History_Buff
Deity
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2001
- Messages
- 6,529
The whole Peace of Augsburg makes that claim look like the steaming pile of dung that it is.
And the only person who's made that claim other than you is one of this forum's two noted blinkered papists, so. It's like using Traitorfish or Cheezy as a reliable source on soshalizm.
Do tell?
I thought one of the biggest draws of Protestantism was that it could be used to assert political independence or autonomy from the Pope/Emperor as appropriate. Certainly the popular narrative of Henry VIII's departure from Catholicism was to allow himself to divorce people, and possibly expropriate church lands to the state. Certainly the actual religious practices at the time of his death weren't really different from the Catholicism that came before it.
And again inside the Empire, where so much land was ecclesiastical, Protestantism allowed rulers the chance to divert those revenues to the state. I'm not trying to say that their reasons for converting weren't genuine, since the Catholic church seems to have been enormously corrupt at the time, but political aspects must have been a great reason not to reconcile with the Church.
Had the rulers come to some sort of arrangement with the Pope/Emperor, I don't doubt that the Jesuits would have stamped out Protestantism in due time.
Edit: also, the last thing I'm trying to do is make a pro-papacy argument. I was raised Catholic, and while I think they're a touch better than their Protestant brethren, they're both pretty wacky. Certainly the Catholics of the time were (and really still are) treading dubious moral ground.