Answer:
In 1638 Anne Hutchinson was kicked out of Boston for “antinomianism.”
So Anne Hutchinson’s view says good character is not necessary for salvation. This is to be “anti-nonmain” — “against law.” The opposite is to make law central — “legalism.” Legalism goes the opposite way and says good character is what is necessary for salvation. But then how good do you have to be? Is anyone really good enough? Can anyone conform to law enough? Perhaps not. No one is perfect. People have weaknesses, secret needs and habits. So we may need some “antinomianism.” If you aren’t good enough but get the benefit anyway, that’s called forgiveness. It seems like forgiveness must be required to go to heaven. Forgiveness negates the necessity of the law. It says you didn’t follow the law properly but it’s okay. If in reality we’re all a bunch of greedy , then we might need a bit of antinomianism to go to heaven. This fundamental problem of Christian religion goes all the way back to the founding and continues today. It’s an inherent logical problem of Christian faith.
Explanation:
The answer would have to be the third option
The answer is the chinese culture, the government formaly recognises five religions: Buddhism,Taoism,Islam,Protestantism and Catholicism.
The answer will most likely be c
hope this helped :) !
Anschluss was the name of the union of Austria and Germany in March 1938. It happened after the collapse of the Habsburg. After the annexation, the US criticized the chaos in Germany and formulated a foreign policy in order to respond to Hitler’s aggressive foreign policy. This was a problem for the US and the allies because it showed that Hitler had no care for peace and got even more strongly with the annexation of Austria - it subsequently increased the size of Germany’s military -.