- Papist
Papist is a term, usually disparaging or an
anti-Catholic slur, referring to a member of theCatholic Church . It was coined during theEnglish Reformation to indicate that a Christian's loyalties were to thePope , rather than to the anti-papalChurch of England . Over time, however, it came to mean one who supported Papal authority over all Christians and thus became a popular term, especially amongAnglican s andPresbyterian s. The word, dating from A.D. 1534, derives via Middle French fromLatin "papa", meaning "Pope". [ [http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/papist papist, Merriam Webster Online] ]The word was in common use until the mid-
nineteenth century ; it occurs frequently in Macaulay's "History of England from the Accession of James II", and in other historical or controversial works from that period. It survives in the British legal system one of the surviving relics of the Penal Laws, Catholic ineligibility to the throne under the current law of theUnited Kingdom . Under the Act of Settlement enacted in1701 and still in force, no one who professes "the popish religion" or marries "a papist" may succeed to the throne of the United Kingdom. Fears thatCatholic secular leaders would be Anti-Protestant arose during the suppression of the Catholic Church in England during the reign of Henry VIII and the subsequent persecution of Protestants during the reign of the CatholicMary I of England .Currently loyalty to the Pope is sometimes indicated by the newer term "Papalism" with no pejorative intended. [ [http://anglicanhistory.org/orthodoxy/abramtsov.pdf overbeck ] ]
Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) author of "Gulliver's Travels ", frequently uses the term in his satirical work "A Modest Proposal " in which he proposes selling Irish children to wealthy English landlords for cannibilistic purposes.During the 1928 US presidential election, Democratic Party nominee
Al Smith was accused of being a papist. He was the first Catholic to ever receive presidential nomination from a major party and this led to fears that, if he were elected, the United States would be ruled by the Vatican.Today the term – and the related words "popery", "papistry" and "popish" – is still used occasionally by some writers and ministers, typically those of a
Calvinist orientation, who seek to portray Roman Catholic orArminian Protestant doctrine (interpreted by many as "un"-Reformed") in a negative light.ee also
*"
Ad hominem "
*Anti-Catholicism
*Mackerel Snapper
*Popish Plot
*Religious intolerance
*Romanism References
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