M
minux
Guest
Part of it has to do with the anti-Catholic bias left over from England and various other countries that manifested itself globally.
Sure. Henry VIII believed his marriage to Catherine of Aragon was “blighted in the eyes of God” due to the fact that she was his brother’s widow. Henry recognized that this violated Leviticus 20:21 and was an impediment to marriage in Catholic canon law. Henry’s father secured a papal dispensation, so they could marry (and Catherine claimed that Henry’s brother never consummated their marriage, etc.).While conceding that you are right and halogirl’s statement was reductionist, was there actually any doctrinal basis for the Anglican schism other than an issue with authority of the Pope in a political context?
Well, obviously there was politics involved because it was dealing with the heir to the kingdom. Henry VIII’s father, Henry VII, was the first king in the Tudor dynasty; he had to defeat Richard III of the House of York and win the Wars of the Roses, So, the Tudor dynasty was not as secure as we might think today. Henry VIII had reason to worry that dying without a male heir would plunge the country into warfare and chaos.Right, but isn’t it a bit disingenuous to claim that this sudden theological issue from King Henry was motivated by anything other than political and probably sexual concerns?
They weren’t called.if the catholic church is right, why don’t more non-catholic christians become catholic?
This is my understanding, may be totally wrong. Your sins are forgiven. That’s the Gospel. You will never die, you will live forever.I’ve also wondered about non-catholic christians in overcoming sin. They don’t have the sacrament of reconciliation/confession, so they just confess to one another or to God directly. The catholic church says reconciliation is needed for the forgiveness of sins, so are non-catholic christians unforgiven, even if they believe in their heart that they are forgiven?
It’s not true, if you’re talking about patriotism, nationalism etc.The Eastern Orthodox are too closely associated with national identity.