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PROTESTANT , the generic name for an adherent of those Churches which See also: base their teaching on the principles of the See also: Reformation (q.v.)
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The name is derived from the formal Protestatio handed in by the evangelical states of the See also: empire, including some of the more important princes and 14 imperial cities, against the recess of the See also: diet of See also: Spires (1529), which decreed that the religious status quo was to be preserved, that no innovations were to be introduced in those states which had not hither-to made them, and that the mass was everywhere to be tolerated, The name Protestant seems to have been first applied to the protesting princes by their opponents, and it soon came to be used indiscriminately of all the adherents of the reformed See also: religion
.
Its use appears to have spread more rapidly outside See also: Germany than in Germany itself, one cause of its popularity being that it was negative and colourless, and could thus be applied by adherents of the " old religion " to those of the " new religion," without giving offence, on occasions when it was expedient to avoid abusive language
.
The designation was moreover grateful to the Reformers as connoting a certain boldness of attitude; and Professor Kattenbusch (Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklop¢die, 3rd ed., xvi. p
.
136, 15) points out with See also: great truth hpw, from this point of view, the name " Protestantism " has survived as embodying for many the conception of liberty, of the right of private See also: judgment, of toleration for every progressive idea in religion, as opposed to the See also: Roman Catholic principles of authority and tradition; so that many even of those who do not " profess and See also: call themselves Christians " yet See also: glory in the name of " Protestant."
As the designation of a See also: Church, " Protestant " was unknown during the Reformation
See also: period and for a long while after
.
In Germany the Reformers called themselves usually evengelici, and avoided See also: special designations for their communities, which they conceived only as See also: part of the true Catholic Church; " Calvinists," " See also: Lutherans," " Zwinglians " were, in the See also: main, terms of abuse intended to stamp them as followers of one o: other heretical See also: leader, like Arians or See also: Hussites
.
It was not until the period of the See also: Thirty Years' War that the two main See also: schools of the reformed or evangelical Churches marked their definitive separation: the Calvinists describing themselves as the " Re-formed Church," the Lutherans as the " Lutheran Church." In See also: France, in See also: England, in See also: Holland the evangelicals continued to describe their churches as ecclesiae ref ormatae, without the arriere pensee which in Germany had confined the designation " Reformed " to the followers of a particular church
See also: order and See also: doctrine
.
As to the word " Protestant," it was never applied to the Church of England or to any other, save unofficially and in the wide sense above indicated, until the See also: style "Protestant Episcopal Church " (see below) was assumed by the See also: Anglican communion in the See also: United States
.
Even in the See also: Bill of Rights the phrase " Protestant religion " occurs, but not " Protestant Church," and it was reserved for the Liberal See also: government, in the See also: original draft (afterwards changed) of the Accession Declaration Bill introduced in 191o, to suggest " Protestant Reformed Church of England " as a new title for the Established Church
.
The style " Protestant " had, however, during the 19th century assumed a variety of new shades of meaning which necessarily made its particular application a somewhat hazardous proceeding
.
In Germany it had, for a while, been assumed by the Lutherans as against the Calvinists, and when in 1817 See also: King
See also: Frederick See also: William III. of Prussia forcibly amalgamated the Lutheran and Reformed Churches in the new " Evangelical Church " its public use was forbidden in the Prussian dominions
.
It survived, however, in spite of royal decrees, but in an altered sense
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It became—to quote Professor Kattenbusch—the " secular " designation of the adherents of the Reformation, theSee also: shibboleth of the " liberal " ecclesiastical and theological tendencies
.
Finally, in opposition to the ultramontane See also: movement in the Roman Catholic Church, it came once more into fashion in something of its original sense among the evangelicals
.
In the Church of England, on the other See also: hand, the name " Protestant " has, under the influence of the High Church reaction, been repudiated by an increasingly large number ofthe See also: clergy and laity, and is even sometimes used by them in a derogatory sense as applied to their See also: fellow churchmen who still uphold in their integrity the principles of the Reformation
.
Among the latter, on the other hand, " Protestantism " is used as exclusive of a See also: good many of the doctrines and practices which in the Lutheran Church were at one See also: time ".Protestant " as opposed to " Reformed," e.g. the doctrine of the real Presence, auricular confession, the use of ceremonial See also: lights and See also: vestments
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By many churchmen, too, the name of " Protestant " is accepted in what they take to be the old sense as implying repudiation of the claims of See also: Rome, but as not necessarily involving a denial of " Catholic " doctrine or any confusion of the Church of England with non-episcopal churches at home or abroad
.
In contradistinction to all these somewhat refined meanings, the See also: term " Protestant " is in See also: common parlance applied to all Christians who do not belong to the Roman Catholic Church, or to one or other of the See also: ancient Churches of the See also: East
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