Jean-François Boyer (12 March 1675 in Paris – 20 August 1755 in Versailles), was a French bishop, best known for having been a vehement opponent of Jansenism and the Philosophe school.
Boyer promulgated the "Statements of Confession" that the faithful had to sign to show their compliance with Pope Clement XI's Unigenitus Bull, and to be entitled to receive the sacrament. This caused an outcry in Paris.
In 1751, Boyer set the King's mind against the editors of the Encyclopédie and his machinations caused their articles to be monitored and censored. But he failed in his goal of suppressing the undertaking completely.
Voltaire, who also commented on other matters in which Boyer was involved, wrote:
...on est obligé d’avouer ici, avec toute la France, combien il est triste et honteux que cet homme si borné ait succédé aux Fénelon et aux Bossuet.[1] ...I am obliged to confess here, with all of France, how sad it is and shameful that such a narrow-minded man has succeeded Fénelon and Bossuet.
But Boyer's eloquence was appreciated by some of his contemporaries, as Charles Le Beau recorded:
...il ne songe pas à charmer, mais à convertir ; au lieu de lui applaudir, on se condamne ; on l’oublie pour n’entendre que la voix de l’Évangile, dont il porte une forte teinture et dont il représente le naturel, le pathétique, l’insinuant, l’auguste et victorieuse simplicité[2] ...he does not try to charm, but to convert, instead of applauding him, we should damn ourselves, in forgetting the word of the Gospel, with its natural, pathetic, and simple and august language.
References
^Voltaire. "Le Tombeau de la Sorbonne" [The Tombe of the Sorbonne]. Mélanges, 1752-56 [Miscellany] (in French).
^Quoted by Tastet, Tyrtée (1855). "Histoire des quarante fauteuils de l'Académie française depuis la fondation jusqu'à nos jours, 1635-1855" [History in forty partsof the Académie française from its foundation until the present]. IV: 614. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)