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Calvinism
[kal-vuh-niz-uhm]
noun
the doctrines and teachings of John Calvin or his followers, emphasizing predestination, the sovereignty of God, the supreme authority of the Scriptures, and the irresistibility of grace.
adherence to these doctrines.
Calvinism
/ ˈæɪˌɪə /
noun
the theological system of John Calvin and his followers, characterized by emphasis on the doctrines of predestination, the irresistibility of grace, and justification by faith
Calvinism
The religious doctrines of John Calvin. Calvin stressed that people are saved through God's grace, not through their own merits. The most famous of Calvin's ideas is his doctrine of predestination. In the United States, the Presbyterians make up the largest single group of Christians (see also Christian) in the Calvinist tradition.
Other Word Forms
- Calvinist noun
- Calvinistic adjective
- Calvinistically adverb
- anti-Calvinism noun
- anti-Calvinist noun
- anti-Calvinistic adjective
- non-Calvinist noun
- non-Calvinistic adjective
- pro-Calvinism noun
- pro-Calvinist noun
- pro-Calvinistic adjective
- ˈ䲹Ծ noun
- ˌ䲹ˈپ adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of Calvinism1
Example Sentences
But the founders’ Calvinism, represented in “The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” was intrepidly covenantal, crusading against abuses and addictions that Augustus merely massaged and that Trump actively trades on and peddles.
For the longest time, in Los Angeles as elsewhere, Thanksgiving was principally a religious holiday, a tip of the capotain Puritan hat to the dogged Calvinism of the Mayflower crowd.
“A few years ago it was Calvinism. Perhaps it will be something else later on.”
"I think it's the Calvinism," a Dutch colleague ventured when I inquired about the enigmatic reserve of her countrymen.
The streak of austerity in Dutch culture can be traced to Calvinism, say residents, the most popular religious branch of Protestantism here for hundreds of years.
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