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Guest
Huh???
You wanted internal divisions, I gave them to you. The church is on the brink of major internal schisms.
What this has to do with Henry VIII is beyond me. When he had 'numerous divorces' it was a problem, and his church split from the RCC.
The point, friend, is that none of the examples you have provided admit to being divided, by their own definition of what is constituted as division. If this were the case then the Episcopal Church in America would not be strenuously attempting to establish property ownership of dissenting congregations. They would, instead, agree that there is division and that each side is separate, but equal. As it is, they have particular means to affirm their lack of division, as determined by themselves.
If every example of disagreement in a church body was determined by that church body to be division, according to its own definition of division, all church bodies, including your own could be clearly shown to be divided. However, to do so would be to apply a definition of division from outside that body because no body (as well as nobody) has been known to admit to division - according to its own definition.
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