Valorius wrote:JAK wrote:Further, the LDS is a very late comer to the Protestant Reformation which began in 1517.
The Protestant Reformation refers to individuals and groups who were Catholics who attempted to change select practices and doctrines of the Holy Roman Catholic Church. When changes were not effected, these individuals and groups conducted church services and missions according to the changes they thought the Mother Church should have adopted. The Protestant Reformation became a Protesting Separation.
The Mormon Church rose from one man's efforts in the 1800s. He had not been Catholic. In fact anti-Catholicism was the norm where he lived, and anti-Catholicism was an element in sermons he heard while growing up.
The LDS is not a late-comer to the Protestant Reformation. It was never a part of the Protestant Reformation. Since the birth of Joseph Smith, the attempts to reform the Catholic Church have been much fewer, usually much less bellicose, and less successful in starting huge new national denominations, than those people of the true Catholic Protestant Reformation, which unique and specific era we may now say has ended.
The LDS church, if anything, is part of a movement in which arose many new denominations and churches in the mid-1800s, and has continued off and on in various countries ever since then.
Valorius,
You are misinformed about the extent of the Protestant Reformation which began (not ended) with Martin Luther in 1517.
The evolution of religious doctrines continues to the present day as part of
reform and the Protestant Reformation.
The division at the time of Martin Luther resulted in the formation of what we presently have in Lutheran churches. There are many of them today. Other Protestant denominations resulted in further splits and start-ups.
For a quick review of that:
See
Protestantism
Many groups have formed following the schism resulting from that begun in 1517.
Valorius stated:
The Protestant Reformation refers to individuals and groups who were Catholics who attempted to change select practices and doctrines of the Holy Roman Catholic Church. When changes were not effected, these individuals and groups conducted church services and missions according to the changes they thought the Mother Church should have adopted. The Protestant Reformation became a Protesting Separation.
Some incorrect analysis. The Methodists were never Roman Catholics. The Baptists were never Roman Catholic. Those and many others including Mormons were much farther removed from the period 1517. That makes the emergence of the Mormon organization in the 1800s one which can be historically (objective historians doing the studies) linked to the initial Protestant Reformation. While Mormons like to rewrite history to suit their own bias and doctrine, the
Mormon view of history is couched and trapped by
Mormon dogma.
That time (1517) was the beginning of the Protestant Reformation. Groups which split from other groups which split from still other groups following the lead of Martin Luther are all part of the Protestant Reformation continued.
It’s correct that Luther wanted reforms which the Church of Rome was unwilling to grant. Granting what Luther wanted would have weakened the authority of the Pope. However, that authority was weakened anyhow as the invention of the printing press gave more and more people access to the Bible and more and more opportunity to have further divisions as a result of
differing interpretations on what the Bible said.
Valorius stated:
The Mormon Church rose from one man's efforts in the 1800s. He had not been Catholic. In fact anti-Catholicism was the norm where he lived, and anti-Catholicism was an element in sermons he heard while growing up.
That’s incorrect. There were many involved in the emergence and evolution of the Mormon Church. J. Smith came from a Methodist family, and he used the resources of others in his attempt to reform or start up a new denomination.
Protestantism is a general category of Christians who do not belong to the Roman Catholic Church or one of the Eastern Orthodox Churches. Protestantism includes more than a thousand demoninations, sects, and cults that differ greatly or slightly from one another. Hence, Protestantism is inclusive of those religious groups and political movements which began in Europe in 1517. The word
Protestant comes from the Latin word
protestans, which means
one who protests.
The term was first used in 1529 at a special
Diet (an assembly) in Speyer Germany. At that Diet, several german leaders protested an attempt of the Roman Catholic Church to limit the practice of Lutheranism, the earliest of the Protest movements. The leaders became know as Protestants because of their protest. The term soon became
all inclusive of the Western Christians who had left the Roman Catholic Church.
Most Protestants live in Europe and North America. A Protestant denomination is the
state religion of a number of nations including Denmark, Great Britain, Norway, and Sweden. Protestantism has influenced the cultural, political, and social history of these and other countries.
And so the Mormon Church is indeed
a late comer to the Protestant Reformation contrary to your perception. Mormons
do not write world history, they write doctrine and dogma protective of their religious peculiarity. That is not really unlike other religious groups in the wake of the initial Protestant Reformation.
Hence your statement here
is incorrect as you state:
Valorius states:
The LDS is not a late-comer to the Protestant Reformation. It was never a part of the Protestant Reformation.
Mormonism got its start with Joseph Smith (1805-44), the unschooled son of a New York
Methodist farmer. He made a wide variety of
claims of a religious nature. His environmental background was out of a Protestant denomination previously established and from which Smith came (a family of 9 children).
The term
Mormon can be applied to various groups as detailed by the website here.
I should like to see evidence for your next claim. However, by the 1800 and certainly by the mid to late 1800s, the denominational splits were diminishing. Unless you can show evidence for a
causal link to your statement, it’s unreliable as implied
cause.
Valorius states:
Since the birth of Joseph Smith, the attempts to reform the Catholic Church have been much fewer, usually much less bellicose, and less successful in starting huge new national denominations, than those people of the true Catholic Protestant Reformation, which unique and specific era we may now say has ended.
The evolution of
doctrinal shift in religion has hardly ended. And to imply that the emergence of the Mormon church had influence on “fewer” “attempts to reform the Catholic Church” lacks merit.
The fact that B follows A does not mean that A
caused B in the contest of your implicit claim here.
There are numerous
independent churches today which have been
start-ups without financial or other direct connection to another Protestant group.
Valorius states:
The LDS church, if anything, is part of a movement in which arose many new denominations and churches in the mid-1800s, and has continued off and on in various countries ever since then.
The LDS organization is one of many emerging, evolving religious groups that claim
to be different than other religious groups. The “movement” is that of
the Protestant Reformation begun in 1517. The
movement did not begin with the Mormon organization.
JAK