has gloss | (noun) the doctrine of a religious group theological doctrine |
lexicalization | eng: theological doctrine |
subclass of | (noun) a belief (or system of beliefs) accepted as authoritative by some group or school philosophy, doctrine, ism, philosophical system, school of thought |
has subclass | (noun) (theology) the doctrine that Jesus was a union of the human and the divine theanthropism |
has subclass | (noun) (theology) being determined in advance; especially the doctrine (usually associated with Calvin) that God has foreordained every event throughout eternity (including the final salvation of mankind) foreordination, predetermination, preordination, predestination |
has subclass | (noun) a system of philosophical and theological doctrines composed of elements of Platonism and Aristotelianism and oriental mysticism; its most distinctive doctrine holds that the first principle and source of reality transcends being and thought and is naturally unknowable; "Neoplatonism was predominant in pagan Europe until the 6th century"; "Neoplatonism was a major influence on early Christian writers and on later medieval and Renaissance thought and on Islamic philosophy" Neoplatonism |
has subclass | (noun) (theology) any doctrine that asserts the separate existence of God spiritualism |
has subclass | (noun) a religious doctrine or theory based on Jesus or Jesus' teachings Christology |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine that by faith and God's grace a Christian is freed from all laws (including the moral standards of the culture) antinomianism |
has subclass | (noun) the comprehensive theological doctrine created by Saint Thomas Aquinas in the 13th century and still taught by the Dominicans Thomism |
has subclass | (noun) heretical doctrine taught by Arius that asserted the radical primacy of the Father over the Son Arianism |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine taught by Athanasius that Christ the Son is of the same substance as God the Father Athanasianism |
has subclass | (noun) the mystical theological doctrine of Jakob Boehme that influenced the Quakers Boehmenism, Behmenism |
has subclass | (noun) the doctrine of the High Anglican Church that after the consecration of the Eucharist the substance of the body and blood of Christ coexists with the substance of the consecrated bread and wine consubstantiation |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine of church government by bishops Episcopalianism |
has subclass | (noun) the doctrine that the state is supreme over the church in ecclesiastical matters Caesaropapism, Byzantinism, Erastianism |
has subclass | (noun) the religious doctrine of Hinayana Buddhism Hinayanism |
has subclass | (noun) the Roman Catholic doctrine of Cornelis Jansen and his disciples; salvation is limited to those who are subject to supernatural determinism and the rest are assigned to perdition Jansenism |
has subclass | (noun) the religious doctrine of Mahayana Buddhism Mahayanism |
has subclass | (noun) the Christian heresy of the 2nd and 3rd centuries that rejected the Old Testament and denied the incarnation of God in Jesus as a human Marcionism |
has subclass | (noun) belief in the Christian doctrine of the millennium mentioned in the Book of Revelations millenarianism, chiliasm, millenniumism, millenarism |
has subclass | (noun) a Christian heresy of the 5th and 6th centuries that challenged the orthodox definition of the two natures (human and divine) in Jesus and instead believed there was a single divine nature Monophysitism |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine that Christ had only one will even though he had two natures (human and divine); condemned as heretical in the Third Council of Constantinople Monothelitism |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine (named after Nestorius) that Christ is both the son of God and the man Jesus (which is opposed to Roman Catholic doctrine that Christ is fully God) Nestorianism |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine put forward by Pelagius which denied original sin and affirmed the ability of humans to be righteous; condemned as heresy by the Council of Ephesus in 431 Pelagianism |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine of the Society of Friends characterized by opposition to war and rejection of ritual and a formal creed and an ordained ministry Quakerism |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine that human reason rather than divine revelation establishes religious truth rationalism |
has subclass | (noun) the Hindu or Buddhist doctrine that a person may be reborn successively into one of five classes of living beings (god or human or animal or hungry ghost or denizen of Hell) depending on the person's own actions reincarnation |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine that venerates the rose and the cross as symbols of Christ's Resurrection and redemption; claims various occult powers Rosicrucianism |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine that salvation results from the interaction of human will and divine grace synergism |
has subclass | (noun) the Calvinist doctrine that everyone is born in a state of corruption as a result of original sin total depravity |
has subclass | (noun) the Roman Catholic doctrine that the whole substance of the bread and the wine changes into the substance of the body and blood of Christ when consecrated in the Eucharist transubstantiation |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine that all people will eventually be saved universalism |
has subclass | (noun) the theological doctrine that Jesus Christ had no human father; Christians believe that Jesus's birth fulfilled Old Testament prophecies and was attended by miracles; the Nativity is celebrated at Christmas Virgin Birth, Nativity |
has subclass | (noun) the heretical doctrine (associated with the Gnostics) that Jesus had no human body and his sufferings and death on the cross were apparent rather than real Docetism |
has subclass | (noun) a religious orientation advocating gnosis as the way to release a person's spiritual element; considered heresy by Christian churches Gnosticism |
has subclass | (noun) a heretical Zoroastrian doctrine holding that Zurvan was the ultimate source of the universe and that both Ahura Mazda and Ahriman were Zurvan's offspring Zurvanism |