[MR] A Question of Protocol
David Baines
alfred_of_suffolk at yahoo.com
Wed May 17 07:18:25 PDT 2006
to say that bowing to an empty throne is a "Catholic"
thing, does have at least some bearing on history, I
think. but I think it has more to do with the
medieval mindset than anything else. in the Middle
Ages, the Church shared many civic responsibilities
with the State. In a sense, Church and State were a
two-headed giant.
it is in the Radical Reformation (i.e. Anabaptists),
moreso than classic Protestantism, that one finds a
problem with acknowledging the State's role in the
Church and an overall problem with secular authority.
Alfred
--- Anthony Bryant <anthony_bryant at cox.net> wrote:
> E L Wimett wrote:
>
> > Ah, but then there are those of us who see such
> usages as problematic in the
> > extreme coming from the same theological base.
>
> Perhaps, but that doesn't invalidate the exercise.
>
> There is a certain mindset that *can't* see the
> concept of a
> greater idea behind a simple symbol -- and that's at
> heart a
> protestant mindset. High Church (and let's face it,
> royalty
> and court are "high church" concepts) minds
> recognize that a
> symbol, which represents a thing, can stand in for
> that
> thing.
>
>
> Effingham
> --
>
> Anthony J. Bryant
> Website: http://www.sengokudaimyo.com
>
> Effingham's Heraldic Avatars (...and stuff):
> http://www.sengokudaimyo.com/avatarbiz.html
>
> All sorts of cool things Japanese and SCA:
> http://www.cafepress.com/sengokudaimyo
>
>
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