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Religious text

Index Religious text

Religious texts (also known as scripture, or scriptures, from the Latin scriptura, meaning "writing") are texts which religious traditions consider to be central to their practice or beliefs. [1]

1177 relations: A Divine Looking-Glass, A Time to Mourn, A. E. Inbanathan, Aaron Chorin, A∴A∴, Abba Mari, Abbahu, Abelians, Abhidhamma Pitaka, Abraham Yachini, Abrahamic religions, Abugida, Acacians, Academic study of new religious movements, Acceptance of evolution by religious groups, Act for the Advancement of True Religion, Ad-Dharmi, Adalbert of Spalding, Adam Possamai, Adam-ondi-Ahman, Adikesava Perumal temple, Sriperumpudur, African Rite, Agricultural spiritualism, Akilathirattu Ammanai, Al-Hadi ila'l-Haqq Yahya, Alain Kirili, Albert Decourtray, Albert Vanhoye, Alexander McCaul, Alfred Loisy, Algis Uždavinys, Altar rails, Alternate history, Ambrosian chant, American Association of Christian Colleges and Seminaries, Amritbani Guru Ravidass Ji, Amulet, Amyraldism, Anagoge, Analects, Anatomy of Criticism, Ancient Greek literature, And/or, Andrew Wilson (academic), Andronicus ben Meshullam, Anglican Marian theology, Anglicanism, Anne Askew, Annihilationism, António Gonçalves de Bandarra, ..., Anthem, Anthony Maas, Anti-paganism influenced by Saint Ambrose, Antiochus of Palestine, Antoni Lange, Antonia Tanini Pulci, Antonio Grassi, Aonio Paleario, Aphian, Aphorism, Apocalypse of Abraham, Apocalypse of Zephaniah, Apophatic theology, Apostle, Apparition, Arab studies, Architecture of cathedrals and great churches, Architecture of Karnataka, Arden Anglican School, Arethas of Caesarea, Argula von Grumbach, Arnold Ehrlich, Artemon, Arul Nool, Asceticism in Judaism, Association football culture, Association of Christian Schools International, Association of Christians in Student Development, At the Feet of the Master, Atto of Vercelli, Audomar, August Friedrich Gfrörer, Augustana Catholic Church, Augustine of Alfeld, Aurora (fictional planet), Australian Hymn Book, Autobiography of a Yogi, Avesta, Ayyavazhi mythology, Ayyavazhi religious studies, Ayyavazhi rituals, Áurea of San Millán, Éditions du Cerf, Étienne Dolet, Āgama (Hinduism), Śruti, Bachelor of Religious Education, Bad Day on the Block, Bagrut certificate, Bahá'í House of Worship, Bahá'í literature, Bahá'í teachings, Balmiki sect, Baptist Evangelical Association of Madagascar, Barbatus of Benevento, Baron d'Holbach, Bartolini Salimbeni Annunciation, Bede, Bede Griffiths, Beilby Porteus, Bell, book, and candle, Bema, Benedict the Moor, Benjamin Fish Austin, Berea (Bible), Bhai Mani Singh, Bhavsagar Granth, Bible, Bible Analyzer, Bible society, Bible translations into Ilocano, Bible translations into Ukrainian, Biblical and Quranic narratives, Biblical archaeology, Biblical canon, Biblical garden, Biblical hermeneutics, Biblical inerrancy, Biblical inspiration, Biblical poetry, Bishop in the Catholic Church, Blaise Gisbert, Blessing of same-sex unions in Christian churches, Bloomingdale Church, Book censorship, Book of Abraham, Book of Commandments, Book of Enoch, Book of Joshua, Book of Mormon, Book of Nature, Book of the Law of the Lord, Book of the Nine Rocks, Book of Veles, Boston Corbett, Braulio Rodríguez Plaza, Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church, Bread of Life Ministries International, Brevitas et facilitas, Brihad Bhagavatamrita, Bruno (bishop of Segni), Buddhist ethics, Buffyverse canon, Buton Rinchen Drub, Buyruk (Shabak), C. Michael Smith, Cades Cove, Caesarea in Palaestina (diocese), Caesarius of Arles, Canadian Badlands Passion Play, Candomblé, Canon, Canon (fiction), Canonical hours, Capernaum Church, Carlo Maria Martini, Carlo Vercellone, Carolingian Renaissance, Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance, Cathedral, Cathedral High School (Springfield, Massachusetts), Cathedral of Saint Joseph (Jefferson City, Missouri), Cathedral school, Catholic Christian Outreach, Catholic Church and evolution, Catholic Church and science, Catholic moral theology, Catholic University of America, Cave of Treasures, Celestin Tomić, Centennial Park group, Cezoram, Ch. Victor Moses, Chad of Mercia, Chamling language, Chandraseniya Kayastha Prabhu, Chant, Characters in the Ramayana, Charles Augustus Briggs, Charles Fillmore (Unity Church), Charles H. Welch, Charleston church shooting, Children's literature, Chinese salvationist religions, Choose Life, Uvacharta Bachayim, Christ Catholic Church (Pruter), Christian biblical canons, Christian Classics Ethereal Library, Christian denomination, Christian library, Christian naturism, Christian poetry, Christian theology, Christian Topography, Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich, Christianity and Islam, Christianity and Judaism, Christianity Explored, Christianity in Angola, Christianity in Hong Kong, Christianity in the 19th century, Christianity in the 1st century, Christianity in the 2nd century, Christianity in the 9th century, Christman Genipperteinga, Christoph Schrempf, Christopher Wittich, Chronological Bible Storying, Church Army, Church Army Chapel, Blackheath, Church Body of Christ- Filipinista, Church covenant, Church of Pentecost, Church of St Thomas the Apostle, Killinghall, Church order, Church service, Church Slavonic language, Churchmanship, Ciceronianus, Civil religion, Claude Maltret, Claudius Buchanan, Claudius of Turin, Clement of Alexandria, Clergy Letter Project, Colindă, Collegiants, Common (liturgy), Communism, Comparative religion, Confession (religion), Confession of 1967, Congregation Rodeph Shalom (Philadelphia), Consecrated virgin, Contemplata aliis tradere, Continuous revelation, Cornelius Hazart, Council of Trent, Covenant of Bahá'u'lláh, Covenant theology, Craig Winn, Creationism, Creed, Crime and punishment in the Torah, Criticism of religion, Criticism of the Book of Mormon, Crown of Immortality, Croxton Play of the Sacrament, Culture of Iran, Cyriacus the Anchorite, D. H. Th. Vollenhoven, Daily Light on the Daily Path, Daniel B. Towner, Dasam Granth, Daughters of Jesus, Dave Sim, David in Islam, David Pendleton Oakerhater, David Ross Boyd, David Smith (Victorian politician), David Tacey, De doctrina christiana, De mirabilibus sacrae scripturae, De vita libri tres, Dead Space (series), Debt relief, Defence of the True and Catholic Doctrine of the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ, Defensor pacis, Delhi Female Medical Mission, Desadanam, Despatch box, Deuterocanonical books, Dhadi (music), Dhammapada (Easwaran translation), Dhammapada (Radhakrishnan translation), Dictum, Diet of Worms, Discordianism, Dispensation (period), Divine authority, Divine inspiration, Divine law, Divine Word, Divinity (academic discipline), Doctor Faustus (play), Doctrine and Covenants, Doctrine of Exchange, Dogma in the Catholic Church, Donatism, Done by the Forces of Nature, Dravidian architecture, Dravidian folk religion, Dravidian people, Dudley D. Watkins, Dutch Catechism, Dutch Renaissance and Golden Age literature, E. B. Grandin, Early Christianity, Early world maps, Earth in culture, East Freetown, Massachusetts, Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar, Eastern religions, Ebionites, Economy of Salvation, Eddie Long, Edgar Haynes, Edict of Serdica, Edmund Bojanowski, Education in New Brunswick, Edward Perronet, Edward Worsley, Edwin Johnson (historian), Ekasarana Dharma, El Shaddai (song), Elias Higbee, Elijah List, Elizabeth Ann Seton, Emil Brunner, Emma Darwin, Emperor Chongzong of Western Xia, Empire and Communications, Encyclopedia of Mormonism, End time, Engelbert of Admont, England in the Late Middle Ages, England in the Middle Ages, English Dissenters, English Presbyterianism, English Reformation, Enrico Bartoletti, Epistles of Wisdom, Erin Tate, Ernst Fuchs (theologian), Eschatology, Etruscan mythology, Eugendus, Eugene Siler, Eugene V. Gallagher, Eustochium, Evangelical Christian Church in Canada, Evangelical Church of the River Plate, Evangelical Connexion of the Free Church of England, Evangelical Presbyterian Church in England and Wales, Evangelical Reformed Baptist Churches in Italy, Evarist Pinto, Evolution, Exegesis, Existence of God, Expository preaching, Eyes Wide Shut, Faith-based foreign aid, Fasting, Faust, Fürstlich Sächsischer Hofbuchdruckerei zu Altenburg, Fellowship of Vocation, Fellowships of the Remnant, Feminist effects on society, First Baptist Church of Tarrytown, Five Articles of Remonstrance, Five Banis, Fleur-de-lis, Florentine Bechtel, Fnord, Follow the Yellow Brick Road, Foreign Mission School, Foxe's Book of Martyrs, Frances Willard, Francesco Ragonesi, Francis Coster, Francis Ellingwood Abbot, Francis Lambert, Francis Martin (priest), Franconia Mennonite Conference, Francysk Skaryna, Friedrich Kohlrausch (educator), Friedrich Seyler, Fringe science, Fulbert of Chartres, Fulgens corona, Funeral of Pope John Paul II, Future, Gabriel Biel, Gaddala Solomon, Gaels, Gallicanism, Gargi Vachaknavi, Gayaza High School, Gaz (candy), Ge Chaofu, General revelation, Genesis Apocryphon, Geneva gown, George Campbell (minister), George H. Lang, George Horton, George M. Stratton, George Peele, George Tyrrell, Gerard of Toul, Giacomo Maria Airoli, Giles of Viterbo, Giocondo Pio Lorgna, Giovanni Andrea Cortese, Giovanni Battista Rinuccini, Giovanni Battista Tolomei, Giuseppe Betori, Giuseppe Girotti, Giuseppe Pace, Glasite, Glossary of Hinduism terms, Glossary of Islam, Glossary of spirituality terms, Gnostic texts, God in Sikhism, God in the Age of Science?, God Speaks, Gojong of Goryeo, Gold (color), Golden plates, Good Shepherd (song), Gordon Hall, Grant Hardy, Granthi, Great Lent, Greek Apocalypse of Daniel, Green Lantern: The Animated Series, Green's Literal Translation, Gurmat, H. Dale Jackson, Handbook (LDS Church), Harcharan Singh Longowal, Haridwar in scriptures, Harold H. Buls, Harris Manchester College, Oxford, Haskalah, Have No Fear: The Life of Pope John Paul II, Hélinand of Froidmont, He Lives, Hector Sévin, Henri François d'Aguesseau, Henry Richard Hoisington, Heptaméron, Hermeneutics, Hermetism and other religions, High Point Christian Academy, Hills Sports High School, Hindu iconography, Hindu texts, History of Allahabad, History of Christian theology, History of Christianity, History of Christianity during the Middle Ages, History of hermeneutics, History of India, History of music in the biblical period, History of Pakistan, History of Patna, History of religion, History of religious Jewish music, History of Sikhism, History of the Jews in Spain, History of the Puritans in North America, History of the Puritans under King Charles I, History of Unitarianism, Holy Emperor Guan's True Scripture to Awaken the World, Holy Name Cathedral (Chicago), Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity, Homiletic and Pastoral Review, Homosexuality and religion, Homosexuality and the Anglican Communion, Homosexuality and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Homosexuality in society, Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui, Horace Newton, Huangdi Yinfujing, Hugh Nibley, Humani generis, Humani generis unitas, Humanism in France, Hungarian Evangelical Fellowship, Hungarians in Venezuela, I Gusti Putu Phalgunadi, Iconoclasm, Ignacy Kłopotowski, Ignatius von Weitenauer, Igor Sibaldi, Imitation of God, Immaculate Conception, Immanence, Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise, Impassibility, Imperial Library of Constantinople, Imprecatory Psalms, Incident at Antioch, Inclusiveness and exclusivity in Ayyavazhi, Index of Islam-related articles, Index of Jainism-related articles, Index of law articles, Index of religion-related articles, Indian calligraphy, Indian religions, Infallibility of the Church, Inspired Media Entertainment, Institute of the Theology of the Consecrated Life Claretianum, Instituut voor Doven, International Order of St. Luke the Physician, Internet Sacred Text Archive, Into Great Silence, Ioan Bob, Irish Theological Quarterly, Irving Hexham, Isaac Komnenos (brother of Alexios I), Isis Unveiled, Islam and Mormonism, Islamic architecture, Islamic economics, Islamic holy books, Islamic Principlism in Iran, Islamic schools and branches, J. C. Winslow, Jack Miner, Jacob Netsvetov, Jacob van Maerlant, Jacques Bonfrère, Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples, Jainism and Sikhism, Jakob Böhme, Jamaat-e-Islami, James Calvert (missionary), James Clerk Maxwell, James H. Cone, James Peggs, James VI and I, Jan Jacob van Oosterzee, Jan Milíč, Jane Addams, Jean Hani, Jean-Baptiste Pérès, Jeûne genevois, Jerald and Sandra Tanner, Jeremiah Benettis, Jesús Emilio Jaramillo Monsalve, Jesus, Jesus and Mo, Jesus Youth, Jewish mythology, Jewish principles of faith, Jewish skeptics, Jewish studies, Jiba (Tenrikyo), Joan Frances Gormley, Joel D. Heck, Johann Ruchrat von Wesel, Johannes Maccovius, Johannes Oecolampadius, John 20:9, John Adams (mutineer), John Calvin's view of Scripture, John Colet, John Henry Keen, John Howison, John Jewel, John Lennox, John MacHale, John Onaiyekan, John Selden, John the Baptist, Joseph Fitzmyer, Joseph Heinrich Aloysius Gügler, Joseph Lilly, Joseph Smith, Joseph Smith Hypocephalus, Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible, Joseph Smith–Matthew, Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, JQuranTree, Juan Eusebio Nieremberg, Judah ben Barzillai, Judaism's views on Muhammad, Judeo-Christian, Judique, Nova Scotia, June Hunt, Kalama Sutta, Kara (Sikhism), Karaite Judaism, Kemetic Orthodoxy, Kenneth Edward Untener, Kensington System, Kingdom of Aksum, Kirat Mundhum, Kirata, Kitáb-i-Íqán, Knock basilica, Konx om Pax, Krishna Dharma, Krista Branch, Kuberakolam, Kumbhaka, Kundakunda, Kuzari, Ladder of Jacob, Lambeth Conference, Lamech (descendant of Cain), Lamentabili sane exitu, Lashon Hakodesh, Last Roman Emperor, Latter Day Saint movement and engraved metal plates, Latter Rain (post–World War II movement), Law, Lawrence Boadt, Lay brother, Lectern, Lectio continua, Lectio Divina, Lectio Sacra, Lection, Lectionary, Ledger, Les Thanatonautes, Letter to King Henry II, Levi Spaulding, Leviathan (Hobbes book), Lewis Tappan, LGBT history in Spain, LGBT themes in mythology, Life stance, Linguistics and the Book of Mormon, List of academic fields, List of anonymously published works, List of book-based war films (1898–1926 wars), List of book-based war films (wars before 1775), List of book-burning incidents, List of books banned by governments, List of Christian denominations, List of code names in the Doctrine and Covenants, List of deists, List of descriptions of Heaven in Abrahamic scriptures, List of Discordian works, List of fictional books, List of Greek and Latin roots in English/S, List of Hindu texts, List of Indian classical music festivals, List of Latin phrases (V), List of Latin words with English derivatives, List of Latter Day Saint movement topics, List of lingua francas, List of major biblical figures, List of organizations in the Honorverse, List of religions and spiritual traditions, List of religious sites, List of topics characterized as pseudoscience, List of words ending in ology, List of works by Thomas Aquinas, List of writing genres, Listed buildings in Wasdale, Lists of songs, Little Brothers of Jesus, Liturgical year, Lives of the Prophets, Lope de Barrientos, Lotus Temple, Louie Verrecchio, Louis Ellies Dupin, Louis Gabriel Ambroise de Bonald, Ludwig Schläfli, Lutheran scholasticism, Lynn de Silva's theology, Lysergic acid diethylamide, Madonna of the Rose Garden, Magyal Dongkar, Major religious groups, Malik ibn Anas, Mamoni Raisom Goswami, Manmukh, Mantra, Manuel Aurelio Cruz, Maoism, Marathakavalli David, Marcionism, Maria Hack, Marian feast days, Mario di Calasio, Mariology of the Catholic Church, Marjoe Gortner, Mark Twain, Martha Hatfield, Martin Luther, Martynas Mažvydas, Mary Bosanquet Fletcher, Massachusetts School Laws, Master Mahan, Matthias Tanner, Maurice de Sully, Mazhar Mahmood Qurashi, Means of grace, Medieval renaissances, Meivazhi, Meme, Men Above the Law, Mesopotamian myths, Messianic Jewish theology, Messianism, Methodist Church of Great Britain, Methodius of Olympus, Methods of obtaining knowledge, MF Norwegian School of Theology, Michael Gaismair, Michael O'Flanagan, Michael Prior (theologian), Miguel García Cuesta, Mikhail Bakunin, Military Religious Freedom Foundation, Minister (Catholic Church), Minister (Christianity), Miracle, Mishnah, Misogyny, Mladen II Šubić of Bribir, Modern Paganism, Modern understanding of Greek mythology, Mohammad Habash, Mondo (scripture), Mongol invasions of Korea, Moritz von Aberle, Mormon (Book of Mormon prophet), Mormon (word), Mormonism and polygamy, Mormons, Moses, Moses in Islam, Mozarabic chant, Muʿtazila, Muhammad, Muhammad in Islam, Mundhum, Munshibari family of Comilla, Murder of Bernard Darke, Music of China, Music technology, Music technology (mechanical), Muslim, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Myth, Nakayama Miki, Narendra Nath Sen Gupta, Natalie Wong, Natural theology, Nebridius, Neocatechumenal Way, Nephites, Neume, New Apostolic Church, New Jewish Publication Society of America Tanakh, New religious movement, New Testament, New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project, Newtonianism, Newville, Ohio, Neyrangistan, Hirbodistan, Hadokht Nask, Nicholas of Gorran, Nizari, Nomina sacra, Non possumus, Nonconformist Relief Act 1779, NOOMA, Normative principle of worship, Norwegian Mission Alliance, Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution, Nouthetic counseling, Oath, Oath of Allegiance (Canada), Octave (liturgy), Of Prelatical Episcopacy, Of Reformation, Old Church Slavonic in Romania, Old Lutheran Church, Olive Willis, Olmec alternative origin speculations, Open-source religion, Opus Majus, Oral Torah, Ordinalia, Orthodox Lutheran Confessional Conference, Other (philosophy), Otto of Passau, Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church (Pearl City, Hawaii), Outline of Christian theology, Outline of Islam, Outline of religion, Outline of the Book of Mormon, Oxford University Press, Palimpsest, Papal infallibility, Parrobus of Pottole, Partners in Crime (short story collection), Pascual Chávez Villanueva, Patheos, Paul Cuffee, Paul VI High School, Paul Y. Hoskisson, Pāli Canon, Pearl of Great Price (Mormonism), Pedro de Morales, Pelagianism, Peresopnytsia Gospel, Perfection, Pericope, Peter Abelard, Peter Annet, Peter W. Ochs, Petrus Comestor, Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse, Philippine literature in Spanish, Philosophical skepticism, Phoenix Affirmations, Pierantonio Tremolada, Pierre Bersuire, Pietro La Fontaine, Pitcairn Islanders, Pitcairn Islands, PL Kyodan, Plane (esotericism), Platform Sutra, Plomin, Polish–Swedish union, Politics Drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture, Polyglot (book), Polytheism, Pomeroy Tucker, Pontifical Biblical Institute, Pope Leo I, Pope Peter I of Alexandria, Pratap Singh Giani, Prayer book, Prayer for the dead, Prayer, meditation and contemplation in Christianity, Prayers for Bobby, Pre-Adamite, Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact theories, Precept, Presbyterian Church in Ireland, Presbyterian Church of Brazil, Presuppositional apologetics, Priest, Primary source, Principia Discordia, Prokeimenon, Prophets and messengers in Islam, Protestantism, Providentissimus Deus, Prussian Union of Churches, Pulcheria, Pulpit, Purgatory, Pyramid Texts, Qedarite, Qila Sobha Singh, Quenya, Quran, Quranic createdness, Quranism, Race and appearance of Jesus, Raimundo Diosdado Caballero, Ram Kinkar Upadhyay, Ramdev, Ranganatha, Ranganathaswamy Temple, Srirangam, Ranter, Ranulf Higden, Rao (Greyhawk), Ratio Studiorum, Ratisbonne Monastery, Ratzinger Foundation, Reader (liturgy), Reccared I, Red letter edition, Redcap, Redemptive-historical preaching, Reginald Pecock, Regulative principle of worship, Religion, Religion and video games, Religion in Futurama, Religion in Indonesia, Religion in Medieval England, Religion in Sweden, Religious Jewish music, Religious offense, Religious satire, Religious syncretism, Religious text, Religious values, Religious views of Charles Darwin, Religious views on organ donation, Remigius of Auxerre, René Guénon, Repentance, Republic, Restoration Church of Jesus Christ, Restoration Movement, Resurrection, Revelation, Revelation 12 sign prophecy, Revival Centres International, Richard Archdekin, Richard Graves (theologian), Richard N. 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Millet, Robert Sarah, Robert the Bruce, Roman Catholic Diocese of Pescia, Roman Catholic Diocese of Valle de Chalco, Roman mythology, Roman Sebastian Zängerle, Ronin Publishing, Roozahang, Russian Orthodox bell ringing, Sacred, Sacred language, Sacred Space (website), Sacred tradition, Sahih Al-Bukhari: The Early Years of Islam, Saint Andrew's Junior College, Saint Austin Press, Sallie McFague, Samaritan Pentateuch, Samuel Best, Samuel Ruiz, Sanat Kumara, Sanctification, Sanghata Sutra, Santa Cruz del Quiché, Santuario del Santo Cristo, Sarah Crosby, Sarah Newcomb Merrick, Sarbat da bhala, Satnam, Satsangi, Scientific foreknowledge in sacred texts, Scott Schultz (producer), Scripture (disambiguation), Sea of Faith (TV series), Second Book of Enoch, Second Temple Judaism, Seminary, Seminary of the Southwest, Sensus fidelium, Sephardi Jews, Sergei Nikolaevich Trubetskoy, Sermons of Jonathan Swift, Sesenebnef, Seth, Seven churches of Asia, Shabda, Shikasta, Shimon ben Lakish, Shiv shishya, Siddhanta Shikhamani, Sigo, Sikh discipline, Sikh scriptures, Singing Christmas Tree, Sir William Lawrence, 1st Baronet, Sirius, Social effects of evolutionary theory, Societal attitudes toward homosexuality, Society of Science, Letters and Art, Solomon ben Abraham of Montpellier, Solomon Spalding, Somatic theory, Some Kind of Zombie, Song of Ascents, Sortes Sanctorum, Sources of sharia, South High School (Salt Lake City), Special revelation, Spiritual practice, Spirituali, Spirituality, Springfield Presbytery, Sri Lanka, St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney, St Joseph's College, Edmonton, St Mary's Church, Nantwich, St. Germain (Theosophy), Standard Thai Astrology Manual, Standard Tibetan, Standard works, Stations of the Resurrection, Strangers No Longer, Stromata, Sulpitius the Pious, Sun Myung Moon, Sunday School (LDS Church), Supernatural, Supplication against the Ordinaries, Susanna Rowson, Swami Nikhilananda, Swiss minaret referendum, 2009, Sydney Bahá'í Temple, Sylvester Gozzolini, Symeon the New Theologian, Systematic theology, Tablet (religious), Tad Williams, Tages, Taizé - Music of Unity and Peace, Taizé Community, Talmud Torah, Talmudical hermeneutics, Taltoli Jama Mosque, Tao Hongjing, Taoism, Tarabai Shinde, Tazkirul Quran, Teachings and impacts of Ayyavazhi, Tell Mar Elias, Terma (religion), Text, Textual criticism, Thích Thanh Từ, The 23rd Psalm, The Abolition of Britain, The Cartoon History of the Universe, The Christ Myth, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, The Courts of Chaos, The Esoteric Character of the Gospels, The Female Eunuch, The Form of Preaching, The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, The Holocaust in Latvia, The Joseph Smith Papers, The Koran Interpreted, The Lamentation of a Sinner, The Little Red Hen, The Lord's Ranch, The Message of The Qur'an, The Nine Billion Names of God, The Reason of Church-Government Urged against Prelaty, The Salvation Army, The Satanic Bible, The Trouble with Islam Today, The Vision to the Youth Bartholomew, The Visual Bible: Acts, The Voice of Human Justice, The Word of the Lord, Theological hermeneutics, Theological Library of Caesarea Maritima, Theological virtues, Third Council of Toledo, Thirty-nine Articles, Thomas Aquinas, Thomas Greenhill (surgeon), Thomas Newberry, Thomas of Ireland, Thomas Woolston, Thomism, Three hares, Tibet, Tibetan Buddhist canon, Tibetan culture, Timeline of Christian missions, Timeline of LGBT history, Tishbe, Titlo, Together in Song, Tommaso Martinelli, Tractatus Theologico-Politicus, Translation, Tree of life vision, Tremont, Tennessee, True Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite), True Jesus Church, Tudwal, Two Treatises of Government, Two-gospel hypothesis, Tzitzak, Ukrainian Bible Society, Unfinished creative work, Unfulfilled Christian religious predictions, Unification Church, Uniform title, Unitarianism, United Arab Emirates Anti-Discrimination Law, Unity of the Brethren, Universal resurrection, Universidad San Anselmo de Canterbury, University of Religions and Denominations, University of Sargodha, Uppsala Synod, Upton Bishop, Usury, Ut unum sint, Vampire Noir, Vanessa Zoltan, Vendetta Red, Veneration of Mary in the Catholic Church, Venneesan, Victoria, Lady Welby, Victorinus of Pettau, Views on Ramakrishna, Villana de' Botti, Vinaya Pitaka, Vincent Strambi, Vipera berus, Vishrava, Viswamaanava, Vittorio Trancanelli, Vladimir Lenin, Voree plates, Voree, Wisconsin, Vulgar Latin, W. T. Stead, War against Islam conspiracy theory, War College (The Salvation Army), Waraka ibn Nawfal, Wartburg Theological Seminary, Wedding, Wells Theological College, Wesleyan Reform Union, Whitinsville Christian School, Willem Hessels van Est, William Alabaster, William Brodie Gurney, William Cameron Townsend, William Dewsbury, William Edwy Vine, William Kirby (entomologist), William M'Culloch, William Meninger, Wolves in folklore, religion and mythology, Women in the Catholic Church, Women's suffrage, Word of God, Wotansvolk, Writ (disambiguation), Writer, Writers of Guru Granth Sahib, Y Beibl cyssegr-lan, Yahweh, Yazdânism, Yazidi Book of Revelation, Yazidis, Yehuda Glantz, Yiddish literature, Yoruba religion, Yuquan Shenxiu, Zakir Naik, Zekr (software), Zevs Cosmos, Zohar Amar, Zoroastrianism, Zwickau prophets, 1250s, 1251, 13th century in literature, 19 Kids and Counting, 1978 Revelation on Priesthood, 1988 Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church, 2 Baruch, 2009 ELCA Churchwide Assembly, 494, 754. Expand index (1127 more) »

