Mr. Warner was the most undogmatic of idealists, the most winning of teachers.
2
He wished to reduce Christianity to a moral, humanitarian, undogmatic philosophy of life.
3
His Christianity, though undogmatic, was real and pervasive, and his love for nature was a devotion.
4
These three Churches unite in this simple, practical, undogmatic statement (the sixth of the thirty-nine articles):
5
The book is sober and undogmatic, but highly persuasive, even if some of its conclusions seem already familiar.
6
Though in some respects he was under the fantastic notions of the Areopagite, in others his interpretation was rational, free and undogmatic.
7
The feeling was very subtle and quite undogmatic, and he never imparted it to any other of the characters in this entanglement.
8
This, however, very soon during his college life he found to be impracticable of attainment, owing to his own pronounced and undogmatic views.
9
Indeed there are signs that its undogmatic nature caused it to be comparatively neglected at certain times and places, as, e.g., Chrysostom explicitly witnesses.