It's so hard to not be encapsulated by Alec's style - even in things I'm not mega interested in, he's just so brilliant at conveying information. Need more academics like him!!
It seems peculiar, at least, that while not even a legitimate creationist, I find these lectures so creative, insightful and brilliant. We are a product of our times, the level of understanding and knowledge in any given period, is not always represented by our actions. Outstanding!
This series of lectures proves that the Anglican Church is definitely protestant, and has been since Elizabeth i, in spite of the claims of so called 'Anglo-Catholics'. The 'Anglo Catholic' movement started in mid-Victorian times in Oxford. The Oxford Movement [OM] tried to reinterpret parts of the Anglican doctrines, and reintroduce some Catholic doctrines and practices. It was soon after Catholic Emancipation, and when the Catholic Church was reinstating the Hierarchy in England and Wales. and was an attempt to keep people in Anglicanism who would have otherwise converted to Catholicism. However the OM was the gateway to the Catholic Church for some, one high profile case was John Henry Newman. The OM also claimed that Anglican Bishops had retained Apostolic Succession and were so on a par with Catholic and Orthodox Bishops. Leo XIII needed to issue a statement in the 1890s to show this was not the case and the succession was broken in the time of Elizabeth 1 [late C16]. The Anglo Catholic movement has influenced doctrine and liturgy of the the Anglican communion as a whole and not just in 'Anglo Catholic' parishes.
King John error of Judgment reveals just how perilous and highly pressurised being a king job can be . I do see the English Catholics strong ties with Rome as a catalyst for unrest & conflicts
Excellent presentation! 🤔 A King ascending to taking the throne as a self appointed authority over the Church, as an adulterer, and with a daughter who appointedherself the same authority. 🤦♀️ What could possibly go wrong? Nothing to see here .. ... That doesn't sound biblical does it? 🥴 Sarcasm
You remind us what "privilege" actually means -- privi lege, private law for the nobility and clergy, with huge exemptions for these "higher orders of society" from the common law for the commoners -- and how England overcame the rule of privilege and built a modern rule of law state, with equal rights under the law. Bravo Henry, for all your sins! We need this clarity today more than ever, as the effort is being made to restore a regime of special privileges and exemptions, in place of modern rights and equality before the law. Your lecture is the more helpful, as this effort to restore an order of privilege is being conducted in the name of a struggle against "privilege", the latter to be sure using a political redefinition of the word to mean its near-opposite. Your support for the Catholic side and its very real privileges at every step when they are taken away, and your attention to the very real downside in Ireland of this great progress, makes this testimonial all the more compelling.
@@Denis.Collins We don't really disagree. I said he took major steps setting in motion the modern state with its abolition of privilege for nobility and clergy. He reduced it, transferred some of it as you say, but set a course that led to its disappearance. Not he alone; not him as the first step in it; but a big step, as this lecture makes clear enough. The only really major area of privilege that remains in the modern liberal state today is the privilege of the state itself and its agents that is necessary for having a reasonably well functioning state at all: "executive privilege" of secrecy; unwritten common law assumed powers; prerogative; police power to define the law in its application on the spot. Even these discretionary powers are restrained by the courts' authority to adjudicate whether their exercisers have exceeded their legitimate space for exercise of discretion. It is this achievement, a tremendous one that was purchased at a terrible price of historical struggles, one that we can all be deeply thankful for, that is being undermined today and that we risk losing.
So you are saying that privilege for nobility and clergy is being reintroduced or emphasised? I'm not clear about what you say we risk losing nowadays. Would you mind explaining please?
I'm not sure that turning over the country to the Pope was a humiliation. John was in the middle of an expensive war with France, one which he was slowly losing. While on its face it appeared that the Pope was in charge of the country, in practice John still ruled. Also once the arrangement was set, Pope Pius then began a concerted effort to pressure the French king to sue for peace. Add to this that all of John's machinations and attempts at wealth-building then became the Pope's, and all of the Pope's machinations then became Johns, it was a relationship worth having, although the optics weren't the best. That said this arrangement where English kings swore oaths to the Popes as their "feudal lords" was the worst part of this arrangement. That an entire country could be controlled by an Italian nobleman thousands of miles away is a slap in the face. The papal bull in 1295 telling the clergy that they should not pay taxes without express permission from the Pope was more a kick in the face than anything else. I am truly surprised that the English Reformation didn't happen sooner.
