Catholic dogma is that everybody is loved by God, and was created by Him to be happy with Him forever in heaven. John Calvin preached double predestination, a doctrine which specifically says that God created some people with the sole end of going to hell, a despicable, anti-Christian doctrine that would imagine our Loving Father creating people to be eternally damned from the moment they were brought into existence. No, I would not say that John Calvin's doctrines were particularly cheerful, I would say that they were diabolical.
social gospel
Judaism. More specifically, Torah, and halakha (the Torah's laws).
Social Gospel
William Tyndale preached against the roman catholic church.
Gerhard O. Forde has written: 'The Preached God' 'The Law-Gospel debate' -- subject(s): History of doctrines, Law and gospel
Not certain, but I'm pretty sure that it is all of them at this point in history.
I'm afraid that you are going to have to be more specific in your question, like a country and a century, maybe.
Martin Luther preached the priesthood of all baptized Christians, which, actually, is the teaching of the Catholic Church.
Martin Luther preached the priesthood of all baptized Christians, which, actually, is the teaching of the Catholic Church.
George Strebeck has written: 'A sermon. Preached (by courtesy) in the German Reformed Church, at New-York' 'The wrath to come' -- subject(s): Doctrines, Lutheran Church, Future punishment
The catholic church has always treated boys and girls equally as far as we know, but to do with all the males only for priests thing im unsure of, i think it was because Jesus was a male and he preached that Catholic priests shall only be male
Through the power of the Holy Spirit and committed Christians who lived their faith and preached it by their way of living. That is what converted the Roman empire.