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Why all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is Protestant
Grylls and Richie are both big ambassadors for the princes trust, his work with that is the biggest legacy Charles will ever have fore.
Quite bizarre that, in the 21st century, our Head of State has to confirm that he is a "faithful Protestant" before he can be confirmed in the role.We are a very strange country.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 06, 2023, 11:32:04 amQuite bizarre that, in the 21st century, our Head of State has to confirm that he is a "faithful Protestant" before he can be confirmed in the role.We are a very strange country.The Monarch is confirmed in the role from the moment of the previous Monarch's death.Their role of Monarch is formally proclaimed in a civic ceremony of the Privy Council a short period of time after this.The Coronation is a religious and symbolic ceremony. Hence why it is held on consecrated ground and conducted by an Archbishop. It does not signify the beginning of a reign.The Monarch, as well as Head of State, is also Head of the Church of England. The Church of England is a protestant religious order. Hence the Monarch declares they are a 'faithful protestant' in the symbolic religious ceremony called the Coronation conducted by the Church of England.Charles had the role of King before today's ceremony took place
Quite bizarre that, in the 21st century, our Head of State has to confirm that he is a "faithful Protestant" before he can be confirmed in the role.We are a very strange country.
Yes. Edward VIII, who never had a coronation was King for 326 days, January - December 1936.
Quote from: ravenrover on May 06, 2023, 01:45:33 pmWhy all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is ProtestantThink about how it would sound to our ears if the Head of State of, say, Micronesia had by law to be a member of a national religious sect.
Why all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is Protestant
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 06, 2023, 02:50:32 pmQuote from: ravenrover on May 06, 2023, 01:45:33 pmWhy all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is ProtestantThink about how it would sound to our ears if the Head of State of, say, Micronesia had by law to be a member of a national religious sect. But he is head of a Protestant church so what has that got to do with Micronesia, it is what it is like it or not
Quote from: ravenrover on May 06, 2023, 01:45:33 pmWhy all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is ProtestantThink about how it would sound to our ears if the Head of State of, say, Micronesia had by law to be a member of a national religious sect.
Why all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is Protestant
Quote from: ravenrover on May 06, 2023, 06:31:48 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 06, 2023, 02:50:32 pmQuote from: ravenrover on May 06, 2023, 01:45:33 pmWhy all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is ProtestantThink about how it would sound to our ears if the Head of State of, say, Micronesia had by law to be a member of a national religious sect. But he is head of a Protestant church so what has that got to do with Micronesia, it is what it is like it or notSorry, I thought my point was obvious.It's this.If we looked at another country and found it had a 300 year old law that required its Head of State to be a member of a specific religious sect, we'd think the place was a benighted hole that refused to engage with the modern world.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 06, 2023, 02:50:32 pmQuote from: ravenrover on May 06, 2023, 01:45:33 pmWhy all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is ProtestantThink about how it would sound to our ears if the Head of State of, say, Micronesia had by law to be a member of a national religious sect. But he is head of a Protestant church so what has that got to do with Micronesia, it is what it is like it or not
Quote from: ravenrover on May 06, 2023, 01:45:33 pmWhy all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is ProtestantThink about how it would sound to our ears if the Head of State of, say, Micronesia had by law to be a member of a national religious sect.
Why all the comments about "protestant".He is Head of the Church of England Fid Def, which is Protestant
Quite bizarre that, in the 21st century, our Head of State has to confirm that he is a "faithful Protestant" before he can be confirmed in the role.What would have happened if Charles, when asked today if he was a faithful Protestant, had answered, "No, I belong to the Church of the Latter Day Dude and I'm a practicing Dudist"?
I wonder who is the head of child procurement now that Saville and Epstein were suicided?
BillyYou seem absurdly vexed about a Head of State with virtually no political power also being a symbolic but powerless Head of our most popular religious order by dint of explainable historic traditions.No the law does not require the Monarch to believe in God or organised religion or anything else.The law requires the Monarch to take Protestant communion and ensure their heir does the same i.e. they must attend C of E church services though there is no requirement on frequency. That is hardly a bind.Constitutional law moves slowly and by necessity only. If a future atheist Monarch was so opposed to the above law and, as would be expected, was broadly supported by our (very) modern secular society the law would be changed.Or were you gnashing your teeth about male primogeniture in the succession before it was belatedly overturned by necessity and public opinion in 2013?The Monarchy has survived in the UK because it has adapted with the times - and there was plenty of evidence for this in the Coronation compared to the prior one 70 years ago.We live in a country that emphatically does embrace, reflect on and consider our history. This is healthy. The Coronation ceremony was evidence for this also. And that includes confronting less glorious parts of our history as well as the celebratory pomp and circumstance.The procession passed right by a prominent statue of Charles I, head in situ, a foolish tyrant. The crowning took place on a chair designed for Edward I, a merciless warmonger.Considering modern history all recent PM's were invited and given a prominent place at the ceremony. This included another (politically) decapitated fool and another warmonger.A mature society remembers and does this, in part, through continuing historic conventions and traditions.It is by contrast telling that those opposed to such traditions or the Monarchy itself on this thread have to resort to childish juvenilia when making their objections known.
I don't like organisations that harbour pedophiles and pay off witnesses.