• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Why is Elizabeth I of England left unprotected by Governments?

MikeDwight

Well-Known Member
As a symbol of Anglo-Saxon supremacy, Elizabeth I has been maneuvered in such a way as to receive slander. Why would that be allowed and under what pretext?

Catholic Answers has charged in the gap with slander pieces garnering propaganda for the "Bloody" Mary and the "Pretended Queen of Scots". I'd charge anyone to find Elizabeth I's page of defense?

Elizabeth's Golden Age offered an identity of the English long under foreign connections, William Shakespeare, start of Colonial Discovery and lasted 50 years.

As a Protestant she was exiled at Birth she was a ******* by Birth. Anne Boleyn was a Protestant handing out Bibles with which you could be condemned and burnt by the Roman Catholic. Anne Boleyn was Henry's wife since Catherine of Aragon was invalid.

We've all been told that the Anglican supremacy was an act of compromise and circumstance yet don't process this? The government was Reformational and the population was largely Catholic. English troops were seen at the relief of Scotland, Netherlands and France and central to Christian Reformation in 1560 Scotland, 1580 Netherlands, and John Calvin was French and during Reformed French (Huguenot) persecution left for Switzerland which became a central hub of the Reformation.
An Anglican governor therefore provides communion between the hardest Catholic and Reformed member in the Governor's Church.

Elizabeth I's military prowess singlehandedly is responsible for the Reformed Christian Communion and countries that are present today including England, Scotland, Netherlands, France.


The Knights of England of the Red Crosse were to crush the Roman Catholic powers and sack Rome.

The Oxford Movement promotes the Anglican communion as a 3rd arm of a universal Church along with Roman Catholicism. The 1950's American Movement transition of PC in the USA to United PC to the PCUSA '83 have a similar effect. Elizabeth I is a Saint no longer by claiming this Christian ruler and contemporary Christian and her mind and speech rarely left a Christian topic adeptly, and these topics, and the Church has been instructed by the political wing to abandon the truth of it. Where would be the Saints day of Elizabeth I for instance by what Church?

 
Last edited:

MikeDwight

Well-Known Member
Presbyterianism is a part of the Reformed tradition within Protestantism that broke from the Roman Catholic Church. Many Reformed churches are organised this way.

Huguenots were a religious group of French Protestants who held to the Reformed, or Calvinist, tradition of Protestantism.

The Hungarian Reformed Church in America is a mainline Reformed Protestant church in the United States that serves people of Hungarian ancestry.The church has approximately 6,080 members.

These Separatist and Independent strands of Puritanism became prominent in the 1640s, when the supporters of a presbyterian polity in the Westminster Assembly were unable to forge a new English national church. This so-called "Great Migration" is not so named because of sheer numbers, which were much less than the number of English citizens who immigrated to Virginia and the Caribbean during this time.[35] The rapid growth of the New England colonies (around 700,000 by 1790) was almost entirely due to the high birth rate and lower death rate per year.[36]

The Church of Scotland was principally shaped by John Knox, in the Reformation of 1560, when it split from the Catholic Church and established itself as a church in the reformed tradition.

The Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Dutch: Gereformeerde Kerken in Nederland, abbreviated Gereformeerde kerk) was the second largest Protestant church in the Netherlands and one of the two major Calvinist denominations.

Presbyterian Church of Korea (PCK) was a Protestant denomination based in South Korea; it is currently separated into many branches.The church adopted the name the Reformed Church in Korea.

 
Top