According to the concept of predestination:
Certain people are selected to be the elect before they are born. These people will certainly do God's Will. They will go to heaven after they die. Those people who were not selcted are known as the reprobate. They have no chance of entering heaven.
production concept marketing concept selling concept product concept
there is no concept!
there is no concept!
selling concept is a traditional concept of marketing. In traditional concept emphasis was on only selling the products.
No it is a production concept as of October 2011
Augustine said that there was free will, not predestination. Although this goes against predestination, Augustine wasn't writing in terms of predestination because he lived 1100 years before Calvin proposed predestination.
If you are saved, heaven is your predestination.
I think you and I stand in predestination.
no Many Bible believers do think predestination is real. Predestination is mentioned several times in the Bible. What it means exactly is debated.
Predestination - 2014 was released on: USA: 2014
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No. Predestination is not part of Methodist doctrine and is not believed by most Methodists.
David H. Kranendonk has written: 'Teaching Predestination' -- subject(s): History of doctrines, Predestination, Calvinism, History 'Teaching predestination' -- subject(s): History of doctrines, Predestination, Calvinism, History
The doctrine of predestination raised concerns among many Christian theologians because it seemed to conflict with the idea of free will. It posed questions about the nature of God's justice, mercy, and human responsibility. Some saw it as challenging the fairness of God's judgment and the concept of salvation for all.
Predestination: The belief that god has determined in advance who will be saved(the elect) and who will be damned( the reprobate)
This is a vexed question. John Wesley did believe in predestination, just a difference kind of predestination than his Calvinist brethren. Wesley was Arminian in his doctrine. He had disagreements over the issue with his friend and fellow worker George Whitfield, who believed in the Calvinist form of predestination. Hard predestination (Whitfield's kind) understands God to be ultimately in charge of deciding whether each individual is "saved" or not. Soft predestination (Wesley's kind) recognizes that God knows who will be saved and who will not, but God does not decide that for each individual.
predestination*