S
sps49
Guest
Perhaps you should submit a specification that accurately describes the precision by which an observation may be deemed “valid.” I suspect you will not get much traction with that, since there are many different perspectives and perceptions on this.Then an invalid observation. For someone to say a protestant being protestant assumes that there is some particular way that protestants are. One could say that they are not Catholic, and that they are Christian. There are some things western non-Catholic Christians agree on. So, one might assume the poster must mean one of these two, though the context doesn’t lend itself to that.
It isn’t a matter of being offended in any way. It is a matter of accuracy. By any context, to say that the actions of this Anglican priest is typical of protestants can be described only as ad hominem.
Anglicans have self identified with that designation over the years, so they did choose, and continue to choose from what I can see. I could see how that would be annoying to a scholar, with messy classifications and nomenclatures popping up and dying. Since I noticed that you have indeed provided a proposed specification for the term “Protestant,” all you need to do now is to get a consensus that this is the approved name that possesses the proper integrity and validity. Good luck with that. Since I did not bring up the “usage” of the word “Catholic,” and since you cleverly pointed out that one need not trouble the Bishop of Rome about it, I can see no reason why you would mind anyone not properly “Lutheran” from using “Protestant.” Still not seeing the whole ad hominem problem. Perhaps it looks different from 30,00 feet, or 400 miles. No, not really…But that isn’t for you, or me, to decide. Anglicans get to choose that designation. They get to say what the influence of the various central European reformation era groups was.
There is no doubt that there was influence, but if Anglicans choose not to be identified as protestant, it becomes polemical to argue with them otherwise.
You are right, however, that naming rights are not exclusive. I self-identify as Evangelical Catholic, as that is the historical identity of the Lutheran reformers and reformation churches, as noted by Lutheran scholars from John Gerhard to Arthur Carl Piepkorn. Those in communion with the Bishop of Rome do not hold exclusive control over the name Catholic.
Perhaps the poster who made the “protestants being protestants” observation could explain it. Otherwise, its clearly ad hominem.
Jon
The term protestant can be used with integrity, if used in its proper sense. Historically, it refers to those who participated in the protest of the 2nd Diet of Speyer in 1529, which was a protest of government action to limit religious free exercise. The second, being a loose, general category of western non-Catholic Christian communions, traditions, and denominations.