Hi
Does anyone know about a time tree like below that shows
more denominations?
Another thing that I see is that Methodism originated from Anglicanism?
Thank you
This is absurd.
From 30 AD to roughly 313 AD, there was no denomination at all.
In the early 4th century, the Roman Empire founded a denomination FOR ITSELF - only for those parishes within the Empire. We'll stand back and witness the OOC, EOC and RCC all continue their irrelevant fight over which of them that was (personally, I don't think it was ANY of them but the proto to all of them - indeed, directly or indirectly, to most denominations).
That Roman Church split in 451, as the OOC was spun off. And while functionally the remainder became "united' only theoretically, it officially split in 1054. Of course, there were other unrelated denominations too. The western side (now often referred to as Roman Catholic) split itself again in 1521 as it spun off the Lutherans.
From it, others broke off. The Anglican Church soon thereafter (although it did not immediately become Protestant in theology, just a separate denomination). Calvin and his followers were soon kicked out, too - and the Reformed bodies were formed (Like Lutherans, never one denomination but rather a fairly loose community united by doctrine but not by denomination). Anabaptists also broke off a bit later in the 16th Century.
The chart is SO absurd at many points. For example, Luther never started any denomination at all. And there are today some 300 Lutheran denominations in the world (of which the ELCA, mentioned, is just one - and far from the largest). And the Reformed church is far, far, far larger than just the Presbyterian Church in the USA (which some would argue isn't even Reformed anymore).
It's a very inaccurate and unhistorical "chart."
I hope that helps.
Pax
- Josiah
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