clergy, and has been the source of fierce debates and division among clergy and laity alike. "Liturgy Wars: Catholic Liturgy After Vatican II" will describe the efforts to reform the Catholic liturgy in the 20th century and how those efforts led to the divisions which persist within the Roman Catholic Church today.
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Mar 26, 2019 • 51min
Necessary Additions? The Marian Dogmas, 1854 & 1950
Only twice in history have popes explicitly invoked their infallible teaching authority, and both times they did so to defend teachings concerning the Virgin Mary. "Necessary Additions? The Marian Dogmas, 1854 & 1950," discusses how and why popes Piux IX and Pius XII felt it necessary to invoke their authority to defend these doctrines, and why they caused such consternation for Protestant and Orthodox Christians, who object both to the content but also the authority of the pope to define such matters of faith.
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