Answer:
Well he was allies with japa, and italy for the most part. Also the Soviet Union at first but that felled apart after a while and other smaller countries.
Answer:
to make their own constitution to fight against the government and create their own society
Explanation:
Book are books
Answer: D. PREDESTINATION
Explanation:
John Calvin taught that salvation was entirely by God's grace, but his emphasis was on what that meant to our understanding of God. He made the key factor all about God's glory. As summarized by Evangelical Focus, "The real marvel of justification in Calvin’s thought was not that a sinner found himself (herself) pardoned from all iniquity but rather that God was being glorified through the salvation of such a transgressor. " So Calvin's emphasis in his teaching regarding salvation was as much about the glory of God as it was about the grace of God.
Calvin's central emphasis was on the sovereignty of God. Sovereignty means God is in charge and whatever he determines is final. This showed itself especially in Calvin's teaching on predestination -- meaning that God decided in advance which persons would be saved and which would not. Calvin taught that God chose from eternity the persons he would bring to heaven and the persons he would condemn to hell. He saw this as a testimony to God's sovereign power. In Calvin's theology, only God has freedom of choice; human beings do not.
Answer:
Thomas Paine wrote pamphlets and tried to attract people in colonies to fight against the British.
Explanation:
Thomas Paine played a vital role by publishing pamphlet named Common Sense. He wrote pamphlets that helped change in colonist behaviour that led to declaring independence against the British. His pamphlet Common Sense encouraged the colonists to think of the present situations. His pamphlets became the source for the colonists to come together as patriots to fight for their cause (independence). Common Sense arrived as a pamphlet in Philadelphia in 1776. The first print sold out quickly, and over thousands of copies sold in America and Europe. Pamphlet read aloud in public, even General Washington commanded it to read among troops.