Overrated: William of Orange/Mary II, the whole "Glorious Revolution" wasn't that glorious. It did no favors for anyone who wasn't a Protestant.
Kind of in a way that the Holy Roman Empire was neither Holy, nor Roman, nor an Empire, the Glorious Revolution was neither Glorious, nor a Revolution.
But I would disagree for two important reasons.
1. It set in motion the evolution that would produce Parliamentary democracy. This was an age of absolute monarchs. And remember, with the Restoration, there were little in the way of tangible changes and in many ways the English Civil War was a big conflict that ended up eating itself French Revolution style, leading to a dictatorship and then a restoration with very little change to the arrangement, prior to except for a profound fear of it being repeated.
With the ascent of William III and Mary II, several things occurred that forever ended the possibility of a return to absolute monarchy. The Parliament was to have regular elections and appropriations were limited to a set number of years (I think two). This meant that the King not only could not raise taxes, he also could not spend money without parliamentary approval. In France Louis XIV was the Sun King, but in England, it was Parliament who signed the checks. There was a "re-affirmation" of English liberties and an acknowledgement of them as natural rights.
2. Finally, Parliament now had the right to determine who was King, and this broke the notion of divine right in favor of the social contract. And yes the motivator was to exclude Catholics, but the principle of exclusion ceded the authority to determine the King to Parliament and the authority to determine the succession.
It is easy to look back and only see the anti-catholicism motivating these actions, and yes that is important to acknowledge, study and learn from. But the implications and effects of them were profound and indeed glorious in their own right, and set the stage for the American Revolution and the evolution of Britain into a Parliamentary Democracy.