Arminian Baptists, Brethren and Pentecostal churches have preached the gospel of Christ within their own limited understanding. |
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These people spoke with great harshness of Arminians and of John Wesley, the Arminian leader, in particular. |
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When he began his studies, he was a thoroughgoing Arminian, but in process of time, God used his doctoral studies for his conversion. |
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Consequently the Reformed believer does not live with the constant sense of insecurity that plagues the Arminian. |
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The controversy originated through the incursion of Arminian preachers into the Calvinistic Methodist churches of 18th century Wales. |
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Hence there are in Austria Mennonite, Brethren and Baptist churches of varying Arminian complexions. |
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Questionable conversion was something I already knew about, even while mired in a thorough-going Arminian theology. |
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Knowing that salvation is of the Lord, and not of our free will, removes both the despair and the pride that accompanies Arminian evangelism. |
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There is little history, for instance, of disagreement over Calvinist or Arminian views. |
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At the same time, Spurgeon was certainly not admitted to Arminian circles because he was far too Calvinistic for them. |
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Missions had served as a rallying cry for Arminian and Calvinistic Baptists in Scotland as it had for Baptists in England in previous years. |
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Spurgeon and Clifford were personal friends, but Spurgeon was a Calvinist who emphasized evangelism and Clifford was an Arminian who emphasized social work. |
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Theological divisions among Baptists at the beginning of the century were usually about the degree to which one held Calvinistic as against Arminian views. |
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Appointed to a living at Kilwinning in Ayrshire, he took part in the Glasgow Assembly, protested against Arminian innovations, and served with the army of the covenant. |
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Arminian divines had been one of the few sources of support for Charles's proposed Spanish marriage. |
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His letter in 1626 to Henry Downhall, an Arminian minister, suggests that Cromwell had yet to be influenced by radical puritanism. |
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The Methodist Church teaches the Arminian concepts of free will, conditional election and sanctifying grace. |
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In contrast to Whitefield's Calvinism, Wesley embraced the Arminian doctrines that dominated the Church of England at the time. |
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In 1778, Wesley began the publication of The Arminian Magazine, not, he said, to convince Calvinists, but to preserve Methodists. |
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After Whitefield's death in 1770, however, American Methodism entered a more lasting Wesleyan and Arminian phase of development. |
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Wesleyan Methodists identify with the Arminian conception of free will, as opposed to the theological determinism of absolute predestination. |
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By the 1930s, however, a strong Arminian strain developed in many parts of the Brethren movement, especially in North America. |
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The Welsh Methodist revival differed from the Methodist revival in England in that its theology was Calvinist rather than Arminian. |
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Classical Pentecostal soteriology is generally Arminian rather than Calvinist. |
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The soteriology of the Apostolic Church is neither uniformly Reformed nor Arminian. |
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Anabaptist, Arminian and other minor Protestant communities were also forbidden. |
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The king's declaration for the sopiting of all Arminian heresies. |
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This view is opposed to the Arminian view that God's choice of whom to save is conditional or based on his foreknowledge of who would respond positively to God. |
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Bramhall, a strong Arminian, had met and debated with Hobbes and afterwards wrote down his views and sent them privately to be answered in this form by Hobbes. |
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It has been characterised as Arminian theology with an emphasis on the work of the Holy Spirit to bring holiness into the life of the participating believer. |
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