These types of conversations remind me of the first amendment and it's origins.
Britain used to be a part of the Catholic kingdom until protestants made themselves presbyterians/anglicans/episcopalians and told the Catholic church to go away, starting I think in the 1500s and finishing in the 1700s
The Americans that were aboard the Mayflower were separatists from these separatists.
The word "protestant" sounds like the attitude Americans have, and look at the modern Brexit that England recently went through which resulted in them exiting the modern European Union. English people have a will to voice their opinions.
It's rooted in a strong will to go one's own way, and a value of womens rights. An example of this is how the Church of England allows female priests and there is a queen of England, while the Roman Catholics they separated from will not allow female priests and there has never been a female pope.
Britain used to be a part of the Catholic kingdom until protestants made themselves presbyterians/anglicans/episcopalians and told the Catholic church to go away, starting I think in the 1500s and finishing in the 1700s
The Americans that were aboard the Mayflower were separatists from these separatists.
The word "protestant" sounds like the attitude Americans have, and look at the modern Brexit that England recently went through which resulted in them exiting the modern European Union. English people have a will to voice their opinions.
It's rooted in a strong will to go one's own way, and a value of womens rights. An example of this is how the Church of England allows female priests and there is a queen of England, while the Roman Catholics they separated from will not allow female priests and there has never been a female pope.