J
joe370
Guest
For example…?I do not think the world would be very good at all. The reformation and other events along those lines, brought about changes within the Catholic church too, that were for the better.
For example…?I do not think the world would be very good at all. The reformation and other events along those lines, brought about changes within the Catholic church too, that were for the better.
I understand the argument - even I read the ‘Open Society and Its Enemies’ at school.I think part of the issue in this particular scenario we’ve all concocted is how to “dethrone” a certain Greek philosopher from his pedestal.
Ahaha. Well, that old phrase of familiarity breeding contempt comes to mind. The Jewish people are mysterious and “exotic.” The Vietnamese, Koreans, and Japanese on the other hand.One of the most disturbing things I ever heard, as a Christian, was Chaim Potok talking about his time in Japan when in the U.S. military (you can read a fictionalized account of this in his novel Book of Lights). He said that one of the most striking and refreshing things about Japanese culture, for him as a Jew, was its freedom from a tradition of anti-Semitism–at least, he added, the demonic anti-Semitism that comes from Christianity.
Ouch!
Edwin
Ever hear about the plan to resettle a large chunk of the Jewish population in Manchuria?Unfortunately, for the vast majority of European Jews, China might as well have been a distant planet.
Kingsley Amis, The Alteration, is the most famous. In this alternate reality, Luther basically makes a deal with the Church and becomes “Pope Germanus I.” The “Reformed” version of the Reformation happens anyway, but with much less success lacking Luther. (I think that this is a pretty sound, reasonable reconstruction of what could have happened, actually.) However, Amis doesn’t really pursue the religious implications very far–his truncated Protestantism (which flourishes mostly in America) serves primarily as a place for the hero to try to escape to (the hero is a boy singer trying to escape castration–at the end of the book there’s an apparent divine intervention in which his testicles twist themselves into a knot and he has to be castrated anyway–yes, it’s a very weird book). Amis makes the basic mistake I’ve been arguing against on this thread–that if the Reformation had failed the result would be a totally triumphant Counter-Reformation Catholicism. The book is really mostly about totalitarianism, I think. I read it many years ago when I was just getting into sci-fi, and I should probably give it another look. It’s a clever piece of work (all Amis’s books are interesting), even if most folks on this forum (including me) would have trouble with a lot of the basic ideological premises. (Oh, and Amis’ presentation of how the Church approaches castration for musical purposes is certainly not true to the official position of the historic Church, which opposed deliberate castration but was happy to accept boys who were already castrated as singers–this meant that in practice families would castrate their musically promising sons and pretend that it was an accident. I found this out when responding to a thread specifically on “castrati” some years ago on this forum!)Has anyone ever written an alternative history novel based on this question? I’m not aware of any, but then I’ve never researched the question.
The formation of the Roman Inquisition and the Index of Prohibited books were good things?I do not think the world would be very good at all. The reformation and other events along those lines, brought about changes within the Catholic church too, that were for the better.
Keith Roberts/ PAVANEHas anyone ever written an alternative history novel based on this question? I’m not aware of any, but then I’ve never researched the question.
I need to read these, especially Roberts.Keith Roberts/ PAVANE
Phyllis Eisenstein/ SHADOW OF EARTH
GKC
Though it’s somewhere in the archives, I don’t recall the Amis very well. PAVANE is a delight.I need to read these, especially Roberts.
It looks like both novels take the Armada as the point of divergence, by which time Counter-Reformation Catholicism was in place.
What I’m interested in is the possibility that if things had gone differently in the 20s and 30s, the official Catholic Reformation would have looked a lot more like what my alias Contarini wanted to see and a lot less like what Carafa wanted. What frustrates me about Amis’ book is that he imagines Luther somehow being reconciled with the Catholic Church without taking seriously what kind of Catholic Church Luther could possibly have been reconciled with, or what effect someone like Luther spending his life as an orthodox Catholic of high standing would have had.
Edwin
Being bonkers knows no international borders.2.) Did you know there was actually a short lived Japanese party within the late 20th century that was actually anti-semitic. You see, they believed in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.
Vaguely, yes but now I’ve had the opportunity to read up on it. Rather reminds me of Oliver Cromwell letting Jews back into England - because he thought that it would bring the ‘Second Coming’ forward - good things coming from weird thinking.Ever hear about the plan to resettle a large chunk of the Jewish population in Manchuria?
That’s an argument that any Catholic Church attempt to suppress science and technology would have failed. NOT that it would have never been attempted.Wow, the comments are mostly negative of the Catholic Church, even in those alternative history books mentioned earlier. ^^; One thing for example, I really do doubt science & technology would’ve been suppressed by the Catholic Church, due to the creation of the printing press - it’s the key invention that made knowledge widely accessible, and literacy almost mandatory. It’s at this point technological advancement progresses at a much faster rate than ever before.
So, what inherent teachings in the Catholic Church do you all believe make the Reformation inevitable? Or is it just the corrupt human element being disobedient to Church teachings?
Hard to say.This makes me wonder, if there had been no protestantism how would the New World have been influenced. Lets say Henry VIII had his own son and didn’t need an annulment and therefore no need to disobey the pope and create his own church. I wonder if there still would have been much competition in the New World since a lot of the reason England expanded was to counteract Catholic Spain. If England is Catholic would it have remained a small nation.
As for continental Europe, it might have led to a kind of bigger stronger holy roman empire in Germany that would be united by Catholicism. I have a hard time seeing the church suppressing science and technology. They would probably want to use it to either help people or if they were more sinister, try to expand the papal states. It’s hard to tell though.
In a way, I think the reformation was a bad thing that brought about some good. It made the church start to focus more towards heaven and made them correct abuses in the church. Its all part of God’s plan.
Henry did have a son, an illegitimate one, Henry Fitzroy, before the advent of La Boleyn. He labored mightily to come up with some way to use that asset (and also his daughter Mary) to deal with the dynastic problem. No go (interesting history, though). And the Duke of Richmond died, like Henry’s other son, early. Bad genes, no doubt. But a source of inspiration for alternate history.Hard to say.
I doubt the British royal line would have been devoid of ambition even if they remained Catholic though:shrug:
True, maybe the Pope or some other church official would have stepped in like Torquemada did in South America when he split it between portugal and spain. Maybe something like today with England getting Northern North America like in our timeline.Hard to say.
I doubt the British royal line would have been devoid of ambition even if they remained Catholic though:shrug:
Besides the mishandling of Galileo, I was with the understanding that the Catholic Church generally supported the sciences.That’s an argument that any Catholic Church attempt to suppress science and technology would have failed. NOT that it would have never been attempted.
I think if Christendom had remained unified under the Catholic Church, the Church would have eventually liberalized and/or reformed on its own.I think that if the Protestant “reformation” had never occurred, the world would be drastically different. The Church never would have approved of contraception for preventing pregnancy and I don’t think many other immoral things would have occurred either. I think that morality likely would have stayed true and orthodox rather than becoming so unorthodox as it is today where things like gay “marriage” and abortion are allowed, even by some Christians. For example, some churches of the United Church of Christ believe that gay “marriage” is just fine. Some of them also don’t have a problem with abortion. The Catholic Church, of course, has a major problem with both things and rightfully so. I sincerely wish that the Church would have conquered the Protestant “reformation” shortly after it started but alas, that did not happen.
That said, I do not like to call it the Protestant “reformation” which is why I put reformation in quotes. I think it would more accurately be called the Protestant Revolt or the Protestant Deformation, deformation because it literally deformed the Church with its many heresies.