The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

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The Guid
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Post by The Guid »

From a Christian point of view it is extremly moral. The Catholic Church was preventing Christ's teaching from reaching the masses by forcing the mass to be in Latin. Without the ideas of many such as Luther the Bible in the Vernacular might still be blasphemous. I like to read my Bible, and I'm not good enough at Latin to learn it that way.
Matthew 10:2 wrote:
Now the names of the twelve apostles are these. The first, Simon, who is called Peter...


Now hang on. The apostles are listed, just like many things are listed. Is "A" the most important letter of the alphabet?
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Post by Slartibartfast »

The Guid wrote:
Matthew 10:2 wrote:
Now the names of the twelve apostles are these. The first, Simon, who is called Peter...


Now hang on. The apostles are listed, just like many things are listed. Is "A" the most important letter of the alphabet?
Fucking A!
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by StarshipTitanic »

Illuminatus Primus wrote: :roll:

Its really sad to watch how Orthodox and Catholics still really do get in earnest pissing matches over a dispute nearly a thousand years old over The Invisible Face in the Sky.
You participate in Star Wars vs Star Trek debates and you speak of pointless arguments? The kettle and the pot both drink from the Colored fountain, if you understand my meaning.

I don't see how Protestantism was a moral decision at all. If someone's going to believe in their magic being in the sky, it's their own choice about how to carry out their worship. Protestantism could be just as corrupt as Catholicism.
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by Queeb Salaron »

StarshipTitanic wrote:The kettle and the pot both drink from the Colored fountain, if you understand my meaning.
Oh, how I do love political incorrectness! ::Hugs:: Thank you so very much. I was beginning to think I was the only one that made those kinds of jokes.
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by fgalkin »

SancheztheWhaler wrote:
Here's my problem with Protestantism in general - if you claim to be a Christian, you have only one choice - Catholicism. This is because Jesus himself chose Peter (the founder of the Catholic Church) as the leader after his death. To reject the Catholic Church would be to reject Jesus.

Any thoughts?
Ever heard of the Great Schism?

Have a very nice day.
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by StarshipTitanic »

fgalkin wrote: Ever heard of the Great Schism?

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
Catholicism and Orthodoxy had already demarcated Europe by the time of the Reformation. Pledging loyalty to the Patriarch while in the middle of Germany or France wasn't entirely an option.
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by Crown »

Illuminatus Primus wrote: <snip>

:roll:

Its really sad to watch how Orthodox and Catholics still really do get in earnest pissing matches over a dispute nearly a thousand years old over The Invisible Face in the Sky.
You realise that I'm an athiest right? And the last comment was an ironic joke considering how me being an athiest, I'm already going to hell by the reasoning of both religions, right? :roll:

And if we were to suspend disbelief, and assume that the imaginary face in the sky exists, than the Orthodox list of complaints against the Arch Bishop of Rome are actually valid, right?
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by SirNitram »

StarshipTitanic wrote:You participate in Star Wars vs Star Trek debates and you speak of pointless arguments? The kettle and the pot both drink from the Colored fountain, if you understand my meaning.
No one's ever died from SWvST.

....That the authorities can prove.
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by Illuminatus Primus »

StarshipTitanic wrote:
Illuminatus Primus wrote: :roll:

Its really sad to watch how Orthodox and Catholics still really do get in earnest pissing matches over a dispute nearly a thousand years old over The Invisible Face in the Sky.
You participate in Star Wars vs Star Trek debates and you speak of pointless arguments? The kettle and the pot both drink from the Colored fountain, if you understand my meaning.

I don't see how Protestantism was a moral decision at all. If someone's going to believe in their magic being in the sky, it's their own choice about how to carry out their worship. Protestantism could be just as corrupt as Catholicism.
My debate hasn't lead to the deaths of millions, you piece of shit.
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by Crown »

SirNitram wrote:
StarshipTitanic wrote:You participate in Star Wars vs Star Trek debates and you speak of pointless arguments? The kettle and the pot both drink from the Colored fountain, if you understand my meaning.
No one's ever died from SWvST.

....That the authorities can prove.
True, but how does that change his point? We either say: their imaginary beings in the sky; who cares? there all idiots anyway! it was a heretic decision!, etc, etc. Which does nothing but kill this thread.

Or we suspend disbelief in the existance of the imaginary person in the sky and - you know - actually analyse the question in the original post.
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Post by Crown »

:oops: :oops: :oops:

Ghetto Edit :: The 'it was a heretic decision!' bit should, obviously not be in the first sentence.

