Examples of faith in the following topics:
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- A hijab symbolizes a type of Islamic religious belief of a muslim woman in her faith.
- People with pluralist beliefs make no distinction between faith systems, viewing each one as valid within a particular culture.
- People with exclusivist beliefs typically explain other religions as either in error, or as corruptions or counterfeits of the true faith.
- In monotheistic faiths, like Abrahamic religions, references to God are often used in constructs such as "God's Chosen People. " By contrast, people with inclusivist beliefs recognize some truth in all faith systems, highlighting agreements and minimizing differences, but often see their own faith as in some way ultimate.
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- Spirituality and faith practices can improve skills for coping with stress and raise levels of happiness and general well-being.
- Faith is trust or confidence in a doctrine, or holding a specific personal or spiritual belief.
- Questions of faith cannot necessarily be settled by evidentiary support, but are also not entirely opposed to reason.
- The practice of faith involves belief in what one cannot actually see or prove to exist.
- Faithfulness can also supplement feelings of hope for the future and acceptance of the past.
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- The doctrine of justification by faith alone was a direct inheritance from Luther.
- The faith continued to spread after Calvin's death in 1563 and reached as far as Constantinople by the start of the 17th century.
- The book was written as an introductory textbook on the Protestant faith for those with some previous knowledge of theology and covered a broad range of theological topics from the doctrines of church and sacraments to justification by faith alone and Christian liberty.
- The issue of religious faith having been thrown into the arena of politics, Francis was prompted to view the movement as a threat to the kingdom's stability.
- The "Five Points of Calvinism" summarize the faith's basic tenets, although some historians contend that it distorts the nuance of Calvin's own theological positions.
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- As a result of the Watergate Scandal and Nixon's impeachment hearings, the public lost faith and trust in politicians and elected officials.
- But by far the biggest impact of the crisis was the loss of the public's faith and trust in politicians and elected officials; cynicism concerning the ethics, behavior, and motives of elected officials would be deep and lasting.
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- Many faiths have flourished in the United States, including later imports spanning the country's multicultural immigrant heritage and those founded within the country, These disparate faiths have led the U.S. to become one of the most religiously diverse countries in the world.
- American Jews are citizens of the Jewish faith or ethnicity.
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- A key difference between scientific explanations and faith-based explanations is simply that faith-based explanations are based on faith and do not need to be testable.
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- Advocates for stronger separation of church and state emphasize the plurality of faiths and non-faiths in the country, and what they see as the broad guarantees of the Constitution.
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- The following are only a few examples of important artists and writers who can be credited with making the movement more visible in culture: Judy Chicago, founder of the first known Feminist Art Program (in Fresno, California); Miriam Schapiro, co-founder of the Feminist Art Program at Cal Arts; Sheila Levrant de Bretteville and Arlene Raven co-founders of the Woman's Building; Suzanne Lacy and Faith Wilding, both participants in all the early programs; Martha Rosler Mary Kelly, Kate Millett, Nancy Spero, Faith Ringgold, June Wayne, art-world agitators The Guerrilla Girls; and critics, historians, and curators Lucy Lippard, Griselda Pollock, Arlene Raven, and Dextra Frankel.
- Suzanne Lacy and Faith Wilding, both participants in all the early programs;
- Martha Rosler Mary Kelly, Kate Millett, Nancy Spero, Faith Ringgold, June Wayne, art-world agitators The Guerrilla Girls;
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- Erasmus lived against the backdrop of the growing European religious Reformation, but while he was critical of the abuses within the Catholic Church and called for reform, he kept his distance from Luther and Melanchthon and continued to recognise the authority of the pope, emphasizing a middle way with a deep respect for traditional faith, piety and grace, rejecting Luther's emphasis on faith alone.
- He always intended to remain faithful to Catholic doctrine, and therefore was convinced he could criticize frankly virtually everyone and everything.
- In Praise of Folly starts off with Folly praising herself, after the manner of the Greek satirist Lucian, whose work Erasmus and Sir Thomas More had recently translated into Latin, a piece of virtuoso foolery; it then takes a darker tone in a series of orations, as Folly praises self-deception and madness and moves to a satirical examination of pious but superstitious abuses of Catholic doctrine and corrupt practices in parts of the Roman Catholic Church—to which Erasmus was ever faithful—and the folly of pedants.
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