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Review of Bremer\u27s Cross and Kremlin: A Brief History of the Orthodox Church in Russia
Mojzes, Paul
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Reflections on the Contemporary Religious Revival Religion, Secularization, Globalization
Bogomilova, Nonka
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2020
The concept of orthodoxy denotes a central set of doctrines, often specified by a recognised authoritative body or set of individuals, to which any person must subscribe in order to be accepted by others as a fellow member of a religious community. Despite some possible precedents among ancient philosophers, the concept of orthodoxy developed in a ...
Behlül Üsdiken, Matthias Kipping
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The concept of orthodoxy denotes a central set of doctrines, often specified by a recognised authoritative body or set of individuals, to which any person must subscribe in order to be accepted by others as a fellow member of a religious community. Despite some possible precedents among ancient philosophers, the concept of orthodoxy developed in a ...
Behlül Üsdiken, Matthias Kipping
+4 more sources
2022
Abstract Orthodoxy is the central term of campus misinformation. Various strains of discourse that constitute such misinformation ultimately reinforce the core premise that liberal, progressive, or secular orthodoxy dominates higher education today.
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Abstract Orthodoxy is the central term of campus misinformation. Various strains of discourse that constitute such misinformation ultimately reinforce the core premise that liberal, progressive, or secular orthodoxy dominates higher education today.
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2019
The term Orthodox comes from the Greek, meaning “the right idea.” In Jewish communities, Orthodoxy is used to identify a theological and sociological stream in the modern period. From a theological perspective, the term is used to signify the belief that canonical Jewish texts are divine, and that the Halakha (or Halacha), the Jewish legal system, is ...
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The term Orthodox comes from the Greek, meaning “the right idea.” In Jewish communities, Orthodoxy is used to identify a theological and sociological stream in the modern period. From a theological perspective, the term is used to signify the belief that canonical Jewish texts are divine, and that the Halakha (or Halacha), the Jewish legal system, is ...
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Like many Protestant fundamentalists, Joseph Fielding Smith came to believe that correct religion depended first on correct doctrine. It was a relatively new notion in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which for decades had imagined fidelity to the Church to be a matter of practice (particularly participation in plural marriage) rather ...
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