Between 1540 and 1559 it is clear that the Catholic Church became less tolerant of disparity and opposition. This is mainly due to the leaders who came to the throne at this opportunity. Between 1540 and 1559, various papers had very different views on how to deal with Protestantism, depreciation and dissent. The Pope in 1540 was Pope Paul III, the most modern pope of those days, and had a strong view of Catholic reform. After taking over from Papal Clement III in 1534, he gained considerable experience in the pope's position.
1559: Roman Catholic Church has listed books that were forbidden by its members for centuries, but this year Pope Paul IV enacted "Index Letter Prohibited". For over 400 years, this is the last list of books that have been told that Roman Catholics should not read. It is one of the most powerful review tools in the world. 1616-42: Galileo's solar system theory and his support for the discovery of Copernicus were criticized by the Catholic Church. A great scientist who was imprisoned at the risk of torture at the age of 70 was forced to give up what he knew. When he died, his widow agreed to destroy some of his manuscripts.
Even before the church spread to the world, it was defined as a Catholic. The original Jerusalem apostolic church, or early city church in Antioch, Ephesus, Collins, or Rome was a Catholic. These churches are Catholics - like all Orthodox churches of the day - there is no need to become a true Christian church. God himself is fully present in all churches through Christ and the Holy Spirit, through its apostolic teachings, ministry (level), and sacrament working in the community of believers, so it is completely in the kingdom of God There is no need to add something to get involved.
Puritan was dissatisfied with the British National Church because he believed it was necessary to purify themselves from Catholic rituals and church buildings. Initially they stayed as "opponents" to the church, but after receiving harassment they gave up the whole church. Pilgrims are a small group of fundamental Puritan separatists. They are the first religious minorities who abandoned the hope of change and emigrated to the new world. At first, they moved to Leiden, the Netherlands, but they were concerned about their survival. Then they decided to move to the state of Virginia in the USA. They went to a company in London, asked for economic assistance, exchanged for travel, and they agreed to develop valuable lands in the United States. First of all, rather than creating documents for citizen governments with the power to enact legislation before signing the Mayflower Agreement, they will stay in Southampton and join more non-separatists to join the United States I left the ship.