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#83374 - 06/08/06 07:12 PM
Re: Pope gave queen rosary beads in underhand way
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Companion
Registered: 05/03/06
Posts: 148
Loc: Cartersville, GA
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I'll say this for the second time. The English Reformation was a socio-political event and occurred in 1534. The Protestant Reformation, however, was a theological event in 1517. They are not the same.
From Wikipedia: "The different character of the English Reformation came rather from the fact that it was driven initially by the political necessities of Henry VIII."
The Episcopal Church is a member of the Anglican Communion. The Anglican Communion's main church is the Church of England. I'm an Episcopalian. To Anglican's, the Pope is simply the Bishop of Rome.
The Episcopal Church in the United States (and throughout the Anglican Communion) is hierarchial. The head of the Diocese of Atlanta is the Bishop of Atlanta. This is just like the Roman Catholic's.
Episcopalian's, including myself, sometimes refer to ourselves as Anglican Catholics.
While confession is considered to be one of the seven sacrements (just like the Roman), we have no requirement for an individual confession, but it is available if desired. During the course of the Mass, we do have a prayer referred to as the "General Confession" that each of us says aloud.
Now if all of the above doesn't convince you that the Church of England is closer to being Catholic than Protestant...
During the course of the Mass, we recite in unision, a summary of our faith, The Nicene Creed (so do the Romans). One of the lines in it goes, "I believe in one holy catholic, and apostolic church".
_________________________
Ubi caritas et amor, Deus ibi est
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#83375 - 06/08/06 07:24 PM
Re: Pope gave queen rosary beads in underhand way
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Best Friend
Registered: 10/27/05
Posts: 1866
Loc: Michigan
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posted by southsideslim---As I've posted elsewhere's, the Church of England (along with the associated Anglican Communion) is not a Protestant denomination, it is a Catholic denomination. I do not know the source of your information--but I have checked a variety of places and with people including Anglicans(and Episcopalians in the US)--C of E, the Anglican Church, and Episcopalians--are not considered Catholic--but are a Protestant denomination. They do not answer to the Pope in any fashion--worship in the language of the country--not Latin. Even Wikipedia says the following: Anglicanism developed as a distinctive theological tradition at approximately the same time as the Protestant Reformation in the Holy Roman Empire, although the immediate reasons for the Church of England breaking from Rome were political rather than theological. The Anglican Communion does not recognize the jurisdiction of the Pope, and is thus clearly not a branch of the Roman Catholic Church.................The Anglican-Roman Catholic International Consultation reached agreement on the doctrine of the ministry in their Elucidation of 1979 [1], but the Roman Catholic Church continues to assert that Anglican ordinations are "invalid" due to its interpretation of doctrine and history and some Anglican bodies reject the teaching that the Sacraments are necessarily attached to Apostolic succession............ According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the Vatican views Anglicans as "separated brothers and sisters" who are ineligible to receive the Catholic eucharist. Although the reason for the separation of the Anglican and Roman Catholic church began as a political issue(rather than a religious one like other protestant denominations)--it was firmly established as a Protestant Church by Elizabeth I--who definately considered herself a Protestant.
_________________________
"When I do good, I feel good. When I do bad, I feel bad. And that is my religion." Abraham Lincoln
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