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![]() "uncle arnie" wrote in message ... Michael Lawson wrote: snip Wasn't that part of the whole C of E's reason for existence? Henry VIII and Anne Boelyn?? It's not that simple. Do a search on the Council of Whitby, 644 AD, if you're interested. Didn't say it was that simple, but it was a factor. Remember, Henry had defended Catholicism rather eloquently before this, so I don't believe it a simple conversion experience that caused him to perform an abrupt 180. The King of Northumbria decided in favour of the Roman versus indigenous Celtic church at that time. Archbishop Cranmer, when he wrote up the first Book of Common Prayer, specifically returned to the traditions of the ancient church of the British Isles. You could "spin" this and say that he only took advantage of Henry's marital issues, and you would be cozy with the Roman Catholic propaganda of many centuries. Considering Henry's title of "Defender of the Faith", to turn around quickly and reject the Roman Church at the specific time when he felt he needed heirs, needed a divorce and wanted to marry Anne smacks of a certain Machiavellian style, not altruism. Certainly, Henry felt he could get away with it and not have Civil War (that came later) and still do with what he felt he needed to preserve the throne. It wasn't all that long before that the Wars of the Roses had ended, and he felt he needed to preserve the line and ensure a united England. You can certainly denigrate a church if you promote that the founding of it was based on someone's desire for divorce. That would be like saying the Roman Catholic Church is based on Peter's three times denial of Christ in His our of need. Did I say anything denigrating the CofE?? No. I just simply found it curious that everyone is up in arms over this, when a precendent has already been set. One, I might add, that was a bit more ruthless and Machiavellian than the current scenario. Considering that many of the German barons who supported Luther did so for both Machiavellian as well as altruistic reasons, I see no reason why that would denigrate what Luther accomplished. Nor the same for Henry; were it not for him, the Protestant Sects that helped to found the Colonies would probably not be around, nor would William Penn found Pennsylvania, nor would Maryland be founded as a haven for Catholics, nor Georgia as essentially a "reformatory" experiment. The Colonies might have turned out completely different, as might have England's relationship to it. Nor, I would argue, would England have become the power that it became without what Henry set in motion. --Mike L. |