Protestant

[prot-uh-stuh nt or for 4, 6, pruh-tes-tuh nt] /ˈprɒt ə stənt or for 4, 6, prəˈtɛs tənt/
noun
1.
any Western Christian who is not an adherent of a Catholic, Anglican, or Eastern Church.
2.
an adherent of any of those Christian bodies that separated from the Church of Rome during the Reformation, or of any group descended from them.
3.
(originally) any of the German princes who protested against the decision of the Diet of Speyer in 1529, which had denounced the Reformation.
4.
(lowercase) a person who protests.
adjective
5.
belonging or pertaining to Protestants or their religion.
6.
(lowercase) protesting.
Origin
1530-40; < German or French, for Latin prōtestantēs, plural of present participle of prōtestārī to bear public witness. See protest, -ant
Related forms
anti-Protestant, noun, adjective
non-Protestant, noun, adjective
pro-Protestant, adjective, noun
unprotestant, adjective
British Dictionary definitions for Protestant

Protestant

/ˈprɒtɪstənt/
noun
1.
  1. an adherent of Protestantism
  2. (as modifier): the Protestant Church
Word Origin and History for Protestant
n., adj.

1539, from German or French protestant, from Latin protestantem (nominative protestans), present participle of protestari (see protest (n.)). Originally used of German princes and free cities who declared their dissent from ("protested") the decision of the Diet of Speyer (1529), which reversed the liberal terms allowed Lutherans in 1526.

When forced to make their choice between obedience to God and obedience to the Emperor, they were compelled to choose the former. [Thomas M. Lindsay, "A History of the Reformation," New York, 1910]
The word was taken up by the Lutherans in Germany (Swiss and French preferred Reformed). It became the general word for "adherents of the Reformation in Germany," then "member of any Western church outside the Roman communion;" a sense first attested in English in 1553.
In the 17c., 'protestant' was primarily opposed to 'papist,' and thus accepted by English Churchmen generally; in more recent times, being generally opposed to 'Roman Catholic,' or ... to 'Catholic,' ... it is viewed with disfavour by those who lay stress on the claim of the Anglican Church to be equally Catholic with the Roman. [OED]
Often contemptuous shortened form Prot is from 1725, in Irish English. Protestant (work) ethic (1926) is taken from Max Weber's work "Die protestantische Ethik und der 'Geist' des Kapitalismus" (1904). Protestant Reformation attested by 1680s.

Protestant in Culture

Protestant definition


A Christian belonging to one of the three great divisions of Christianity (the other two are the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church). Protestantism began during the Renaissance as a protest against the established (Roman Catholic) church. That protest, led by Martin Luther, was called the Reformation, because it sprang from a desire to reform the church and cleanse it of corruption, such as the selling of indulgences.

Note: Protestants hold a great variety of beliefs, but they are united in rejecting the authority of the pope. Protestant groups include the Amish, the Anglican Communion, the Assemblies of God, the Baptists, Christian Science, the Congregationalists, the Lutheran Church, the Mennonites, the Methodists, the Presbyterian Church, and the Quakers.