Lollards.
lollards
The Lollards believed that the church should aid people to live a life of evangelical poverty and imitate Jesus Christ.
It means that as far as the Lollards were concerned, the Catholic Church's method of ordaining priests had no Biblical basis.
Lollards were not only the followers of John Wyclif - they were called the Wycliffites. The term "Lollard" loosely refers to heretics in general (the name possibly derives from the dutch term meaning "babbler"). While some Lollards were sympathetic to the views of Wyclif, they also disagreed and differed on some points. The point is, a Lollard was not only a Wycliffite.
The Sunna is based on the life of the prophet Muhammad.
Lollards
no difference between emiter follower and source follower
A christian IS a follower, of Jesus. it's not "a christian's follower" it's a christian follower (of jesus).
George Stokes has written: 'The Lollards' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Reformation, Lollards, Biography 'The manners and customs of the Jews, and other nations mentioned in the Bible' -- subject(s): Social life and customs, Jews 'The Lollards, or, Some account of the witnesses for the truth in Great Britain between the years 1400 and 1546. With a brief notice of events connected with the early history of the Reformation' -- subject(s): Reformation, Lollards, Biography 'Lives of the British reformers' -- subject(s): Reformers, Reformation, Biography 'The history of the Jews' -- subject(s): Jews, History 'Natural Theology'
No, Chris Tomlin is a Christian, a follower of Jesus Christ. Chris is also a worship leader, and a Christian artist whom is quite popular.
I could not find the word 'lawler', but the "Lollards"(meaning 'praisers of God') were followers of John Wycliffe and industrious preachers of God's Word. They used the Wycliffe Bible, and then later the second Wycliffe Bible, which made the scriptures easier to understand for the common folk to whom they spoke.