A Divine Looking-Glass

A Divine Looking-Glass was written and first published in 1656 by John Reeve, an English prophet.

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A Time to Mourn

A Time to Mourn is the third album by Paramaecium.

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A. E. Inbanathan

A.

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Aaron Chorin

Aaron Chorin (אהרן חארין; August 3, 1766August 24, 1844) was a Hungarian rabbi and pioneer of early religious reform.

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A∴A∴

The A∴A∴ is a spiritual organization described in 1907 by occultist Aleister Crowley.

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Abba Mari

Abba Mari ben Moses ben Joseph, was a Provençal rabbi, born at Lunel, near Montpellier, towards the end of the 13th century.

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Abbahu

Abbahu (אבהו) was a Jewish Talmudist, known as an amora, who lived in the Land of Israel, of the 3rd amoraic generation (about 279-320), sometimes cited as R. Abbahu of Caesarea (Ḳisrin).

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Abelians

Abelians (Abelonii; also Abelites, Abeloites or Abelonians) were a Christian sect that sprang up in the 4th century in the country side near Hippo Regius in north Africa during the reign of Arcadius.

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Abhidhamma Pitaka

The Abhidhamma Pitaka (Pali; English: Basket of Higher Doctrine) is the last of the three pitakas (Pali for "baskets") constituting the Pali Canon, the scriptures of Theravāda Buddhism.

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Abraham Yachini

Abraham Yachini (Heb: אברהם יכיני; also transliterated as Abraham Yakhini, or Abraham ha-Yakini; 1611-1682) was one of the chief agitators in the Sabbatean movement, the son of Pethahiah of Constantinople.

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Abrahamic religions

The Abrahamic religions, also referred to collectively as Abrahamism, are a group of Semitic-originated religious communities of faith that claim descent from the practices of the ancient Israelites and the worship of the God of Abraham.

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Abugida

An abugida (from Ge'ez: አቡጊዳ ’abugida), or alphasyllabary, is a segmental writing system in which consonant–vowel sequences are written as a unit: each unit is based on a consonant letter, and vowel notation is secondary.

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Acacians

The Acacians, also known as the Homoeans, were an Arian sect which first emerged into distinctness as an ecclesiastical party some time before the convocation of the joint synods of Rimini and Seleucia Isauria in 359.

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Academic study of new religious movements

The academic study of new religious movements is known as new religions studies' (NRS).

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Acceptance of evolution by religious groups

Although biological evolution has been vocally opposed by some religious groups, many other groups accept the scientific position, sometimes with additions to allow for theological considerations.

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Act for the Advancement of True Religion

The Act for the Advancement of True Religion (34 & 35 Henry VIII, c. 1) was an Act passed by the Parliament of England on 12 May 1543.

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Ad-Dharmi

The Ad-Dharmi is a Dalit Scheduled Caste community and now a Chamar Sub-caste found in the state of Punjab in India.

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Adalbert of Spalding

Adalbert of Spalding was a supposed English theologian writer identified by Bale and Pitts, and discussed at length in the 1885 Dictionary of National Biography (DNB).

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Adam Possamai

Adam Possamai is a sociologist and novelist born in Belgium and living in Australia.

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Adam-ondi-Ahman

Adam-ondi-Ahman (sometimes clipped to Diahman) is a historic site in Daviess County, Missouri, about five miles south of Jameson.

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Adikesava Perumal temple, Sriperumpudur

Adi Kesava Temple (also called Ramanujar Temple) is dedicated to Hindu god Vishnu located in Sriperumbudur, Kanchipuram district, in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

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African Rite

In the history of Christianity, the African Rite refers to a now defunct Catholic, Western liturgical rite, and is considered a development or possibly a local use of the primitive Roman Rite.

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Agricultural spiritualism

Agricultural spiritualism or the Spirit of Agriculture refers to the idea that the concepts of food production and consumption and the essential spiritual nature of humanity are linked.

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Akilathirattu Ammanai

Akilathirattu Ammanai (அகிலத்திரட்டு அம்மானை; akilam ("world"), thirattu ("collection"), ammanai ("ballad")), also called Thiru Edu ("venerable book"), is the main religious text of the Tamil belief system Ayyavazhi.

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Al-Hadi ila'l-Haqq Yahya

Al-Hadi ila’l-Haqq Yahya (859 – August 19, 911) was a religious and political leader on the Arabian Peninsula.

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Alain Kirili

Alain Kirili (born in 1946) is a sculptor.

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Albert Decourtray

Albert Florent Augustin Decourtray S.T.D. (9 April 1923 – 16 September 1994) was a French Roman Catholic Cardinal and Archbishop of Lyon.

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Albert Vanhoye

Albert Vanhoye, SJ (born 24 July 1923) is a priest of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits) and an exegete.

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Alexander McCaul

Rev Alexander McCaul (May 16, 1799 – November 13, 1863) was an Irish Hebraist and missionary to the Jews.

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Alfred Loisy

Alfred Firmin Loisy (28 February 1857, Ambrières, Marne1 June 1940, Ceffonds, Haute-Marne) was a French Roman Catholic priest, professor and theologian generally credited as a founder of Biblical Modernism in the Roman Catholic Church.

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Algis Uždavinys

Algis Uždavinys (1962–2010) was a prolific Lithuanian philosopher and scholar.

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Altar rails

The altar rail (also known as a communion rail or chancel rail) is a low barrier, sometimes ornate and usually made of stone, wood or metal in some combination, delimiting the chancel or the sanctuary and altar in a church, from the nave and other parts that contain the congregation.

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Alternate history

Alternate history or alternative history (Commonwealth English), sometimes abbreviated as AH, is a genre of fiction consisting of stories in which one or more historical events occur differently.

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Ambrosian chant

Ambrosian chant (also known as Milanese chant) is the liturgical plainchant repertory of the Ambrosian rite of the Roman Catholic Church, related to but distinct from Gregorian chant.

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American Association of Christian Colleges and Seminaries

The American Association of Christian Colleges and Seminaries, Inc. is an organization of Bible colleges and Christian universities and seminaries in the continental United States and Puerto Rico.

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Amritbani Guru Ravidass Ji

Amritbani Guru Ravidass Ji is the holy book of the Ravidassia religion.

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Amulet

An amulet is an object that is typically worn on one's person, that some people believe has the magical or miraculous power to protect its holder, either to protect them in general or to protect them from some specific thing; it is often also used as an ornament though that may not be the intended purpose of it.

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Amyraldism

Amyraldism (sometimes Amyraldianism) is also known as the School of Saumur, post redemptionism, moderate Calvinism, four-point Calvinism, or hypothetical universalism (though it is in fact one of several hypothetical universalist systems).

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Anagoge

Anagoge (ἀναγωγή), sometimes spelled anagogy, is a Greek word suggesting a "climb" or "ascent" upwards.

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Analects

The Analects (Old Chinese: *run ŋ(r)aʔ), also known as the Analects of Confucius, is a collection of sayings and ideas attributed to the Chinese philosopher Confucius and his contemporaries, traditionally believed to have been compiled and written by Confucius's followers.

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Anatomy of Criticism

Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays (Princeton University Press, 1957) is a book by Canadian literary critic and theorist, Northrop Frye, which attempts to formulate an overall view of the scope, theory, principles, and techniques of literary criticism derived exclusively from literature.

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Ancient Greek literature

Ancient Greek literature refers to literature written in the Ancient Greek language from the earliest texts until the time of the Byzantine Empire.

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And/or

And/or (also and or) is a grammatical conjunction used to indicate that one or more of the cases it connects may occur.

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Andrew Wilson (academic)

Andrew Wilson (born December 26, 1950), full name Andrew Murray Wilson, is the Director of Scriptural Research Retrieved February 19, 2012 and Professor of Scriptural Studies of the Unification Theological Seminary (UTS), the main seminary of the international Unification Church.

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Andronicus ben Meshullam

Andronicus ben Meshullam, a Jewish scholar of the 2nd century BCE.

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Anglican Marian theology

Anglican Marian theology is the summation of the doctrines and beliefs of Anglicanism concerning the Blessed Virgin Mary.

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Anglicanism

Anglicanism is a Western Christian tradition that evolved out of the practices, liturgy and identity of the Church of England following the Protestant Reformation.

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Anne Askew

Anne Askew (née Ayscough, Ascue; married name Anne Kyme; 152116 July 1546) was an English writer, poet, and Protestant martyr who was condemned as a heretic in England in the reign of Henry VIII of England.

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Annihilationism

Annihilationism (also known as extinctionism or destructionism) is a belief that after the final judgment some human beings and all fallen angels (all of the damned) will be totally destroyed so as to not exist, or that their consciousness will be extinguished, rather than suffer everlasting torment in hell (often synonymized with the lake of fire).

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António Gonçalves de Bandarra

António Gonçalves Annes Bandarra or Gonçalo Annes Bandarra (Trancoso, 1500 – Trancoso, 1556) was a Portuguese writer.

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Anthem

An anthem is a musical composition of celebration, usually used as a symbol for a distinct group, particularly the national anthems of countries.

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Anthony Maas

Anthony John Maas (1859–1927) was a noted Catholic exegete, or writer of critical interpretation of scripture.

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Anti-paganism influenced by Saint Ambrose

Saint Ambrose influenced the anti-paganism policy of several late Roman emperors including Gratian, Valentinian II and Theodosius I. Under the influence of Saint Ambrose, Theodosius issued, in the year 391, the "Theodosian decrees," a declaration of war on paganism, and the Altar of Victory was removed by Gratian.

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Antiochus of Palestine

Antiochus of Palestine, also known as Antiochus the Monk, was a 7th-century monk and an author of the Pandektes, a collection of moral sentences.

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Antoni Lange

Antoni Lange (1863 – 17 March 1929) was a Polish poet, philosopher, polyglot (15 languages), writer, novelist, science-writer, reporter and translator.

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Antonia Tanini Pulci

Antonia Tanini Pulci (1452/54 – 1501) was an Italian playwright whose works were published in several editions in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.

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Antonio Grassi

Blessed Antonio Grassi (13 November 1592 - 13 December 1671), born Vincenzo Grassi, was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and a professed member of the Oratorians.

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Aonio Paleario

Aonio Paleario (c. 1500July 3, 1570) was an Italian Christian termed a reformer.

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Aphian

Saint Aphian (Apphian, Apian, Appian, Amphianus, Amphian; and Amfiano) is venerated as a martyr by the Catholic Church and by the Eastern Orthodox Church.

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Aphorism

An aphorism (from Greek ἀφορισμός: aphorismos, denoting "delimitation", "distinction", and "definition") is a concise, terse, laconic, and/or memorable expression of a general truth or principle.

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Apocalypse of Abraham

The Apocalypse of Abraham is a pseudepigraphic work (a text whose claimed authorship is uncertain) based on the Old Testament.

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Apocalypse of Zephaniah

The Apocalypse of Zephaniah (or Apocalypse of Sophonias) is an 1st-century pseudepigraphic Jewish text attributed to the Biblical Zephaniah and so associated with the Old Testament, but not regarded as scripture by Jews or any Christian group.

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Apophatic theology

Apophatic theology, also known as negative theology, is a form of theological thinking and religious practice which attempts to approach God, the Divine, by negation, to speak only in terms of what may not be said about the perfect goodness that is God.

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Apostle

An apostle, in its most literal sense, is an emissary, from Greek ἀπόστολος (apóstolos), literally "one who is sent off", from the verb ἀποστέλλειν (apostéllein), "to send off".

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Apparition

Generally, an apparition is an instance of something's appearing, i.e. being seen.

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Arab studies

Arab studies or Arabic studies is an academic discipline centered on the study of Arabs and Arab World.

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Architecture of cathedrals and great churches

The architecture of cathedrals, basilicas and abbey churches is characterised by the buildings' large scale and follows one of several branching traditions of form, function and style that all ultimately derive from the Early Christian architectural traditions established in the Constantinian period.

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Architecture of Karnataka

The antiquity of Architecture of Karnataka can be traced to its southern Neolithic and early Iron Age, Having witnessed the architectural ideological and utilitarian transformation from shelter- ritual- religion.

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Arden Anglican School

Arden Anglican School is an independent, Anglican, co-educational day school, located in Beecroft and Epping, both north-western suburbs of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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Arethas of Caesarea

Arethas of Caesarea (Ἀρέθας; born c. 860 AD) was Archbishop of Caesarea Mazaca in Cappadocia (modern Kayseri, Turkey) early in the 10th century, and is considered one of the most scholarly theologians of the Greek Orthodox Church.

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Argula von Grumbach

Argula von Grumbach née von Stauff (1492-c. 1554) was a Bavarian writer and noblewoman who, starting in the early 1520s, became involved in the Protestant Reformation debates going on in Germany.

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Arnold Ehrlich

Arnold Bogumil Ehrlich (15 January 1848 in Włodawa, Poland – November 1919 in New Rochelle, New York) was a scholar of bible and rabbinics whose work spanned the latter part of the 19th and the early 20th century.

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Artemon

Artemon (fl. c. 230 AD), a prominent Christian teacher in Rome, who held Adoptionist, or Nontrinitarian views.

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Arul Nool

The Arul Nool is a supplement to the Akilattirattu Ammanai, and is likewise considered a holy scripture of Ayyavazhi.

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Asceticism in Judaism

Asceticism is a term derived from the Greek verb ἀσκέω, meaning "to practise strenuously," "to exercise." Athletes were therefore said to go through ascetic training, and to be ascetics.

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Association football culture

Association football culture refers to the cultural aspects surrounding the game of association football.

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Association of Christian Schools International

The Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI) is an association of evangelical Protestant Christian schools.

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Association of Christians in Student Development

The Association of Christians in Student Development (ACSD) is a global organization that "provide opportunities for the integration of Scripture and the Christian faith in the Student Development profession." ACSD's work with Christians at institutions around the world seeks to support and equip student development professionals through networking and professional development.

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At the Feet of the Master

is a book attributed to Jiddu Krishnamurti (18951986), authored when he was fourteen years old.

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Atto of Vercelli

Atto of Vercelli or Atto II (885-961) was a Lombard who became bishop of Vercelli in 924.

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Audomar

Saint Audomar (died c. 670), better known as Saint Omer, was a Burgundy-born bishop of Thérouanne, after whom nearby Saint-Omer in northern France was named.

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August Friedrich Gfrörer

August Friedrich Gfrörer (5 March 18036 July 1861) was a German historian.

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Augustana Catholic Church

The Augustana Catholic Church (ACC), formerly the Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church (ALCC) and the Evangelical Community Church-Lutheran (ECCL), is an American church in the Lutheran Evangelical Catholic tradition.

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Augustine of Alfeld

Augustine of Alfeld (1480 – c. 1535) was a teacher and Minister Provincial of the Franciscan Order in Saxony, who was opposed to Martin Luther on the question of papal authority.

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Aurora (fictional planet)

Aurora is a fictional planet in Isaac Asimov's ''Robot'' series.

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Australian Hymn Book

The Australian Hymn Book was published in 1977, and was the culmination of almost ten years' work by an ecumenical committee, chaired by A. Harold Wood, intent on producing a new, contemporary and inclusive hymn book that could be used in worship by the varied Christian congregations across Australia.

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Autobiography of a Yogi

Autobiography of a Yogi is an autobiography of Paramahansa Yogananda (January 5, 1893–March 7, 1952) first published in 1946.

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Avesta

The Avesta is the primary collection of religious texts of Zoroastrianism, composed in the otherwise unrecorded Avestan language.

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Ayyavazhi mythology

Ayyavazhi mythology is the mythology of the growing South Indian religious faith and a sect of Hinduism known as Ayyavazhi.

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Ayyavazhi religious studies

The religious studies of Ayyavazhi are based primarily on the Ayyavazhi scriptures.

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Ayyavazhi rituals

Ayyavazhi rituals are the religious practices prevalent among the followers of Ayyavazhi.

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Áurea of San Millán

Saint Aurea or Oria (from the golden) (1043-1070), was a Spanish anchorite saint attached to the Monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla, in the Spanish Province of La Rioja (Europe).

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Éditions du Cerf

Éditions du Cerf (French: "Editions of the Deer") is a French publishing house specializing in religious books.

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Étienne Dolet

Étienne Dolet (3 August 1509 – 3 August 1546) was a French scholar, translator and printer.

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Āgama (Hinduism)

The Agamas (Devanagari: आगम, IAST) are a collection of scriptures of several Hindu devotional schools.

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Śruti

Shruti or Shruthi (श्रुति;; IPA/Sanskrit) in Sanskrit means "that which is heard" and refers to the body of most authoritative, ancient religious texts comprising the central canon of Hinduism.

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Bachelor of Religious Education

The Bachelor of Religious Education, or BRE, or B.R.E. is an undergraduate degree.

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Bad Day on the Block

Bad Day on the Block is a 1997 American psychological thriller film directed by Craig R. Baxley.

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Bagrut certificate

Te'udat Bagrut is a certificate which attests that a student has successfully passed Israel's high school matriculation examination.

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Bahá'í House of Worship

A Bahá'í House of Worship, sometimes referred to by the name of mašriqu-l-'aḏkār (مشرق اﻻذكار), an Arabic phrase meaning "Dawning-place of the remembrances of God", is the designation of a place of worship, or temple, of the Bahá'í Faith.

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Bahá'í literature

Bahá'í literature, like the literature of many religions, covers a variety of topics and forms, including scripture and inspiration, interpretation, history and biography, introduction and study materials, and apologia.

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Bahá'í teachings

The Bahá'í teachings represent a considerable number of theological, social, and spiritual ideas that were established in the Bahá'í Faith by Bahá'u'lláh, the founder of the religion, and clarified by successive leaders including `Abdu'l-Bahá, Bahá'u'lláh's son, and Shoghi Effendi, `Abdu'l-Bahá's grandson.

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Balmiki sect

Balmiki is a Hindu sect that worships the sage Valmiki as their ancestor and god.

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Baptist Evangelical Association of Madagascar

The Baptist Evangelical Association of Madagascar is a fellowship of evangelical Baptist churches in Madagascar.

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Barbatus of Benevento

Saint Barbatus of Benevento (San Barbato) (c. 610 – February 19, 682), also known as Barbas, was a bishop of Benevento from 663 to 682.

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Baron d'Holbach

Paul-Henri Thiry, Baron d'Holbach, was a French-German author, philosopher, encyclopedist and prominent figure in the French Enlightenment.

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Bartolini Salimbeni Annunciation

The Bartolini Salimbeni Annunciation (Italian: Annunciazione Bartolini Salimbeni) is a painting by the Italian Gothic painter Lorenzo Monaco, completed just before his death (1420–1424) and housed in the Bartolini Salimbeni Chapel of the church of Santa Trinita, Florence, Italy.

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Bede

Bede (italic; 672/3 – 26 May 735), also known as Saint Bede, Venerable Bede, and Bede the Venerable (Bēda Venerābilis), was an English Benedictine monk at the monastery of St.

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Bede Griffiths

Bede Griffiths OSB Cam (17 December 1906 – 13 May 1993), born Alan Richard Griffiths and also known by the end of his life as Swami Dayananda ("bliss of compassion"), was a British-born Benedictine monk and priest who lived in ashrams in South India and became a noted yogi.

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Beilby Porteus

Beilby Porteus (or Porteous; 8 May 1731 – 13 May 1809), successively Bishop of Chester and of London, was a Church of England reformer and a leading abolitionist in England.

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Bell, book, and candle

The phrase "bell, book, and candle" refers to a Latin Christian method of excommunication by anathema, imposed on a person who had committed an exceptionally grievous sin.

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Bema

The bema, or bima, is an elevated platform used as an orator's podium in ancient Athens.

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Benedict the Moor

Benedict the Moor, O.F.M., (Benedetto da San Fratello, 1526 – April 4, 1589) was an Italian Franciscan friar in Sicily who is venerated as a saint in the Catholic and Lutheran churches.

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Benjamin Fish Austin

Benjamin Fish Austin (September 10, 1850 – January 22, 1933) was a nineteenth-century Canadian educator, Methodist minister, and spiritualist.

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Berea (Bible)

Berea or Beroea was a city of the Hellenic and Roman era now known as Veria (or Veroia) in Macedonia, northern Greece.

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Bhai Mani Singh

Bhai Mani Singh was an 18th-century Sikh scholar and martyr.

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Bhavsagar Granth

Bhavsagar Granth (Bhavsagar Samunder Amrit Vani Granth) is a 2,704-page book considered as a religious text by the followers of the Indian religious leader Baba Bhaniara.

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Bible

The Bible (from Koine Greek τὰ βιβλία, tà biblía, "the books") is a collection of sacred texts or scriptures that Jews and Christians consider to be a product of divine inspiration and a record of the relationship between God and humans.

