Tuesday, September 29, 2009

The Beginnings of the Anglican Church

I have been following the Tudor drama on BBC2 on Friday evenings and whilst I have my own reservations about the interpretation of history in this series it cannot evade the murky issue about how the Anglican church came into being. An infamous English King concerned about his need for a male heir set against decades of conflict in the previous century precisely over this issue of the succession, wishes to divorce his wife on the most debatable of theological grounds in order to marry a younger woman with whom he had become infatuated.
This is all set against the complex issues of the Reformation in the church and the divisions in opinion engendered both in the court and in the country as a whole.
Albeit the pope wouldn't grant the divorce so our king took matters into his own hands, wresting religious authority from the papacy and making himself head of the church in England. What an extraordinary story!
It hasn't escaped my notice that had Henry remained married to Catherine of Aragon he might still have gone on to marry Jane Seymour who did finally give him his male heir even if the child was to die in adolescence some years after Henry. But then we would not have had Elizabeth and it would then have been likely that after a brief flirtation with Protestantism we would have reverted to the Catholic fold under the Stuart monarchs. Things might have proved more harmonious in the longer term but we would have been deprived of the English translation of the bible until well into the 20th century. That would have been a major deprivation indeed!

5 comments:

duopastorale said...

Oh my goodness. I say thank God for Elisabeth!!

cherie said...

i think you may have visited my site once, and i am here to say thank you. God bless you.

Mary said...

Interesting study, what can you tell me about “anglo-catholicism” a term I heard used on occasion as an adolescent.

Steve said...

Anglo-Catholicism is a movement which had its roots in the 19th century with a man called Cardinal Newman I believe. I'm uncertain of the specifics but it is largely due to his influence that led to the revival of incense, candles, psalm-chanting robed choirs and clergy with white outer garments called surpluses (uncertain of the spelling)which recall aspects of the church's Catholic origins.This form of Anglicanism has typified the 'high' church as it is known right through to the present day.
'Low' church Anglicanism by contrast is much more informal and at times is hardly distinguishable from free/evangelical forms of worship particularly with the charismatic renewal movement.

duopastorale said...

Long time no post!