• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

What if the Protestant reformation never happened?

hagios24

Active Member
Feb 7, 2014
309
5
Sleeping under the stars somewhere...
✟487.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Single
:wave: I speak for myself, but this is probably one of the most interesting threads that I've read on CF before, but... the topic is starting to fly way over my head lol. :D

Can any of you refer me to any free online (edit: Church History) sources? :cool: Preferably ones that are heavily bias: pro protestant, catholic, humanist-atheist, etc. (edit: Joking of course)
 
Upvote 0

LittleLambofJesus

Hebrews 2:14.... Pesky Devil, git!
Site Supporter
May 19, 2015
125,550
28,531
74
GOD's country of Texas
Visit site
✟1,237,300.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Libertarian
:wave: I speak for myself, but this is probably one of the most interesting threads that I've read on CF before, but... the topic is starting to fly way over my head lol. :D

Can any of you refer me to any free online (edit: Church History) sources? :cool: Preferably ones that are heavily bias: pro protestant, catholic, humanist-atheist, etc. (edit: Joking of course)
I found this thread on GT, but not sure if it mentions sources
If I remember correctly, the OP member was a RC?

http://www.christianforums.com/t7401867/
History of the Catholic Church

When Constantine adopted the Christian religion. He adopted what was mainstream at the time. There were other line of thoughts in Christianity at the time as well that were suppressed over time. The pagan church was essentially fused with the mainstream Christian Church of the time. This had to be done because the Christian Church would not be accepted among the Gentiles unless it had the structure and resemblance of the pagan church.


The Roman Catholic Church essentially took the word "katholikos" as their own. All others who were not apart of this new Roman Church were no longer considered apart of the universal church. The other Christian Churches of the time were basically marginalized.

The truth is that all Christians are apart of the true Universal Church. Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant and even other Christians that were lost from history were and are apart of universal church.

The Catholic Church once taught that salvation was only possible if you were a member of the Church. They have had to redefine what this meant along with other teachings as well.

Look. The Pope is defending Martin Luther! Hopefully, this is the first step out of the many for them to come clean. I understand that they cannot fully come clean as this would be too shocking of a change for people. So the process will be slow at best.

The truth is, is that the Catholic Church has many secrets. But I do believe they do a lot of good in the world. They are just wrong to say that they have the fullness of truth. As only God has the fullness of truth.

Yet, I love the Catholic Church. They are for Christ! They preach Christ! They feed the hungry! They clothe the naked! They visit the sick and imprisoned! They give drink to the thirsty!


I could go on and on....I don't know where to stop so I'll just stop here. There are many things to say.


The more I learn the more I realize how much I don't know.


.
 
Upvote 0
G

GratiaCorpusChristi

Guest
The Catholic Church has a history of reformers and I find it offensive you would call them crypto-protestants, because they loved the Church and wanted to improve her, rather than ditching her and creating their own groups.

I didn't call them crypto-Protestants. Many of them were marginalized by the church and considered crypto-Protestants at the time. Erasmus' books were put on the Index later in the century. So don't get in a huff. It's simply the facts of history, not my personal opinion. I don't considered them crypto-Protestants.

Also, you say that like Hus or Luther didn't love the church and want to improve her. Neither wanted to create their own groups, but once they (or their followers) were outside the church, they did.

In fact, that's the most interesting counterfactual of all: what if the Catholic Church had coopted Hus in the fifteenth century and allowed communion in both kinds and worship in the vernacular, and then allowed Luther to do on teaching and publishing in Wittenburg and done away with indulgence sales? What if the Reformation could have been confined to the Reformed and Anabaptists, and the Catholic Church had basically behaved in the sixteenth century in the same way it behaved at Vatican II?

This is completely untrue. Galileo is praised by atheists to denounce religion as against science, thus stupid and ignorant. Galileo is one example on one very particular issue of science because it seemingly contradicted scripture. This was not an issue among other sciences which the Church promoted and supported. Thus, the only thing protestantism would have furthered is heliocentrism, but I believe they would have considered that heretical at the time too.

Did I just mention the scientific revolution and you assumed that I was sneaking in a common Protestant position? Did you read what I actually wrote? I said the Scientific Revolution would have proceeded apace and only perhaps faster due to the one instance of Galileo's trial- exactly what you ended up saying.

This is profoundly wrong. One- Mexico is part of North America.

Oh for the love of.... Mexico is not part of the North American political tradition, and that's what's under consideration. If you're going to be nitpicky then no one is going to want to play.