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Bible Analyzer

Bible Analyzer is a freeware, cross-platform Bible study computer software application for Microsoft Windows, Macintosh OS X, and Ubuntu Linux.

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Bible society

A Bible Society is a non-profit organization, usually ecumenical in makeup, devoted to translating, publishing, and distributing the Bible at affordable costs.

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Bible translations into Ilocano

The Ilocano Bible, published in 1909, is the second Bible to be published in any Philippine language, after the Tagalog which was published in 1905.

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Bible translations into Ukrainian

The known history of Bible translation into Ukrainian began in the 16th century with Peresopnytsia Gospels, which included only four Gospels of the New Testament.

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Biblical and Quranic narratives

The Quran, the central religious text of Islam, contains references to more than fifty people and events also found in the Bible.

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Biblical archaeology

Biblical archaeology involves the recovery and scientific investigation of the material remains of past cultures that can illuminate the periods and descriptions in the Bible, be they from the Old Testament (Tanakh) or from the New Testament, as well as the history and cosmogony of the Judeo-Christian religions.

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Biblical canon

A biblical canon or canon of scripture is a set of texts (or "books") which a particular religious community regards as authoritative scripture.

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Biblical garden

Biblical gardens are cultivated collections of plants that are named in the Bible.

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Biblical hermeneutics

Biblical hermeneutics is the study of the principles of interpretation concerning the books of the Bible.

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Biblical inerrancy

Biblical inerrancy, as formulated in the "Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy", is the doctrine that the Protestant Bible "is without error or fault in all its teaching"; or, at least, that "Scripture in the original manuscripts does not affirm anything that is contrary to fact".

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Biblical inspiration

Biblical inspiration is the doctrine in Christian theology that the authors and editors of the Bible were led or influenced by God with the result that their writings may be designated in some sense the word of God.

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Biblical poetry

The ancient Hebrews perceived that there were poetical portions in their sacred texts, as shown by their entitling as songs or chants passages such as Exodus 15:1-19 and Numbers 21:17-20; a song or chant is, according to the primary meaning of the term, poetry.

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Bishop in the Catholic Church

In the Catholic Church, a bishop is an ordained minister who holds the fullness of the sacrament of holy orders and is responsible for teaching doctrine, governing Catholics in his jurisdiction, sanctifying the world and representing the Church.

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Blaise Gisbert

Blaise Gisbert (21 February 1657 – 21 February 1731) was a French Jesuit rhetorician and critic.

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Blessing of same-sex unions in Christian churches

The blessing of same-sex marriages and same-sex unions is an issue about which Christian churches are in ongoing disagreement.

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Bloomingdale Church

Bloomingdale Church is a Christian & Missionary Alliance church located in Bloomingdale, Illinois, US.

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Book censorship

Book censorship is when some authority, government or otherwise, takes measures to prevent access to a book or to part of its contents.

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Book of Abraham

The Book of Abraham is a work produced in 1835 by Joseph Smith.

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Book of Commandments

The Book of Commandments is the earliest published volume said to contain the revelations of Joseph Smith Jr. Text published in the Book of Commandments is now considered scripture by Latter-day Saints as part of the larger Doctrine and Covenants.

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Book of Enoch

The Book of Enoch (also 1 Enoch; Ge'ez: መጽሐፈ ሄኖክ mets’iḥāfe hēnoki) is an ancient Jewish religious work, ascribed by tradition to Enoch, the great-grandfather of Noah.

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Book of Joshua

The Book of Joshua (ספר יהושע) is the sixth book in the Hebrew Bible (the Christian Old Testament) and the first book of the Deuteronomistic history, the story of Israel from the conquest of Canaan to the Babylonian exile.

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Book of Mormon

The Book of Mormon is a sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, which adherents believe contains writings of ancient prophets who lived on the American continent from approximately 2200 BC to AD 421.

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Book of Nature

The Book of Nature is a religious and philosophical concept originating in the Latin Middle Ages which views nature as a book to be read for knowledge and understanding.

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Book of the Law of the Lord

The Book of the Law of the Lord is a sacred book of scripture used by the Strangites, a sect of the Latter Day Saint movement.

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Book of the Nine Rocks

The Book of the Nine Rocks is an anonymous 14th century German mystical text.

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Book of Veles

The Book of Veles (also: Veles Book, Vles book, Vlesbook, Isenbeck's Planks, Велесова книга, Велесова књига, Велес книга, Книга Велеса, Дощечки Изенбека, Дощьки Изенбека) is a literary forgery purporting to be a text of ancient Slavic religion and history supposedly written on wooden planks.

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Boston Corbett

Thomas P. "Boston" Corbett (January 29, 1832 – presumed dead c. September 1, 1894) was a Union Army soldier who shot and killed President Abraham Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth.

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Braulio Rodríguez Plaza

Braulio Rodríguez Plaza (24 January 1944) is a Spanish Catholic prelate, the current Archbishop of Toledo and therefore Primate of Spain (and thus a more likely candidate for the cardinalate) since his appointment by Pope Benedict XVI on 16 April 2009, which was Pope Benedict's 82nd birthday.

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Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church

The Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church (Igreja Católica Apostólica Brasileira,; ICAB) is an independent Catholic church established in 1945 by Brazilian excommunicated Roman Catholic bishop Carlos Duarte Costa.

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Bread of Life Ministries International

Bread of Life Ministries International (BOLMI; previous name Bread of Life Christian Fellowship; simply known as BOL or Bread) is a Filipino Evangelical megachurch founded by Rev.

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Brevitas et facilitas

Brevitas et Facilitas means "brevity and simplicity" in English, the hermeneutical method of John Calvin.

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Brihad Bhagavatamrita

Brihad-bhagavatamrita is a sacred text for followers of Hindu tradition of Gaudiya Vaishnavism.

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Bruno (bishop of Segni)

Saint Bruno di Segni (c. 1045 – 18 July 1123) was an Italian Roman Catholic prelate and professed member from the Order of Saint Benedict who served as the Bishop of Segni and the Abbot of Montecassino.

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Buddhist ethics

Buddhist ethics are traditionally based on what Buddhists view as the enlightened perspective of the Buddha, or other enlightened beings such as Bodhisattvas.

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Buffyverse canon

The Buffyverse canon consists of materials that are thought to be genuine (or "official") and those events, characters, settings, etc., that are considered to have inarguable existence within the fictional universe established by the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

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Buton Rinchen Drub

Butön Rinchen Drup, (1290–1364), 11th Abbot of Shalu Monastery, was a 14th-century Sakya master and Tibetan Buddhist leader.

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Buyruk (Shabak)

The Buyruk or Kitab al-Manaqib (Book of Exemplary Acts) is the sacred book of the Shabak.

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C. Michael Smith

C.

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Cades Cove

Cades Cove is an isolated valley located in the Tennessee section of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA.

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Caesarea in Palaestina (diocese)

The archiepiscopal see of Caesarea in Palaestina, also known as Caesarea Maritima, is now a metropolitan see of the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem and also a titular see of the Catholic Church.

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Caesarius of Arles

Saint Caesarius of Arles (Caesarius Arelatensis; 468/470 27 August 542 AD), sometimes called "of Chalon" (Cabillonensis or Cabellinensis) from his birthplace Chalon-sur-Saône, was the foremost ecclesiastic of his generation in Merovingian Gaul.

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Canadian Badlands Passion Play

The Canadian Badlands Passion Play is a passion play performed annually since 1994 in Drumheller, Alberta, Canada.

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Candomblé

Candomblé (dance in honour of the gods) is an Afro-American religious tradition, practiced mainly in Brazil.

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Canon

Canon may refer to.

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Canon (fiction)

In fiction, canon is the material accepted as officially part of the story in the fictional universe of that story.

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Canonical hours

In the practice of Christianity, canonical hours mark the divisions of the day in terms of periods of fixed prayer at regular intervals.

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Capernaum Church

Capernaum Church (Kapernaum-Kirche) is one of the two places of worship of the Lutheran Capernaum Congregation, a member of the Evangelical Church of Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia, an umbrella comprising Lutheran, Calvinist (Reformed) and united Protestant congregations.

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Carlo Maria Martini

Carlo Maria Martini, S.J. (15 February 1927 – 31 August 2012) was an Italian Jesuit and cardinal of the Catholic Church.

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Carlo Vercellone

Carlo Vercellone (1814–1869) was an Italian biblical scholar.

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Carolingian Renaissance

The Carolingian Renaissance was the first of three medieval renaissances, a period of cultural activity in the Carolingian Empire.

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Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance

Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance is a platform-adventure video game developed and published by Konami for the Game Boy Advance.

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Cathedral

A cathedral is a Christian church which contains the seat of a bishop, thus serving as the central church of a diocese, conference, or episcopate.

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Cathedral High School (Springfield, Massachusetts)

Cathedral High School was a Catholic co-educational college-preparatory high school in Springfield, Massachusetts.

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Cathedral of Saint Joseph (Jefferson City, Missouri)

The Cathedral of Saint Joseph is the Mother Church for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Jefferson City in Missouri.

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Cathedral school

Cathedral schools began in the Early Middle Ages as centers of advanced education, some of them ultimately evolving into medieval universities.

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Catholic Christian Outreach

Catholic Christian Outreach Canada (CCO) is a Catholic missionary organization that is present at several Canadian universities.

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Catholic Church and evolution

Early contributions to biology were made by Catholic scientists such as Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and the Augustinian monk Gregor Mendel.

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Catholic Church and science

The relationship between the Roman Catholic Church and science is a widely debated subject.

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Catholic moral theology

Catholic moral theology is a major category of doctrine in the Catholic Church, equivalent to a religious ethics.

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Catholic University of America

The Catholic University of America (CUA) is a private, non-profit Catholic university located in Washington, D.C., in the United States.

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Cave of Treasures

The Cave of Treasures, sometimes referred to simply as The Treasure, is a book of the New Testament apocrypha.

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Celestin Tomić

Fr.

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Centennial Park group

The Centennial Park group is a fundamentalist Mormon group, with approximately 1,500 members that is headquartered in Centennial Park, Arizona.

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Cezoram

According to the Book of Mormon, a sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, Cezoram was the eighth Nephite chief judge (c. 30 BC).

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Ch. Victor Moses

Ch.

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Chad of Mercia

Chad (died 2 March 672) was a prominent 7th century Anglo-Saxon churchman, who became abbot of several monasteries, Bishop of the Northumbrians and subsequently Bishop of the Mercians and Lindsey People.

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Chamling language

Chamling is one of the Kiranti languages spoken by the Kiranti of eastern Nepal.

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Chandraseniya Kayastha Prabhu

Chandraseniya Kayastha Prabhu (CKP) is an ethno-religious clan of South Asia.

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Chant

A chant (from French chanter, from Latin cantare, "to sing") is the iterative speaking or singing of words or sounds, often primarily on one or two main pitches called reciting tones.

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Characters in the Ramayana

Characters in the Ramayana.

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Charles Augustus Briggs

Charles Augustus Briggs (January 15, 1841 – June 8, 1913), American Presbyterian (and later Episcopalian) scholar and theologian, was born in New York City, the son of Alanson Briggs and Sarah Mead Berrian.

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Charles Fillmore (Unity Church)

Charles Sherlock Fillmore (August 22, 1854 – July 5, 1948) founded Unity, a church within the New Thought movement, with his wife, Myrtle Page Fillmore, in 1889.

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Charles H. Welch

Charles Henry Welch (called C. H. Welch) (1880–1967) was a Christian dispensational theologian, writer and speaker.

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Charleston church shooting

The Charleston church shooting (also known as the Charleston church massacre) was a mass shooting in which Dylann Roof, a 21-year-old white supremacist, murdered nine African Americans (including the senior pastor, state senator Clementa C. Pinckney) during a prayer service at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in downtown Charleston, South Carolina, on the evening of June 17, 2015.

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Children's literature

Children's literature or juvenile literature includes stories, books, magazines, and poems that are enjoyed by children.

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Chinese salvationist religions

Chinese salvationist religions or Chinese folk religious sects are a Chinese religious tradition characterised by a concern for salvation (moral fulfillment) of the person and the society.

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Choose Life, Uvacharta Bachayim

Choose Life, Uvacharta Bachayim, is a dramatic oratorio by composer Mona Lyn Reese and librettist Delores Dufner OSB, that draws on Jewish and Christian music and scripture, as well as the writings of Holocaust survivors, to create an interfaith commemoration of the Holocaust.

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Christ Catholic Church (Pruter)

The Christ Catholic Church (Pruter) is a Christian religious denomination founded by Karl Pruter.

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Christian biblical canons

A Christian biblical canon is the set of books that a particular Christian denomination or denominational family regards as being divinely inspired and thus constituting an authorised Christian Bible.

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Christian Classics Ethereal Library

The Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL) is a digital library that provides free electronic copies of Christian scripture and literature texts.

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Christian denomination

A Christian denomination is a distinct religious body within Christianity, identified by traits such as a name, organisation, leadership and doctrine.

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Christian library

Christian Theological libraries have their origins in the Jewish religion whose practice and transmission depended on the keeping and duplication of sacred texts.

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Christian naturism

Christian naturism is the practise of naturism or nudism by Christians.

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Christian poetry

Christian poetry is any poetry that contains Christian teachings, themes, or references.

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Christian theology

Christian theology is the theology of Christian belief and practice.

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Christian Topography

The Christian Topography (Χριστιανικὴ Τοπογραφία, Topographia Christiana) is a 6th-century work, one of the earliest essays in scientific geography written by a Christian author.

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Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich

Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich (30 October 1712 – 23 April 1774) was a German painter and art administrator.

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Christianity and Islam

Christianity and Islam are the two largest religions in the world and share a historical and traditional connection, with some major theological differences.

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Christianity and Judaism

Christianity is rooted in Second Temple Judaism, but the two religions diverged in the first centuries of the Christian Era.

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Christianity Explored

Christianity Explored is an informal Christian evangelistic teaching course developed by Rico Tice and Barry Cooper at All Souls Church, Langham Place, a leading Anglican church, and published by The Good Book Company.

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Christianity in Angola

Christianity in Angola has existed since 1491.

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Christianity in Hong Kong

Christianity has been in Hong Kong since 1841.

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Christianity in the 19th century

Bibliothèque Nationale de France --> Characteristic of Christianity in the 19th century were Evangelical revivals in some largely Protestant countries and later the effects of modern Biblical scholarship on the churches.

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Christianity in the 1st century

Christianity in the 1st century deals with the formative years of the Early Christian community.

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Christianity in the 2nd century

Christianity in the 2nd century was largely the time of the Apostolic Fathers who were the students of the apostles of Jesus, though there is some overlap as John the Apostle may have survived into the 2nd century and Clement of Rome is said to have died at the end of the 1st century.

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Christianity in the 9th century

In 9th century Christianity, Charlemagne was crowned as Holy Roman Emperor, which continued the Photian schism.

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Christman Genipperteinga

Christman Genipperteinga was a possibly fictitious German bandit and serial killer of the 16th century.

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Christoph Schrempf

Christoph Schrempf (April 28, 1860 – February 13, 1944) was a German evangelical theologian and philosopher.

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Christopher Wittich

Christopher Wittich or Christophorus Wittichius (1625, Brieg – 1687, Leiden) was a German-born Dutch theologian.

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Chronological Bible Storying

Chronological Bible Storying (CBS) is a method of orally communicating portions of the Bible by telling its stories aloud to listeners in chronological order.

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Church Army

The Church Army is an evangelistic organisation founded in the Church of England and now operating in many parts of the Anglican Communion.

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Church Army Chapel, Blackheath

The Church Army Chapel at Vanbrugh Park, Blackheath, Greater London, designed by Austin Vernon & Partners, opened in 1965 by Princess Alexandra and consecrated by Michael Ramsey, is a locally listed building of outstanding architectural significance, and is notable for originally having had the tallest sectional aluminium spire of its time, and for being one of the earliest 20th-century chapels of modern design to have been conceived with a central altar.

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Church Body of Christ- Filipinista

The Church Body of Christ Filipinista also known for its abbreviation" C.B.C.F" or Filipinista is an independent Christian religious organisation originated in the Philippines particularly in the island of Mindanao and was organized in the year 1966.

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Church covenant

The church covenant is a declaration, which some churches draw up and call their members to sign, in which their duties as church members towards God and their fellow believers are outlined.

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Church of Pentecost

The Church of Pentecost is a church originating from Ghana.

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Church of St Thomas the Apostle, Killinghall

The Church of St Thomas the Apostle, Killinghall, is an Anglican parish church in Killinghall, North Yorkshire, England.

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Church order

Church Order is the systematically organised set of rules drawn up by a qualified body for the church.

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Church service

A church service (also called a service of worship, or simply a service) is a formalized period of communal worship in Christian tradition.

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Church Slavonic language

Church Slavonic, also known as Church Slavic, New Church Slavonic or New Church Slavic, is the conservative Slavic liturgical language used by the Orthodox Church in Bulgaria, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, Russia, Belarus, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Republic of Macedonia and Ukraine.

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Churchmanship

Churchmanship (or churchpersonship; or tradition in most official contexts) is a way of talking about and labelling different tendencies, parties, or schools of thought within the Church of England and the sister churches of the Anglican Communion.

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Ciceronianus

Ciceronianus ("The Ciceronian") is a treatise written by Desiderius Erasmus and published in 1528.

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Civil religion

Civil religion is a concept that originated in French political thought and became a major topic for American sociologists since its use by Robert Bellah in 1960.

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Claude Maltret

Claude Maltret (October 3, 1621 – January 3, 1674) was a French Jesuit.

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Claudius Buchanan

Rev Claudius Buchanan DD FRSE (12 March 1766 – 9 February 1815) was a Scottish theologian, an ordained minister of the Church of England, and an evangelical missionary for the Church Missionary Society.

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Claudius of Turin

Claudius of Turin (or Claude) (fl. 810–827)M.

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Clement of Alexandria

Titus Flavius Clemens, also known as Clement of Alexandria (Κλήμης ὁ Ἀλεξανδρεύς; c. 150 – c. 215), was a Christian theologian who taught at the Catechetical School of Alexandria.

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Clergy Letter Project

The Clergy Letter Project is a project that maintains statements in support of the teaching of evolution and collects signatures in support of letters from American Christian, Jewish, Unitarian Universalist, and Buddhist clergy.

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Colindă

Colindă (pl. colinde; also colind, pl. colinduri) are traditional Romanian Christmas carols.

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Collegiants

In Christian history, the Collegiants (Collegiani; Collegianten), also called Collegians, were an association, founded in 1619 among the Arminians and Anabaptists in Holland.

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Common (liturgy)

The common or common of saints (Latin: commune sanctorum) is a part of the Christian liturgy that consists of texts common to an entire category of saints, such as apostles or martyrs.

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Communism

In political and social sciences, communism (from Latin communis, "common, universal") is the philosophical, social, political, and economic ideology and movement whose ultimate goal is the establishment of the communist society, which is a socioeconomic order structured upon the common ownership of the means of production and the absence of social classes, money and the state.

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Comparative religion

Comparative religion is the branch of the study of religions concerned with the systematic comparison of the doctrines and practices of the world's religions.

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Confession (religion)

Confession, in many religions, is the acknowledgment of one's sins (sinfulness) or wrongs.

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Confession of 1967

The Confession of 1967 is a confession of faith of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), abbreviated PC(USA).

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Congregation Rodeph Shalom (Philadelphia)

Congregation Rodeph Shalom of Philadelphia, founded in 1795, is the oldest Ashkenazic synagogue in the Western Hemisphere.

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Consecrated virgin

In the Catholic Church, a consecrated virgin is a woman who has been consecrated by the church to a life of perpetual virginity in the service of God.

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Contemplata aliis tradere

"Contemplata aliis tradere" is a Latin phrase which translates into English as "to hand down to others the fruits of contemplation." Derived from the Summa Theologiae of St. Thomas Aquinas, OP, the phrase is often used to express the distinct Dominican theory of Christian vocation, and for that reason it became a motto of the Order.

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Continuous revelation

Continuous revelation or continuing revelation is a theological belief or position that God continues to reveal divine principles or commandments to humanity.

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Cornelius Hazart

Cornelius Hazart (28 October 1617 – 25 October 1690) was a Belgian Jesuit priest, controversialist, orator and writer of polemical history.

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Council of Trent

The Council of Trent (Concilium Tridentinum), held between 1545 and 1563 in Trent (or Trento, in northern Italy), was an ecumenical council of the Catholic Church.

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Covenant of Bahá'u'lláh

Covenant in the Bahá'í Faith refers to two separate binding agreements between God and man.

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Covenant theology

Covenant theology (also known as Covenantalism, Federal theology, or Federalism) is a conceptual overview and interpretive framework for understanding the overall structure of the Bible.

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Craig Winn

Craig Winn is an anti-Islamic American author and former businessman.

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Creationism

Creationism is the religious belief that the universe and life originated "from specific acts of divine creation",Gunn 2004, p. 9, "The Concise Oxford Dictionary says that creationism is 'the belief that the universe and living organisms originated from specific acts of divine creation.'" as opposed to the scientific conclusion that they came about through natural processes.

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Creed

A creed (also known as a confession, symbol, or statement of faith) is a statement of the shared beliefs of a religious community in the form of a fixed formula summarizing core tenets.

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Crime and punishment in the Torah

The Hebrew Bible is considered a holy text in most Abrahamic religions.

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Criticism of religion

Criticism of religion is criticism of the ideas, the truth, or the practice of religion, including its political and social implications.

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Criticism of the Book of Mormon

The Book of Mormon is a sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, which adherents believe contains writings of ancient prophets who lived on the American continent from approximately 2200 BC to AD 421.

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Crown of Immortality

The Crown of Immortality is a literary and religious metaphor traditionally represented in art first as a laurel wreath and later as a symbolic circle of stars (often a crown, tiara, halo or aureola).

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Croxton Play of the Sacrament

The Croxton Play of the Sacrament is the only surviving English Host miracle play.

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Culture of Iran

The culture of Iran (Farhang-e Irān), also known as culture of Persia, is one of the oldest in the world.

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Cyriacus the Anchorite

Saint Cyriacus the Anchorite (also known as 'Cyriacus the Hermit') (Greek: Ὅσιος Κυριάκος ὁ Ἀναχωρητής, Hosios Kyriakos ho Anachōrētēs) was born in Corinth in the year 448.

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D. H. Th. Vollenhoven

Dirk Hendrik Theodoor Vollenhoven (1 November 1892, Amsterdam – 6 June 1978, Amsterdam) was a Dutch philosopher.

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Daily Light on the Daily Path

Daily Light on the Daily Path or Daily Light is a Christian daily devotional scripture reading published by Bagster & Sons about 1875.

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Daniel B. Towner

Daniel Brink Towner (March 5, 1850 – October 3 1919) was a composer who held a Doctorate of music, and used his abilities to develop the music to several Christian hymns which are still popular today.

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Dasam Granth

The Dasam Patishah Ji Da Granth (Gurmukhi: ਦਸਮ ਪਾਤਿਸ਼ਾਹ ਦਾ ਗ੍ਰੰਥ.

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Daughters of Jesus

The Daughters of Jesus (Filles de Jésus) is a French Roman Catholic congregation of Religious Sisters, founded in 1834 at Kermaria-Sulard, Brittany, in the Diocese of Vannes.

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Dave Sim

Dave Sim (born 17 May 1956) is a Canadian cartoonist and publisher, best known for his comic book Cerebus, his artistic experimentation, his advocacy of self-publishing and creator's rights, and his controversial political, philosophical and religious beliefs.

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David in Islam

The biblical David (Dā’ūd or Dāwūd), who was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the second king of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah, reigning in –970 BCE, is also venerated in Islam as a prophet and messenger of God, and as a righteous, divinely-anointed monarch of the ancient United Kingdom of Israel, which itself is revered in Islam.

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David Pendleton Oakerhater

David Pendleton Oakerhater (b. ca. 1847, d. August 31, 1931), also known as O-kuh-ha-tuh and Making Medicine, was a Cheyenne Indian warrior and spiritual leader, who became an artist and Episcopal deacon.

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David Ross Boyd

David Ross Boyd (1853 – November 17, 1936) was an American educator and the first president of the University of Oklahoma.

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David Smith (Victorian politician)

David Smith (18 November 1861 – 24 January 1943) was an Australian politician.

