bunhlio is almighty
Nagarjuna
Martin Luther taught at the University of Wittenberg in Germany. He became a professor there in 1508 and played a crucial role in the Protestant Reformation. The university was pivotal in the dissemination of his ideas and writings.
This doctrine taught that any state could nullify a law of the United States that was contrary to the Constitution as they understood it.
John Calvin differed from Catholicism on the doctrine of predestination. In Calvin's system, since Adam's fall man no longer has any internal freedom of will. In other words, men can not repent and believe in the Gospel, they are predestined from all eternity to either heaven or hell completely independent of their actions. This system renders the entire Gospel and Christ's preaching, death, and resurrection as taught by the Catholic Church, kind of meaningless.
Almost all the Reformers preached this doctrine - I can't think of any that taught that the Pope was the head of the church. Martin Luther and John Calvin would be the two most prominent of the group.
The protestant doctrine of predestination is mostly attributed to John Calvin, the founder of the Reformed tradition (which includes Presbyterians today). Predestination as taught by Calvin was adopted as one of the five main precepts of Reformed theology.
John Calvin, a French theologian and religious reformer, believed in the doctrine of predestination. He taught that God has predetermined who will be saved and who will be damned, regardless of human actions or merit. This belief is a key tenet of Calvinism.
John Calvin taught that God has predestined certain individuals for salvation and others for damnation, based on His sovereign will. This doctrine of predestination is significant in Christian theology as it emphasizes God's control over salvation and highlights the importance of faith and obedience in the lives of believers.
Nagarjuna
John Calvin was an important Reformation leader who taught the ideas of free will and predestination.
No the cults have their own doctrine , not that what Jesus taught.
doctrine
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.)
I think it was John Calvin????
This belief is usually associated with the Reformed approach to Christianity as taught by John Calvin. Presbyterian churches generally fall within the Reformed tradition.Another answerPredestination is a doctrine stating that God has previously determined all things especially that god has elected certain souls to eternal salvation and others to eternal damnation.The above describes double predestination in which God elects some and rejects others. There are other versions - single predestination in which God elects some and we maintain a respectful agnosticism about the others and universal predestination in which ultimately all are saved. The key idea binding all together is that the election is done by God, not by humans.
This doctrine taught that any state could nullify a law of the United States that was contrary to the Constitution as they understood it.
The BALTIMORE catechism