S
StJudePray4Me
Guest
Yes, I couldnât read that post.If you broke that up into paragraphs it would be easier to read.
Just a suggestionâŚ
Yes, I couldnât read that post.If you broke that up into paragraphs it would be easier to read.
Just a suggestionâŚ
If that doesnât answer the opâs question, Gurney, I donât know what would.![]()
Here is your disconnect. Henry didnât start the Church of England either, St. Peter did. Henry caused the initial split between Rome and Canterbury not the creation of anything new. Thatâs why your not getting answers that satisfy your questions. Your frame of reference doesnât match up with the Anglicans who will answer this question for you. unless you change your frame of reference you wonât get a satisfying answer. There is no Roman Catholic answer that makes sense in that frame of reference since the Roman church considers us as schismatic. Either accept our answer as it is, from the Anglican perspective or we need to move on to something else to discuss because we will run in circles otherwise.Actually,it doesnât answer the question. Because according to Catholicism it wasnât Emperor Constantine who established the Catholic Church it was St. Peter. Read below.
catholic-pages.com/pope/peter.asp
Here, Christ entrusted a special authority to St. Peter to preserve, interpret and teach His truth. In all, this understanding of Matthew 16 was unchallenged until the Protestant leaders wanted to legitimize their rejection of papal authority and the office of the pope. Even the Orthodox Churches recognize the pope as the successor of St. Peter; however, they do not honor his binding jurisdiction over the whole Church but grant him a position of âfirst among equals.â
St. Peterâs role in the New Testament further substantiates the Catholic belief concerning the papacy and what Jesus said in Matthew 16. St. Peter held a preeminent position among the Apostles. He is always listed first (Mt. 10:14; Mk. 3:16-19; Lk. 6:14-1 5; Acts 1:13) and is sometimes the only one mentioned (Lk. 9:32). He speaks for the Apostles (Mt. 18:21; Mk. 8:28; Lk. 12:41; Jn. 6:69).
Thatâs why Reformation was such HUGE deal. Because up until then this was accepted as truth. This is why I pose the question: âHow do Protestants rationalize King Henry VIII, and his selfish non-spiritual motivation?â Because only after Henry VIII in his arrogance broke from Rome and did away with Catholicism and thus did away with the accepted religious doctrine that had been in place centuries which placed St. Peter, the apostle of Christ as the first Pope. So basicly after more than centuries of accepting that St. Peter, an apostle of Christ, was the first Pope, Henry broke from Rome, and then under the Reformation all these other religions came to be, all of which got their strength from Henryâs break with Rome, which by doing so rejected that St. Peter was the first Pope, a doctrine that had been in place for centuries, and before Emperor Constantine. So no, citing Emperor Constantine doesnât address the issue.
So to break it down, your answer did address the political history, yes, but thatâs not in question everyone knows this. In short, Hank, as you refer to him, by his decision to break with Rome, okayed rejecting St. Peter as the first Pope, a doctrine that was accepted as truth for 1500 years by Catholics, and later by the whole of Europe that became Catholic and accepted it as truth also. But Hank didnât change to course of history and put in the Reformation because he had a spiritual calling that told him Catholicism was wrong or even that the Reformation was right. He just didnât get his way with Rome, used the Reformation as a political tool, and if denying that the apostle of Christ, St. Peter was the First Pope, which he and the rest of Europe had believe for centuries, then okay, sorry St. Peter I just donât believe you were the first Pope, not because I donât believe you are, itâs just not working for personal life right now so I have to say you werenât and make the rest of my kingdom accept it also, itâs business nothing personal. And religions that came out of the Reformation think this okay or do not address it. And even if you say that part of the Reformation was the belief that Peter, the apostle of Christ, never was the Pope because there is no such thing as a Pope, the fact still remains Henry VIII used the Reformation as a tool, a pawn, a chess piece, etc and and from this your religion was born, and Protestants are okay with this? Really, how? I mean if you are okay with saying âMy religion was came into place because it was a good tool for a Kingâ, then okay. But most people who practice their religion donât believe that, so if you really believe your religion is worth following how on earth do you make sense out itâs most insincere, non-spiritiual birth? This has yet to be answered.
