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==== Lollards ==== |15th | * followers of John Wycliffe who rejected the Sacraments * "lollard" means | |anit-clericalism | |- |Savonarola |1490s |Florentine priest who preached against "vanities" * led a popular uprising, especially among youths, against art |rigorism | | |- |Protestantism |16th | * Started by various anti-Church "reformers" of the 15th-17th centuries, Protestantism holds that salvation in Christ comes from ''belief'' in Christ alone (''sola fide''), as opposed to what they call "works", but which also thereby includes reason; * Protestantism also holds that belief can only be derived from Scripture (''sola scriptura''), so tradition, early Church teachings, and Church doctrine promulgated outside of the Bible are invalid; * as such, protestants do not believe in the Sacramental Economy, Holy Orders, priestly celibacy, the Papacy, the Magisterium of the Catholic Church, Church tradition and the Saints. |''pertinacia'' | colspan="2" |The heresies of Protestantism consist primarily of * denial of the Sacraments, the Magisterium of the Church, and of Transubstantiation (some Protestant churches do believe in the Eucharist) * rejection of Papal authority * self-exclusion from the Catholic Church |- | | | | | | |- |Mormanism |19th | |asceticism |prophetic | |- |Jehovah's Witness |19th | | |nontrinitarianism | |- | | | | | | |- | rowspan="2" |Universalism | rowspan="2" |late 18th-20th (Orijen in the early Church was accused of this heresy) |All people will be saved | |nontrinitarianism |universal salvation |- |Belief that all people will, in the end, will find God's salvation; aside from contradicting the plain words of Chris, the belief ultimately reduces salvation to belief in Christ alone, regardless of one's other beliefs or actions. Universalism is a logical extension of Protestantism's ''sola fidelis'', and makes clear why that tenant is so dangerous. | | | |- |Modernism |19th | | | | |- |Atheism |20th | | | | |}
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