Index: WEBCHRISTIANITYSTUDY - THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION

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| DENOMINATIONS | RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS | POLITICAL MOVEMENTS | PHILOSOPHICAL MOVEMENTS | THEOLOGY | THEOLOGY SUBDIVISION | THEOLOGY MAJOR TOPICS | THEOLOGY TRADITIONAL-EXEGETICAL | THEOLOGY TRADITIONAL-HISTORICAL | THEOLOGY TRADITIONAL-SYSTEMATIC | THEOLOGY TRADITIONAL-PRACTICAL | THEOLOGY ROMAN-CATHOLIC | THEOLOGY CONTOVERSIAL-MOVEMENTS | THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION | THEOLOGY CONTEMPORARY-MOVEMENTS
Info @ WEBCHRISTIANSTUDY: Links to various online resources to study Christianity.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Adventism : Typified by the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Anabaptism
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Anglicanism
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Anglo-Catholicism : High church theology of Anglicanism.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Arminianism : Reaction to Calvinist soteriology, which affirms man's freedom to accept or reject God's gift of salvation; identified with Dutch Reformed theologian Jacobus Arminius, developed by Hugo Grotius, defended by the Remonstrants, and popularized by John Wesley. Key doctrine of Anglican and Methodist churches, adopted by many Baptists and some Congregationalists.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Brethrenism: Anabaptist-Pietist, with Open and Exclusive streams.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Calvinism : System of soteriology advanced by French Reformer John Calvin, which espouses Augustinian views on election and reprobation; stresses absolute predestination, the sovereignty of God and the inability of man to effect his own salvation by believing the Gospel prior to regeneration; principle doctrines are often summarized by the acronym TULIP (see Canons of Dort).
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Charismaticism : Movement in many Protestant and some Catholic churches that emphasizes the gifts of the Spirit and the continual working of the Holy Spirit within the body of Christ; often associated with glossolalia (i.e., speaking in tongues) and divine healing.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Congregationalism : Form of governance used in Congregationalist, Baptist, and Pentecostal churches in which each congregation is self-governing and independent of all others.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Counter-Reformation (or Catholic Reformation): The Roman Catholic response to the Protestant Reformation (see also Council of Trent).
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Creation Spirituality : Panentheist theology.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Deism : The general doctrine that no faith is necessary for justified belief in God's existence and/or the doctrine that God does not intervene in earthly affairs (contrasts with Fideism).
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Dispensationalism : Belief in a conservative, Biblically literalist hermeneutic and philosophy of history that, by stressing the dichotomy between Israel and the Church, rejects supersessionism (commonly referred to as "replacement theology").
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Evangelicalism : Typically conservative, predominantly Protestant outlook that prioritizes evangelism above all or most other activities of the Church (see also neo-evangelicalism).
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Fideism : The doctrine that faith is irrational, that God's existence transcends logic, and that all knowledge of God is on the basis of faith (contrasts with Deism).
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Latitudinarianism: Broad church theology of Anglicanism.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Liberalism : Belief in interpreting the Bible to allow for the maximum amount of individual freedom.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Low church : Puritanical / Evangelical theology of Anglicanism.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Methodism : Form of church governance and doctrine used in the Methodist Church.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Modernism : Belief that truth changes, so doctrine must evolve in light of new information or trends.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Latter Day Saint movement (Mormonism): Belief that the Book of Mormon and others to be additional divine scriptures; belief in living prophets; generally reject the Nicene creed and other early creeds.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION New Thought : Movement based on 19th century New England belief in positive thinking. Several denominations arose from it including Unity Church, and Religious Science.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Nonconformism : Advocacy of religious liberty; includes Quakers, Methodists, Baptists, Congregationalists and Salvationists.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Nontrinitarianism : Rejection of the doctrine of Trinity.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Open Theism : A rejection of the exhaustive foreknowledge of God, by attributing it to Greek philosophy.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Pentecostalism
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Pietism : A stream of Lutheranism placing renewed emphasis on the Bible and a universal priesthood of all believers.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Presbyterianism : Form of governance used in Presbyterian and Reformed churches.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Puritanism: Movement to cleanse Episcopalianism of any "ritualistic" aspects.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Supersessionism : Belief that the Christian Church, the body of Christ, is the only elect people of God in the new covenant age (see also covenant theology).
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Restoration Movement : 19th century attempt to return to a New Testament model of the Church.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Restorationism (Christian primitivism) : The doctrine that most of the modern Church is apostate; includes the Millerites, Seventh-day Adventists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Latter Day Saints.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Salvation Army : An offshoot of the Methodist Church known for its charitable activities
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Tractarianism : Oxford Movement. It led to Anglo-Catholicism.
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Ultramontanism : A movement within 19th-century Roman Catholicism to emphasize papal authority, particularly in the wake of the French Revolution and the secularization of the state
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Unification Church
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Unitarianism : Rejects a holy "Trinity" and also the divinity of Christ, with some exceptions (see modalism).
THEOLOGY POST-REFORMATION Universalism : In various forms, the belief that all people will ultimately be reconciled with God; most famously defended by Origen.

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