Well, we know for a fact that God favored Israel, at least if we accept the Bible. There is no similar information regarding France.
I think your distinction is too simple. If one digs into the canon, one can find reasons to question it just as easily as one could question post-Biblical claims. I'm not saying that I question the Bible, nor am I saying that establishment of the canon was not a unique thing.
Rather I'm asking for opinions. I know you've already given an opinion, but I'm trying to dig deeper. Do you think establishment of the canon is so unique as to say God will never make clear to us such things again? Is it impossible to know when God intervenes in an epic way?
What would that have been?
The English monarchy was as Christian as the French but guaranteed more human rights to its people AND the Church.
I don't think I would state it in that way. Circumstances forced the English crown to concede more rights than the French crown had. But those rights were not universal for all Englishmen and the crown constantly maneuvered to rescind them.
In theory the Church was not subject to
either the English or the French crown. It was on that theoretical technicality that Bishop Cauchon based his trial of Joan. Had she been tried as a combatant, burning her at the stake would not have been legal punishment. In fact, she might well have been ransomed by the French.
The whole trial is indicative of the rottenness of the state of affairs: the English government for so shamefully violating the laws of chivalry they claimed to uphold, the French government for failing to intervene, and the Church for allowing itself to be used as such a political pawn. Might not this have been signs of the evils that led to the Reformation?
If you think it's not, I would ask whether Wycliff and his Lollards had any legitimate complaints against the decay the Wars of the Roses had wrought in England? And if not that, was the English claim so properly justified as to warrant the cruelties of the seige of Orleans that Joan lifted?
Again, I'm not trying to justify the French state as holy. But it certainly seems possible God was using the French state to put an end to what had been a century of bloody turmoil.
If so, can't we look for the same features in these events that led us to add to the canon the stories of the conquest of Palestine by the Hebrews, etc.?
For example, if we agree that God did not care whether it was the French or English state that ruled a particular province, is there some other spiritual aspect (reformation of the church, a revival, etc.) or some relief to human suffering that would justify such things, or some denial of personal glory, some appeal to God's grace, some affirmation of Christian doctrine that we can look at?
I would further ask what purpose it would serve. Would it serve as a witness, or is it simply none of our business to know such things?
If she was mistaken, so what? That doesn't make her a liar or her actions evil.
Of course it's a possibility that she knew it all to be a lie, but that's not what I meant by my comment. If she believed in a falsehood, then she believed in a lie - whether by the hand of the French court, by demons, or by someone else. Somewhere an evil occurred.
Of course God could have used what others intended for evil (Gen 50:20), but that's not what I'm talking about here.
On the other hand, there is some evidence that she was not the unknown girl pictured in memory, but rather was put up to the job by the would-be king in order to give his soldiers the idea that God was on their side.
I think it an overstatement to say there is evidence for that. There are opinions based on some hints of the character of Tremoille, etc. To be honest, those opinions often come off to me as attempts to dismiss Joan by people who simply can't believe that an illiterate teenage girl could accomplish such things - and indeed she probably couldn't have without some kind of supernatural intervention. The conundrum is exactly the one faced by the church of the time: was that supernatural intervention divine or demonic?
I guess if this is your final answer, then OK. I didn't come into this thinking I could explain it all, but I'm looking for some discussion on the matter. So, I hope to prompt a bit more from you.