Mark Twain
Julius Caesar
George Etienne Cartier was a practicing lawyer before he was elected liberal reformer in Canada.
thoaadi pan de lun khote saalyo.... mera time waste kita je harrraaamdyo......
Frederick Douglass was an African-American social reformer and abolitionist. He escaped from slavery to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and became a free man.
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, 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.
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.
John Calvin believed in man kind's depravity and sinfulness. He was a protestant reformer and his beliefs are the foundation of Calvinism.
Predestination is most closely associated with John Calvin. See, for example, his Institutes of the Christian Relgion
Zarathustra.
Jan Hus, a Czech religious reformer, believed in several concepts, including: Preaching in the local language, allowing people to understand the Bible directly. The importance of moral living and a personal connection to God, rather than relying solely on the church. Criticizing the practices and wealth of the Catholic Church, advocating for reforms.
Because of his heliocentric beliefs.
Jan Hus was a Bohemian religious reformer who was burned as a heretic in 1415.He is John Hus.
Zoraster.
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.
The reformer who believed that business success was a sign of God's grace was Max Weber, a German sociologist and philosopher. Weber's theory of the "Protestant work ethic" suggested that the values of hard work, thrift, and success in business were linked to the teachings of Calvinism. This idea was presented in his work "The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism".