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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
predestination
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Here was a community in which people argued fiercely about theology, even sang ballads about predestination.
▪ His central doctrine was that of predestination.
▪ His views on predestination and the trinity were remarkably conventional.
▪ I vowed to question Lili about predestination.
▪ Posterity undoubtedly concentrated its attention on St Augustine as a theologian, and on what he wrote about predestination.
▪ The main points at issue between Hooker and Travers were predestination and justification by faith.
▪ There is almost a tinge of predestination in footballers' reflections on how they came to sport in the first place.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Predestination

Predestination \Pre*des`ti*na"tion\, n. [L. praedestinatio: cf. F. pr['e]destination.]

  1. The act of predestinating.

    Predestination had overruled their will.
    --Milton.

  2. (Theol.) The purpose of Good from eternity respecting all events; especially, the preordination of men to everlasting happiness or misery. See Calvinism.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
predestination

mid-14c., "the action of God in foreordaining certain of mankind through grace to salvation or eternal life," from Old French predestinacion and directly from Church Latin praedestinationem (nominative praedestinatio) "a determining beforehand," noun of action from past participle stem of praedestinare "set before as a goal; appoint or determine beforehand," from Latin prae- "before" (see pre-) + destinare "appoint, determine" (see destiny). First used in theological sense by Augustine; given prominence by Calvin.

Wiktionary
predestination

n. 1 (context theology English) The doctrine that everything has been foreordained by a God, especially that certain people have been elected for salvation, and sometimes also that others are destined for reprobation. 2 destiny or fate.

WordNet
predestination
  1. n. previous determination as if by destiny or fate

  2. (theology) being determined in advance; especially the doctrine (usually associated with Calvin) that God has foreordained every event throughout eternity (including the final salvation of mankind) [syn: foreordination, preordination, predetermination]

Wikipedia
Predestination

Predestination, in theology, is the doctrine that all events have been willed by God, usually with reference to the eventual fate of the individual soul. Explanations of predestination often seek to address the " paradox of free will", whereby God's omniscience seems incompatible with human free will. In this usage, predestination can be regarded as a form of religious determinism; and usually predeterminism.

Predestination (film)

Predestination is a 2014 Australian science fiction mystery thriller film written and directed by The Spierig Brothers, based on the 1959 short story —All You Zombies— by Robert A. Heinlein. The film stars Ethan Hawke, Sarah Snook and Noah Taylor.

Usage examples of "predestination".

Consequently, by reason of human nature alone can predestination be attributed to Christ.

By and by I went to him, which knew well enough all the matter, as being monished by like precept in the night: for the night before as he dressed the flowers and garlands about the head of the god Osiris, he understood by the mouth of the image which told the predestinations of all men, how he had sent a poore man of Madura, to whom he should minister his sacraments, to the end hee should receive a reward by divine providence, and the other glory, for his vertuous studies.

But the loss of one mystery was amply compensated by the stupendous doctrines of original sin, redemption, faith, grace, and predestination, which have been strained from the epistles of St.

By and by I went to him, which knew well enough all the matter, as being monished by like precept in the night: for the night before as he dressed the flowers and garlands about the head of the god Osiris, he understood by the mouth of the image which told the predestinations of all men, how he had sent a poore man of Madura, to whom he should minister his sacraments, to the end hee should receive a reward by divine providence, and the other glory, for his vertuous studies.

Mohammed has been a favorite subject for comparison with Luther by the Catholics, but in truth, in no disparaging sense, the proclamation of Islam, with its monotheism, emphasis on faith and predestination, was very like the Reformation, and so were several later reforms within Mohammedanism, including two in the sixteenth century.

Son of God, not by grace, but by nature: whereas predestination regards what is of grace, as stated in the First Part, Q.

Secondly, predestination may be considered as regards its temporal effect, which is some gratuitous gift of God.

First, as regards what comes under predestination materially, and thus it is false.

Bubba had been raised in a Presbyterian atmosphere of predestination, God's will, inclusive language, exegesis and colorful stoles.

Among Scholars, serious questions arise as to Predestination and the Will of God, Who notes each detail of each life in a sort of divine Ledger, allotting Fortune bad and good, to each individually, even as He raiseth the storm at sea, lendeth the Weather-gage to the dark Dromonds of Piracy, provoketh the Mohawk against the Trader's Post.

Do I mention predestination to excuse my failure, or did inexorable fate really grab me like a marionette and frogmarch me through the stations of some cosmic ritual?

However, it soon develops that Galen isn't quite the middle American idyll it seems to be: tragedies are shrugged off by the population, some of the local dogs can speak, and a weird kind of predestination appears to rule everyday life.

For in the 41st Psalm also it is shown much more clearly, where in the person of the Mediator, in the usual way, things are narrated as if past which were prophesied as yet to come, since these things which were yet to come were in the predestination and foreknowledge of God as if they were done, because they were certain.

Waterhouse, you were raised by Puritans, who believe in predestination.

The concept of Rewriteability undermines the entire doctrine of Predestination.