Why did Catholic Societies develop a more artistic, expressive mentality than Protestant ones? (user search)
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  Why did Catholic Societies develop a more artistic, expressive mentality than Protestant ones? (search mode)
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Author Topic: Why did Catholic Societies develop a more artistic, expressive mentality than Protestant ones?  (Read 681 times)
Georg Ebner
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Posts: 410
« on: June 22, 2021, 01:02:15 PM »
« edited: June 22, 2021, 01:06:19 PM by Georg Ebner »

The central aspect of Christianity is the InCarnation of GOD, thus catholicism (at least the WestRoman version) has always been focussed to halt with liturgy/dogmata/... any evaporizing into abstract metaphysical speculations or ethics. Thus being led by carrierists&canonists, not by theologians (St.PETER!). The economical/intellectual MiddleClasses having always been the Church's AchillesHeel: Heresies being taken over by merchants in the south, CraftsMen (weavers!) in the north; by those, who were/are too intelligent for simply reciting a catechism (and anyWay You can be sure, that catholicism cannot be represented in a catechism), but not for doubting their own Idio-SynCrasies.
Fitting to the protestantism of professor LUTHER: For political reasons supported here and there by sovereigns/aristocrats, but in general the vehicle of the bourgeoisie to take over the world. The puritanical preacher, who made faith the slave of human will, being obviously the predecessor of the left "intellectual". "Marxism is the puritanical theology of the bourgeois religion." (GOMEZ DAVILA)
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