BazzaMcKenzie wrote:
Also includes the concept of Providence (?) and pre-destiny?
Well, unless I misunderstand what you mean by providence, I think that classical theology contains both points, just Calvinism tends to emphasize these elements. I think most Christian theologians think that God has a plan of some form, Arminians just think that man has a free will and that can be seen as having a tension in the belief. Open theists are the ones who outright reject predestination though, and they are a rather heretical group in the eyes of most Christians but there are some intelligent thinkers who believe this idea.
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I reject the last 5 points (at least) of Calvin, so I guess I am not Arminianist either
Well, you are probably closer to Arminianism than Calvinism, and some Calvinists will lump a disbelief in total depravity in with Arminianism and some who claim to be Arminians also hold to a disbelief in total depravity. Some would call the rejection of total depravity a variant of Pelagianism though.
Doc Emmett Brown wrote:
It means your future hasn't been written yet. No one's has. Your future is whatever you make it. So make it a good one, both of you.
And that fits in more with the theological concept of open theism, which is more related to Arminianism than to other theological ideas, but it is not the same because it rejects classical theology where God already knows all of the future and on some level has a plan.