L
ltwin
Guest
That is how it was legally established. King Henry wanted an annulment. The Pope would not grant it. The King convenes Parliament, which then passes laws separating the Church in England from the Roman Church and ending papal control.But the Anglican Church started when a king decided to throw off the authority of the Pope. Anglicanism as a tradition doesn’t make sense to me. It’s as if it started simply because a whiny king couldn’t get his way.
Once this happens, English Protestants who were influenced by Lutheranism and Calvinism began to gain influence over the doctrinal trajectory of the Church of England. Anglicanism becomes a hybrid of Lutheranism and Calvinism (with some Arminianism thrown in for good measure). The first Book of Common Prayer is published, which establishes the benchmark for Anglican liturgy.
During the English Reformation, many just went to the parish church that they always had. Many realized that if they remained Catholic, they would be legally discriminated against and so took the path of least resistance. Others no doubt truly believed what the Anglican Church was teaching. Then of course, as generations went by, many people are Anglican because their parents were Anglicans.And now, on the surface, it seems much of Anglicanism looks (Roman) Catholic. Why would someone choose to be Anglican over Catholic?