Thing is he specialises in English Church history. I am sure there excellent historians in Sweden who are better placed to do it for that part of the world.
How could a Roman elected Pope claim superiority over a de facto divine King? Some kings were not divine. Elected Pope was probably better than lying King…. Also, as to Magna Carta, some of us have literally no idea what the fuss was all about. King John signs a piece of paper that says, “these are your rights, which you know you have.” Some of us, myself included, wonder. King John was humiliated for stating somethings that were self-evident? Hmmmm…..
Because the election of a Roman Pope is Divine event in Catholic theology - I still can’t get over my grandmas reaction to the Sistine Chapel. She dropped to her knees and wept saying “this is the room where the Holy Spirit has gifted the Church her chief pastors for hundreds of years” - or watching Francis Habemus Papam on her knees and in tears at home after a several day prayeraton of rosaries and psalms every day while the Conclave was in session - or making all us grandkids kneel down in St Peter’s Sq and pushing her half disabled knees to the concrete at the end of the Wednesday Audience last time she visited Rome There’s theology to all this of course - but the behaviour of one of the more elderly faithful tells you everything you need to know about the significance of papal power
It's so hard to not be encapsulated by Alec's style - even in things I'm not mega interested in, he's just so brilliant at conveying information. Need more academics like him!!
Succinct, erudite, eloquent, insightful. Excellent!
Excellent lecture. So insightful.
After watching a few videos this has put a few things into prospective for me, Many Thanks
Lots to learn from this lecture. Thanks.
It seems peculiar, at least, that while not even a legitimate creationist, I find these lectures so creative, insightful and brilliant. We are a product of our times, the level of understanding and knowledge in any given period, is not always represented by our actions. Outstanding!
Excellent lecture! I'm going to watch all of the others. Thanks- just what I was looking for.
What an awesome, and awesomely told story.
Excellent lectures. It would have been great if you had numbered them though.
Excellent as always!
Excellent! Thanks so much!
Wonderful - interesting content and so easy to listen to
Very interested to see what this next few weeks will bring.
This series of lectures proves that the Anglican Church is definitely protestant, and has been since Elizabeth i, in spite of the claims of so called 'Anglo-Catholics'. The 'Anglo Catholic' movement started in mid-Victorian times in Oxford. The Oxford Movement [OM] tried to reinterpret parts of the Anglican doctrines, and reintroduce some Catholic doctrines and practices. It was soon after Catholic Emancipation, and when the Catholic Church was reinstating the Hierarchy in England and Wales. and was an attempt to keep people in Anglicanism who would have otherwise converted to Catholicism. However the OM was the gateway to the Catholic Church for some, one high profile case was John Henry Newman. The OM also claimed that Anglican Bishops had retained Apostolic Succession and were so on a par with Catholic and Orthodox Bishops. Leo XIII needed to issue a statement in the 1890s to show this was not the case and the succession was broken in the time of Elizabeth 1 [late C16]. The Anglo Catholic movement has influenced doctrine and liturgy of the the Anglican communion as a whole and not just in 'Anglo Catholic' parishes.
Thanks, I was wondering how that all came about.
King John error of Judgment reveals just how perilous and highly pressurised being a king job can be . I do see the English Catholics strong ties with Rome as a catalyst for unrest & conflicts
Excellent presentation!
🤔 A King ascending to taking the throne as a self appointed authority over the Church, as an adulterer, and with a daughter who appointedherself the same authority.
🤦♀️ What could possibly go wrong?
Nothing to see here ..
... That doesn't sound biblical does it?
🥴 Sarcasm
I can’t hear it well enough, passed.
You remind us what "privilege" actually means -- privi lege, private law for the nobility and clergy, with huge exemptions for these "higher orders of society" from the common law for the commoners -- and how England overcame the rule of privilege and built a modern rule of law state, with equal rights under the law. Bravo Henry, for all your sins!
