Of or relating to theism.
Person who believes in the existence of a god or gods.
Sinônimos
Examples for "faith"
Examples for "faith"
1The government had a responsibility to negotiate in good faith, he said.
2Nice represents the political future of the republic, negotiated in good faith.
3I think we need legislation protecting good faith efforts to stop spam.
4So far, most countries in most cases have acted in good faith.
5They need to work with councils, health boards, schools and faith communities.
1DISCRIMINATION Spitzer also said the refusal involved the victims' nationality and religion.
2However, much of his attack on religion is mere opinion and assertion.
3It is also a religion that is facing a rather serious problem.
4We have seen unimaginable violence carried out in the name of religion.
5It is rarer still to read good news concerning matters of religion.
1But in the northern development of his system, theistic conceptions sprang up.
2It is worth emphasizing the logical independence of moral values from any theistic system.
3From his earliest years, Augustine had sought a theistic religion.
4The theistic interpretation of the universe has been completely discredited by the scientific investigations.
5And the theistic God is almost as sterile a principle.
1Darwinian evolution (whatever may be said of other kinds) is neither theistical nor nontheistical.
1You told me a little while ago you were a Geminon theist.
2He was repeatedly indignant at the suggestion that he was a theist.
3Rousseau was a sentimental theist; Voltaire erected a church to God.
4The world is not the same to the Christian theist and to the agnostic.
5He was a theist because, in his time, everybody was.
6Whatever theist fortunes, they would always be welcome here .
7As to Mr. Lincoln's religious views, he was, in short, an infidel,... a theist.
8Of course Jesus was a theist, but that is the least interesting thing about him.
9The theist recognizes a creator who created the universe and is responsible for its operation.
10He was a theist, of wavering and doubtful faith.
11For, after all, what the theist needs is, not an eternal energy, but a personality.
12As ever, the theist's answer is deeply unsatisfying, because it leaves the existence of God unexplained.
13The theist claims that God is the answer.
14How strange that a convinced theist should be so prone to associate design only with miracle!
15The intent is to make the admonition still yet more inclusive (to those not theist).
16But Tennyson was a passionately convinced theist.