This proposal has become dormant through lack of discussion by the community. It is inactive but retained for historical interest. If you want to revive discussion on this subject, try using the talk page or start a discussion at the village pump. |
The following is a proposed Wikipedia policy, guideline, or process. The proposal may still be in development, under discussion, or in the process of gathering consensus for adoption. |
This page in a nutshell: The terms Catholic Church and Catholic are acceptable names for the worldwide church in full communion with the Pope in Rome. Although branch theory-derived objections tend to be rejected along WP:FRINGE lines, what settles the WP:CONSENSUS is WP:PRIMARYUSAGE. Article names, and by consequence its content, should not be changed from this convention without strong reason. |
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This Wikipedia Manual of Style supplement has been created through the efforts and broad consensus of contributors to WikiProject Catholicism. Please follow these conventions when you contribute to Catholic Church-related articles so that they are neutral and stylistically in WP:Consistency for better and easier reader comprehension.
Guidlelines
editNational polities
editArticles about the Catholic Church in specific sovereign territories should avoid creating unnecessary confusion. For examples:
- Catholic Church in England and Wales
- This may be referred to as the Catholic Church in England, but preferably avoid "English Church" for risk of confusion with the Church of England (Anglican)
- Catholic Church in Denmark
- This may be referred to as the Catholic Church in Denmark, but preferably avoid "Danish Church" for risk of confusion with the Church of Denmark (Lutheran)
Individual Catholics
editFor reasons of misconnotions of the term "Career" and such, it is advised that if the article content needs to be divided into different headings, the curriculum of the subject of the biography may be divided into:
- Presbyteriate
- Episcopate
- Cardinalate
- Papacy
See for example: Pope Francis ("Career" notion explicitly dismissed by very subject of the biography, and also rendering connotations generally not fully applicable for the topic).