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French Huguenot Protestant Reformation Movement

Historical Events and Beliefs of Christian Protestantism

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French Huguenot Protestant Reformation Movement

Written by: James M. Lowrance
Narrated by: Gary L. Willprecht
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About this listen

Most non-Catholic Christians are not aware of the Protestant Reformation Movement of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries, without which, we would have no choice, even today, but to be Catholics.

Does this sound strange to you if you're Protestant? That's because many Protestant pastors are not teaching their flocks about this Christian, world-changing event. I honor the right of people in Catholicism to practice their religion because as a USA citizen it is my constitutional duty, but Protestants can still strongly disagree with many of their interpretations on doctrines of the Holy Bible. These include paying money to the Catholic Church to get loved ones out of purgatory - a place in-between Heaven and Hell; praying to Saints and to Mary, who we love dearly, rather than to the Father through Jesus Christ; belief that with the partaking of communion (Eucharist), the bread and wine become the literal body and blood of Jesus Christ; etc. Still, it is our duty to honor their rights of beliefs because we also have those rights as Protestants.

However, we do not have to honor hostile, violent religious movements because those movements are an abuse of religious rights. Protestantism and Catholicism are not still at war, but during the 16th, 17th and part of the 18th centuries, there were over 10 million deaths as a result of the Protestant Reformation Movement. A people called Huguenots, who were French, protested the coerced enforcement of Catholicism as did followers of Martin Luther, referred to as Lutherans. My family-tree books show that my own ancestors were Huguenot-French Protestants as does my DNA testing. The National Huguenot Society also lists my ancestor, a man named Johannes Lorentz, who with his wife Anna Margaretha Heiliger, immigrated to Holland and to the US from there.

Learn more about the Protestant Reformation Movement in this audiobook.

©2017, 2018 James Mark Lowrance (P)2019 James M. Lowrance
Bibles & Bible Study Ministry & Evangelism France English Reformation
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High jacked for personal beliefs

Author uses historical facts to form personal religious opinions that do not line up with truth. He also forgot that much of Huguenot leadership fled to Acadia, an indépendant people for 150 years and modern day Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, PEI, Maine, New Hampshire and Connecticut.

Puritans and Evangelicals massacred the Acadians in a religious genocide called the Great Upheaval. 1755 was a continuation of the religious wars.

This book is such a twisted version of history to help the author cope with his reality. The last of the Acadians were rereleased a few months after Oak Island was discovered and the British began their colonial conquest of the Huguenots in South Africa.

Please do not use my ancestors to justify horrors of evangelicalism.

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