J
josephback
Guest
Hi all. Over the years I’ve heard two basic stories about the origin of the word Protestant. One is that originated at the Diet of Speyer, when the ‘protestantes’ or protesting estates held out for Lutheran freedom of worship. Another is that it comes from the Latin verb protestar, which means ‘to evangelize, proclaim.’ (Google translate told me it means protest). Blessed John Cardinal Newman said that what is imperative in the word Protestant but the exhortation to evangelize.
Anyway, in the first possibility Protestant becomes what it’s often derided as - a declaration of protest. In the second, Luther and his fellow Protestants are shown as having a predominantly ‘evangelical’ philosophy. Which is the correct origin of the word?
Anyway, in the first possibility Protestant becomes what it’s often derided as - a declaration of protest. In the second, Luther and his fellow Protestants are shown as having a predominantly ‘evangelical’ philosophy. Which is the correct origin of the word?