An irreligious person does not have any religion, and would be described as an atheist or an agnostic. A Protestant is not irreligious, because Protestantism is a group of Christian religions, which were created by people who wished to practice Christianity without being subject to the authority of the Roman Catholic Church.
The CCCP (USSR or Union of Soviet Social Republics) was always Irreligion, which is like Atheism, but not at the same time. Irreligion is the absence of religion. It was not practiced or anything. It was just not there. Religion was not a big role in the CCCP, so they did not bother with it.
Evangelicalism is a subset of Protestantism, but they are not the same. Protestantism is a broad category of Christian denominations that broke away from the Roman Catholic Church during the Reformation. Evangelicalism is a specific movement within Protestantism that emphasizes personal conversion, the authority of the Bible, and evangelism.
irreligion
Atheist
Irreligion
English Protestantism was able to successfully spread in the 1500s as a result of politics. Henry VIII, who became disillusioned with the Roman Catholic Church, embraced the idea of Protestantism and pressured his subjects to do likewise. Leaders in other countries did the same thing.
No you do not they are humans like you
Protestantism takes care of your spiritual health.
the central doctrine of protestantism is 1 god monotheism
Protestantism arose after the Middle Ages ended. There were dissidents in the Church of the Middle Ages, including Lollards and Hussites, along with such heretical groups as the Albigensians and Waldensians, but they were not actually Protestant, strictly speaking. They anticipated Protestantism, but were of sufficiently different natures to be considered not the same. There is a link below to an article on the history of Protestantism.
Presbyterianism is one denomination within Protestantism.
To stop the spread of Protestantism. The Counter Reformation is a movement of internal renewal as well as a response to the spread of Protestantism.