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David Tacey

David Tacey is an Australian public intellectual, writer and interdisciplinary scholar.

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De doctrina christiana

De doctrina christiana (English: On Christian Doctrine or On Christian Teaching) is a theological text written by Saint Augustine of Hippo.

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De mirabilibus sacrae scripturae

De mirabilibus sacrae scripturae (in English: On the miraculous things in sacred scripture) is a Latin treatise written around 655 by an anonymous Irish writer and philosopher known as Augustinus Hibernicus or the Irish Augustine.

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De vita libri tres

The De vita libri tres (Three Books on Life) or De triplici vita, was written in the years 1480–1489 by Italian Platonist Marsilio Ficino.

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Dead Space (series)

Dead Space is a horror media franchise created by Glen Schofield, developed by Visceral Games and published by Electronic Arts.

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Debt relief

Debt relief or debt cancellation is the partial or total forgiveness of debt, or the slowing or stopping of debt growth, owed by individuals, corporations, or nations.

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Defence of the True and Catholic Doctrine of the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ

The Defence of the True and Catholic Doctrine of the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ is a book by Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury.

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Defensor pacis

The tract Defensor pacis (The Defender of Peace) laid the foundations of modern doctrines of sovereignty.

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Delhi Female Medical Mission

The Delhi Female Medical Mission (DFMM) was a medical mission in Delhi, India that was founded in the mid-19th century by an Indian-born Englishwoman named Priscilla Winter.

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Desadanam

Desadanam (ദേശാടനം., Journey to wisdom) is a 1996 Indian Malayalam language feature film directed by Jayaraj.

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Despatch box

A despatch box (alternatively dispatch box) goes back to the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, referring to an important message for the Queen.

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Deuterocanonical books

The deuterocanonical books (from the Greek meaning "belonging to the second canon") is a term adopted in the 16th century by the Roman Catholic Church to denote those books and passages of the Christian Old Testament, as defined in 1546 by the Council of Trent, that were not found in the Hebrew Bible.

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Dhadi (music)

Dhadi (ਢਾਡੀ, Dhādi), also spelled as Dhadhi, is one who sings ballads using Dhadd and also Sarangi, the folk instruments of Punjab.

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Dhammapada (Easwaran translation)

The Dhammapada / Introduced & Translated by Eknath Easwaran is an English-language book originally published in 1986.

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Dhammapada (Radhakrishnan translation)

The Dhammapada: With introductory essays, Pali text, English translation and notes is a 1950 book written by philosopher and (later) President of India, Dr.

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Dictum

In general usage, a dictum (from Latin, "something that has been said"; plural dicta) is an authoritative or dogmatic statement.

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Diet of Worms

The Diet of Worms 1521 (Reichstag zu Worms) was an imperial diet (assembly) of the Holy Roman Empire held at the Heylshof Garden in Worms, then an Imperial Free City of the Empire.

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Discordianism

Discordianism is a paradigm based upon the book Principia Discordia, written by Greg Hill with Kerry Wendell Thornley in 1963, the two working under the pseudonyms Malaclypse the Younger and Omar Khayyam Ravenhurst.

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Dispensation (period)

In Christianity, one meaning of the term dispensation is as a distinctive arrangement or period in history that forms the framework through which God relates to mankind.

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Divine authority

Divine authority may refer to.

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Divine inspiration

Divine inspiration is the concept of a supernatural force, typically a deity, causing a person or people to experience a creative desire.

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Divine law

Divine law is any law that is understood as deriving from a transcendent source, such as the will of God or gods, in contrast to man-made law.

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Divine Word

The concept of the Divine Logos, translated loosely as The Divine Word, is originally credited to Heraclitus, circa about 535 - 475 BC.

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Divinity (academic discipline)

Divinity is the study of Christian and other theology and ministry at a school, divinity school, university, or seminary.

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Doctor Faustus (play)

The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus, commonly referred to simply as Doctor Faustus, is an Elizabethan tragedy by Christopher Marlowe, based on German stories about the title character Faust, that was first performed sometime between 1588 and Marlowe's death in 1593.

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Doctrine and Covenants

The Doctrine and Covenants (sometimes abbreviated and cited as D&C or D. and C.) is a part of the open scriptural canon of several denominations of the Latter Day Saint movement.

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Doctrine of Exchange

The Doctrine of Exchange is a central tenet of Scientology, which dictates that for spiritual well-being, "anytime a person receives something, he must pay something back" and balance "inflow" with "outflow".

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Dogma in the Catholic Church

In the Catholic Church, a dogma is a definitive article of faith (de fide) that has been solemnly promulgated by the college of bishops at an ecumenical council or by the pope when speaking in a statement ex cathedra, in which the magisterium of the Church presents a particular doctrine as necessary for the belief of all Catholic faithful.

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Donatism

Donatism (Donatismus, Δονατισμός Donatismós) was a schism in the Church of Carthage from the fourth to the sixth centuries AD.

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Done by the Forces of Nature

Done by the Forces of Nature is the second studio album by American hip hop group Jungle Brothers, released on November 7, 1989 by Warner Bros. Records.

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Dravidian architecture

Dravidian architecture is an architectural idiom in Hindu temple architecture that emerged in the southern part of the Indian subcontinent or South India, reaching its final form by the sixteenth century.

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Dravidian folk religion

The early Dravidian religion constituted a non-Vedic form of Hinduism in that they were either historically or are at present Āgamic.

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Dravidian people

Dravidians are native speakers of any of the Dravidian languages.

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Dudley D. Watkins

Dudley Dexter Watkins (27 February 1907 – 20 August 1969) was an English cartoonist and illustrator.

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Dutch Catechism

The Dutch Catechism of 1966 (De Nieuwe Katechismus, geloofsverkondiging voor volwassenen; English translation: A New Catechism: Catholic Faith for Adults) was the first post-Vatican II Catholic catechism.

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Dutch Renaissance and Golden Age literature

Dutch Renaissance and Golden Age literature is the literature written in the Dutch language in the Low Countries from around 1550 to around 1700.

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E. B. Grandin

Egbert Bratt Grandin (March 30, 1806 – April 16, 1845) was a printer in Palmyra, New York, best known for publishing the first edition of the Book of Mormon, a sacred text of the churches of the Latter Day Saint movement.

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Early Christianity

Early Christianity, defined as the period of Christianity preceding the First Council of Nicaea in 325, typically divides historically into the Apostolic Age and the Ante-Nicene Period (from the Apostolic Age until Nicea).

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Early world maps

The earliest known world maps date to classical antiquity, the oldest examples of the 6th to 5th centuries BCE still based on the flat Earth paradigm.

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Earth in culture

The cultural perspective on Earth, or the world, varies by society and time period.

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East Freetown, Massachusetts

East Freetown is one of two villages in the town of Freetown, Bristol County, Massachusetts, United States.

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Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar

The Eastern Orthodox Liturgical Calendar describes and dictates the rhythm of the life of the Eastern Orthodox Church.

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Eastern religions

The Eastern religions are the religions originating in East, South and Southeast Asia and thus having dissimilarities with Western religions.

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Ebionites

Ebionites (Ἐβιωναῖοι Ebionaioi, derived from Hebrew אביונים ebyonim, ebionim, meaning "the poor" or "poor ones") is a patristic term referring to a Jewish Christian movement that existed during the early centuries of the Christian Era.

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Economy of Salvation

The Economy of Salvation, also called the Divine Economy, is that part of divine revelation in the Christian tradition that deals with God’s creation and management of the world, particularly his plan of salvation accomplished through the Church.

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Eddie Long

Eddie Lee Long (May 12, 1953 – January 15, 2017) was an American pastor who served as the senior pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, a megachurch in unincorporated DeKalb County, Georgia, from 1987 until his death in 2017.

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Edgar Haynes

Edgar Allan Poe Haynes (May 18, 1866 – January 11, 1923) was named after the famous American writer, Edgar Allan Poe.

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Edict of Serdica

The Edict of Serdica, also called Edict of Toleration by Galerius, was issued in 311 in Serdica (today Sofia, Bulgaria) by the Roman emperor Galerius, officially ending the Diocletianic persecution of Christianity in the East.

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Edmund Bojanowski

Blessed Edmund Bojanowski (14 November 1814 - 7 August 1871) was a Polish Roman Catholic and the founder of four separate religious congregations.

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Education in New Brunswick

The education system of New Brunswick comprises public and private primary and secondary schools and post-secondary institutions.

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Edward Perronet

Edward Perronet (1726 – 2 January 1792) was the son of an Anglican priest, who worked closely with Anglican priest John Wesley and his brother Charles Wesley for many years in England's eighteenth century revival.

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Edward Worsley

Edward Worsley (1605 – 2 September 1676) was an English Jesuit writer and professor.

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Edwin Johnson (historian)

Edwin Johnson (1842–1901) was an English historian, best known for his radical criticisms of Christian historiography.

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Ekasarana Dharma

Ekasarana Dharma (Assamese এক শৰণ ধৰ্ম; literally: 'Shelter-in-One religion') is a panentheistic form of Hinduism founded and propagated by Srimanta Sankardeva in the 15th century.

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El Shaddai (song)

"El Shaddai" (sometimes styled "El-Shaddai") is a Contemporary Christian music song.

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Elias Higbee

Elias Higbee (October 23, 1795 – June 8, 1843) was an associate of Joseph Smith, a prominent Danite, and an official historian and recorder in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

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Elijah List

The Elijah List is a non-denominational Christian prophetic website created by Steve Shultz in 1997 with 135,000 subscribers as of August 2012.

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Elizabeth Ann Seton

Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton, S.C., (August 28, 1774 – January 4, 1821) was the first native-born citizen of the United States to be canonized by the Roman Catholic Church (September 14, 1975).

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Emil Brunner

Heinrich Emil Brunner (born December 23, 1889 in Winterthur, Switzerland; died April 6, 1966 in Zurich, Switzerland) was a Swiss Protestant (Reformed) theologian.

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Emma Darwin

Emma Darwin (née Wedgwood; 2 May 1808 – 2 October 1896) was an English woman who was the wife and first cousin of Charles Darwin.

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Emperor Chongzong of Western Xia

Emperor Xixia Chongzong of Western Xia (西夏崇宗) (1084–1139), or Li Qianshun (李乾順), was a Tangut emperor of Western Xia (one of the four kingdoms that made up China, along with Song dynasty, Liao dynasty and Jin dynasty) from 1086 until 1139.

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Empire and Communications

Empire and Communications is a book published in 1950 by University of Toronto professor Harold Innis.

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Encyclopedia of Mormonism

The Encyclopedia of Mormonism is a semiofficial encyclopedia for topics relevant to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church, see also "Mormon").

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End time

The end time (also called end times, end of time, end of days, last days, final days, or eschaton) is a future time-period described variously in the eschatologies of several world religions (both Abrahamic and non-Abrahamic), which believe that world events will reach a final climax.

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Engelbert of Admont

Engelbert (c. 1250 – 12 May 1331) was Abbot of the Benedictine monastery of Admont in Styria.

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England in the Late Middle Ages

England in the Late Middle Ages concerns the history of England during the late medieval period, from the thirteenth century, the end of the Angevins, and the accession of Henry III – considered by many to mark the start of the Plantagenet dynasty – until the accession to the throne of the Tudor dynasty in 1485, which is often taken as the most convenient marker for the end of the Middle Ages and the start of the English Renaissance and early modern Britain.

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England in the Middle Ages

England in the Middle Ages concerns the history of England during the medieval period, from the end of the 5th century through to the start of the Early Modern period in 1485.

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English Dissenters

English Dissenters or English Separatists were Protestant Christians who separated from the Church of England in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.

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English Presbyterianism

Presbyterianism in England is practiced by followers of the Reformed tradition within Protestantism who practise the Presbyterian form of church government in England.

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English Reformation

The English Reformation was a series of events in 16th century England by which the Church of England broke away from the authority of the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church.

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Enrico Bartoletti

Enrico Bartoletti (7 October 1916 – 5 March 1976) was an Italian Roman Catholic archbishop who served on the Italian Episcopal Conference and also as the Archbishop of Lucca.

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Epistles of Wisdom

The Epistles of Wisdom or Rasa'il al-Hikma (رسـائـل الـحـكـمـة) is a corpus of sacred texts and pastoral letters by teachers of the Druze Faith, which has currently close to a million faithful, mainly in Lebanon, Syria, Israel and Jordan.

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Erin Tate

Erin Tate was the drummer for Seattle-based indie rock band, Minus the Bear, and Hand of the Hills, a side project started with David Totten(The Quiet Ones, Scriptures) and Matt Benham (Black Swedes).

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Ernst Fuchs (theologian)

Ernst Fuchs (11 January 1903 – 15 January 1983) was a German New Testament theologian and a student of Rudolf Bultmann.

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Eschatology

Eschatology is a part of theology concerned with the final events of history, or the ultimate destiny of humanity.

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Etruscan mythology

Etruscan mythology comprises a set of stories, beliefs, and religious practices of the Etruscan civilization, originating in the 7th century BC from the preceding Iron Age Villanovan culture, with its influences in the mythology of ancient Greece and Phoenicia, and sharing similarities with concurrent Roman mythology.

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Eugendus

Saint Eugendus (also Augendus; Oyand, Oyan; 449 – January 1, 510) was the fourth abbot of Condat Abbey, at Saint-Claude, Jura.

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Eugene Siler

Eugene Siler (June 26, 1900 – December 5, 1987) was a member of the United States House of Representatives from Kentucky between 1955 and 1965.

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Eugene V. Gallagher

Eugene V. Gallagher (born June 23, 1950) is an American professor of religious studies at Connecticut College.

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Eustochium

Saint Eustochium (ca. 368 – September 28, 419 or 420).

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Evangelical Christian Church in Canada

The Evangelical Christian Church (Christian Disciples) as an evangelical Protestant Canadian church bodyhttp://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/pub/rc/rel/eccc-ecec-eng.asp Religions in Canada (2009) Retrieved on 17/10/09 in North America (2004) can be traced to the formal organization of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in 1804, in Bourbon County, Kentucky under the leadership of Barton Warren Stone (1772–1844).

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Evangelical Church of the River Plate

The Evangelical Church of the River Plate (Iglesia Evangélica del Río de la Plata or IERP) is a United, Protestant denomination with congregations in Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay.

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Evangelical Connexion of the Free Church of England

The Evangelical Connexion of the Free Church of England was a small religious body that came into being in 2003 as a result of secessions from the Free Church of England.

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Evangelical Presbyterian Church in England and Wales

The Evangelical Presbyterian Church in England and Wales (EPCEW) is a reformed and conservative evangelical denomination in both England and Wales with churches in Germany and Sweden.

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Evangelical Reformed Baptist Churches in Italy

The Evangelical Reformed Baptist Churches in Italy (Chiese Evangeliche Riformate Battiste in Italia), or CERBI, is an association of Reformed Baptist churches formed on 25 April 2006 in Bologna.

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Evarist Pinto

Evarist Pinto (born 31 December 1933 in Goa, Portuguese India) is the former Archbishop of Karachi, Pakistan.

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Evolution

Evolution is change in the heritable characteristics of biological populations over successive generations.

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Exegesis

Exegesis (from the Greek ἐξήγησις from ἐξηγεῖσθαι, "to lead out") is a critical explanation or interpretation of a text, particularly a religious text.

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Existence of God

The existence of God is a subject of debate in the philosophy of religion and popular culture.

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Expository preaching

Expository preaching is a form of preaching that details the meaning of a particular text or passage of Scripture.

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Eyes Wide Shut

Eyes Wide Shut is a 1999 erotic drama film directed, produced, and co-written by Stanley Kubrick.

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Faith-based foreign aid

Faith-based foreign aid refers to the international development and relief-related spending and activities of religious or religiously motivated organizations, and the government financial and political support of those organizations.

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Fasting

Fasting is the willing abstinence or reduction from some or all food, drink, or both, for a period of time.

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Faust

Faust is the protagonist of a classic German legend, based on the historical Johann Georg Faust (c. 1480–1540).

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Fürstlich Sächsischer Hofbuchdruckerei zu Altenburg

Fürstlich Sächsischer Hofbuchdruckerei of Altenburg, Germany, is used generically in this article to denote a succession of book printers (sometimes synonymous with "publishers") based in Altenburg, in the German state of Thuringia (formerly East Germany), that — under various capacities, names, and owners – have endured as one continuous printing operation, without interruption (save and except wars), for years — since 1594, the early modern German period.

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Fellowship of Vocation

In the Church of Ireland, individuals who feel called to the ministry in its widest sense are asked to meet together regularly in what is known as a Fellowship of Vocation in order to.

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Fellowships of the Remnant

Remnant fellowships—formed by individuals inspired by divine revelations allegedly received by Denver Snuffer Jr. (an attorney excommunicated from the LDS Church in 2013)–are composed of Latter Day Saint Restorationist movement Christians who feel called to personal and social renewal preparatory of Christ's eventual second coming.

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Feminist effects on society

The feminist movement has effected change in Western society, including women's suffrage; greater access to education; more equitable pay with men; the right to initiate divorce proceedings; the right of women to make individual decisions regarding pregnancy (including access to contraceptives and abortion); and the right to own property.

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First Baptist Church of Tarrytown

The First Baptist Church of Tarrytown is located on South Broadway (U.S. Route 9) in Tarrytown, New York, United States.

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Five Articles of Remonstrance

The Five Articles of Remonstrance were theological propositions advanced in 1610 by followers of Jacobus Arminius who had died in 1609, in disagreement with interpretations of the teaching of John Calvin then current in the Dutch Reformed Church.

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Five Banis

The initiated Sikh is asked by the Panj Piare during the Amrit Sanchar ceremony to recite the following five banis every morning as a commitment to the Sikh Gurus and Waheguru.

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Fleur-de-lis

The fleur-de-lis/fleur-de-lys (plural: fleurs-de-lis/fleurs-de-lys) or flower-de-luce is a stylized lily (in French, fleur means "flower", and lis means "lily") that is used as a decorative design or motif, and many of the Catholic saints of France, particularly St. Joseph, are depicted with a lily.

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Florentine Bechtel

The Reverend Florentine Stanislaus Bechtel, S.J., (Haguenau, Alsace, 4 February 1857 -) was a French-born American Biblical scholar.

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Fnord

"Fnord" is a word coined in 1965 by Kerry Thornley and Greg Hill in the Principia Discordia.

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Follow the Yellow Brick Road

Follow the Yellow Brick Road is a television play by Dennis Potter, first broadcast in 1972 as part of BBC Two's The Sextet series of eight plays featuring the same six actors.

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Foreign Mission School

The Foreign Mission School was an educational institution which existed between 1817 and 1826 in Cornwall, Connecticut.

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Foxe's Book of Martyrs

The Actes and Monuments, popularly known as Foxe's Book of Martyrs, is a work of Protestant history and martyrology by John Foxe, first published in English in 1563 by John Day.

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Frances Willard

Frances Elizabeth Caroline Willard (September 28, 1839 – February 17, 1898) was an American educator, temperance reformer, and women's suffragist.

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Francesco Ragonesi

Francesco Cardinal Ragonesi S.T.D. J.U.D. (21 December 1850 – 14 September 1931) was a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and was the Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura.

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Francis Coster

Francis Coster (or Frans de Costere, Franciscus Costerus), born on 16 June 1532 (1531) at Mechlin (Duchy of Brabant) and died the 16 December 1619 at Brussels, was a Flemish Jesuit, theologian and author.

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Francis Ellingwood Abbot

Francis Ellingwood Abbot (November 6, 1836 – October 23, 1903) was an American philosopher and theologian who sought to reconstruct theology in accord with scientific method.

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Francis Lambert

Francis Lambert (c. 1486 – April 8, 1530) was a Protestant reformer, the son of a papal official at Avignon, where he was born between 1485 and 1487.

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Francis Martin (priest)

Francis Martin (1652–1722) was an Irish Augustinian.

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Franconia Mennonite Conference

Franconia Mennonite Conference is a conference of Mennonite Church USA based in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, with 45 congregations in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Vermont, New York and California and 19 conference related ministries.

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Francysk Skaryna

Francysk Skaryna or Francisk Skorina (pronounced; Franciscus Scorina, 985-11-0108-7) Скарына; Franciszek Skaryna; ca.

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Friedrich Kohlrausch (educator)

Heinrich Friedrich Theodor Kohlrausch (November 5, 1780 – January 30, 1867) was a German educator and historian.

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Friedrich Seyler

Friedrich Seyler (13 December 1642 – 31 January 1708), also spelled Friedrich Seiler, was a Swiss Reformed (i.e. Calvinist) pastor and theologian from Basel, noted for his work Anabaptista Larvatus on Anabaptism.

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Fringe science

Fringe science is an inquiry in an established field of study which departs significantly from mainstream theories in that field and is considered to be questionable by the mainstream.

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Fulbert of Chartres

Fulbert of Chartres (Fulbert de Chartres; 952-970–10 April 1028) was the Bishop of Chartres from 1006 to 1028 and a teacher at the Cathedral school there.

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Fulgens corona

Fulgens corona ("Radiant Crown") is an encyclical by Pope Pius XII, given at St.

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Funeral of Pope John Paul II

The funeral of Pope John Paul II was held on 8 April 2005, six days after his death on 2 April.

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Future

The future is what will happen in the time after the present.

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Gabriel Biel

Gabriel Biel, C.R.S.A. (1420 to 1425 – 7 December 1495), was a German scholastic philosopher and member of the Canons Regular of the Congregation of Windesheim, who were the clerical counterpart to the Brethren of the Common Life.

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Gaddala Solomon

G.

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Gaels

The Gaels (Na Gaeil, Na Gàidheil, Ny Gaeil) are an ethnolinguistic group native to northwestern Europe.

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Gallicanism

Gallicanism is the belief that popular civil authority—often represented by the monarchs' authority or the State's authority—over the Catholic Church is comparable to that of the Pope's.

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Gargi Vachaknavi

Gargi Vachaknavi (born about c. 7th century BCE) was an ancient Indian philosopher.

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Gayaza High School

Gayaza High School is the oldest all-girls boarding secondary school covering grades 8 to 13 (Senior 1 to 6) in Uganda.

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Gaz (candy)

Gaz (گز) is an Iranian nougat.

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Ge Chaofu

Ge Chaofu (Chinese: 葛巢甫) is a member of the Chinese Ge family who lived during the 4th and 5th centuries CE.

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General revelation

In theology, general revelation, or natural revelation, refers to knowledge about God and spiritual matters, discovered through natural means, such as observation of nature (the physical universe), philosophy and reasoning.

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Genesis Apocryphon

The Genesis Apocryphon (1Q20), also called the Tales of the Patriarchs or the Apocalypse of Lamech and labeled 1QapGen, is one of the original seven Dead Sea Scrolls discovered in 1946 by Bedouin shepherds in Cave 1 near Qumran, a city in the northwest corner of the Dead Sea.

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Geneva gown

The Geneva gown, also called a pulpit gown, pulpit robe, or preaching robe, is an ecclesiastical garment customarily worn by ordained ministers in the Christian churches that arose out of the historic Protestant Reformation.

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George Campbell (minister)

Rev Prof George Campbell DD FRSE (25 December 1719 – 6 April 1796) was a figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, known as a philosopher, minister, and professor of divinity.

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George H. Lang

George Henry Lang (20 November 1874 – 20 October 1958) was an English Bible teacher, author, and biblical scholar.

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George Horton

George Horton (1859–1942) was a member of the United States diplomatic corps who held several consular offices in Greece and the Ottoman Empire between 1893 and 1924.

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George M. Stratton

George Malcolm Stratton (September 26, 1865 – October 8, 1957) was a psychologist who pioneered the study of perception in vision by wearing special glasses which inverted images up and down and left and right.

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George Peele

George Peele (baptised 25 July 1556 – buried 9 November 1596) was an English translator, poet, and dramatist, who is most noted for his supposed but not universally accepted collaboration with William Shakespeare on the play Titus Andronicus.

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George Tyrrell

George Tyrrell SJ (6 February 1861 – 15 July 1909) was an Irish Jesuit priest (until his expulsion from the Society) and a modernist theologian and scholar.

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Gerard of Toul

Saint Gerard (Geraud; c. 935 - 994) was a German prelate who served as the Bishop of Toul from 963 until his death.

