Gaspar Contarini (Catholic) and Philipp Melanchthon (Reformer)
Elizabeth I combined the Protestants and The Catholics together because Elizabeth tried to bring peace in matters of religion. She tried to find a solution which both the Catholics and the Protestants could agree on and accept this created The Middle Way. Eg. Elizabeth created a bible in English for the Protestants but allowed a Latin edition to be printed for the Catholics. By Georgia age 12.
In order to bring peace to an area that has been long depraved of such.
Most of the French settlers in New France were Roman Catholics. The French Protestants (the Huguenots) were barred from emigrating to New France.
Dayton Accords.
He converted back to Catholicism.
Nelson Mandela was elected the first African -black skinned- president, and he attempted to bring the country together.
Catholics, the world over, by the preaching of the Gospel and by the healing ministry of the Church in the Sacraments (Reconciliation and Anointing of the Sick) bring Christ's healing to people.
Roman Catholic AnswerIn the sixteenth century Catholic missionaries took the faith to pagans in the Far East, they attempted to stem the damage done by the new protestant heresy and bring the protestants back to the Church, and spread the faith in Africa and the Americas, and other newly explored regions by the Europeans.
Enlightened despots attempted to bring about reforms to their social and government systems during their rules.
Bring Us Together happened in 1968-10.
Mary I of England aimed to restore Catholicism after her father, Henry VIII, established the Church of England. She sought to unite Catholics and Protestants through marriage alliances and policies, though her reign was marked by persecution of Protestants, which ultimately deepened the divide between the two groups. Her efforts included the reinstatement of papal authority and the enforcement of Catholic doctrine, which alienated many Protestant subjects. This approach ultimately failed to achieve lasting religious unity in England.
AnswerAnswerThe U.S. media hasn't taken time to acquaint our short-attention span citizens of the background of the conflict. To listen to the media the only thing different is their religion prompting Americans to think the conflict is solely about religion. This is an unresolved colonial situation. The Protestants and Catholics differ in religion, ethnicity, historical experiences, and, at one time, language. The Protestants are descended from Scottish and English colonists introduced in the early 1600s to pacify the "Wild Irish" and have maintained a separate identity.Incidentally, a recent survey indicated that most Protestants in N.I. consider themselves British rather than Irish. So the term Irish Protestant may not apply to the North, although it could refer to a Protestant in the Irish Republic. Americans referring to Protestants in the North as "Irish Protestants" is not going to bring these groups closer.