The main reason the Protestant religion was formed was because people were tired of the Catholic church's overbearing laws. A group eventually protested and broke away from the church forming the Protestant church.
Protestant worship was in the local language. Catholic worship was in Latin. The protestant congregations sang hymns. The Catholic congregations did not. Since the Lutheran worship service was a translation of the Roman Catholic one before Trent, little difference existed there.
During the 16th century, the Protestant Reformation led to the establishment of the Church of England and several other denominations. There was a rivalry between Catholic Spain and Protestant England.
As Saint Patrick was a bishop in the 5th Century and the Protestant Reformation didn't occur until the 16th Century, it is safe to say that he was most definitely not a Protestant. He was a Catholic.
The Protestant Reformation :)
Marie of France lived in the twelve century. The protestant heresy hadn't been invented yet, she was Catholic.
No. The Protestant Church began as a division away from Roman Catholic Church in the 14th century. The central ideas of the churches are similar, but the Protestant Church has altered the original Catholic Bible and disagrees with some Catholic ideas, such as confession.
From a Catholic point of view: there really isn't a difference between the members of the Church of England (Anglican or Episcopalian) or Protestants because all Churches who broke from Rome during the Reformation are considered Protestant since they "protested" the Roman Church. However, the Church of England considers themselves to be "quasi-Protestant" a somewhat cross section of both Protestantism and Catholicism since they still somewhat retained a few Catholic traditions and views, but are separate from the Roman Church. There are differences between Anglicans/Episcopalians and other Protestants, but the Anglicans are still considered Protestant by the Roman Catholic Church.
The protestant faith emergenced from the revolt against the Catholic Church in the sixteenth century.
In Christianity there was only the Catholic Church until the Protestant Reformation. The Baptist Church, which is usually regarded as Protestant, started in the 17th Century and differs from Catholic teaching in several areas: the belief in salvation by faith alone; adult rather than infant baptism; emphasis on the New Testament alone and the autonomy of each church congregation as opposed to the centralised structure of the Catholic Church with the Pope at the apex.
the Protestants' separation from the Catholic Church.
No, the Protestant Reformation occurred before the Catholic Reformation. The Protestant Reformation began in the early 16th century, with Martin Luther's 95 Theses in 1517 marking a significant moment. In response, the Catholic Reformation, also known as the Counter-Reformation, took place mainly in the mid-16th century, focusing on reforming the Church and addressing issues raised by the Protestant movement.
There was no such thing as a "protestant religion" until the very end of the Renaissance. The Renaissance ran roughly from the 14th century to the 17th century. Martin Luther did not post his 95 Theses until 1517 which was just about the time the Renaissance was ending.