T
tqualey
Guest
Hi, GKC,
You have usually provided better responses … and, this is a simply turning around in circles. It appears that you are actively defending Henry for the similar action you have criticized the Pope. Historically, the Pope (and that would be Peter in Matt 16:18) began as the spiritual leader, acquired civil governance by virtue of the fact he alone was left standing after the fall of the Roman Empire - gradually (and not always willingly) gave up temporal power to what is now Vatican City - but, never lost spiritual leadership. Henry is quite different.
The monarchy of England had a long and colorful history leading up to Henry VII and his successor. Who actually applied for the dispensation - and the reasons for it - are truly of no consequence to this topic. The dispensation for young Henry to marry Mary was made and granted and the marriage took place - and was consumapted. There is no reasonable ground to claim that a marriage never existed. This nonsense about not having a male heir is strictly beyond the bounds of the Sacrament of Matrimony. And, that is really the fact of the matter.
Defending Henry for trying to defend his temporal crown by SELF-claiming he is now pope is to attempt to usurp what he can not possibly have in reality. For those forthright souls like St. Thomas More and many others (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Catholic_martyrs_of_the_English_Reformation) who followed their conscience rather than king’s orders - a heavenly crown is theirs, rather than the priase given to the lackey.
Henry VIII freely chose to confrom his belief to fit his bedroom adventures. Like Luther he had ‘industrial strength pride’ - but also the temporal power to effect his will on others while on earth. Defending Henry’s claim to spiritual authority is not only a lost cause - but a poor masquerade of trying to praise hubris.
What makes Henry even more tragic than Luther is that his entire focus on a male heir was never really materialized.
God bless
You have usually provided better responses … and, this is a simply turning around in circles. It appears that you are actively defending Henry for the similar action you have criticized the Pope. Historically, the Pope (and that would be Peter in Matt 16:18) began as the spiritual leader, acquired civil governance by virtue of the fact he alone was left standing after the fall of the Roman Empire - gradually (and not always willingly) gave up temporal power to what is now Vatican City - but, never lost spiritual leadership. Henry is quite different.
The monarchy of England had a long and colorful history leading up to Henry VII and his successor. Who actually applied for the dispensation - and the reasons for it - are truly of no consequence to this topic. The dispensation for young Henry to marry Mary was made and granted and the marriage took place - and was consumapted. There is no reasonable ground to claim that a marriage never existed. This nonsense about not having a male heir is strictly beyond the bounds of the Sacrament of Matrimony. And, that is really the fact of the matter.
Defending Henry for trying to defend his temporal crown by SELF-claiming he is now pope is to attempt to usurp what he can not possibly have in reality. For those forthright souls like St. Thomas More and many others (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Catholic_martyrs_of_the_English_Reformation) who followed their conscience rather than king’s orders - a heavenly crown is theirs, rather than the priase given to the lackey.
Henry VIII freely chose to confrom his belief to fit his bedroom adventures. Like Luther he had ‘industrial strength pride’ - but also the temporal power to effect his will on others while on earth. Defending Henry’s claim to spiritual authority is not only a lost cause - but a poor masquerade of trying to praise hubris.
What makes Henry even more tragic than Luther is that his entire focus on a male heir was never really materialized.
God bless
What he assumed was, in practice, the political powers, not the spiritual ones. Henry had few innovations in the theological realm, for the most part what he proclaimed was to be followed hewed closely to the RC origins, i.e., the Six Articles. He had some original thought, as in an insistence on wider availability of vernacular Holy Scripture, but his aim in the Act of Supremacy was to proclaim that whatever the Church in England followed, it would be enforced by the political, Royal arm, and not by any agency outside the realm. If a point of doctrine did catch his eye, as with Scripture, he could enforce it, but as a part of the political role of a Sovereign who was also (by Act of Parliament) the head of the Church in England.
GKC