Sentences with phrase «known for its orthodoxy»

But that is not true at a Catholic event, a FAITH Movement gathering, a pro-life conference, a get - together at a major Catholic venue known for its orthodoxy and devotion.

Not exact matches

In a sector known for long timelines and fervent secrecy, Bioastra has embraced a research and development orthodoxy that allows it to quickly market its inventions.
Once the mind has â $ œconsented to be orthodoxâ $, then it becomes â $ œnarrow, rigid, mercenary, morally corrupt, and vengeful against dissenters.â $ He says this is the nature of orthodoxy: â $ œone who presumes to know the truth does not look for itâ $ (p. 174).
We know that it is virtually impossible for anyone who dissents from sexual orthodoxies to be hired as a professor.
(No, this isn't a test for orthodoxy.
Rather, to take this radically dissident line of departure from the orthodoxy of the day is to speak what, for many blacks, is a truth inherited from our ancestors, a truth we know as a result of our awareness of our history coming out of slavery, a truth reflected in the ambiguous but great legacy of Booker T. Washington.
Along the way, Protestants demonstrated what Catholics already knew» namely, that the Bible never stands alone but, even in its translation, is situated in a web of relationships that involve the authority of church leaders and questions about who has responsibility for determining orthodoxy.
Though orthodox in his doctrinal thinking, Cardinal Bertone is known as a genial man with a human touch» (for The Guardian, it seems, geniality and orthodoxy are not commonly seen together).
No longer will doctrinal statements be focused on «truths to believe» as a litmus test for orthodoxy.
6 For Bushnell essentially to adopt the historic heresy known as patripassionism — namely, that the Father in the Trinity also suffered when Christ was crucified — opened the way to a fresh understanding of what a new orthodoxy might be able to embrace.
He says this is the nature of orthodoxy: â $ œone who presumes to know the truth does not look for itâ $.
Once the mind has â $ œconsented to be orthodoxâ $, then it becomes â $ œnarrow, rigid, mercenary, morally corrupt, and vengeful against dissenters.â $ He says this is the nature of orthodoxy: â $ œone who presumes to know the truth does not look for itâ $.
Naturally we don't know how the planning officers vote although it is likely that Socialism is the prevailing orthodoxy - just as it would be, for instance, among the social workers of Cambridgeshire County Council where Labour have three of the 69 councillors.
«I know he's talking to people around New York and trying to develop his own message, which is very much against the grain for traditional Republican orthodoxy
By then, though, the damage was done, and she would be known for the rest of her life as an ex-abstractionist, an apostate from the orthodoxies of the critics Meyer Shapiro and Clement Greenberg.
His comments here and elsewhere over time make clear that his skepticism is informed not by his command of the evidence and of the scientific method as it is practiced by actual scientists, but by his disdain for «orthodoxy» and his resentment at being told he doesn't know what he's talking about.
For those who question the orthodoxy, AGW is not (yet) unequivocal, and its signal is not (yet) discernible, and its consequences are not (yet) known to be dangerous, and so on.
It used to be conservatives who stood for orthodoxies; traditions, and «knowing one's place» in natural and social orders.
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