R
Ridgerunner
Guest
I probably shouldn’t post, as I’m likely to offend. But maybe not, so here goes.
I think a meaningful comparison between what I understand as Lutheranism and what I understand as Anglicanism cannot be made, because both vary a great deal, and significantly.
Paraphrasing something W.F. Buckley said long ago “The Anglican church is so eclectic that no one from the Pope to Mao Tse Tung can say with any degree of certainty that he is NOT an Anglican.”
One thing I do think, though, and by what I have observed is this (understanding that I am more familiar with LCMS than any other branch of the Lutheran church). Lutherans don’t mind saying they are Protestants. Lots of Anglicans do not like to say it, and maintain that they’re not.
That’s not a doctrinal difference, but it does, I think, tell something about how each views Catholicism and their relationship (or non-relationship) to it.
I think a meaningful comparison between what I understand as Lutheranism and what I understand as Anglicanism cannot be made, because both vary a great deal, and significantly.
Paraphrasing something W.F. Buckley said long ago “The Anglican church is so eclectic that no one from the Pope to Mao Tse Tung can say with any degree of certainty that he is NOT an Anglican.”
One thing I do think, though, and by what I have observed is this (understanding that I am more familiar with LCMS than any other branch of the Lutheran church). Lutherans don’t mind saying they are Protestants. Lots of Anglicans do not like to say it, and maintain that they’re not.
That’s not a doctrinal difference, but it does, I think, tell something about how each views Catholicism and their relationship (or non-relationship) to it.