:oops: :oops: :oops:
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by Crown »

StarshipTitanic wrote:
fgalkin wrote: Ever heard of the Great Schism?

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
Catholicism and Orthodoxy had already demarcated Europe by the time of the Reformation. Pledging loyalty to the Patriarch while in the middle of Germany or France wasn't entirely an option.
That's immaterial to the point. SanchezWhaler was saying that the only valid form of Christianity was Catholicism. Period.

Whether he was basing this on the demographics of the time (the heart of Orthodoxy being effectively in the hands of the enemy, and the heirs of Orthodoxy being Russia) is doubtfull in the least. It is a fair assumption that he isn't (or wasn't at the time of posting) aware of the Orthdoxy branch of the faith, and its roots and relation to the Roman Catholic Church, which you know, kinda factor in on the original assumption. :wink:
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Post by Crown »

Battlehymn Republic wrote:
Crown wrote:I assume you mean the three Popes of near the end of 1300's.
Three popes? That's the Roman pope, the antipope of Avignon, and who else?
The Beeb provides

It's actually quite humours, so I'll quote the whole thing;
The BBC wrote:In Europe, between 1378 and 1415 there were Two Popes at all times and eventually Three Popes!

Question- What do you call it when they have two Popes at the same time?

Answer- Well, you usually call it temporary. You call one of the Popes - 'the Pope' and you call the other one 'the Anti-Pope'.1

Question- What happens when a Pope and an Anti-Pope collide?

Answer- Contrary to popular belief they don't eliminate one another and release huge amounts of energy 2. Usually one of the Popes has got enough support, so that the other one begins to look like a crank almost immediately. Once the weaker Pope is deposed his claim on the Seat of Paul is described as 'anti'. As in all matters, the victor gets to label the loser.

Question- So how did we get Three Popes at the same time?

Answer: Well, I'm glad you asked.

It all started with the Babylonian Captivity3 which began in 1309. The Archbishop of Bordeaux had recently become Pope and he noticed that Italy of the day displayed the sort of political stability today associated with Sierra Leone. So he moved the Papacy to the fortress town of Avignon in Provence, France. It was secure, it was fief of a vassal of Rome (so technically was Roman, not French) and it was in Provence. The time the Papacy was in Avignon is referred to as the Babylonian Captivity by later critics who saw a parallel with the forced exodus of the Israelites to Babylon from ancient times.

But what was Rome without the Pope in the 14th Century? Not a lot decided the people and cardinals alike. In 1328-1330 they tried declaring Nicholas V the true Pope - but it turned out he was an Anti-Pope because he was the first to back down when the Popes faced off. Avignon remained the seat of the Papacy until March 1378 when the real, actual and un-anti Pope Gregory XI died whilst in Rome.

Fearing the wrath of the Roman crowd, the cardinals elected Urban VI - who was Italian, but thought to be sympathetic to Avignon's claim on the Pope's HQ. As it turned out Urban was sympathetic to absolutely no one. Within months he had ticked off all and sundry - and his election was declared null and void by a bunch of Avignon-loving cardinals who packed their bags and elected Robert of Geneva to be the new Pope (Clement VII) when they got back home to Provence.

Urban VI might have become another in a long line of Anti-Popes with reigns of less than a few months - but for the support he had from the Italian public, some Rome-loving cardinals, England and Flanders4. He decided to stay Pope and sit back in Rome until his death in 1389. His successor was Boniface IX (1389-1404) who even got Portugal supporting him, strengthening the claim for Rome as the Papal Seat.

Meanwhile in Avignon, the other Pope garnered the support of France, Scotland, Aragon, Castille and lots of little German states. Clem 7 wasn't backing down and as far as he was concerned Urban VI should be called 'the other Pope' by amateur historians writing for h2g2.com and not him. When Clem 7 died in 1394, Avignon elected a Spaniard the new Pope: Benedict XIII. 13 was not their lucky number. Benedict was such a mongrel that even France (who started the whole Captivity) declared there was no Pope (not two, not one, but none!) from 1398 to 1403 and after patching things up, again from 1408 to 1409.

Rome was running smoother - with Innocent VII dying after two years and Gregory XII replacing him. But the general Catholic theological community decided having two, one and no Popes all at the same time was looking a bit strange. In 1409 they met at Pisa and decided it would best for all concerned if they declared Greg XII and Ben XIII both null and void and elect a new Pope - let's call him Alexander V.

France decided there was a Pope after all - Alexander V (the Council of Pisa had been their idea after all). Ben XIII and Greg XII decided the Council was stupid and that when all was said and done - they were both the one, true pontiff (along with the third Pope). When Alexander V died in 1410 the two Pope situation briefly emerged - except a successor to Alex V was elected - this being Pope John XXIII5 So, back to Three Popes.