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Giacomo Maria Airoli

Giacomo Maria Airoli (1660 – 27 March 1721) was a Jesuit Orientalist and Scriptural commentator.

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Giles of Viterbo

Giles Antonini, O.E.S.A., commonly referred to as Giles of Viterbo (Ægidius Viterbensis, Egidio da Viterbo), was a 16th-century Italian Augustinian friar, bishop of Viterbo and cardinal, a reforming theologian, orator, humanist and poet.

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Giocondo Pio Lorgna

Giocondo Pio Lorgna (27 September 1870 - 8 July 1928), born Giocondo Lorgna, was an Italian Roman Catholic priest who was also a professed member of the Order of Preachers.

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Giovanni Andrea Cortese

Giovanni Andrea Cortese (his name in the Benedictine Order was Gregorio) (1483 in Modena – September 21, 1548) was an Italian Cardinal and monastic reformer.

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Giovanni Battista Rinuccini

Giovanni Battista Rinuccini (15 September 1592 – 28 December 1653) was an Italian Roman Catholic archbishop in the mid-seventeenth century.

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Giovanni Battista Tolomei

Giovanni Battista Tolomei, S.J., (3 December 1653 – 19 January 1726) was an Italian Jesuit priest, theologian, and cardinal.

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Giuseppe Betori

Giuseppe Betori (born 25 February 1947 in Foligno, Italy) is an Italian Cardinal of the Catholic Church.

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Giuseppe Girotti

Blessed Giuseppe Girotti (19 July 1905 – 1 April 1945) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and a professed member from the Order of Preachers.

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Giuseppe Pace

Giuseppe Pace (translated in English into Joseph Pace) was the 7th Bishop of Gozo after Mikiel Gonzi.

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Glasite

The Glasites or Glassites were a small Christian church founded in about 1730 in Scotland by John Glas.

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Glossary of Hinduism terms

The following is a glossary of terms and concepts in Hinduism.

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Glossary of Islam

The following list consists of notable concepts that are derived from both Islamic and Arab tradition, which are expressed as words in the Arabic language.

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Glossary of spirituality terms

This is a glossary of spirituality-related terms.

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Gnostic texts

Gnosticism used a number of religious texts that are preserved, in part or whole, in ancient manuscripts are lost but mentioned critically in Patristic writings.

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God in Sikhism

Sikhism is a monotheistic religion and hence, believes that "God" is One, and prevails in everything, as symbolized by the symbol Ik Onkar (one all pervading spirit).

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God in the Age of Science?

God in the Age of Science?: A Critique of Religious Reason is a 2012 book by the Dutch philosopher Herman Philipse, written in English and published in the United Kingdom.

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God Speaks

God Speaks, The Theme of Creation and Its Purpose is the principal book by Meher Baba, and the most significant religious text used by his followers.

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Gojong of Goryeo

Gojong of Goryeo (3 February 1192 – 21 July 1259), sometimes spelled Ko-tjong, was the twenty-third ruler of Goryeo in present-day Korea from 1213–1259.

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Gold (color)

Gold, also called golden, is a color.

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Golden plates

According to Latter Day Saint belief, the golden plates (also called the gold plates or in some 19th-century literature, the golden bible) are the source from which Joseph Smith said he translated the Book of Mormon, a sacred text of the faith.

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Good Shepherd (song)

"Good Shepherd" is a traditional song, best known as recorded by Jefferson Airplane on their 1969 album Volunteers.

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Gordon Hall

Gordon Hall (8 April 1784 – 20 March 1826) was one of the first two American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions missionaries to Bombay, then-headquarters of Bombay Presidency.

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Grant Hardy

Grant Hardy is professor of history and religious studies and director of the humanities program at the University of North Carolina at Asheville.

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Granthi

A Granthi (ਗ੍ਰੰਥੀ) is a person, female or male, of the Sikh religion who is a ceremonial reader of the Sri Guru Granth Sahib, which is the Holy Book in Sikhism, often read to worshipers at Sikh temples called a Gurudwara.

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Great Lent

Great Lent, or the Great Fast, (Greek: Μεγάλη Τεσσαρακοστή or Μεγάλη Νηστεία, meaning "Great 40 Days," and "Great Fast," respectively) is the most important fasting season in the church year in the Byzantine Rite of the Eastern Orthodox Church (including Western Rite Orthodoxy) and the Eastern Catholic Churches, which prepares Christians for the greatest feast of the church year, Pascha (Easter).

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Greek Apocalypse of Daniel

The Greek Apocalypse of Daniel is a Christian pseudepigraphic text (one whose claimed authorship is unfounded) attributed to the Biblical Daniel and so associated with the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament).

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Green Lantern: The Animated Series

Green Lantern: The Animated Series is an American computer-animated television series based on the DC Comics superhero Green Lantern.

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Green's Literal Translation

Green's Literal Translation (Literal Translation of the Holy Bible - LITV), is a translation of the Bible by Jay P. Green, Sr., first published in 1985.

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Gurmat

Gurmat (gur-mat, mat, Sanskrit mati, i.e. counsel or tenets of the Guru, more specifically focusing the mind towards the Guru) is a term which may in its essential sense be taken to be synonymous with Sikhism itself.

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H. Dale Jackson

Reverend Dr.

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Handbook (LDS Church)

The Handbook (formerly the Church Handbook of Instructions and earlier the General Handbook of Instructions) is a two-volume book of instructions and policies for leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).

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Harcharan Singh Longowal

Harchand Singh Longowal (2 January 1932 − 20 August 1985) was the President of the Akali Dal during the Punjab insurgency of the 1980s.

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Haridwar in scriptures

Haridwar (हरिद्वार) finds mention in numerous scriptures (religious texts) and manuscripts of antiquity, as well as in various historical texts of the recent past.

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Harold H. Buls

Dr.

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Harris Manchester College, Oxford

Harris Manchester College is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom.

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Haskalah

The Haskalah, often termed Jewish Enlightenment (השכלה; literally, "wisdom", "erudition", Yiddish pronunciation Heskole) was an intellectual movement among the Jews of Central and Eastern Europe, with certain influence on those in Western Europe and the Muslim world.

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Have No Fear: The Life of Pope John Paul II

The biopic Have No Fear: The Life of Pope John Paul II (ABC, December 1, 2005) explains in biographical form the life story of the late head of the Roman Catholic church, Pope John Paul II.

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Hélinand of Froidmont

Hélinand of Froidmont (c. 1150—after 1229 (probably 1237)) was a medieval poet, chronicler, and ecclesiastical writer.

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He Lives

"He Lives" is a Christian hymn, otherwise known by its first line, "I Serve a Risen Savior".

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Hector Sévin

Hector Sévin (22 March 1852 – 4 May 1916) was a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and was former Archbishop of Lyon.

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Henri François d'Aguesseau

Henri François d'Aguesseau (27 November 16685 February 1751) was Chancellor of France three times between 1717 and 1750 and pronounced by Voltaire to be "the most learned magistrate France ever possessed".

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Henry Richard Hoisington

Henry Richard Hoisington (23 August 1801 – 16 May 1858) was an American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions missionary to Ceylon (present-day Sri Lanka) and was one of the first three missionaries who established mission station at Madura, commencing American Madura Mission in South India as an offshoot of the Jaffna Mission in Ceylon, also known as Ceylon Mission.

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Heptaméron

The Heptaméron is a collection of 72 short stories written in French by Marguerite of Navarre (1492–1549), published posthumously in 1558.

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Hermeneutics

Hermeneutics is the theory and methodology of interpretation, especially the interpretation of biblical texts, wisdom literature, and philosophical texts.

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Hermetism and other religions

This is a comparative religion article which outlines the similarities and interactions between Hermeticism (or Hermetism) and other religions or philosophies.

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High Point Christian Academy

High Point Christian Academy (HPCA) is a private Christian school in High Point, North Carolina, United States serving students in preschool (2-, 3-, and 4-year olds) through twelfth grade.

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Hills Sports High School

The Hills Sports High School is a co-educational government secondary school located at Seven Hills, in the west of Sydney, Australia.

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Hindu iconography

Over the millennia of its development Hinduism has adopted several iconic symbols, forming part of Hindu iconography, that are imbued with spiritual meaning based on either the scriptures or cultural traditions.

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Hindu texts

Hindu texts are manuscripts and historical literature related to any of the diverse traditions within Hinduism.

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History of Allahabad

Allahabad (Hindi: इलाहाबाद), also known by its original name Prayag (Hindi: प्रयाग), is one of the largest cities of the North Indian state of Uttar Pradesh in India.

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History of Christian theology

The doctrine of the Trinity, considered the core of Christian theology by Trinitarians, is the result of continuous exploration by the church of the biblical data, thrashed out in debate and treatises, eventually formulated at the First Council of Nicaea in AD 325 in a way they believe is consistent with the biblical witness, and further refined in later councils and writings.

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History of Christianity

The history of Christianity concerns the Christian religion, Christendom, and the Church with its various denominations, from the 1st century to the present.

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History of Christianity during the Middle Ages

The history of Christianity during the Middle Ages is the history of Christianity between the Fall of Rome and the onset of the Protestant Reformation during the early 16th century, the development usually taken to mark the beginning of modern Christianity.

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History of hermeneutics

Hermeneutics is the theory and methodology of interpretation.

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History of India

The history of India includes the prehistoric settlements and societies in the Indian subcontinent; the advancement of civilisation from the Indus Valley Civilisation to the eventual blending of the Indo-Aryan culture to form the Vedic Civilisation; the rise of Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism;Sanderson, Alexis (2009), "The Śaiva Age: The Rise and Dominance of Śaivism during the Early Medieval Period." In: Genesis and Development of Tantrism, edited by Shingo Einoo, Tokyo: Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo, 2009.

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History of music in the biblical period

Knowledge of the biblical period is mostly from literary references in the Bible and post-biblical sources.

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History of Pakistan

The history of Pakistan encompasses the history of the region constituting modern-day Pakistan.

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History of Patna

Patna (पटना), the capital of Bihar state, India, is one of the oldest continuously inhabited places in the world and the History of Patna spans at least three millennia.

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History of religion

The history of religion refers to the written record of human religious experiences and ideas.

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History of religious Jewish music

The earliest synagogal music was based on the same system as that used in the Temple in Jerusalem.

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History of Sikhism

The history of Sikhism started with Guru Nanak Dev Ji, the first Guru in the fifteenth century in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent.

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History of the Jews in Spain

Spanish Jews once constituted one of the largest and most prosperous Jewish communities in the world.

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History of the Puritans in North America

In the early 17th century, thousands of English Puritans settled in North America, mainly in New England.

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History of the Puritans under King Charles I

Under Charles I, the Puritans became a political force as well as a religious tendency in the country.

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History of Unitarianism

Unitarianism, as a Christian denominational family of churches, was first defined in Poland-Lithuania and Transylvania in the late 16th century.

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Holy Emperor Guan's True Scripture to Awaken the World

Holy Emperor Guan's True Scripture to Awaken the World is a Taoist classic, believed to be written by Guan Yu himself during a spirit writing session in 1668.

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Holy Name Cathedral (Chicago)

Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago, Illinois is the seat of the Archdiocese of Chicago, one of the largest Roman Catholic dioceses in the United States.

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Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity

The Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity (HSA-UWC), commonly called the Unification Church, was a spiritual organization founded in South Korea in 1954 by Sun Myung Moon to unify Christianity around a broad and inclusive vision of a messianic mission.

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Homiletic and Pastoral Review

Homiletic and Pastoral Review is a religious journal, the first Catholic Clergy magazine to appear in the United States and has been the leading journal of its kind for over a century.

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Homosexuality and religion

The relationship between religion and homosexuality has varied greatly across time and place, within and between different religions and denominations, and regarding different forms of homosexuality and bisexuality.

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Homosexuality and the Anglican Communion

Since the 1990s, the Anglican Communion has struggled with controversy regarding homosexuality in the church.

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Homosexuality and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

The law of chastity of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) states that "sexual relations are proper only between a man and a woman who are legally and lawfully wedded as husband and wife." In principle, this commandment forbids all same-sex sexual behavior (whether intra-marriage or extramarital).

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Homosexuality in society

Homosexuality, as a phenomenon and as a behavior, has existed throughout the eras in human societies.

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Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui

The Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui (abbreviated SKH), also known as the Hong Kong Anglican Church (Episcopal), is the Anglican Church in Hong Kong and Macao.

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Horace Newton

Canon Horace Newton (Born 1844, Died 1920) was a priest within the Church of England, philanthropist, and country landowner.

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Huangdi Yinfujing

The Huangdi Yinfujing, or Yinfujing, is a circa 8th century CE Daoist scripture associated with Chinese astrology and Neidan-style Internal alchemy.

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Hugh Nibley

Hugh Winder Nibley (March 27, 1910 – February 24, 2005) was an American scholar and Mormon apologist who was a professor at Brigham Young University (BYU) for nearly 50 years.

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Humani generis

Humani generis is a papal encyclical that Pope Pius XII promulgated on 12 August 1950 "concerning some false opinions threatening to undermine the foundations of Catholic Doctrine".

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Humani generis unitas

Humani generis unitas (Latin; English translation: On the Unity of the Human Race) was a draft for an encyclical planned by Pope Pius XI before his death on February 10, 1939.

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Humanism in France

Humanism in France found its way from Italy, but did not become a distinct movement until the 16th century was well on its way.

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Hungarian Evangelical Fellowship

The Hungarian Evangelical Fellowship (HEF.

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Hungarians in Venezuela

The Hungarian-Venezuelan community is primarily composed of immigrants who left Hungary after World War II and the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.

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I Gusti Putu Phalgunadi

Dr.

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Iconoclasm

IconoclasmLiterally, "image-breaking", from κλάω.

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Ignacy Kłopotowski

Blessed Ignacy Kłopotowski (20 July 1866 – 7 September 1931) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Sisters of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Loreto (1920); he founded this congregation with the assistance of the Polish nuncio Achille Ratti - the future Pope Pius XI.

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Ignatius von Weitenauer

Ignatius von Weitenauer (November 1, 1709 – February 4, 1783) was a German Jesuit writer, exegete, and Orientalist.

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Igor Sibaldi

Igor Sibaldi (Milan, Italy, 15 June 1957), born from Russian mother and Italian father, is an Italian writer, scholar of theology and history of religion.

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Imitation of God

Imitation of God (imitatio Dei) is the religious precept of Man finding salvation by attempting to realize his concept of supreme being.

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Immaculate Conception

The Immaculate Conception is the conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary free from original sin by virtue of the merits of her son Jesus Christ.

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Immanence

The doctrine or theory of immanence holds that the divine encompasses or is manifested in the material world.

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Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise

"Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise" is a Christian hymn with words by Walter Chalmers Smith, usually sung to the tune, "St.

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Impassibility

Impassibility (from Latin in-, "not", passibilis, "able to suffer, experience emotion") describes the theological doctrine that God does not experience pain or pleasure from the actions of another being.

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Imperial Library of Constantinople

The Imperial Library of Constantinople, in the capital city of the Byzantine Empire, was the last of the great libraries of the ancient world.

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Imprecatory Psalms

Imprecatory Psalms, contained within the Book of Psalms of the Hebrew Bible (תנ"ך), are those that invoke judgment, calamity, or curses, upon one's enemies or those perceived as the enemies of God.

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Incident at Antioch

The Incident at Antioch was an Apostolic Age dispute between the apostles Paul and Peter which occurred in the city of Antioch around the middle of the first century.

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Inclusiveness and exclusivity in Ayyavazhi

The Inclusiveness and exclusivity in Ayyavazhi is the inclusive and exclusive ideology of Ayyavazhi scriptures over other religions.

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Index of Islam-related articles

This is an alphabetical list of topics related to Islam, the history of Islam, Islamic culture, and the present-day Muslim world, intended to provide inspiration for the creation of new articles and categories.

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Index of Jainism-related articles

is a special page for finding related articles (it is not entirely accurate though, enter Jainism for example, and then verify context by searching for "Jain" within any article linked there).

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Index of law articles

This collection of lists of law topics collects the names of topics related to law.

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Index of religion-related articles

Many Wikipedia articles on religious topics are not yet listed on this page.

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Indian calligraphy

Indian calligraphy is the Indian tradition of calligraphy, or artistic writing.

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Indian religions

Indian religions, sometimes also termed as Dharmic faiths or religions, are the religions that originated in the Indian subcontinent; namely Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism and Sikhism.

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Infallibility of the Church

The infallibility of the Church is the belief that the Holy Spirit preserves lots of the Christian Church from errors that would Complete its essential doctrines.

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Inspired Media Entertainment

Inspired Media Entertainment, also known as Left Behind Games, was a Christian-themed gaming company most notable for its work on Left Behind: Eternal Forces.

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Institute of the Theology of the Consecrated Life Claretianum

The Institute of the Theology of the Consecrated Life "Claretianum" is an educational institute of the Roman Catholic Church in Rome founded by the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary of the Claretian order.

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Instituut voor Doven

The Instituut voor Doven (IvD) was a deaf school, based in the south of the Netherlands for children who are deaf, hard-of-hearing and deaf-blind.

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International Order of St. Luke the Physician

The International Order of Saint Luke is an inter-denominational religious order dedicated to the Christian healing ministry, begun in 1932 as the Fellowship of St.

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Internet Sacred Text Archive

The Internet Sacred Text Archive (ISTA) is a Santa Cruz, California based website dedicated to the preservation of electronic public domain texts, specifically those with significant cultural value.

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Into Great Silence

Into Great Silence (Die große Stille) is a documentary film directed by Philip Gröning that was released in 2005.

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Ioan Bob

Ioan Bob, (1739 – 2 October 1830) was Bishop of Făgăraş and Primate of the Romanian Greek Catholic Church from 1783 to his death in 1830.

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Irish Theological Quarterly

Irish Theological Quarterly is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes systematic, moral, and historical theology as well as sacred scripture.

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Irving Hexham

Irving Hexham (born 14 April 1943) is a Canadian academic and writer who has published twenty-three books and numerous articles, chapters, and book reviews in respected academic journals.

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Isaac Komnenos (brother of Alexios I)

Isaac Komnenos or Comnenus (Ἰσαάκιος Κομνηνός, Isaakios Komnēnos; – 1102/1104) was a notable Byzantine aristocrat and military commander in the 1070s.

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Isis Unveiled

Isis Unveiled: A Master-Key to the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Science and Theology, published in 1877, is a book of esoteric philosophy and Helena Petrovna Blavatsky's first major work and a key text in her Theosophical movement.

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Islam and Mormonism

Islam and Mormonism have been compared to one another ever since the earliest origins of the former in the nineteenth century, often by detractors of one religion or the other—or both.

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Islamic architecture

Islamic architecture encompasses a wide range of both secular and religious styles from the early history of Islam to the present day.

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Islamic economics

Islamic economics (الاقتصاد الإسلامي) is a term used to refer to Islamic commercial jurisprudence (فقه المعاملات, fiqh al-mu'āmalāt).

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Islamic holy books

Islamic holy books are the texts which Muslims believe were authored by Allah via various prophets throughout humanity's history.

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Islamic Principlism in Iran

The history of Islamic Principlism in Iran covers the history of Islamic revivalism and the rise of political Islam in modern Iran.

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Islamic schools and branches

This article summarizes the different branches and schools in Islam.

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J. C. Winslow

Jack Copley Winslow (18 August 1882 – 1974), also known by names John Copley Winslow or J.C. Winslow or John C. Winslow or Jack C. Winslow, was an English Society for the Propagation of the Gospel (SPG) missionary to Konkan and Pune, then-Poona—both part of then-Bombay Presidency.

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Jack Miner

John Thomas Miner, OBE (April 10, 1865 – November 3, 1944), or "Wild Goose Jack," was a Canadian conservationist called by some the "father" of North American conservationism.

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Jacob Netsvetov

Saint Jacob Netsvetov, Enlightener of Alaska, was a native of the Aleutian Islands who became a priest of the Orthodox Church and continued the missionary work of St.

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Jacob van Maerlant

Jacob van Maerlant (c. 1230–40 – c. 1288–1300) was the greatest Flemish poet of the 13th century and one of the most important Middle Dutch authors during the Middle Ages.

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Jacques Bonfrère

Jacques Bonfrère (12 April 1573, Dinant, Belgium – 9 May 1642, Tournai, Belgium) was a Jesuit priest, Biblical scholar and leading commentator on the Old Testament.

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Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples

Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples or Jacobus Faber Stapulensis (c. 1455 – 1536) was a French theologian and humanist.

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Jainism and Sikhism

Both Jainism and Sikhism are faiths native to the Indian subcontinent.

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Jakob Böhme

Jakob Böhme (1575 – 17 November 1624) was a German philosopher, Christian mystic, and Lutheran Protestant theologian.

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Jamaat-e-Islami

Jamaat-e-Islami (Urdu: جماعتِ اسلامی) is an Islamic political organisation and social conservative movement founded in 1941 in British India by the Islamist theologian and socio-political philosopher, Abul Ala Maududi.

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James Calvert (missionary)

James Calvert (3 January 1813 – 8 March 1892), was a Methodist missionary.

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James Clerk Maxwell

James Clerk Maxwell (13 June 1831 – 5 November 1879) was a Scottish scientist in the field of mathematical physics.

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James H. Cone

James Hal Cone (August 5, 1936 – April 28, 2018) was an American theologian, best known for his advocacy of black theology and black liberation theology.

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James Peggs

James Peggs (1793–1850), along with William Bampton, was a pioneer of the English General Baptists missionary to Cuttack, then-capital city of Orissa, to evangelize Odia people(present Odia people).

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James VI and I

James VI and I (James Charles Stuart; 19 June 1566 – 27 March 1625) was King of Scotland as James VI from 24 July 1567 and King of England and Ireland as James I from the union of the Scottish and English crowns on 24 March 1603 until his death in 1625.

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Jan Jacob van Oosterzee

Jan Jacob van Oosterzee (April 1, 1817 – July 29, 1882), Dutch divine, was born at Rotterdam.

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Jan Milíč

Jan Milíč z Kroměříže (Ioannes Milicius; Johann Militsch) (died 29 June 1374) was a Czech Catholic priest and the most influential preacher of the emerging Bohemian Reformation in the 14th century.

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Jane Addams

Jane Addams (September 8, 1860May 21, 1935), known as the "mother" of social work, was a pioneer American settlement activist/reformer, social worker, public philosopher, sociologist, public administrator, protestor, author, and leader in women's suffrage and world peace.

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Jean Hani

Jean Hani (1917-2012) was a French philosopher and Traditionalist author, and a professor of Greek civilization and literature at the University of Amiens.

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Jean-Baptiste Pérès

Jean-Baptiste Pérès (1752–1840) was a French physicist best known for his 1827 pamphlet Grand Erratum, a polemical satire, translated into many European languages, that attempted "in the interest of conservative theology, to reduce to an absurdity the purely negative tendencies of the rationalistic criticism of the Scriptures then in vogue" (as Frederick W. Loetscher described what he called "the celebrated pamphlet" in The Princeton Theological Review 1906Frederick W. Loetscher,, The Princeton Theological Review, p144, Vol. IV, 1906) through humorously suggesting ways in which the history of Napoleon Bonaparte could be shown to be an expression of an ancient sun myth.

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Jeûne genevois

Jeûne genevois (meaning Genevan fast) is a public holiday in the canton of Geneva, Switzerland which occurs on the Thursday following the first Sunday of September.

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Jerald and Sandra Tanner

Jerald Dee Tanner (June 1, 1938 — October 1, 2006) was an American writer and researcher.

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Jeremiah Benettis

Jeremiah Benettis (died 1774) was an Italian writer and Friar Minor Capuchin.

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Jesús Emilio Jaramillo Monsalve

Blessed Jesús Emilio Jaramillo Monsalve (16 February 1916 – 2 October 1989) was a Colombian Roman Catholic prelate who was a professed member of the Xaverian Missionaries of Yarumal and served as the Bishop of Arauca from 1984 until his assassination.

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Jesus

Jesus, also referred to as Jesus of Nazareth and Jesus Christ, was a first-century Jewish preacher and religious leader.

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Jesus and Mo

Jesus and Mo is a British webcomic created by an artist using the pseudonym Mohammed Jones.

