Savonarola had preached his great Renovation Sermon…
April 1495 CE
Savonarola had preached his great Renovation Sermon to a huge audience in the Cathedral on January 13, 1495, recalling that he had begun prophesying in Florence four years earlier, although the divine light had come to him "more than fifteen, maybe twenty years ago."
He now claims that he had predicted the deaths of Lorenzo de' Medici and of Pope Innocent VIII in 1492 and the coming of the sword to Italy—the invasion of King Charles of France.
As he had foreseen, God has chosen Florence, "the navel of Italy", as his favorite and he repeats: if the city continues to do penance and begin the work of renewal it will have riches, glory and power.
If the Florentines have any doubt that the promise of worldly power and glory has heavenly sanction, Savonarola emphasizes this in a sermon of April 1, 1495, in which he describes his mystical journey to the Virgin Mary in Heaven.
At the celestial throne Savonarola presents the Holy Mother a crown made by the Florentine people and presses her to reveal their future.
Mary warns that the way will be hard both for the city and for him, but she assures him that God will fulfill his promises: Florence will be "more glorious, more powerful and richer than ever, extending its wings farther than anyone can imagine."
She and her heavenly minions will protect the city against its enemies and support its alliance with the French.
In the New Jerusalem that is Florence peace and unity will reign.
Based on such visions, Savonarola promotes theocracy, and declares Christ the king of Florence.
He sees sacred art as a tool to promote this worldview, and he is therefore only opposed to secular art, which he sees as worthless and potentially damaging.
Buoyed by liberation and prophetic promise, the Florentines embrace Savonarola’s campaign to rid the city of "vice".
At his repeated insistence, new laws are passed against "sodomy" (which includes male and female same-sex relations), adultery, public drunkenness, and other moral transgressions, while his lieutenant fra Silvestro Maruffi organizes boys and young men to patrol the streets to curb immodest dress and behavior.
For a time, Pope Alexander VI (1492–1503) tolerates friar Girolamo’s strictures against the Church, but he is moved to anger when Florence declines to join his new Holy League against the French invader, and blames it on Savonarola’s pernicious influence.
An exchange of letters between the pope and the friar ends in an impasse which Savonarola tries to break by sending His Holiness "a little book" recounting his prophetic career and describing some of his more dramatic visions.
This is the Compendium of Revelations, a brilliant self-dramatization which is one of the farthest-reaching and most popular of his writings.
The pope was not mollified.
He summons the friar to appear before him in Rome, and when Savonarola refuses, pleading ill health and confessing that he is afraid of being attacked on the journey, Alexander bans him from further preaching.