Quietism, the name given to a mystical religious turn of mind which
seeks to attain spiritual illumination and perfection by maintaining a
purely passive and susceptive attitude to Divine communication and
revelation, shutting out all consciousness of self and all sense of
external things, and independently of the observance of the practical
virtues. The high-priest of Quietism was the Spanish priest
Molinos (
q. v.), and his chief disciple in France was Madame de
Guyon, who infected the mind of the saintly Fénélon. The appearance of it
in France, and especially Fénélon's partiality to it, awoke the hostility
of Bossuet, who roused the Church against it, as calculated to have an
injurious effect on the interests of practical morality; indeed the
hostility became so pronounced that Fénélon was forced to retract, to the
gradual dying out of the fanaticism.