Here is your disconnect. Henry didnât start the Church of England either, St. Peter did. Henry caused the initial split between Rome and Canterbury not the creation of anything new. Thatâs why your not getting answers that satisfy your questions. Your frame of reference doesnât match up with the Anglicans who will answer this question for you. unless you change your frame of reference you wonât get a satisfying answer. There is no Roman Catholic answer that makes sense in that frame of reference since the Roman church considers us as schismatic. Either accept our answer as it is, from the Anglican perspective or we need to move on to something else to discuss because we will run in circles otherwise.
Sorry, I meant indirectly. As in we trace of orders back to Peter. Of course Christ was our actual founder.Iâve never heard of any Anglican claiming that St. Peter started the Church in England. Most commonly you hear things like St. Augustine of Canterbury or St. Patrick or other missionariesâŚthe early Celtic Church or early RomansâŚ
St. Peter was famed for Antioch and RomeâŚ
Amongst certain Anglican types you can find the assertion that the Church in England was started by (you choose) Joseph of Arimathea, St.Aristobolous, FIL of St. Peter, St. Barnabas, St. Paul, St. Peter, and sundry others. The date given is usually 37AD. THis is usually associated with the Glastonbury legends.Iâve never heard of any Anglican claiming that St. Peter started the Church in England. Most commonly you hear things like St. Augustine of Canterbury or St. Patrick or other missionariesâŚthe early Celtic Church or early RomansâŚ
St. Peter was famed for Antioch and RomeâŚ
No, Iâm going out to the front yard to smoke a pipe, in my new lawn chair.Agreed. I quit reading it about halfway. Giant blockâŚ
But I fail to see what the poster is claiming people havenât acknowledged? Nobody here has glossed over Henry VIII or his significance in influencing the Reformation in England? Nobody is minimizing his contributions, sins, influence, or part that he played???
To sum up the answer to the OP: How do Protestants rationalize Henry VIII and his selfish, non-spiritual motivation? Easy. Hereâs the Anglican view (at least the view many hold):
There was a Church in England prior to the papal oversight of the British Isles. Henry was a selfish letch who wanted a decree of nullity. He used Old Testament examples and thinking to explain to the Pope why he wanted one. While the popes had granted decrees of nullity for much less, due to politics, he didnât grant one to Hank. Hank got mad, made himself the supreme head of the Church of England. He wanted it to remain as Catholic as it had been up to that point. Reformers didnât necessarily approve of Hankâs antics or even the situation but they viewed the moment as something to jump on and go with in order to restore England to its original state of self-governance religiously. Just as Constantine the Great wasnât a wonderful man (killed his own son in a heinous way and was a warmonger, very violent) but politically used Christianity to his advantage in a win-win situation for both sides, so did Henry VIII. The Reformers took the moment, seized it, and then later folks like Edward VI and especially Elizabeth I carried it more into full-on ReformationâŚ
Thatâs it in a nutshell to me. I know GKC will poke holes in this but itâs my amateur analysisâŚ
As another poster points out a little later in the thread, itâs a frame of reference issue. Christianity is my religion, not Protestantism, Anglicanism, Catholicism or any of its other branches. When people ask me my religion, I say Iâm a Christian or a Christ-follower (same meaning, less baggage, better conversation starter). I donât say Assemblies of God, though thatâs the church I attend. Nor do I say Pentecostal, though AG is part of that group. Neither do I say Protestant. That Iâm not Catholic or Orthodox is a fact, which makes me Protestant by default, but I donât consider it a whole lot more important that not being Presbyterian or Baptist.âBut I donât see how Henry VIIIâs being a murderer should cause a crisis of faith in Protestants, any more than the notoriously corrupt and treacherous Borgia family of poisoners having two Popes (Alexander VI and Callistus III) should cause a crisis of faith in Catholics.â
There is a huge difference. It was as a result of King Henry VIIIâs break with Rome, motivated by his ego manic desires that lead to England becoming a Protestant country, and without England as a Protestant country, Protestantism would never had the strength and support to take and become one of the most flourishing religions of the modern era. As for the corrupt Popes such as the Borgias, were a single Pope and his family that were part of the Catholic Church, but had nothing to do with the actual founding of the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church had been in place from the year 50 to about 500 depending how you view Church history. With or without the Borgia family, the Catholic Church was already strong and in place. The Borgia family could never have existed and the Catholicism would still be the widespread religion it is today. The Borgias and the like had little to do with the Catholic religion taking hold in Europe and spreading to the Americas as it is now. That fact was already set into motion centuries earlier. If the Borgia family had in fact been a family that for without it them Catholicism would not be the widespread religion it is today, then Catholics would definitely have to reconcile the issue of their origins to the Borgia family. This is the difference .
