Great Schism

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The phrase The Great Schism is used to mean two different things:

  • The Western Schism (1378-1417) was an argument within the Roman Catholic Church provoked by the French bishops resulting in French cardinals electing an "antipope" (Clement VII of Avignon, France) in order to dispute the authority of the recently elected Pope Urban VI, even though he had been lawfully elected by the majority of the cardinals in the electoral conclave.[1] In 1409, a third antipope (John XXIII) existed in Pisa, Italy.[2] This and other controversies set the stage for the Protestant Reformation.

See Romans 13:1-5 and Hebrews 13:17

References

  1. Urban VI: Pope (britannica.com)
  2. Catholic Encyclopedia 1913, http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13539a.htm