Moreover, everything you say subsequently falls under this point: the North American political tradition as it developed in the Atlantic seaboard British colonies would not have developed as it did, and the North American political tradition would simply not exist.

I also do think the natives would disagree with you. The French were far more peaceful with natives and the Spanish colonized and intermarried. The British wiped out natives, pushing them further and further into the interior. None of them were benign, but the natives would have been better off without the British genocide.

Well this is just untrue. The Spanish and Portuguese committed horrendous atrocities against the Native Americans that make British crimes, and later American crimes, pale in comparison.

Catholics didn't start this thread. I wish you had held yourself to a higher standard and decided not to do exactly what you condemned and then tried to push off on Catholics like we started it.

Dude, people were literally posting just the words "better" and "worse." I exactly that from Protestants, but seriously, aren't Catholics supposed to intelligent and nuanced? What I tried to do in my post was show that the world wouldn't be unequivocally better or worse, but somewhat better in certain areas (theology, the church), and decidedly worse in others (political structure, international relations).
 
Upvote 0

abacabb3

Newbie
Jul 14, 2013
3,217
564
✟91,561.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
The doctrine of papal infallibility already existed well before the Protestant revolt. It was only defined as dogma at Vatican I well after the Protestant revolt. In other words the Protestant revolt had no bearing whatsoever on the dogma of papal infallibility.

Again, there was a historical basis, but in the 1500s such claims were in their nascent stage as far as I know.
 
Upvote 0

abacabb3

Newbie
Jul 14, 2013
3,217
564
✟91,561.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
True enough. It is clearly in operation from 155ad onward. The real question is whether it is apostolic? No.

No, that's simply not true. One Pope declared Athanasius anathema under duress. And I know that a Pope is only infallible unless he sits on the seat of Peter or something. Even in the middle ages it was debated. Pope John XII issued a bull Qui quorundam that condemned the idea. So, it seems like it was a belief that existed, but wasn't yet universally accepted.
 
Upvote 0

abacabb3

Newbie
Jul 14, 2013
3,217
564
✟91,561.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
those are some VERY interesting ideas
I do agree that if the Protestant Reformation never happened, there would be a lot more of a diverse Catholic Church

but who can tell?

At least you caught my drift. I think Protestants don't realize that Catholicism already has immense diversity, and with the right historical conditions, could have retained most Protestant sects under the Catholic umbrella outside of anabaptists and baptists (who, without a reformeation, would probably never exist.)
 
Upvote 0

Rhamiel

Member of the Round Table
Nov 11, 2006
41,182
9,432
ohio
✟256,121.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Single
The papal infallibility would most probably have been defined at Vatican I anyway. Remember that defining the doctrine was not due to the heresy of Protestantism, but rather it was the Gallicanism heresy that forced the definition at Vatican I.

Gallicanism has been brought up before in this thread

even though it was a belief that came up in Catholic Countries, most noticeably France, it was a belief that became popular AFTER the Protestant Reformation, we can not assume how things would have went if the Protestant Reformation never happened
maybe Gallicanism (the belief that the State in general or Monarchy in particular is not under the jurisdiction of the Pope... ok that might be too much of a simplified definition)
maybe Gallicanism would not have evolved the way it did if the Reformation did not happen?

we can not speculate on that
 
Upvote 0
G

GratiaCorpusChristi

Guest
Gallicanism has been brought up before in this thread

even though it was a belief that came up in Catholic Countries, most noticeably France, it was a belief that became popular AFTER the Protestant Reformation, we can not assume how things would have went if the Protestant Reformation never happened
maybe Gallicanism (the belief that the State in general or Monarchy in particular is not under the jurisdiction of the Pope... ok that might be too much of a simplified definition)
maybe Gallicanism would not have evolved the way it did if the Reformation did not happen?

we can not speculate on that

Certainly Gallicanism arose as a particular heresy after the Reformation. But the general idea that the state should have a substantial role in controlling the church and appointing bishops apart from the jurisdiction from the pope goes back all the way to Theodosius. It was fairly standard practice in the Byzantine Empire, and in the west, at the very least, the question had already been brought up in the Investiture Controversy.
 