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Jesus Youth

Jesus Youth is an International Catholic Movement approved by the Holy See.

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Jewish mythology

Jewish mythology is a major literary element of the body of folklore found in the sacred texts and in traditional narratives that help explain and symbolize Jewish culture and Judaism.

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Jewish principles of faith

There is no established formulation of principles of faith that are recognized by all branches of Judaism.

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Jewish skeptics

Jewish skeptics are Jewish individuals (historically, Jewish philosophers) who have held skeptical views on matters of the Jewish religion.

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Jewish studies

Jewish studies (or Judaic studies) is an academic discipline centered on the study of Jews and Judaism.

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Jiba (Tenrikyo)

In the Tenrikyo religion, the Jiba (ぢば) is the axis mundi where adherents believe that God created humankind.

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Joan Frances Gormley

Joan Frances Gormley (October 6, 1937 - October 19, 2007), a consecrated virgin in the Catholic Church, was an American scholar in the fields of classical literature and of biblical studies.

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Joel D. Heck

Joel D. Heck (born 1 October 1948) is Professor of Theology at Concordia University Texas and formerly Executive Editor of Concordia University Press.

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Johann Ruchrat von Wesel

Johann Ruchrat von Wesel (died 1481) was a German Scholastic theologian.

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Johannes Maccovius

Johannes Maccovius (1588 – June 24, 1644), also known as Jan Makowski, was a Polish Reformed theologian.

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Johannes Oecolampadius

Johannes Oecolampadius (also Œcolampadius, in German also Oekolampadius, Oekolampad; 1482 in Weinsberg, Electoral Palatinate in the Holy Roman Empire – 24 November 1531 in Basel, Canton of Basel in the Old Swiss Confederacy) was a German Protestant reformer in the Reformed tradition from the Electoral Palatinate.

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John 20:9

John 20:9 is the ninth verse of the twentieth chapter of the Gospel of John in the Bible.

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John Adams (mutineer)

John Adams, known as Jack Adams (4 December 1767 – 5 March 1829), was the last survivor of the HMS ''Bounty'' mutineers who settled on Pitcairn Island in January 1790, the year after the mutiny.

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John Calvin's view of Scripture

John Calvin's view of Scripture includes the ideas that Scripture is necessary for human understanding of God's revelation, that it is the equivalent of direct revelation, and that it is both "majestic" and "simple." Calvin's general, explicit exposition of his view of Scripture is found mainly in his Institutes of the Christian Religion.

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John Colet

John Colet (January 1467 – 16 September 1519) was an English churchman and educational pioneer.

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John Henry Keen

John Henry Keen (1851–1950) was an Anglican missionary in Canada, known for translating scriptures into Haida.

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John Howison

John Howison (or Howisone, Howisoune, or Howieson, c. 1530 – 1618) was Minister in the Parish of Cambuslang during a turbulent time in Scotland’s history.

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John Jewel

John Jewel (alias Jewell) (24 May 1522 – 23 September 1571) of Devon, England was Bishop of Salisbury from 1559 to 1571.

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John Lennox

John Carson Lennox (born 7 November 1943) is a Northern Irish mathematician specialising in group theory, a philosopher of science and a Christian apologist.

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John MacHale

John MacHale (Seán Mac Éil; 6 March 1789 – 7 November 1881) was the Irish Roman Catholic Archbishop of Tuam, and Irish nationalist.

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John Onaiyekan

John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan (born 29 January 1944) is a Nigerian prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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John Selden

John Selden (16 December 1584 – 30 November 1654) was an English jurist, a scholar of England's ancient laws and constitution and scholar of Jewish law.

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John the Baptist

John the Baptist (יוחנן המטביל Yokhanan HaMatbil, Ἰωάννης ὁ βαπτιστής, Iōánnēs ho baptistḗs or Ἰωάννης ὁ βαπτίζων, Iōánnēs ho baptízōn,Lang, Bernhard (2009) International Review of Biblical Studies Brill Academic Pub p. 380 – "33/34 CE Herod Antipas's marriage to Herodias (and beginning of the ministry of Jesus in a sabbatical year); 35 CE – death of John the Baptist" ⲓⲱⲁⲛⲛⲏⲥ ⲡⲓⲡⲣⲟⲇⲣⲟⲙⲟⲥ or ⲓⲱ̅ⲁ ⲡⲓⲣϥϯⲱⲙⲥ, يوحنا المعمدان) was a Jewish itinerant preacherCross, F. L. (ed.) (2005) Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, 3rd ed.

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Joseph Fitzmyer

Joseph Augustine Fitzmyer (November 4, 1920 – December 24, 2016) was an American Catholic priest of the Society of Jesus and professor emeritus at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. He specialized in biblical studies, particularly the New Testament, though he also made contributions to the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls and early Jewish literature.

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Joseph Heinrich Aloysius Gügler

Joseph Heinrich Aloysius Gügler (25 August 1782 – 28 February 1827) was a Swiss theologian.

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Joseph Lilly

Joseph L. Lilly, C.M. (1893–1952), was an American Vincentian priest and Scriptural scholar.

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Joseph Smith

Joseph Smith Jr. (December 23, 1805 – June 27, 1844) was an American religious leader and founder of Mormonism and the Latter Day Saint movement.

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Joseph Smith Hypocephalus

The Joseph Smith Hypocephalus (also known as the Hypocephalus of Sheshonq) was a papyrus fragment, part of the original Joseph Smith Papyri, found in the Gurneh area of Thebes, Egypt, around the year 1818.

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Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible

The Joseph Smith Translation (JST; also called the Inspired Version (IV)) is a revision of the Bible by Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement.

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Joseph Smith–Matthew

Joseph Smith–Matthew (abbreviated JS–M) is a book in the Pearl of Great Price, a scriptural text used by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and other Latter Day Saint denominations.

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Journal of Book of Mormon Studies

The Journal of Book of Mormon Studies is an annual peer-reviewed academic journal covering topics surrounding the Book of Mormon.

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JQuranTree

JQuranTree is a set of Java APIs for accessing and analyzing the Quran, in its authentic Arabic form.

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Juan Eusebio Nieremberg

Juan Eusebio Nieremberg (1595 – 7 April 1658) was a Spanish Jesuit and mystic.

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Judah ben Barzillai

Judah ben Barzillai (Albargeloni) was a Catalan Talmudist of the end of the 11th and the beginning of the 12th century.

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Judaism's views on Muhammad

Very few texts in Judaism refer to or take note of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad.

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Judeo-Christian

Judeo-Christian is a term that groups Judaism and Christianity, either in reference to Christianity's derivation from Judaism, both religions common use of the Torah, or due to perceived parallels or commonalities shared values between those two religions, which has contained as part of Western culture.

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Judique, Nova Scotia

Judique (Scottish Gaelic: Siùdaig) is a small community located in Inverness County on the Ceilidh Trail (Trunk 19) on the western side of Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada.

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June Hunt

June Hunt (born Ruth June Hunt on December 31, 1944, in Dallas, Texas) is Founder and CSO (Chief Servant Officer) of Hope for the Heart, the nonprofit Christian ministry she founded in 1986.

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Kalama Sutta

The Kālāma Sutta is a discourse of the Buddha contained in the Aṅguttara Nikaya of the Tipiṭaka.

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Kara (Sikhism)

A kara (کڑا (Shahmukhi) कड़ा (Devanagari)) is a steel or iron (sarb loh) bracelet, worn by all initiated Sikhs.

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Karaite Judaism

Karaite Judaism or Karaism (also spelt Qaraite Judaism or Qaraism) is a Jewish religious movement characterized by the recognition of the Tanakh alone as its supreme authority in Halakha (Jewish religious law) and theology.

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Kemetic Orthodoxy

Kemetic Orthodoxy is a modern religious sect based on Kemeticism, which is a reconstruction of Egyptian polytheism.

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Kenneth Edward Untener

Kenneth Edward Untener (August 3, 1937 – March 27, 2004) was a Roman Catholic bishop, serving the Diocese of Saginaw from 1980 until his death.

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Kensington System

The Kensington System was a strict and elaborate set of rules designed by Victoria, Duchess of Kent, along with her attendant, Sir John Conroy, concerning the upbringing of the Duchess's daughter, the future Queen Victoria.

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Kingdom of Aksum

The Kingdom of Aksum (also known as the Kingdom of Axum, or the Aksumite Empire) was an ancient kingdom in what is now northern Ethiopia and Eritrea.

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Kirat Mundhum

Kirat Mundhum (also Kirati Mundhum), also called Kiratism or Kirantism or simply Mundhum, is the religion of the Kirati tribes of Nepal: Limbu, Rai, Sunuwar and Yakkha peoples of Nepal, India, Myanmar and now practiced in the UK, China, USA and many other countries.

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Kirata

The Kirāta (Kirat) (किरात) is a generic term in Sanskrit literature for people who had territory in the mountains, particularly in the Himalayas and North-East India and who are believed to have been Sino-Tibetan in origin.

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Kitáb-i-Íqán

The Kitáb-i-Íqán (كتاب ايقان, كتاب الإيقان "The Book of Certitude") is one of many books held sacred by followers of the Bahá'í Faith; it is their primary theological work.

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Knock basilica

The basilica of Knock is a Roman Catholic Church of the Latin Rite located in the small town of Knock, in County Mayo in the West Region of Ireland.

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Konx om Pax

Konx Om Pax: Essays in Light is a publication by British occultist Aleister Crowley, first published in 1907.

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Krishna Dharma

Krishna Dharma (born 1955 in London) is a British Hindu scholar and author.

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Krista Branch

Krista Branch is an American singer whose 2010 song "I Am America" has been called the anthem of the Tea Party movement.

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Kuberakolam

Kuberakolam (also written as Kubera kolam) is a certain magic square of order 3 constructed using rice flour and drawn on the floors of several houses in South India.

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Kumbhaka

Kumbhaka is the pause between an inhale and exhale.

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Kundakunda

Acharya Kundakunda is a revered Digambara Jain monk and philosopher.

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Kuzari

The Kuzari, full title The Book of Refutation and Proof in Support of the Abased Religion (كتاب الحجة والدليل في نصرة الدين الذليل), also known as the Book of the Kuzari, (ספר הכוזרי) is one of the most famous works of the medieval Spanish Jewish philosopher and poet Judah Halevi, completed around 1140.

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Ladder of Jacob

The Ladder of Jacob (Hebrew: Sulam Yaakov סולם יעקב) is a pseudepigraphic writing of the Old Testament.

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Lambeth Conference

The Lambeth Conference is a decennial assembly of bishops of the Anglican Communion convened by the Archbishop of Canterbury.

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Lamech (descendant of Cain)

Lamech (לֶמֶךְ Lemeḵ) is a person in Cain's genealogy in the fourth chapter of the Book of Genesis.

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Lamentabili sane exitu

Lamentabili sane exitu ("with truly lamentable results") is a 1907 syllabus, prepared by the Roman Inquisition and confirmed by Pope Pius X, which condemned alleged errors in the exegesis of Holy Scripture and in the history and interpretation of dogma.

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Lashon Hakodesh

Lashon Hakodesh (לָשׁוֹן הַקֹּדֶשׁ; lit. "the tongue holiness" or "the Holy Tongue"), also spelled L'shon Hakodesh or Leshon Hakodesh (לְשׁוֹן הַקֹּדֶשׁ‎), is a Jewish term and appellation attributed to the Hebrew language, or sometimes to a mix of Hebrew and Aramaic, in which its religious texts and prayers were written, and served, during the Medieval Hebrew era, for religious purposes, liturgy and Halakha – in contrary to the secular tongue, which served for the routine daily needs, such as the Yiddish language.

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Last Roman Emperor

Last Roman Emperor, Last World Emperor or Emperor of the Last Days is a figure of medieval European legend, which developed as an aspect of eschatology in the Catholic Church.

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Latter Day Saint movement and engraved metal plates

Engraved metal plates hold a special significance in the Latter Day Saint movement because in 1827, the founder of that religion, Joseph Smith, claimed to have obtained a set of engraved golden plates from an angel and from them translated the Book of Mormon, a religious text of that religious tradition.

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Latter Rain (post–World War II movement)

The Latter Rain, also known as the New Order or New Order of the Latter Rain, was a post–World War II movement within Pentecostal Christianity which remains controversial to this day.

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Law

Law is a system of rules that are created and enforced through social or governmental institutions to regulate behavior.

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Lawrence Boadt

Lawrence Edward Boadt, C.S.P. (October 26, 1942 – July 24, 2010), was an American Paulist priest and Biblical scholar, who advocated on behalf of improved communication and understanding between Christians and Jews.

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Lay brother

In the past, the term lay brother was used within some Catholic religious institutes to distinguish members who were not ordained from those members who were clerics (priests and seminarians).

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Lectern

A lectern (from the Latin lectus, past participle of legere, "to read") is a reading desk, with a slanted top, usually placed on a stand or affixed to some other form of support, on which documents or books are placed as support for reading aloud, as in a scripture reading, lecture, or sermon.

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Lectio continua

In Christianity, Lectio continua (Latin for continuous reading) refers to the practice of reading Scripture in sequence over a period of time.

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Lectio Divina

In Christianity, Lectio Divina (Latin for "Divine Reading") is a traditional Benedictine practice of scriptural reading, meditation and prayer intended to promote communion with God and to increase the knowledge of God's Word.

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Lectio Sacra

In Christianity, Lectio Sacra is a Latin term meaning sacred reading which refer to the reading of Scripture.

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Lection

A lection, also called the lesson, is a reading from scripture in liturgy.

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Lectionary

A lectionary (Lectionarium) is a book or listing that contains a collection of scripture readings appointed for Christian or Judaic worship on a given day or occasion.

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Ledger

A ledger is the principal book or computer file for recording and totaling economic transactions measured in terms of a monetary unit of account by account type, with debits and credits in separate columns and a beginning monetary balance and ending monetary balance for each account.

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Les Thanatonautes

Les Thanatonautes is a 1994 science fiction novel by French writer Bernard Werber.

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Letter to King Henry II

The famous open Letter to King Henry II of France by Nostradamus is his dedicatory preface to the now-missing 1558 edition of his Propheties, as reprinted in the posthumous 1568 edition by Benoist Rigaud.

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Levi Spaulding

Levi Spaulding (22 August 1791 – 18 June 1873) was an American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions missionary to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), and he also led the team of American missionaries to choose Madura as a site for American Madura Mission, for Tamil people of South India.

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Leviathan (Hobbes book)

Leviathan or The Matter, Forme and Power of a Common-Wealth Ecclesiasticall and Civil—commonly referred to as Leviathan—is a book written by Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) and published in 1651 (revised Latin edition 1668). Its name derives from the biblical Leviathan. The work concerns the structure of society and legitimate government, and is regarded as one of the earliest and most influential examples of social contract theory. Leviathan ranks as a classic western work on statecraft comparable to Machiavelli's The Prince. Written during the English Civil War (1642–1651), Leviathan argues for a social contract and rule by an absolute sovereign. Hobbes wrote that civil war and the brute situation of a state of nature ("the war of all against all") could only be avoided by strong, undivided government.

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Lewis Tappan

Lewis Tappan (1788–1873) was a New York abolitionist who worked to achieve the freedom of the illegally enslaved Africans of the Amistad.

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LGBT history in Spain

This is a list of notable events in the history of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights that took place in Spain.

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LGBT themes in mythology

LGBT themes in mythology occur in mythologies and religious narratives that include stories of romantic affection or sexuality between figures of the same sex or that feature divine actions that result in changes in gender.

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Life stance

A person's life stance, or lifestance, is their relation with what they accept as being of ultimate importance.

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Linguistics and the Book of Mormon

According to most adherents of the Latter Day Saint movement, the Book of Mormon is a 19th-century translation of a record of ancient inhabitants of the American continent, which was written in a script which the book refers to as "reformed Egyptian".

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List of academic fields

The following outline is provided as an overview of an topical guide to academic disciplines: An academic discipline or field of study is known as a branch of knowledge.

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List of anonymously published works

Throughout the history of literature, since the creation of bound texts in the forms of books and codices, various works have been published and written anonymously, often due to their political or controversial nature, or merely for the purposes of the privacy of their authors, among other reasons.

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List of book-based war films (1898–1926 wars)

This is a list of list of war films that are based on books.

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List of book-based war films (wars before 1775)

A list of films that are based on war books.

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List of book-burning incidents

Notable book burnings have taken place throughout history.

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List of books banned by governments

Banned books are books or other printed works such as essays or plays which are prohibited by law or to which free access is not permitted by other means.

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List of Christian denominations

A Christian denomination is a distinct religious body within Christianity, identified by traits such as a name, organisation, leadership and doctrine.

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List of code names in the Doctrine and Covenants

The original 1835 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants, a book of LDS scripture, used code names for certain people and places.

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List of deists

This is a partial list of people who have been categorized as deists, the belief in a deity based on natural religion only, or belief in religious truths discovered by people through a process of reasoning, independent of any revelation through scripture or prophets.

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List of descriptions of Heaven in Abrahamic scriptures

Throughout the scriptures of the three Abrahamic religions – Judaism, Christianity and Islam – there exist a large number of descriptions of the afterlife that awaits the faithful believers.

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List of Discordian works

Discordian works include a number of books, not all of which actually exist.

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List of fictional books

A fictional book is a non-existent book created specifically for (i.e. within) a work of fiction.

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List of Greek and Latin roots in English/S

Category:Lists of words.

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List of Hindu texts

Hinduism is an ancient religion with diverse traditions such as Vaishnavism, Shaivism, Shaktism and others.

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List of Indian classical music festivals

The following is an incomplete list of Indian classical music festivals, which encapsulates music festivals focused on Indian classical music.

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List of Latin phrases (V)

Additional references.

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List of Latin words with English derivatives

This is a list of Latin words with derivatives in English (and other modern languages).

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List of Latter Day Saint movement topics

In an effort to bring together pages on various religions, below is a list of articles that are about or reference Latter Day Saint movement topics.

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List of lingua francas

This is a list of lingua francas.

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List of major biblical figures

The Bible is a canonical collection of texts considered sacred in Judaism or Christianity.

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List of organizations in the Honorverse

List of organizations in the Honorverse universe, created by David Weber.

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List of religions and spiritual traditions

Religion is a collection of cultural systems, beliefs and world views that establishes symbols relating humanity to spirituality and, often, to moral values.

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List of religious sites

This article provides an incomplete list and broad overview of significant religious sites and places of spiritual importance throughout the world.

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List of topics characterized as pseudoscience

This is a list of topics that have, at one point or another in their history, been characterized as pseudoscience by academics or researchers.

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List of words ending in ology

† not study.

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List of works by Thomas Aquinas

The collected works of Thomas Aquinas are being edited in the Editio Leonina (established 1879).

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List of writing genres

Writing genres (commonly known, more narrowly, as literary genres) are determined by narrative technique, tone, content, and sometimes length.

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Listed buildings in Wasdale

Wasdale is a civil parish in the Borough of Copeland, Cumbria, England.

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Lists of songs

This is a list of song-related list articles on Wikipedia.

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Little Brothers of Jesus

The Little Brothers of Jesus is a religious congregation of brothers within the Catholic Church; it is inspired by the life and writings of Blessed Charles de Foucauld.

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Liturgical year

The liturgical year, also known as the church year or Christian year, as well as the kalendar, consists of the cycle of liturgical seasons in Christian churches that determines when feast days, including celebrations of saints, are to be observed, and which portions of Scripture are to be read either in an annual cycle or in a cycle of several years.

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Lives of the Prophets

The Lives of the Prophets is an ancient apocryphal account of the lives of the prophets from the Old Testament.

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Lope de Barrientos

Lope de Barrientos (1382–1469), sometimes called Obispo Barrientos ("Bishop Barrientos"), was a powerful clergyman and statesman of the Crown of Castile during the 15th century, although his prominence and the influence he wielded during his lifetime is not a subject of common study in Spanish history.

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Lotus Temple

The Lotus Temple, located in Delhi, India, is a Bahá'í House of Worship that was dedicated in December 1986, costing $10 million.

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Louie Verrecchio

Louie Verrecchio, M.I. (born August 4, 1961) is a traditionalist Catholic author, columnist and speaker residing in the Archdiocese of Baltimore, MD.

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Louis Ellies Dupin

Louis Ellies du Pin, or Dupin (17 June 1657 – 6 June 1719) was a French ecclesiastical historian, who was responsible for the Nouvelle bibliothèque des auteurs ecclésiastiques.

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Louis Gabriel Ambroise de Bonald

Louis de Bonald, properly Louis Gabriel Ambroise, Vicomte de Bonald (2 October 1754 – 23 November 1840), was a French counter-revolutionary philosopher and politician.

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Ludwig Schläfli

Ludwig Schläfli (15 January 1814 – 20 March 1895) was a Swiss mathematician, specialising in geometry and complex analysis (at the time called function theory) who was one of the key figures in developing the notion of higher-dimensional spaces.

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Lutheran scholasticism

Lutheran scholasticism was a theological method that gradually developed during the era of Lutheran Orthodoxy.

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Lynn de Silva's theology

Lynn de Silva's theology began at an early stage in Lynn de Silva's ministry, when his interest in Buddhism and its culture began to increase.

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Lysergic acid diethylamide

Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), also known as acid, is a psychedelic drug known for its psychological effects, which may include altered awareness of one's surroundings, perceptions, and feelings as well as sensations and images that seem real though they are not.

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Madonna of the Rose Garden

The Madonna of the Rose Garden (Italian: Madonna del Roseto) is an International Gothic painting attributed to Michelino da Besozzo or Stefano da Verona.

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Magyal Dongkar

Tsepangsa Magyal Dongkar (? – ?) was an important Tibetan Empire female.

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Major religious groups

The world's principal religions and spiritual traditions may be classified into a small number of major groups, although this is by no means a uniform practice.

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Malik ibn Anas

Mālik b. Anas b. Mālik b. Abī ʿĀmir b. ʿAmr b. al-Ḥārit̲h̲ b. G̲h̲aymān b. K̲h̲ut̲h̲ayn b. ʿAmr b. al-Ḥārit̲h̲ al-Aṣbaḥī, often referred to as Mālik ibn Anas (Arabic: مالك بن أنس‎; 711–795 CE / 93–179 AH) for short, or reverently as Imam Mālik by Sunni Muslims, was an Arab Muslim jurist, theologian, and hadith traditionist.

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Mamoni Raisom Goswami

Indira Goswami (14 November 1942 – 29 November 2011), known by her pen name Mamoni Raisom Goswami and popularly as Mamoni Baideo, was an Assamese editor, poet, professor, scholar and writer.

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Manmukh

Manmukh literally means "to follow one's mind or desires".

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Mantra

A "mantra" ((Sanskrit: मन्त्र)) is a sacred utterance, a numinous sound, a syllable, word or phonemes, or group of words in Sanskrit believed by practitioners to have psychological and spiritual powers.

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Manuel Aurelio Cruz

Manuel Aurelio Cruz (born December 2, 1953) is a Cuban American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who serves as an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Newark.

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Maoism

Maoism, known in China as Mao Zedong Thought, is a political theory derived from the teachings of the Chinese political leader Mao Zedong, whose followers are known as Maoists.

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Marathakavalli David

Marathakavalli David (1950-2011Rev. Marathakavalli passes away in Malankara Nazrani, October 2011.) was the first Woman Priest in Kerala hailing from the South Kerala Diocese (headquartered in Trivandrum) of the Church of South India who was ordained in 1989.

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Marcionism

Marcionism was an Early Christian dualist belief system that originated in the teachings of Marcion of Sinope at Rome around the year 144.

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Maria Hack

Maria Hack (née Barton, 16 February 1777 – 4 January 1844) was an English writer of educational books for children that were praised for their clarity.

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Marian feast days

Marian feast days are specific holy days of the liturgical year recognized by Christians as significant Marian days for the celebration of events in the life of the Blessed Virgin Mary and her veneration.

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Mario di Calasio

Mario di Calasio (1550 in Calascio, Abruzzi, Italy – February 1, 1620 in Ara Coeli) was an Italian Minorite friar.

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Mariology of the Catholic Church

Mariology of the Catholic Church is the systematic study of the person of Mary, mother of Jesus, and of her place in the Economy of Salvation, within Catholic theology.

