P
Peter_J
Guest
I don’t know if this topic will spark much conversation, but I thought I would give it a try…
Do you think there is such a thing as ecumenical flattery, and if so what example(s) come most to your mind?
For example, I think Catholics (and Orthodox for that matter) tend to flatter protestants by writing “Protestants” with a capital P. It say flatter because it doesn’t really make sense grammatically, since “protestant” it isn’t the proper name of a group but rather an adjective that can be applied to many groups. (I would use a capital P if I said, e.g. “the Lutheran Evangelical Protestant Church” or “Free Protestant Episcopal Church”, since then it’s part of a proper name. Likewise, in the proper name “the Armenian Apostolic Church” the word “Apostolic” is of course capitalized, but that doesn’t mean we capitalize “apostolic” when using it as a simple adjective.)
Do you think there is such a thing as ecumenical flattery, and if so what example(s) come most to your mind?
For example, I think Catholics (and Orthodox for that matter) tend to flatter protestants by writing “Protestants” with a capital P. It say flatter because it doesn’t really make sense grammatically, since “protestant” it isn’t the proper name of a group but rather an adjective that can be applied to many groups. (I would use a capital P if I said, e.g. “the Lutheran Evangelical Protestant Church” or “Free Protestant Episcopal Church”, since then it’s part of a proper name. Likewise, in the proper name “the Armenian Apostolic Church” the word “Apostolic” is of course capitalized, but that doesn’t mean we capitalize “apostolic” when using it as a simple adjective.)