I think that would be Calvinism.
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.
John Calvin but I don't think he was French. He believed in predestination, the idea that God had chosen who would be saved and who would be condemned
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
oh my god idiots stupid idiots. Haha utsha upway
John Calvin
believed in predestination
No. Predestination is not part of Methodist doctrine and is not believed by most Methodists.
The Calvinists believed in the concept of predestination, which teaches that God has already determined who will be saved and who will be condemned, regardless of any actions taken by individuals. This belief is a central tenet of Calvinism, a Protestant Christian theological system developed by John Calvin in the 16th century.
John Calvin
The Puritans were fatalistic in that they believed in the doctrine of the elect (predestination).
John Calvin, a key figure in the Protestant Reformation. He believed in the doctrine of predestination, which states that God has already determined who will be saved and who will be damned. This idea was a central tenet of Calvinism.
They believed in predestination, sanctity, divine grace for salvation, and purifying the structure of the church in the 16th century.
This belief is known as predestination. The Puritans believed that God had predestined certain individuals for salvation before the beginning of time.
It was John Calvin. I think...
I think that would be Calvinism.
John Calvin believed predestination was the path to salvation.