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
Predestination was one of the beliefs held by John Calvin, one of the leaders of the Reformation.
I think that would be Calvinism.
Calvin's big difference was double predestination, he actually thought that God would create human beings in love and then predestine them to hell.
Calvinists
Martin Luther was the one who came up with the modern view of predestination in Lutheranism, which is that people are predestined to heaven, but they are not predestined to hell.Answer Martin Luther was not at all focused on predestination, however, since for him "justification by grace through faith" was the focus of Christianity. Other Protestants, such as Calvin, were much more interested in the idea of predestination, so in Calvinist denominations predestination plays a much more central role than it does in Lutheranism.
Predestination is most closely associated with John Calvin. See, for example, his Institutes of the Christian Relgion
I think that would be Calvinism.
John Calvin was an important Reformation leader who taught the ideas of free will and predestination.
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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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.
St. Augustine originated the theory of predestination, but John Calvin (1509-1564), a French theologian active during the Protestant Reformation, was its foremost exponent. Predestination is the doctrine that God has determined on an eternal basis those whom he will save and those whom he will save, regardless of the person's faith or merit or lack thereof.
Calvin's big difference was double predestination, he actually thought that God would create human beings in love and then predestine them to hell.
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
John Calvin (1509-1564) created a form of systematic theology that emphasised predestination. Calvin's theology was very important in the Reformation period, with it strongly influencing Reformation theology in most countries outside of Germany (where Luther's theology was more important). The Dutchman, Jacob Arminius (1560-1609), reacted against the determinism inherent in Calvin's doctrine of predestination, and proposed a doctrine that asserted the unimpaired freewill of all people. The 39 Articles of the Church of England, although strongly influenced by Calvin's doctrines, holds back from the unqualified adoption of the doctrine of predestination, and points the clergy to consider the words of Scripture on this subject. In England, the Christian reformer, John Wesley, was closer in his ideas to Arminius than to Calvin, and so is the Methodist Church, which was formed out those who were converted by his preaching or followed his ideas.