I am new to the Lord. I go to a little Non Denominational Church that is more anti catholic than non denominational. My pastor is so against Catholicism even though he was raised Catholic. He ended up in the Pentecostal denomination where he became a Pastor. I am leaning toward the Catholic side in my religious life. The History and Christ seem to line up with the Roman Catholic Church in my opinion. Since doing more research about our Faith, I mean our Faith in Christ not the different forms of the Faith, who do you feel has caused the biggest so called reformation of the The Church of Christ? Calvin, Luther or someone else. I am so green in my walk that I am soaking everything in like a sponge. This weekend I am going to a mass and my church… Love the lord and love the history of the Church!
Blast …I had half a page typed up and now I’ve lost it…
Basically Martin Luther and his supporters started the Reformation as we call it, although there had long been calls to reform the corruption in the Church from within. Even Luther probably wanted to do so at the beginning, but after his “kidnap” by von Hutten and von Sickingen, he was spirited away to the Wartburg. From this time on it became as much political as much as spiritual, with wars and a death toll to match.
For example, William Shirer, the American journalist who wrote “The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich” claimed the German population decreased in a century from about 16 million to about 6 million, and that a “horrible torpor” descended on Germany for centuries. It was his opinion, and he made it clear he was a Protestant, that if there was a mad genius who laid the ground for Hitler, he would have to nominate Martin Luther.
For background on Shirer, see
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_L._Shirer
For a less pleasant look at Luther, the following link may help -
tentmaker.org/books/MartinLuther-HitlersSpiritualAncestor.html
However Luther gave direct rise to the Lutheran Church.
Calvin came a bit later.
From Wikipedia -
“John Calvin (French: Jean Calvin or Jehan Cauvin; 10 July 1509 – 27 May 1564) was an influential French theologian and pastor during the Protestant Reformation. He was a principal figure in the development of the system of Christian theology later called Calvinism. Originally trained as a humanist lawyer, he broke from the Roman Catholic Church around 1530. After religious tensions provoked a violent uprising against Protestants in France, Calvin fled to Basel, Switzerland, where he published the first edition of his seminal work Institutes of the Christian Religion in 1536.”
For the full article, see the following -
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Calvin
He gave rise to those churches known as “Reformed”, of which probably the best known in the English speaking world is the Presbyterian Church, which owes its origins to John Knox, a Scot, and it still has it’s world HO in Scotland. The Dutch Reformed Church is another, and it had a lot to do with the South African policy of aparthied in South Afriica, through the Boer settlers, who were originally Dutch.
The Reformed Churches generally follow Calvinistic theology. Wikipedia has a link on Reformed Churches -
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Reformed_churches
For the Anglican Church (or Episcopal Church as they are called in the USA), you have to thank old Henry VIII, the king with the six wives, two of whom nagged him too much. In some ways it is very similar in liturgy and form to the Catholic Church.
Methodism under John Wesley was an attempt to reform the Anglican Church, but broke away. My “old pastor” whom I briefly refer to later was a Methodist by training, but joined the Presbyterian Church about a year after a local merger between Methodist, Congregationalist and some Presbyterian churches which became the Uniting Church of Australia. So I did not cop hardline Calvinism when I was a Presbyterian.
I’m not au fait with other churches eg. Baptists, Salvos, Pentecostals and so on, or the quasi-Christian sects such as Mormons, Jehovah’s Witnesses etc. I wold have no idea where your own church originated for example. You’ll have to do your own research on that.
I’ve made it clear that I didn’t get along with my own father in other posts, but I won’t go into that here. But I do remember him once saying about the protestants that “They can’t even agree between themselves what they believe.” And my “old protestant pastor” whom I sometimes quote in various posts and above, once made the sarcastic comment to me that “When it comes to theology, Protestants couldn’t agree how far to spit.”
I think the Catholic Church is “
closest to the truth”, and I am afraid I’m not being particularly original in that, as my old pastor turned up one night in a very brief vision, a few years after he’d died, and simply said, “The Catholic Church is
closest to the truth.”
Anyway that’s my opinion, and I hope the above fills you in a bit.