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The Sixteenth Century Idea of National Churches

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2025

Extract

Heresy and schism are not a novelty of the sixteenth century, they exist from the beginning, and always in the East. The national Church, self-governing, refusing all obedience to Rome, abiding in its own decrees of faith and morals, and owning na allegiance to any power without its borders, can still be seen and studied in Armenia and in the Monophysite Coptic Church of Egypt. Plainly they are not Catholic, but national or racial these separated brethren. So too the Donatists in Africa sought to set up a national non-Catholic Church. And political nationalism, it would seem, was chiefly responsible for the schism that rent the Orthodox Church of the East from the Catholic communion of Rome; as it is responsible in our own times for the independent national Churches of the Balkans.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1924 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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