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Marjoe Gortner

Hugh Marjoe Ross Gortner (born January 14, 1944 in Long Beach, California) is a former evangelist preacher and actor.

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Mark Twain

Samuel Langhorne Clemens (November 30, 1835 – April 21, 1910), better known by his pen name Mark Twain, was an American writer, humorist, entrepreneur, publisher, and lecturer.

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Martha Hatfield

Martha Hatfield (also known as The Wise Virgin) (fl. 1652) was an English Puritan prophet.

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Martin Luther

Martin Luther, (10 November 1483 – 18 February 1546) was a German professor of theology, composer, priest, monk, and a seminal figure in the Protestant Reformation.

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Martynas Mažvydas

Martynas Mažvydas (1510 – 21 May 1563) was the author and the editor of the first printed book in the Lithuanian language.

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Mary Bosanquet Fletcher

Mary Bosanquet Fletcher (12 September 1739 – 8 December 1815) was a Methodist preacher.

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Massachusetts School Laws

The Massachusetts School Laws were three legislative acts of 1642, 1647 and 1648 enacted in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

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Master Mahan

Master Mahan, in the religious texts of the Latter Day Saint movement, is a title assumed first by Cain and later by his descendant Lamech.

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Matthias Tanner

Matthias Tanner was born at Pilsen in Bohemia on February 28, 1630.

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Maurice de Sully

Maurice de Sully (died 11 September 1196) was Bishop of Paris from 1160 until his death.

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Mazhar Mahmood Qurashi

Mazhar Mahmood Qurashi (Urdu: مظهر محمود قريشى; b. 8 October 1925 – 21 November 2011; SI), best known as M. M. Qureshi was a Pakistani physicist and an Islamic scholar who was educated in Lahore and Manchester.

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Means of grace

The means of grace in Christian theology are those things (the means) through which God gives grace.

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Medieval renaissances

The medieval renaissances were periods characterised by significant cultural renewal across medieval Western Europe.

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Meivazhi

Meivazhi - The True Path (மெய்வழி) is a syncretic monotheistic religion based in Tamil Nadu, India.

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Meme

A meme is an idea, behavior, or style that spreads from person to person within a culture—often with the aim of conveying a particular phenomenon, theme, or meaning represented by the meme.

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Men Above the Law

Men Above the Law (translit) is a tragedy in five acts by Alexey Pisemsky first published in the No.2, February 1867 issue of Vsemirny Trud magazine.

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Mesopotamian myths

Mesopotamian mythology refers to the myths, religious texts, and other literature that comes from the region of ancient Mesopotamia in modern-day West Asia.

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Messianic Jewish theology

Messianic Jewish theology is the study of God and Scripture from the perspective of Messianic Judaism, a religious movement that fuses elements of Judaism and Christianity and claims to be a legitimate form of Judaism.

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Messianism

In Abrahamic religions, Messianism is the belief and doctrine that is centered on the advent of the messiah, who acts as the chosen savior and leader of humanity by God.

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Methodist Church of Great Britain

The Methodist Church of Great Britain is the fourth-largest Christian denomination in Britain and the mother church to Methodists worldwide.

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Methodius of Olympus

The Church Father and Saint Methodius of Olympus (died c. 311) was a Christian bishop, ecclesiastical author, and martyr.

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Methods of obtaining knowledge

Knowledge may originate or be derived from the following origins or methods.

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MF Norwegian School of Theology

Norwegian School of Theology (1908), formerly the Free Faculty of Theology (Det teologiske Menighetsfakultet) is an accredited Norwegian Specialized University focused on Theology, Religion, Education, and Social Studies, located in Oslo, Norway.

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Michael Gaismair

Michael Gaismair, (1490, Sterzing, County of Tyrol – 15 April 1532, Padua, Republic of Venice) was the son of a mining entrepreneur,Aldo Stella, Il Bauernführer, Michael Gaismair e l'utopia di un repubblicanesimo popolare, il Mulino, 1999 which became secretary of the powerful bishop of Brixen.

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Michael O'Flanagan

Father Michael O'Flanagan (An tAthair Mícheál Ó Flannagáin) (1876 – 7 August 1942) was a Roman Catholic priest, Irish language scholar and Irish republican active in Sinn Féin, of which he was President in 1933–35.

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Michael Prior (theologian)

Michael Prior (March 15, 1942 – July 21, 2004) was a priest of the Vincentian Congregation, professor of biblical theology at Saint Mary's College, University of Surrey, and a liberation theologian.

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Miguel García Cuesta

Miguel García Cuesta (6 October 1803 in Macotera – 18 April 1873 in Santiago de Compostela) was a Professor at the University of Salamanca, Bishop of Jaca (1848), Archbishop of Santiago de Compostela (1851), Senator for Life (1851) and Cardinal (1861).

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Mikhail Bakunin

Mikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin (– 1 July 1876) was a Russian revolutionary anarchist and founder of collectivist anarchism.

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Military Religious Freedom Foundation

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF) is a watchdog group and advocacy organization founded in 2005 by Michael Weinstein.

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Minister (Catholic Church)

In the Catholic Church the term minister enjoys a variety of usages.

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Minister (Christianity)

In Christianity, a minister is a person authorized by a church, or other religious organization, to perform functions such as teaching of beliefs; leading services such as weddings, baptisms or funerals; or otherwise providing spiritual guidance to the community.

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Miracle

A miracle is an event not explicable by natural or scientific laws.

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Mishnah

The Mishnah or Mishna (מִשְׁנָה, "study by repetition", from the verb shanah, or "to study and review", also "secondary") is the first major written collection of the Jewish oral traditions known as the "Oral Torah".

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Misogyny

Misogyny is the hatred of, contempt for, or prejudice against women or girls.

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Mladen II Šubić of Bribir

Mladen II Šubić of Bribir (Mladen II Šubić Bribirski) (c.1270 – c.1341), a Croatian leader and member of the Šubić noble family, was a Ban of Croatia and Lord of all of Bosnia.

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Modern Paganism

Modern Paganism, also known as Contemporary Paganism and Neopaganism, is a collective term for new religious movements influenced by or claiming to be derived from the various historical pagan beliefs of pre-modern Europe, North Africa and the Near East.

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Modern understanding of Greek mythology

The genesis of modern understanding of Greek mythology is regarded by some scholars as a double reaction at the end of the 18th century against "the traditional attitude of Christian animosity mixed with disdain, which had prevailed for centuries", in which the Christian reinterpretation of myth as a "lie" or fable had been retained.

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Mohammad Habash

Mohammad Al-Habash or Mohamed Habash (محمد حبش) (born 1 October 1962) is a Syrian Islamic scholar, writer and politician.

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Mondo (scripture)

A is a recorded collection of dialogues between a pupil and a rōshi (a Zen Buddhist teacher).

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Mongol invasions of Korea

The Mongol invasions of Korea (1231–1259) comprised a series of campaigns between 1231 and 1270 by the Mongol Empire against the Kingdom of Goryeo (the proto-state of modern-day Korea).

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Moritz von Aberle

Moritz von Aberle (25 April 1819 – 3 November 1875) was a German Catholic theologian.

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Mormon (Book of Mormon prophet)

Mormon is believed by followers of Mormonism to have been the narrator of much of the Book of Mormon, a sacred religious text of the Latter Day Saint movement, which describes him as a prophet-historian and a member of a tribe of indigenous Americans known as the Nephites, one of the four groups (including the Lamanites, Jaredites, and Mulekites) described in the Book of Mormon as having settled in the ancient Americas.

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Mormon (word)

The word or term "Mormon" most commonly denotes an adherent, practitioner, follower, or constituent of Mormonism in restorationist Christianity.

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Mormonism and polygamy

Polygamy (most often polygyny, called plural marriage by Mormons in the 19th century or the Principle by modern fundamentalist practitioners of polygamy) was practiced by leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) for more than half of the 19th century, and practiced publicly from 1852 to 1890 by between 20 and 30 percent of Latter-day Saint families.

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Mormons

Mormons are a religious and cultural group related to Mormonism, the principal branch of the Latter Day Saint movement of Restorationist Christianity, initiated by Joseph Smith in upstate New York during the 1820s.

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Moses

Mosesמֹשֶׁה, Modern Tiberian ISO 259-3; ܡܘܫܐ Mūše; موسى; Mωϋσῆς was a prophet in the Abrahamic religions.

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Moses in Islam

Mûsâ ibn 'Imran (Mūsā) known as Moses in the Hebrew Bible, considered a prophet, messenger, and leader in Islam, is the most frequently mentioned individual in the Quran.

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Mozarabic chant

Mozarabic chant (also known as Hispanic chant, Old Hispanic chant, Old Spanish chant, or Visigothic chant) is the liturgical plainchant repertory of the Visigothic/Mozarabic rite of the Catholic Church, related to the Gregorian chant.

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Muʿtazila

Muʿtazila (المعتزلة) is a rationalist school of Islamic theology"", Encyclopaedia Britannica.

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Muhammad

MuhammadFull name: Abū al-Qāsim Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib ibn Hāšim (ابو القاسم محمد ابن عبد الله ابن عبد المطلب ابن هاشم, lit: Father of Qasim Muhammad son of Abd Allah son of Abdul-Muttalib son of Hashim) (مُحمّد;;Classical Arabic pronunciation Latinized as Mahometus c. 570 CE – 8 June 632 CE)Elizabeth Goldman (1995), p. 63, gives 8 June 632 CE, the dominant Islamic tradition.

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Muhammad in Islam

Muḥammad ibn ʿAbdullāh ibn ʿAbdul-Muṭṭalib ibn Hāshim (مُـحَـمَّـد ابْـن عَـبْـد الله ابْـن عَـبْـد الْـمُـطَّـلِـب ابْـن هَـاشِـم) (circa 570 CE – 8 June 632 CE), in short form Muhammad, is the last Messenger and Prophet of God in all the main branches of Islam.

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Mundhum

Mundhum (also known as Peylan) is the ancient religious scripture and folk literature of the Limbu.

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Munshibari family of Comilla

The Munshibari (মুন্সীবাড়ী) estate established in the 18th century was held by a landed, Anglo-Indian family of Munshis (Urdu:; Hindi: मुंशी; Persian:منشی) in Bengal (present day Chandpur District, Chittagong Division in Bangladesh).

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Murder of Bernard Darke

On 14 July 1979 Bernard Darke, a British-born, Guyana-based Jesuit priest and photographer for the Catholic Standard, was stabbed to death by members of the House of Israel, a religious cult closely tied to the People's National Congress, while photographing Working People's Alliance demonstrations of the PNC.

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Music of China

Music of China refers to the music of the Chinese people, which may be the music of the Han Chinese as well as other ethnic minorities within mainland China.

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Music technology

Music technology is the use of any device, mechanism, machine or tool by a musician or composer to make or perform music; to compose, notate, play back or record songs or pieces; or to analyze or edit music.

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Music technology (mechanical)

Mechanical music technology is the use of any device, mechanism, machine or tool by a musician or composer to make or perform music; to compose, notate, play back or record songs or pieces; or to analyze or edit music.

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Muslim

A Muslim (مُسلِم) is someone who follows or practices Islam, a monotheistic Abrahamic religion.

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Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (19 May 1881 (conventional) – 10 November 1938) was a Turkish army officer, revolutionary, and founder of the Republic of Turkey, serving as its first President from 1923 until his death in 1938.

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Myth

Myth is a folklore genre consisting of narratives that play a fundamental role in society, such as foundational tales.

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Nakayama Miki

was a nineteenth-century Japanese farmer and religious leader.

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Narendra Nath Sen Gupta

Narendra Nath Sen Gupta (23 December 1889 – 13 June 1944) was a Harvard-educated Indian psychologist, philosopher, and professor, who is generally recognized as the founder of modern psychology in India along with Indian Scientist Gunamudian David Boaz.

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Natalie Wong

Natalie Kei Ying Wong (Chinese name: 黃𨥈瑩, sometimes credited as 黃紀瑩 or 黃釲瑩) (born on 15 July 1976 in Hong Kong) is a Chinese actress affiliated with TVB in Hong Kong.

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Natural theology

Natural theology, once also termed physico-theology, is a type of theology that provides arguments for the existence of God based on reason and ordinary experience of nature.

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Nebridius

Saint Nebridius (Nebridi, Nebridio) was bishop of Egara (Terrassa) (516–527) and then bishop of Barcelona from 540 to around 547 AD.

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Neocatechumenal Way

The Neocatechumenal Way, also known as the Neocatechumenate, NCW or, colloquially, The Way, is a charism within the Catholic Church dedicated to Christian formation.

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Nephites

The Nephites are one of many groups (including the Lamanites, Jaredites, and Mulekites) to be mentioned in the Book of Mormon to be settled in the ancient Americas.

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Neume

A neume (sometimes spelled neum) is the basic element of Western and Eastern systems of musical notation prior to the invention of five-line staff notation.

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New Apostolic Church

The New Apostolic Church (NAC) is a chiliastic Christian church that split from the Catholic Apostolic Church during a 1863 schism in Hamburg, Germany.

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New Jewish Publication Society of America Tanakh

The New Jewish Publication Society of America Tanakh, first published in complete form in 1985, is a modern Jewish translation of the Masoretic Text of the Hebrew Bible into English.

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New religious movement

A new religious movement (NRM), also known as a new religion or an alternative spirituality, is a religious or spiritual group that has modern origins and which occupies a peripheral place within its society's dominant religious culture.

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New Testament

The New Testament (Ἡ Καινὴ Διαθήκη, trans. Hē Kainḕ Diathḗkē; Novum Testamentum) is the second part of the Christian biblical canon, the first part being the Old Testament, based on the Hebrew Bible.

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New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project

The New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project was founded in New York City in 2003 with the stated purpose of treating rescue workers for toxins inhaled from the smoke of the September 11 attacks.

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Newtonianism

Newtonianism is a philosophical and scientific doctrine inspired by the beliefs and methods of natural philosopher Isaac Newton.

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Newville, Ohio

Newville is a now defunct town located near what is now Pleasant Hill Lake, in northeastern Worthington Township, Richland County, Ohio, United States.

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Neyrangistan, Hirbodistan, Hadokht Nask

Neyrangistan, Hirbodistan, Hadokht Nask is a Zoroastrian religious book which is written in middle Persian language.

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Nicholas of Gorran

Nicholas of Gorran (or Gorrain) (1232–1295) was born in Gorron, France.

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Nizari

The Nizaris (النزاريون al-Nizāriyyūn) are the largest branch of the Ismaili Shi'i Muslims, the second-largest branch of Shia Islam (the largest being the Twelver).

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Nomina sacra

In Christian scribal practice, Nomina sacra (singular: nomen sacrum from Latin sacred name) is the abbreviation of several frequently occurring divine names or titles, especially in Greek manuscripts of Holy Scripture.

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Non possumus

"Non possumus" is a Latin, Catholic, religious phrase that translates as "we cannot".

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Nonconformist Relief Act 1779

The Nonconformist Relief Act 1779 (19 Geo. III c. 44) was Act of the British Parliament.

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NOOMA

NOOMA is a series of short films produced by Flannel promoting spiritual reflections on individual life experiences.

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Normative principle of worship

The normative principle of worship is a Christian theological principle that teaches that worship in the Church can include those elements that are not prohibited by Scripture.

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Norwegian Mission Alliance

Norwegian Mission Alliance (NMA) - non-profit organization of christian origin, engaged in the development assistance to poor countries.

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Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution

"Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution" is a 1973 essay by the evolutionary biologist and Eastern Orthodox Christian Theodosius Dobzhansky, criticising anti-evolution creationism and espousing theistic evolution.

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Nouthetic counseling

Nouthetic counseling (Greek: noutheteo, to admonish) is a form of Evangelical Protestant pastoral counseling based solely upon the Bible and focused on Christ.

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Oath

Traditionally an oath (from Anglo-Saxon āð, also called plight) is either a statement of fact or a promise with wording relating to something considered sacred as a sign of verity.

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Oath of Allegiance (Canada)

The Canadian Oath of Allegiance is a promise or declaration of fealty to the Canadian monarch, as personification of the Canadian state, taken, along with other specific oaths of office, by new occupants of various federal and provincial government offices, members of federal, provincial, and municipal police forces, members of the Canadian Armed Forces, and, in some provinces, all lawyers upon admission to the bar.

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Octave (liturgy)

"Octave" has two senses in Christian liturgical usage.

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Of Prelatical Episcopacy

Of Prelatical Episcopacy is a religious tract written by John Milton in either June or July 1641.

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Of Reformation

Of Reformation is a 1641 pamphlet by John Milton, and his debut in the public arena.

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Old Church Slavonic in Romania

Old Church Slavonic was the main language used for administrative (until the 16th century) and liturgical purposes (until the 17th century) by the Romanian principalities, being still occasionally used in the Orthodox Church until the early 18th century.

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Old Lutheran Church

The Old Lutheran Church an orthodox Lutheran Church holding to the teachings of the Unaltered Augsburg Confession (UAC).

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Olive Willis

Olive Margaret Willis (26 October 1877 – 11 March 1964) was an English educationist and headmistress.

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Olmec alternative origin speculations

Olmec alternative origin speculations are pseudohistorical theories that have been suggested for the formation of Olmec civilization which contradict generally accepted scholarly consensus.

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Open-source religion

Open-source religions employ open-source methods for the sharing, construction, and adaptation of religious belief systems, content, and practice.

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Opus Majus

The Opus Majus (Latin for "Greater Work") is the most important work of Roger Bacon.

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Oral Torah

According to Rabbinic Judaism, the Oral Torah or Oral Law (lit. "Torah that is on the mouth") represents those laws, statutes, and legal interpretations that were not recorded in the Five Books of Moses, the "Written Torah" (lit. "Torah that is in writing"), but nonetheless are regarded by Orthodox Jews as prescriptive and co-given.

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Ordinalia

The Ordinalia are three medieval mystery plays dating to the late fourteenth century, written primarily in Middle Cornish, with stage directions in Latin.

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Orthodox Lutheran Confessional Conference

The Orthodox Lutheran Confessional Conference is a group of independent Lutheran congregations.

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Other (philosophy)

In phenomenology, the terms the Other and the Constitutive Other identify the other human being, in their differences from the Self, as being a cumulative, constituting factor in the self-image of a person; as their acknowledgement of being real; hence, the Other is dissimilar to and the opposite of the Self, of Us, and of the Same.

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Otto of Passau

Otto of Passau was a medieval German clerical author.

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Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church (Pearl City, Hawaii)

Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church is a parish of the Roman Catholic Church of Hawaii in the United States.

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Outline of Christian theology

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Christian theology: Christian theology is the study of God and His Word from a Christian point of view.

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Outline of Islam

Islam is an Abrahamic monotheistic religion teaching that there is only one God (Allah) and that Muhammad is a messenger of God.

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Outline of religion

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to religion: Religion – organized collection of beliefs, cultural systems, and world views that relate humanity to an order of existence.

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Outline of the Book of Mormon

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the Book of Mormon: Book of Mormon – sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, which adherents believe contains writings of ancient prophets who lived on the American continent from approximately 2200 BC to AD 421.

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Oxford University Press

Oxford University Press (OUP) is the largest university press in the world, and the second oldest after Cambridge University Press.

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Palimpsest

In textual studies, a palimpsest is a manuscript page, either from a scroll or a book, from which the text has been scraped or washed off so that the page can be reused for another document.

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Papal infallibility

Papal infallibility is a dogma of the Catholic Church that states that, in virtue of the promise of Jesus to Peter, the Pope is preserved from the possibility of error "when, in the exercise of his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians, in virtue of his supreme apostolic authority, he defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church." This doctrine was defined dogmatically at the First Ecumenical Council of the Vatican of 1869–1870 in the document Pastor aeternus, but had been defended before that, existing already in medieval theology and being the majority opinion at the time of the Counter-Reformation.

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Parrobus of Pottole

Parrobus of Pottole, sometimes Patrobos, Patrobus or Patrobas (Πατροβᾶς), is numbered among the seventy disciples.

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Partners in Crime (short story collection)

Partners in Crime is a short story collection written by Agatha Christie and first published by Dodd, Mead and Company in the US in 1929 and in the UK by William Collins & Sons on 16 September of the same year.

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Pascual Chávez Villanueva

Pascual Chávez Villanueva SDB (born December 20, 1947) is a Roman Catholic priest of the Salesians of Don Bosco, who was Rector Major of that Order between April 3, 2002 and March 25, 2014, being the 9th successor of Don Bosco, the first Mexican to get such position and the second Latin American after Argentinian Juan Edmundo Vecchi.

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Patheos

Patheos is a non-denominational, non-partisan online media company providing information and commentary from various religious and nonreligious perspectives.

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Paul Cuffee

For the Episcopalian Reverend missionary, see Paul Cuffee (1754-1812). Paul Cuffee or Paul Cuffe (January 17, 1759 – September 7, 1817) was a Quaker businessman, sea captain, patriot, and abolitionist.

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Paul VI High School

Paul VI High School is a private Catholic high school located in Haddon Township, in Camden County, New Jersey, United States.

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Paul Y. Hoskisson

Paul Y. Hoskisson (born 1943) is an American professor of Ancient scripture and former associate dean of Religious Education at Brigham Young University (BYU).

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Pāli Canon

The Pāli Canon is the standard collection of scriptures in the Theravada Buddhist tradition, as preserved in the Pāli language.

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Pearl of Great Price (Mormonism)

The Pearl of Great Price is part of the canonical standard works of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and some other Latter Day Saint denominations.

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Pedro de Morales

Pedro de Morales (1538–1614) was a Spanish religious writer.

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Pelagianism

Pelagianism is the belief that original sin did not taint human nature and that mortal will is still capable of choosing good or evil without special divine aid.

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Peresopnytsia Gospel

The Peresopnytsia Gospels (Пересопницьке Євангеліє, Peresopnytske Yevanheliie), dating from the 16th century, is one of the most intricate surviving East Slavic manuscripts.

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Perfection

Perfection is, broadly, a state of completeness and flawlessness.

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Pericope

A pericope (Greek περικοπή, "a cutting-out") in rhetoric is a set of verses that forms one coherent unit or thought, suitable for public reading from a text, now usually of sacred scripture.

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Peter Abelard

Peter Abelard (Petrus Abaelardus or Abailardus; Pierre Abélard,; 1079 – 21 April 1142) was a medieval French scholastic philosopher, theologian, and preeminent logician.

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Peter Annet

Peter Annet (169318 January 1769) was an English deist and early freethinker.

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Peter W. Ochs

Peter W. Ochs (born 1950) is the Edgar M. Bronfman Professor of Modern Judaic Studies at the University of Virginia, where he has served since 1997.

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Petrus Comestor

Petrus Comestor, also known as Pierre le Mangeur – both names, respectively, the Latin and French for "Peter the Devourer" (of knowledge) – was a twelfth-century French theological writer and university administrator who died around 1178.

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Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse

Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse (13 November 1504 – 31 March 1567), nicknamed der Großmütige ("the magnanimous"), was a leading champion of the Protestant Reformation and one of the most important of the early Protestant rulers in Germany.

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Philippine literature in Spanish

Philippine literature in Spanish (Literatura Filipina en Español) (Literaturang Pilipino sa Espanyol) is a body of literature made by Filipino writers in the Spanish language.

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Philosophical skepticism

Philosophical skepticism (UK spelling: scepticism; from Greek σκέψις skepsis, "inquiry") is a philosophical school of thought that questions the possibility of certainty in knowledge.

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Phoenix Affirmations

The Phoenix Affirmations is a set of twelve principles originally penned by a group of clergy and laypeople from Phoenix, Arizona, in an attempt to articulate clearly the broad strokes of the emerging Christian faith.

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Pierantonio Tremolada

Pierantonio Tremolada (born 4 October 1956 in Lissone) is an Italian Roman Catholic prelate who serves as the current Bishop of Brescia since his appointment on 12 July 2017.

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Pierre Bersuire

Pierre Bersuire (c. 1290–1362), also known as Pierre Bercheure and Pierre Berchoire (in Latin, Petrus Berchorius or Petrus Bercorius), was a French author of the Middle Ages.

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Pietro La Fontaine

The Servant of God Pietro La Fontaine (29 November 1860 – 9 July 1935) was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal who served as the Patriarch of Venice from 1915 until his death.

