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theologically

[ UK /θiːəlˈɒd‍ʒɪkli/ ]
[ US /ˌθiəˈɫɑdʒɪkɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a theological manner
    he dealt with the problem of evil theologically, not philosophically
  2. as regards theology
    the candidate was found theologically sound

How To Use theologically In A Sentence

  • However, he stresses that their aim is not to train theologians but to theologically train professionals.
  • Luther's theology of two kingdoms (law for one, gospel for the other) creates a dilemma for those theologically and confessionally orthodox Lutherans who wish to oppose women's ordination.
  • It is typical of Choumnos™ approach that he seeks to argue philosophically, that is by valid inference from principles and definitions that are universally accepted, for views that are already theologically established. Byzantine Philosophy
  • So we now get stories such as that of an army's nighttime panic when the imagination produces non-existent enemies or a theologically significant animal fable about an overscrupulous ass and a self-serving wolf.
  • Others who had found that church too theologically liberal for their tastes espoused a more traditional theology.
  • There have been numerous attempts to translate the Trisagion, not all of which are either theologically or linguistically accurate.
  • It never made sense to me theologically or morally--it anthropomorphizes God into a kind of harried Big Chief in the sky whose decision making processes are influenced by the squeaky wheels. E-Mails to God and Glenn Beck
  • The verb kana is polysemic, a feature which has allowed the by-now-discredited translation “to acquire” instead of the less theologically palatable “to create.” Creation According to Eve: Beyond Genesis 3.
  • McLaren, however, has plenty of critics for his liberal evangelical views and some will find this politically as well as theologically soft-headed. Pastor links Christian, Muslim hopes, Egypt's revolution
  • This moment, recapitulated in the Introduction to all three extant versions of the Ages, is accomplished ontotheologically in the first, and mythopoeically in the second, which in fact describes its own first distant beginning toward a revelation 'The Abyss of the Past': Psychoanalysis in Schelling's Ages of the World (1815)
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