Predestination was (and is) a part of Reformed Church Doctrine and spread with Reformed Church in Europe and America. The "founder" of Reformed Theology was John Calvin and John ran a school for reformers in Geneva. Naturally, Reformed theology was taught there and it spread as the graduates returned to their native countries and taught others. One notable example from Calvin's school was John Knox, who brought Reformed theology back to his native Scotland, from where it spread to America. (Presbyterian church, Dutch Reformed Church, Reformed Church in America, etc.)
Predestination was one of the beliefs held by John Calvin, one of the leaders of the Reformation.Read more: What_is_The_relationship_between_the_reformation_and_predestination
I think that would be Calvinism.
John Calvin was an important Reformation leader who taught the ideas of free will and predestination.
To stop the spread of Protestantism. The Counter Reformation is a movement of internal renewal as well as a response to the spread of Protestantism.
John Calvin, a key figure in the Protestant Reformation. He believed in the doctrine of predestination, which states that God has already determined who will be saved and who will be damned. This idea was a central tenet of Calvinism.
Greek was used to spread the ideas of the Renaissance the reformation and the scientific revolution.
Guttenberg
europe was very large and so it was difficult to spread the reformation
Greek was used to spread the ideas of the Renaissance the reformation and the scientific revolution.
Greek was used to spread the ideas of the Renaissance the reformation and the scientific revolution.
John Calvin. One of the effects of Luther's Reformation, Calvin rose up and started his own sect that is most famously none for the idea of predestination.
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