John XXIII lacked the support of several major nations which he'd need to get Ben and Greg to stand down. Then there was John's personality. Within five years he'd lost most of his support. With all the nations of Europe calling for a solution, John convened the Council of Constance6. The Council promptly deposed both Benedict XIII and John XXIII. The third Pope - Gregory XII of Rome - declared 'you cant fire me, 'coz I quit' or Latin words to those effect. This was good fortune for him - because there was a strong Catholic tenet of the time which held that 'no power could depose the true pope.'

Martin V was elected in 1415 as the Pope. That's all. Just Pope Martin7. Of course Benedict XIII refused to believe the comedy was over and even after he was carted off to a Spanish castle to live in exile for the rest of his days he kept sending out ex-communications against people he didn't like, signed Pope Benedict XIII8.

So who was the Anti-Pope? or Anti-Popes? Well, because Gregory XII stood down voluntarily and thus was not removed, he is considered to be the Real, Actual, True, One Pope up to 1414. Thus his line - the Urban line or the Roman line - is now described as the Popes. Everyone else - all four of them - are Anti-Popes. Martin V returned to Rome, where Greg had left off and Catholicism was basically back on track... well except for the massive rift the whole cock-up had created through Europe which almost instantly brought about the Reformation and Protestantism9.

1 This is actually a lie. Some peoples want what the skinny Pope's got, other peoples want what the fat Pope's got. If you stopped flicking down to the footnotes and just read the article you'd already be clear on this...
2 Not to be confused with the warp core engines used in Star Trek which rely on very similar principles - though Paramount assures us no Popes have ever been harmed in the making of a Star Trek episode or movie.
3 Not to be confused with the modern form of Babylonian Captivity - watching all of Seasons 3 and 4 of Babylon5 in one weekend while getting nicely toasted.
4 The region of Europe - not Ned.
5 This John XXIII, a Pisan Pope should not be confused with the Roman Pope John XXIII.
6 The Council of Constance not only settled the whole Three Pope thing, but nutted out a few theological points. Like who Kings can kill without getting in trouble, and which Czechs are okay to burn at the stake.
7 And a most fanatical devotion to...
8 Benedict XIII made the news in April 2000 when his skull (the only body part not lost to thieves) was stolen from a descendant's home in Aragon. The skull was held for ransom - but no one was willing to pay to get it back.
9 But that's another entry surely.
There is actually two popes today (well on in lieu until they elect one in Rome), the Coptic Catholics (in Egypt) have their own pope.
Battlehymn Republic wrote:Also, my dear Orthodox-er, what about the Assyrian Church of the East and the Oriental Orthodox Churches?
I don't know ... if they are apart of the Orthodox church (think Greek, Russian, Serbian, etc) then yes them too. If not, then they are either splinter groups, or have never had an association with Constantinopole in the first place (which of course doesn't count).

I was more refering to the fact that the Orthodox church with the Ecumenical Patriarchate as the head still retains the same manner of internal opperation as the United Church did prior to April 1054. With the small exception that the Ecumenical Patriarchate now has the title 'First among equals' which didn't exist back then (except when the Arch Bishop of Rome tried it) - but he doesn't have the power of the Pope. He can only yield his influence to break decisions that Holly Synods can not come to an agreement in. :wink:
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Post by Patrick Degan »

BBC wrote:Question- What happens when a Pope and an Anti-Pope collide?

Answer- Contrary to popular belief they don't eliminate one another and release huge amounts of energy
Pity. If they did, it would make for a much better show and solve a lot of doctrinal problems in the bargain. 8)
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Re: The Morality of the Protestant Reformation

Post by StarshipTitanic »

Illuminatus Primus wrote:My debate hasn't lead to the deaths of millions, you piece of shit.
I'm sorry, I was unaware of the depth and meaning Star Trek vs Star Wars debates have brought to the world through their nonviolent nature.

You big poo head.
Crown wrote:That's immaterial to the point. SanchezWhaler was saying that the only valid form of Christianity was Catholicism. Period.
I figured he didn't understand that, too, but I thought I should point out how irrelevant Orthodoxy had been in Western Europe since the 600s, anyway. :P
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Post by wolveraptor »

The Spartan wrote:Bull, Chris Rock is a comedian/actor.

The wrestler/actor "The Rock" actually is named Dwayne Johnson.
Oh yeah. Chris Rock is the guy who hosted the last Oscars, right? and the other dude is "The Rock".

...Who really gives a damn anyways?
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