We need this clarity today more than ever, as the effort is being made to restore a regime of special privileges and exemptions, in place of modern rights and equality before the law. Your lecture is the more helpful, as this effort to restore an order of privilege is being conducted in the name of a struggle against "privilege", the latter to be sure using a political redefinition of the word to mean its near-opposite.
Your support for the Catholic side and its very real privileges at every step when they are taken away, and your attention to the very real downside in Ireland of this great progress, makes this testimonial all the more compelling.
Could you elaborate? What is this 'regime of special privileges and exemptions' that you mentioned?
@@Denis.Collins We don't really disagree. I said he took major steps setting in motion the modern state with its abolition of privilege for nobility and clergy. He reduced it, transferred some of it as you say, but set a course that led to its disappearance. Not he alone; not him as the first step in it; but a big step, as this lecture makes clear enough.
The only really major area of privilege that remains in the modern liberal state today is the privilege of the state itself and its agents that is necessary for having a reasonably well functioning state at all: "executive privilege" of secrecy; unwritten common law assumed powers; prerogative; police power to define the law in its application on the spot. Even these discretionary powers are restrained by the courts' authority to adjudicate whether their exercisers have exceeded their legitimate space for exercise of discretion.
It is this achievement, a tremendous one that was purchased at a terrible price of historical struggles, one that we can all be deeply thankful for, that is being undermined today and that we risk losing.
So you are saying that privilege for nobility and clergy is being reintroduced or emphasised? I'm not clear about what you say we risk losing nowadays. Would you mind explaining please?
29:25
I'm not sure that turning over the country to the Pope was a humiliation. John was in the middle of an expensive war with France, one which he was slowly losing. While on its face it appeared that the Pope was in charge of the country, in practice John still ruled. Also once the arrangement was set, Pope Pius then began a concerted effort to pressure the French king to sue for peace. Add to this that all of John's machinations and attempts at wealth-building then became the Pope's, and all of the Pope's machinations then became Johns, it was a relationship worth having, although the optics weren't the best. That said this arrangement where English kings swore oaths to the Popes as their "feudal lords" was the worst part of this arrangement. That an entire country could be controlled by an Italian nobleman thousands of miles away is a slap in the face. The papal bull in 1295 telling the clergy that they should not pay taxes without express permission from the Pope was more a kick in the face than anything else. I am truly surprised that the English Reformation didn't happen sooner.
An extremism beyond even Sweden. Why does he not make a lekture on the reformation in Sweden.
I had the same thought when he said that... Swedenborg, et al
Thing is he specialises in English Church history. I am sure there excellent historians in Sweden who are better placed to do it for that part of the world.
How could a Roman elected Pope claim superiority over a de facto divine King? Some kings were not divine. Elected Pope was probably better than lying King…. Also, as to Magna Carta, some of us have literally no idea what the fuss was all about. King John signs a piece of paper that says, “these are your rights, which you know you have.” Some of us, myself included, wonder. King John was humiliated for stating somethings that were self-evident? Hmmmm…..
Because the election of a Roman Pope is Divine event in Catholic theology - I still can’t get over my grandmas reaction to the Sistine Chapel. She dropped to her knees and wept saying “this is the room where the Holy Spirit has gifted the Church her chief pastors for hundreds of years” - or watching Francis Habemus Papam on her knees and in tears at home after a several day prayeraton of rosaries and psalms every day while the Conclave was in session - or making all us grandkids kneel down in St Peter’s Sq and pushing her half disabled knees to the concrete at the end of the Wednesday Audience last time she visited Rome
There’s theology to all this of course - but the behaviour of one of the more elderly faithful tells you everything you need to know about the significance of papal power
Henry VIII. "Be fruitful and multiply".
"FRAMING". Reformation OR Deformation? 😇😎💒
Er.. no.
Any explanation coming?
🤔
@@CyberDwarf1949 I have to say I've forgotten. Could have been some false parallel with today (Brexit or Trump) - I'll have to watch it again.
@@FiveLiverjust watched it - no such parallel occurs
Excellent lecture in which we see the forerunners to both the Trump family and BREXIT!
🤣🤣🤣
A very succinct lecture on the subject!