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Catholicism

[ US /kəˈθɔɫəˌsɪzəm/ ]
NOUN
  1. the beliefs and practices of a Catholic Church

How To Use Catholicism In A Sentence

  • She, too, was a convert to Roman Catholicism.
  • He establishes that Evangelical theology ‘lacks a unitary hermeneutic’ of Catholicism.
  • The red (or Greene) flag of Catholicism that Anderson is missing in FO's work is probably "redemption" ... there is none. Signature Elements
  • The Church of England has always taken pride in its "comprehensiveness" - a British tolerance for theological diversity dating to Queen Elizabeth I, who combined element of Catholicism and Protestant ism to form a "bridge" between the two traditions. Pink Collars For Anglicans
  • To many people, John XXIII was the Kennedy pope, and Vatican II was his Camelot a glorious, Roman Catholic version of the New Deal and the New Frontier that would move Catholicism from the medieval past into a rosy future of social equality, in which mass would be celebrated in the vernacular, nuns' habits would be modernized, and the popemobile would replace the traditional gestatorial chair as a form of papal transportation. Philocrites: May 2005 Archives
  • At the age of thirteen, he had a traditional Jewish confirmation which was soon followed by an interest in Catholicism.
  • But Benedict, however "charming," is still stifling theologians who challenge ideas about Catholicism, says Thomas Reese, a Jesuit priest and former editor of the Jesuit-owned magazine America. U.S. visit will give pope a defining moment
  • Said stories were so popular that they grew into a religion known today as Catholicism/Christianity and featuring dark-age, daily wine to blood and bread to body rituals called the eucharistic sacrifice of the non-atoning Jesus. CNN.com
  • On the island itself, due to the dominance of Roman Catholicism, the feast of saints and other Church holy days are observed.
  • Finally, does anyone else note that Catholicism is a polytheist religion? Harlan Ellison on God
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