I horrible person, perhaps? When people who are not Catholic say that the pope is infallible, they do not understand the meaning. The pope is only infallible when making a statement that is Ex Cathedra concerning faith and morals. That means that the statement is infallible, not the man. Scott Hahn, a theologian at Franciscan University has said that in his research, a pope has only spoken Ex Cathedra twice in the history of the church; and I think one of those was to declare Mary was born without original sin, but I donât remember the other.Just to turn the tables for once, and listen to the howlingâŚ
How do Roman Catholics explain
"Pope Urban VI (1378â1389), who complained that he did not hear enough screaming when Cardinals who had conspired against him were tortured?"
No, Iâm going out to the front yard to smoke a pipe, in my new lawn chair.
The above will do for right now. You missed a point or two, but there will not be a deduction; you got the gist.
The Reformation was not a monolith. Henry was not the fons et origo
GKC
Henry was not the fons et origo
GKC
Youâll have to ask a non-Catholic; I dunno.I always wonder why non-Catholics are so obsessed with Latin phrases? What part of the XXIV in the Articles did you not understand!?You need to go Tridentine or stick with Anglo Catholic but make up your mind already! As Stan used to say âNuff Said!â
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Nothing left out. Just some expository details.Nit pick and nit pick, ay yay yay! Iâm just a 36 year old wipper-snapper! Youâre Gandalf to my Frodo, be nice now!
Just like Gandalf, you smoke a pipe. STOP THAT! My dadâs buddy had to have deep scaling done on his gums and another buddy had lip cancer both from pipes! Stop the hobbit weedâŚ
Ok, Iâll biteâŚwhat did I leave outâŚ![]()
Agreed. But typo, substitute Anne Boleyn, for Catherine of Aragon.âTrue their were Reformers prior to Englandâs break with Rome but they did not have the political support to flourish until England, one the most powerful European countries at the time, gave it itâs backing. What I am seeing clearly from this post is that so many people donât want to acknowledge a key fact in the history of Western Civilization. In the 16th century King Henry VIII broke from the Catholic Church which lead to Reformation, and out of the Reformation came the Protestant faith, or faiths that would not exist had it not been for the Reformation, which again was the result of King Henry VIIIâs break with the Catholic Church. Plane and simple, a common fact in any high school or college history text book. It would be difficult to find any student of history or historian who will disagree with this statement**.**â
Actually, it is more likely that it would difficult to find any student of history or historian who will agree with this statement. You have failed to make any remotely convincing case that the Reformation on the Continent developed from or was dependent upon the Reformation in England. Henry âmarriedâ Catherine of Aragon in 1533 and the Act of Supremacy, in which he made himself the head of the Church of England, was passed in 1534. By this time, more than a decade and a half had passed since Lutherâs 95 Theses were written in 1517. Furthermore, Luther was excommunicated in 1521-13 years prior to the passage of the Act of Supremacy, which was also preceded by both the Marburg Colloquy and the Augsburg Confession. You have grossly exaggerated the role of Henry VII in the Reformation on the Continent, with which he held no sympathies, and which he actually opposed. I also think you exaggerate the power of England during the reign of Henry. Actually, England would become much more powerful under the reign of his daughter, Elizabeth, than it was during Henryâs reign.