To a great extent England was already protestant by the time Edward VI was crowned, he did however inforce it on those who still did not accept the King as head of the Church, as some rebelled against it.
Edward VI had been brought up a Protestant like Elizabeth I was.
Edward VI was a protestant, because when Henry VIII died more people had become protestant, and decided that Henry VIII was right. Since Edward was a heir to Henry, people were on the protestant side
The majority of Christians in the USA are Protestant.
The main difference is that the Catholic Church has a lot more bright colours, whereas the Protestants are more bland.
yes Elizabeth was a protestant because she helped the protestants we know this because she raised one of their concerns in one of her meetings and solved their problem.
The Episcopal church is becoming more and more liberal....some Presbyterian churches are headed that direction. The ELCA Lutheran church is becoming more liberal also.
The reforms of the Church of England during the reign of Elizabeth I made it more Protestant.
Martin Luther feared the church. This was more specifically the Protestant church. He was persecuted by the church and fled to the new world. This thus created the thirteen colonies that are the US.
Well in a sense. The founder William Booth was a Methodist preacher originally. But The Salvation Army is a Protestant church or more specifically Wesleyan Protestant.
England was more Protestant in 1558. This was when Elizabeth I came to power and made England Protestant, but allowed Catholics to worship privately. However, there was most likely to have been more Catholics than Protestants in England.
The clue is to know what makes a Protestant, and then to see what rules the different monarchs set.The answer is that English became more and less Protestant depending on the monarch, and ended up with Elizabeth being Protestant, but not extreme ProtestantFfionxxx
Generally, Protestant churches tend to have simpler decorations and ornate furnishings compared to Catholic churches. This simplicity is often reflective of the Protestant emphasis on the focus being on the Word of God rather than elaborate decorations. However, there can still be variations among Protestant denominations and individual churches in terms of their level of ornateness.
Yes, if you have gone through the annulment process. The Catholic Church view marriges in other types of churces as valid marriges, unless one or both of the spouses was Catholic. If this is not the case, the annulment process is much longer and more complicated.