Upvote 0

Rhamiel

Member of the Round Table
Nov 11, 2006
41,182
9,432
ohio
✟256,121.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Single
Certainly Gallicanism arose as a particular heresy after the Reformation. But the general idea that the state should have a substantial role in controlling the church and appointing bishops apart from the jurisdiction from the pope goes back all the way to Theodosius. It was fairly standard practice in the Byzantine Empire, and in the west, at the very least, the question had already been brought up in the Investiture Controversy.

we can look at the pendulum swinging back and forth over the centuries

we also have the martyrdoms of St. Thomas Becket and St. John of Nepomuk as examples where the State acted brutally and this caused backlash in support for the Church
 
Upvote 0

Erose

Newbie
Jul 2, 2010
9,009
1,471
✟75,992.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
Gallicanism has been brought up before in this thread

even though it was a belief that came up in Catholic Countries, most noticeably France, it was a belief that became popular AFTER the Protestant Reformation, we can not assume how things would have went if the Protestant Reformation never happened
maybe Gallicanism (the belief that the State in general or Monarchy in particular is not under the jurisdiction of the Pope... ok that might be too much of a simplified definition)
maybe Gallicanism would not have evolved the way it did if the Reformation did not happen?

we can not speculate on that
Actually I think that it would have occurred earlier, if not for the Protestant revolt. Rebellion was already in the air, and if anything the Protestant revolt galvanized the Catholic countries behind the papacy.
 
Upvote 0

Erose

Newbie
Jul 2, 2010
9,009
1,471
✟75,992.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
I know this sounds weird, but one of the greatest things about the Reformation is the advent of religious freedom. True faith cannot be forced.

I'm not sure that you can give the Protestant revolt credit for religious freedom. The Protestant kings and princes did not allow much diversity within their countries. It was for this very reason, that people from the British isles made the journey to America.
 
Upvote 0

Erose

Newbie
Jul 2, 2010
9,009
1,471
✟75,992.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
Again, there was a historical basis, but in the 1500s such claims were in their nascent stage as far as I know.

Not true. The pope has been using his charism of infallibility throughout the history of the Church. Every time a pope used the prefix "I(We) declare and define... and/or the suffix "...let him be anathema!" He is speaking infallibly. Every time a pope ratifies the dogmatic canons of a Ecumenical Council he is using his charism. Every time a pope declares a man or a woman a Saint, he is using his charism of infallibility.
 
Upvote 0

Hentenza

I will fear no evil for You are with me
Site Supporter
Mar 27, 2007
35,588
4,367
On the bus to Heaven
✟93,903.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Baptist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
Yeah - it is nice to be around people that believe the same thing.

Disagreement occurs on issues of how to implement and live that belief. Much better than the protestant sections where everyone has their own cafeteria faith.

Cafeteria faith? ^_^^_^^_^

I don't think so.
 
Upvote 0

Hentenza

I will fear no evil for You are with me
Site Supporter
Mar 27, 2007
35,588
4,367
On the bus to Heaven
✟93,903.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Baptist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
The Catholic Church is in a constant state of reform. What is sad is when people decide not to help, but to rip up the Body of Christ.

The Catholic Church is not the body of Christ. It is but one of the churches composing the body of Christ.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Yoseft
Upvote 0
G

GratiaCorpusChristi

Guest
Actually I think that it would have occurred earlier, if not for the Protestant revolt. Rebellion was already in the air, and if anything the Protestant revolt galvanized the Catholic countries behind the papacy.

Ya, that was kinda my point in my first reply. It also improved the character of the papacy. The Counter-Reformation popes were, hands down, of far better character than the Renaissance papacy.
 
Upvote 0

rockytopva

Love to pray! :)
Site Supporter
Mar 6, 2011
20,703
8,049
.
Visit site
✟1,252,659.00
Faith
Pentecostal
Marital Status
Single
Have you guys ever stopped to think that nobody runs Islam? You do not need a human leader to run a faith!

The spirit of Jezebel is to control and to dominate. Give a church too much power and it will refer to itself as an institution apart from Christ and justify evil done on its behalf as 'doing what it can to protect the church.'

The Pilgrim in the Pilgrims Progress getting away from it all.... Yikes! Let me outta here!

"You will never mend till more of you be burned." - The Spirit of Jezebel, including Pope, Imam, Calvin, and Pagin.
Cleric_zps2d168709.gif
 
Upvote 0

concretecamper

I stand with Candice.
Nov 23, 2013
7,362
2,867
PA
✟334,604.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
Have you guys ever stopped to think that nobody runs Islam? You do not need a human leader to run a faith!

Islam is a false religion and has no human head...are you sure you wanna continue this logic? :D
 
Upvote 0