ADJECTIVE
- relating to or influenced by antinomianism
NOUN
- a follower of the doctrine of antinomianism
How To Use antinomian In A Sentence
- Why should parents fund the moral decivilization of their children at the hands of tenured antinomians?
- The answer often lies as much in titillation as in antinomianism.
- God's law is holy, just, and good, and no one wants the gospel of grace accused of antinomianism.
- The whole lecture has a morally subversive ring, and the savour of antinomianism about it.
- In morals Simon was probably Antinomian, an enemy of Old Testament law.
- I'm not an Antinomian, but I've thought about it!
- Of course, 1968 was fueled by powerful utopian and antinomian impulses.
- But a recognition of the fact that Taylor distinctly belongs to the antinomians of English prose, or at least to those guiltless heathens who lived before the laws of it had been asserted, can not in any competent critic dull the sense of the wonderful beauty of his style. A History of Elizabethan Literature
- Perhaps you are right that antinomianism is not the best word, but then what would you suggest is a better one? Matthew Yglesias » Books-a-Million
- First then, that doctrine that exempts all believers from the obligation of the moral law is directly destructive of all godliness; which doctrine is taught and asserted by the antinomians, who from thence derive that name, as being opposers of the law. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. V.