Well… this needs a setup. Tracing this all back to Europe in the 16th century, we find a growing, increasingly massive resistance to Church authority. Much of it was geographic and political, as well as centered on plain old money. In rejecting the Catholic Church, men assumed the authority to interpret a Catholic Church document, known as the bible. Since each individual ego saw those printed words differently, all began to disagree with each other.
What the 16th century rebellion did was grant license to man to become a nuclear church unto himself. Since the “biggies”, i.e. Luther, Melanchthon, Calvin, Zwingli etc. quickly split from each other and provided a wide variety of novel and aberrant interpretations of God’s intent as recorded in the scriptures. This coincided with the advent of the printing press and increasing distribution of bibles for those individual egos to interpret.
This attitude, this license to re-invent God, passed to America - especially with the Puritans who were fleeing both Catholic as well as Church of England (Anglican) persecution in England. But, once they arrived, egos flared and the Puritans also split off from each other. Other denominations arrived in the US before and after and did the same.
The reformation attitude and the utter freedom/license that went with it, produced the natural result of an exponential increase in the number of denominations. For some spiritual reason (worldly spirit), 19th century America was extremely fertile soil for all manner of new thought - thought which departed even further from Christianity.
Inject ego-driven charismatic leaders of low education and instability into the mix, and you gain followings. By now, what had begun as a single, unified Church was crumbling into increasing insignificance. Non-Christian ideas appeared, such as the Swedenborgian-influenced imaginings of Joseph Smith (Mormons). It got to the point where even a brain-damaged, mercury poisoned woman began receiving “visions” and gained many believers. That is the SDA with now millions of members.
All of this, from “reformation” to American “revolution” to “reawakening” was certainly incited by a worldly spirit of division. And each and every denomination is certain of only one thing: the Catholic Church is bad, evil, or worse. It continues to this day, as we see the almost complete pulverization of the Body of Christ in America.
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