Religion became a very divisive factor in people's lives in England when Protestant ideas challenged the dominance of the Catholic Church of Rome
Elizabeth offered a 'middle way' compromise
Elizabethan Religious Settlement
Elizabeth's approach to avoid the kind of traumatic extremism of the reigns of her brother Edward VI (Protestant) and her sister Mary I (Catholic)
The established religion under Elizabeth was Protestant, so the English did not acknowledge the authority of the Pope in Rome
The English monarch was to be the overall leader of the Church of England, but not a spiritual authority
Some actual religious practices were very similar to the Catholic Church, including the celebration of the mass (also known as Holy Communion) and the priests' wearing of vestments
The Religious Settlement
1. Act of Supremacy
2. Act of Uniformity
Act of Supremacy
Made Elizabeth the Supreme Governor of the Church, with a strict prohibition of foreignleadership in the English church
Act of Uniformity
Made Protestantism England's official faith and set out rules of religious practice and worship in a revised prayer book, retaining some Catholic traditions
There was broad support for the new Settlement and very few refused to take the oath of loyalty to the queen
Elizabeth's tolerant approach seemed to have worked on the whole, but it did not keep everyone happy and she faced numerous threats
Sources of opposition to the Religious Settlement
Catholics
Puritans (more extreme Protestants who objected to any compromise with Catholic ideas)