L
Little_Sheep
Guest
Yes, interesting article. Many Anglicans consider themselves both Catholic and Protestant.Thank you, Peter J, for linking us to interesting view from an Anglican perspective.
Yes, interesting article. Many Anglicans consider themselves both Catholic and Protestant.Thank you, Peter J, for linking us to interesting view from an Anglican perspective.
Yes. Some Lutherans too, as I understand it.Yes, interesting article. Many Anglicans consider themselves both Catholic and Protestant.
Yes, absolutely, quite a few Lutherans as well. It occurs to me that I have visited so very many houses of worship, but I have never attended a Lutheran service. I should probably rectify that.Yes. Some Lutherans too, as I understand it.
Btw, I used to go to school near an Anglo-Catholic church, but didn’t know till I moved back home. I wish I had known. I would have like to have visited.![]()
True but what is the fee esire not to be associated with ProtestantsYou could always call them by their faith groupings, Anglican, Lutheran, Methodist, Baptist, etc… since there does tend to be some fairly big differences between them. And of course Orthodox, Assyrian, Oriental Christians are not Protestant anymore than the Catholic Chirch is Protestant.
Probably because it’s an inaccurate grouping for many that overly simplifies differences that different denominations have between each other as much as they have between themselves and say Catholics or the Orthodox. That and for any raised in a “protestant” faith group, they’re generally speaking, not protesting anything. They’re simply Christians experiencing and living their faith. It just happens to not be Catholic, Orthodox, Assyrian, or Oriental.True but what is the fee esire not to be associated with Protestants