Historical Root Of Burleson’s Ambivalent Gospel
Amyraldism Moses Amyraut (1596-1664), after whom Amyraldism is named. Amyraldism (or sometimes Amyraldianism, the School of Saumur, hypothetical universalism,[1] or Post Redemptionism),[2] also known as “hypothetical universalism” or “four-point Calvinism”, primarily refers to a modified form of Calvinist theology. It rejects one of the Five points of Calvinism, the doctrin... »