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Pitcairn Islanders

Pitcairn Islanders also referred to as Pitkerners, are the inhabitants or citizens of the Pitcairn Islands.

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Pitcairn Islands

The Pitcairn Islands (Pitkern: Pitkern Ailen), officially Pitcairn, Henderson, Ducie and Oeno Islands, are a group of four volcanic islands in the southern Pacific Ocean that form the last British Overseas Territory in the South Pacific.

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PL Kyodan

, is a Japanese Shinshūkyō (new religious movement) founded in 1924 by Tokuharu Miki (1871–1938), who was a priest in the Ōbaku sect of Zen Buddhism.

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Plane (esotericism)

In esoteric cosmology, a plane is conceived as a subtle state, level, or region of reality, each plane corresponding to some type, kind, or category of being.

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Platform Sutra

The Platform Sutra of the Sixth Patriarch (or simply: 壇經 Tánjīng) is a Chan Buddhist scripture that was composed in China during the 8th to 13th century.

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Plomin

Plomin (Fianona) is a village in the Croatian part of Istria, situated approximately 11 km north of Labin, on a hill 80 meters tall.

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Polish–Swedish union

The Polish–Swedish union was a short-lived personal union between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the Kingdom of Sweden, when Sigismund III Vasa, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, was crowned King of Sweden in 1592.

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Politics Drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture

Politique tirée des propres paroles de l'Écriture sainte (in English translation, Politics Drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture) is a work of political theory prepared by Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet as part of his duties as tutor for Louis XIV's heir apparent, Louis, ''le Grand Dauphin''.

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Polyglot (book)

A polyglot is a book that contains side-by-side versions of the same text in several different languages.

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Polytheism

Polytheism (from Greek πολυθεϊσμός, polytheismos) is the worship of or belief in multiple deities, which are usually assembled into a pantheon of gods and goddesses, along with their own religions and rituals.

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Pomeroy Tucker

Pomeroy Tucker (August 10, 1802 – June 30, 1870) was a journalist and New York politician.

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Pontifical Biblical Institute

The Pontifical Biblical Institute (it: Pontificio Istituto Biblico), or "'Biblicum'", in Rome, Italy, is an institution of the Holy See that is run by the Jesuits and offers instruction at the university level.

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Pope Leo I

Pope Saint Leo I (400 – 10 November 461), also known as Saint Leo the Great, was Pope from 29 September 440 and died in 461.

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Pope Peter I of Alexandria

Pope Peter I of Alexandria (Ⲡⲁⲡⲁ Ⲁⲃⲃⲁ ⲡⲉⲧⲣⲟⲥ ⲁ̅), 17th Pope of Alexandria & Patriarch of the See of St. Mark.

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Pratap Singh Giani

Pratap Singh Giani (also Partap Singh Gyani, 1855–1920) was a Sikh academician, scholar and calligraphist.

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Prayer book

A prayer book is a book containing prayers and perhaps devotional readings, for private or communal use, or in some cases, outlining the liturgy of religious services.

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Prayer for the dead

Wherever there is a belief in the continued existence of human personality through and after death, religion naturally concerns itself with the relations between the living and the dead.

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Prayer, meditation and contemplation in Christianity

Prayer has been an essential part of Christianity since its earliest days.

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Prayers for Bobby

Prayers for Bobby is a televised docudrama that premiered on the Lifetime network on January 24, 2009.

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Pre-Adamite

The Pre-Adamite hypothesis or Pre-adamism is the theological belief that humans (or intelligent yet non-human creatures) existed before the biblical character Adam.

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Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact theories

Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact theories relate to visits or interactions with the Americas and/or indigenous peoples of the Americas by people from Africa, Asia, Europe, or Oceania before Columbus's first voyage to the Caribbean in 1492.

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Precept

A precept (from the præcipere, to teach) is a commandment, instruction, or order intended as an authoritative rule of action.

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Presbyterian Church in Ireland

The Presbyterian Church in Ireland (PCI; Eaglais Phreispitéireach in Éirinn, Ulster-Scots: Prisbytairin Kirk in Airlann) is the largest Presbyterian denomination in Ireland, and the largest Protestant denomination in Northern Ireland.

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Presbyterian Church of Brazil

The Presbyterian Church of Brazil (Portuguese: Igreja Presbiteriana do Brasil, or IPB) is an Evangelical Protestant Christian denomination in Brazil.

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Presuppositional apologetics

Presuppositionalism is a school of Christian apologetics that believes the Christian faith is the only basis for rational thought.

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Priest

A priest or priestess (feminine) is a religious leader authorized to perform the sacred rituals of a religion, especially as a mediatory agent between humans and one or more deities.

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Primary source

In the study of history as an academic discipline, a primary source (also called original source or evidence) is an artifact, document, diary, manuscript, autobiography, recording, or any other source of information that was created at the time under study.

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Principia Discordia

The Principia Discordia is a Discordian religious text written by Greg Hill (Malaclypse the Younger) with Kerry Wendell Thornley (Lord Omar Khayyam Ravenhurst).

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Prokeimenon

In the liturgical practice of the Orthodox Church and Byzantine Rite, a prokeimenon (Greek Προκείμενον, plural prokeimena; sometimes prokimenon/prokimena; lit. "that which precedes") is a psalm or canticle refrain sung responsorially at certain specified points of the Divine Liturgy or the Divine Office, usually to introduce a scripture reading.

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Prophets and messengers in Islam

Prophets in Islam (الأنبياء في الإسلام) include "messengers" (rasul, pl. rusul), bringers of a divine revelation via an angel (Arabic: ملائكة, malāʾikah);Shaatri, A. I. (2007).

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Protestantism

Protestantism is the second largest form of Christianity with collectively more than 900 million adherents worldwide or nearly 40% of all Christians.

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Providentissimus Deus

Providentissimus Deus, "On the Study of Holy Scripture", was an encyclical letter issued by Pope Leo XIII on 18 November 1893.

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Prussian Union of Churches

The Prussian Union of Churches (known under multiple other names) was a major Protestant church body which emerged in 1817 from a series of decrees by Frederick William III of Prussia that united both Lutheran and Reformed denominations in Prussia.

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Pulcheria

Saint Aelia Pulcheria (Πουλχερία; 19 January 398 or 399 – July 453) was Regent of the Byzantine Empire during the minority of her brother Theodosius II, and empress by marriage to Marcian.

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Pulpit

Pulpit is a raised stand for preachers in a Christian church.

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Purgatory

In Roman Catholic theology, purgatory (via Anglo-Norman and Old French) is an intermediate state after physical death in which some of those ultimately destined for heaven must first "undergo purification, so as to achieve the holiness necessary to enter the joy of heaven," holding that "certain offenses can be forgiven in this age, but certain others in the age to come." And that entrance into Heaven requires the "remission before God of the temporal punishment due to sins whose guilt has already been forgiven," for which indulgences may be given which remove "either part or all of the temporal punishment due to sin," such as an "unhealthy attachment" to sin.

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Pyramid Texts

The Pyramid Texts are a collection of ancient Egyptian religious texts from the time of the Old Kingdom.

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Qedarite

The Qedarite Kingdom or Qedar (مملكة قيدار, Mamlakat Qaydar), were a largely nomadic, ancient Arab tribal confederation.

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Qila Sobha Singh

Qila Sobha Singh, now called Ahmad Abad (احمد آباد) is a town in the Punjab province of Pakistan. It was renamed as Qila Ahmad Abad on 18 March 1999, owing to behemoth furore among the masses of the town, that it should be renamed. Before 1 July 1991 it was under the District Administration of Sialkot and was part of Sialkot District but after 1 July 1991 it was made part of Narowal and on the same date Narowal was declared a district. It is part of Narowal District and is located at 32°13'60N 74°46'0E and has an altitude of 240 metres (787 feet).

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Quenya

Quenya is a fictional language devised by J. R. R. Tolkien and used by the Elves in his legendarium.

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Quran

The Quran (القرآن, literally meaning "the recitation"; also romanized Qur'an or Koran) is the central religious text of Islam, which Muslims believe to be a revelation from God (Allah).

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Quranic createdness

Createdness refers to the doctrinal position that the Qur’an was created, rather than having always existed and thus being "uncreated".

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Quranism

Quranism (القرآنية; al-Qur'āniyya) describes any form of Islam that accepts the Qur'an as the only sacred text through which Allah revealed himself to mankind, but rejects the religious authority, reliability, and/or authenticity of the Hadith collections.

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Race and appearance of Jesus

The race and appearance of Jesus has been a topic of discussion since the days of early Christianity.

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Raimundo Diosdado Caballero

Raimundo Diosdado Caballero (June 19, 1740 - January 16, 1830 or April 28, 1829) was a Catholic miscellaneous writer, chiefly ecclesiastical.

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Ram Kinkar Upadhyay

Ram Kinkar Upadhyay is a noted scholar on Indian scriptures and a recipient of Padma Bhushan - the third highest civil award of India — in 1999.

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Ramdev

Swami Ramdev (born as Ramkrishna Yadav on 25 December 1965) is a yoga guru known for his work in ayurveda, business, politics and agriculture.

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Ranganatha

Ranganāthar also known as Sri Ranganatha, Aranganathar, Ranga and Thenarangathan is a Hindu deity, more well known in South India, and the chief deity of the Sri Ranganathaswamy Temple, Srirangam.

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Ranganathaswamy Temple, Srirangam

The Sri Ranganathaswamy Temple or Thiruvarangam is a Hindu temple dedicated to Ranganatha, a reclining form of the Hindu deity Vishnu, located in Srirangam, Tiruchirapalli, Tamil Nadu, India.

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Ranter

The Ranters were one of a number of nonconformist dissenting groups that emerged around the time of the English Commonwealth (1649–1660).

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Ranulf Higden

Ranulf Higden or Higdon (– 12 March 1364) was an English chronicler and a Benedictine monk of the monastery of St. Werburgh in Chester.

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Rao (Greyhawk)

In the World of Greyhawk campaign setting for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, Rao is the Flan god of Peace, Reason, and Serenity.

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Ratio Studiorum

The Ratio atque Institutio Studiorum Societatis Iesu (The Official Plan for Jesuit Education), often abbreviated as Ratio Studiorum (Latin: Plan of Studies), was a document that standardized the globally influential system of Jesuit education in 1599.

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Ratisbonne Monastery

Ratisbonne Monastery (מנזר רטיסבון) is a monastery in the Rehavia neighborhood of Jerusalem, Israel, established by Marie-Alphonse Ratisbonne, a French convert from Judaism.

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Ratzinger Foundation

The Ratzinger Foundation, also known as The Pope Benedict XVI Foundation, is a charitable organization whose aim is "the promotion of theology in the spirit of Joseph Ratzinger." which it achieves by funding scholarships and bursaries for poorer students across the world.

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Reader (liturgy)

In some Christian churches, the reader is responsible for reading aloud excerpts of the scripture at a liturgy.

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Reccared I

Reccared I (or Recared; Reccaredus; Recaredo; 559 – 31 May 601 AD; reigned 586–601) was Visigothic King of Hispania and Septimania.

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Red letter edition

Red letter edition bibles are those in which the Dominical words—those spoken by Jesus Christ, commonly only those spoken during His corporeal life on Earth—are printed rubricated, in red ink.

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Redcap

The redcap (or Redcap) is a type of malevolent, murderous goblin found in Border folklore.

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Redemptive-historical preaching

Redemptive-historical preaching is a method of preaching that emerged from the Reformed churches of the Netherlands in the early 1940s.

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Reginald Pecock

Reginald Pecock (or Peacock; c. 1395– c. 1461) was an English prelate, Scholastic, and writer.

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Regulative principle of worship

The regulative principle of worship is a Christian doctrine, held by some Calvinists and Anabaptists, that God commands churches to conduct public services of worship using certain distinct elements affirmatively found in Scripture, and conversely, that God prohibits any and all other practices in public worship.

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Religion

Religion may be defined as a cultural system of designated behaviors and practices, world views, texts, sanctified places, prophecies, ethics, or organizations, that relates humanity to supernatural, transcendental, or spiritual elements.

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Religion and video games

The study of religion and video games is a subfield of digital religion, which the American scholar of communication, Heidi Campbell, defines as “Religion that is constituted in new ways through digital media and cultures.” (Campbell, 2012, p. 3).

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Religion in Futurama

The animated science fiction television program Futurama makes a number of satirical and humorous references to religion, including inventing several fictional religions which are explored in certain episodes of the series.

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Religion in Indonesia

Indonesia is constitutionally a secular state and the first principle of Indonesia's philosophical foundation, Pancasila, is "belief in the one and only God".

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Religion in Medieval England

Religion in Medieval England includes all forms of religious organization, practice and belief in England, between the end of Roman authority in the fifth century and the advent of Tudor dynasty in the late fifteenth century.

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Religion in Sweden

Religion in Sweden is diversified.

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Religious Jewish music

This article describes the principal types of religious Jewish music from the days of the Temple to modern times.

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Religious offense

Religious offense means any action which offends religious sensibilities and arouses serious negative emotions in people with strong belief and which is usually associated with an orthodox response to, or correction of, sin.

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Religious satire

Religious satire is a form of satire targeted at religious beliefs.

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Religious syncretism

Religious syncretism exhibits blending of two or more religious belief systems into a new system, or the incorporation into a religious tradition of beliefs from unrelated traditions.

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Religious text

Religious texts (also known as scripture, or scriptures, from the Latin scriptura, meaning "writing") are texts which religious traditions consider to be central to their practice or beliefs.

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Religious values

Religious values are ethical principles founded in religious traditions, texts and beliefs.

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Religious views of Charles Darwin

Charles Darwin's views on religion have been the subject of much interest.

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Religious views on organ donation

Many different major religious groups and denominations have varying views on organ donation of a deceased and live bodies, depending on their ideologies.

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Remigius of Auxerre

Remigius (Remi) of Auxerre (Remigius Autissiodorensis; c. 841 – 908) was a Benedictine monk during the Carolingian period, a teacher of Latin grammar, and a prolific author of commentaries on classical Greek and Latin texts.

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René Guénon

René-Jean-Marie-Joseph Guénon (15 November 1886 – 7 January 1951), also known as ʿAbd al-Wāḥid Yaḥyá, was a French author and intellectual who remains an influential figure in the domain of metaphysics, having written on topics ranging from sacred science and traditional studies, to symbolism and initiation.

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Repentance

Repentance is the activity of reviewing one's actions and feeling contrition or regret for past wrongs, which is accompanied by commitment to change for the better.

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Republic

A republic (res publica) is a form of government in which the country is considered a "public matter", not the private concern or property of the rulers.

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Restoration Church of Jesus Christ

The Restoration Church of Jesus Christ (RCJC), based in Salt Lake City, Utah, was a church in the Latter Day Saint movement that catered primarily to the spiritual needs of LGBT Latter Day Saints.

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Restoration Movement

The Restoration Movement (also known as the American Restoration Movement or the Stone-Campbell Movement, and pejoratively as Campbellism) is a Christian movement that began on the United States frontier during the Second Great Awakening (1790–1840) of the early 19th century. The pioneers of this movement were seeking to reform the church from within and sought "the unification of all Christians in a single body patterned after the church of the New Testament."Rubel Shelly, I Just Want to Be a Christian, 20th Century Christian, Nashville, TN 1984, Especially since the mid-20th century, members of these churches do not identify as Protestant but simply as Christian.. Richard Thomas Hughes, Reviving the Ancient Faith: The Story of Churches of Christ in America, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1996: "arguably the most widely distributed tract ever published by the Churches of Christ or anyone associated with that tradition."Samuel S Hill, Charles H Lippy, Charles Reagan Wilson, Encyclopedia of Religion in the South, Mercer University Press, 2005, pp. 854 The Restoration Movement developed from several independent strands of religious revival that idealized early Christianity. Two groups, which independently developed similar approaches to the Christian faith, were particularly important. The first, led by Barton W. Stone, began at Cane Ridge, Kentucky, and identified as "Christians". The second began in western Pennsylvania and Virginia (now West Virginia) and was led by Thomas Campbell and his son, Alexander Campbell, both educated in Scotland; they eventually used the name "Disciples of Christ". Both groups sought to restore the whole Christian church on the pattern set forth in the New Testament, and both believed that creeds kept Christianity divided. In 1832 they joined in fellowship with a handshake. Among other things, they were united in the belief that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; that Christians should celebrate the Lord's Supper on the first day of each week; and that baptism of adult believers by immersion in water is a necessary condition for salvation. Because the founders wanted to abandon all denominational labels, they used the biblical names for the followers of Jesus. Both groups promoted a return to the purposes of the 1st-century churches as described in the New Testament. One historian of the movement has argued that it was primarily a unity movement, with the restoration motif playing a subordinate role. The Restoration Movement has since divided into multiple separate groups. There are three main branches in the U.S.: the Churches of Christ, the unaffiliated Christian Church/Church of Christ congregations, and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). Some characterize the divisions in the movement as the result of the tension between the goals of restoration and ecumenism: the Churches of Christ and unaffiliated Christian Church/Church of Christ congregations resolved the tension by stressing restoration, while the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) resolved the tension by stressing ecumenism.Leroy Garrett, The Stone-Campbell Movement: The Story of the American Restoration Movement, College Press, 2002,, 573 pp. A number of groups outside the U.S. also have historical associations with this movement, such as the Evangelical Christian Church in Canada and the Churches of Christ in Australia. Because the Restoration Movement lacks any centralized structure, having originated in a variety of places with different leaders, there is no consistent nomenclature for the movement as a whole.. The term "Restoration Movement" became popular during the 19th century; this appears to be due to the influence of Alexander Campbell's essays on "A Restoration of the Ancient Order of Things" in the Christian Baptist. The term "Stone-Campbell Movement" emerged towards the end of the 20th century as a way to avoid the difficulties associated with some of the other names that have been used, and to maintain a sense of the collective history of the movement.

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Resurrection

Resurrection is the concept of coming back to life after death.

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Revelation

In religion and theology, revelation is the revealing or disclosing of some form of truth or knowledge through communication with a deity or other supernatural entity or entities.

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Revelation 12 sign prophecy

The Revelation 12 sign prophecy was an apocalyptic belief that suggested an astronomical alignment on September 23, 2017 fulfilled the first two verses of Revelation 12.

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Revival Centres International

The Revival Centres International is a Pentecostal church with its headquarters in Melbourne, Australia.

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Richard Archdekin

Richard Archdeacon, alias McGillacuddy (1616-1690), was an Irish Jesuit who wrote Catholic works in both English and Irish.

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Richard Graves (theologian)

Richard Graves (1763–1829) was a Church of Ireland cleric, theological scholar and author of Graves on the Pentateuch.

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Richard N. Hughes

Richard Norman Hughes (born March 1, 1927, Michigan – died October 9, 2004, Durham, North Carolina) was an American television executive and television station editorialist.

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Rigveda

The Rigveda (Sanskrit: ऋग्वेद, from "praise" and "knowledge") is an ancient Indian collection of Vedic Sanskrit hymns along with associated commentaries on liturgy, ritual and mystical exegesis.

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Robert Govett

Robert Govett, (Staines, Middlesex, 14 February 1813 – Norwich, Norfolk, 20 February 1901) was a famous British theologian, and a successful independent pastor of Surrey Chapel, Norwich, Norfolk, England.

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Robert L. Millet

Robert L. Millet (born 30 December 1947) is a professor of ancient scripture and emeritus Dean of Religious Education at Brigham Young University (BYU) in Provo, Utah.

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Robert Sarah

Robert Sarah (born 15 June 1945) is a Guinean prelate of the Catholic Church.

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Robert the Bruce

Robert I (11 July 1274 – 7 June 1329), popularly known as Robert the Bruce (Medieval Gaelic: Roibert a Briuis; modern Scottish Gaelic: Raibeart Bruis; Norman French: Robert de Brus or Robert de Bruys; Early Scots: Robert Brus; Robertus Brussius), was King of Scots from 1306 until his death in 1329.

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Roman Catholic Diocese of Pescia

The Italian Catholic Diocese of Pescia (Dioecesis Pisciensis) is in Tuscany.

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Roman Catholic Diocese of Valle de Chalco

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Valle de Chalco (Dioecesis Vallis Chalcensis) (erected 8 July 2003) is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Tlalnepantla.

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Roman mythology

Roman mythology is the body of traditional stories pertaining to ancient Rome's legendary origins and religious system, as represented in the literature and visual arts of the Romans.

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Roman Sebastian Zängerle

Roman Sebastian Zängerle (January 20, 1771, Ober-Kirchberg near Ulm – April 17, 1848 at Seckau in Austria) was Prince-Bishop of Seckau.

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Ronin Publishing

Ronin Publishing, Inc. is a small press in Berkeley, California, founded in 1983 and incorporated in 1985, which publishes books as tools for personal development, visionary alternatives, and expanded consciousness.

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Roozahang

Roozahang (روزآهنگ) is the Avestan language name of a Zoroastrian benevolent divinity associated with life-bringing rainfall and fertility.

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Russian Orthodox bell ringing

Russian Orthodox bell ringing has a history starting from the baptism of Rus in 988 and plays an important role in the traditions of the Russian Orthodox Church.

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Sacred

Sacred means revered due to sanctity and is generally the state of being perceived by religious individuals as associated with divinity and considered worthy of spiritual respect or devotion; or inspiring awe or reverence among believers.

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Sacred language

A sacred language, "holy language" (in religious context) or liturgical language is any language that is cultivated and used primarily in religious service or for other religious reasons by people who speak another, primary language in their daily life.

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Sacred Space (website)

Sacred Space is a prayer website which has achieved considerable fame since its foundation in 1999.

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Sacred tradition

Sacred Tradition, or Holy Tradition, is a theological term used in some Christian traditions, primarily those claiming apostolic succession such as the Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Assyrian, and Anglican traditions, to refer to the foundation of the doctrinal and spiritual authority of the Christian Church and of the Bible.

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Sahih Al-Bukhari: The Early Years of Islam

Sahih Al-Bukhari: The Early Years of Islam is the translation and explanation of Sahih al-Bukhari by Muhammad Asad.

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Saint Andrew's Junior College

St.

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Saint Austin Press

Saint Austin Press is a British Roman Catholic publishing house founded in 1996.

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Sallie McFague

Sallie McFague (1933-) is an American feminist Christian theologian, best known for her analysis of how metaphor lies at the heart of how we may speak about God.

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Samaritan Pentateuch

The Samaritan Pentateuch, also known as the Samaritan Torah (תורה שומרונית torah shomronit), is a text of the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, written in the Samaritan alphabet and used as scripture by the Samaritans.

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Samuel Best

Samuel Best (1738–1825) was an English pretended prophet, stated to have been at one period of his life a servant in several families in London, where he earned a reputation for dishonesty.

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Samuel Ruiz

Samuel Ruiz García (3 November 1924 – 24 January 2011) was a Mexican Roman Catholic prelate who served as bishop of the Diocese of San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas, from 1959 until 1999.

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Sanat Kumara

According to the post-1900 publications of Theosophy, Lord Sanat Kumara is an "Advanced Being" at the Ninth level of initiation who is regarded as the 'Lord' or 'Regent' of Earth and of the humanity, and is thought to be the head of the Spiritual Hierarchy of Earth who dwells in Shamballah (also known as 'The City of Enoch').

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Sanctification

Sanctification is the act or process of acquiring sanctity, of being made or becoming holy.

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Sanghata Sutra

The Sanghata Sutra (Ārya Sanghāta Sūtra; Devanagari, आर्य सङ्घाट सूत्र) is a Mahāyāna Buddhist scripture widely circulated in northwest India and Central Asia.

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Santa Cruz del Quiché

Santa Cruz del Quiché is a city in Guatemala.

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Santuario del Santo Cristo

The Santuario del Santo Cristo, also known as the Church of San Juan del Monte is a church and convento in San Juan, Metro Manila, Philippines.

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Sarah Crosby

Sarah Crosby (6 October 1729 – 29 October 1804) was a Methodist preacher, and is considered to be the first woman to hold this title.

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Sarah Newcomb Merrick

Sarah Newcomb Merrick (9 May 1844 – ?) was a Canadian-born American educator, writer, business woman, physician, and inventor.

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Sarbat da bhala

Sarbaht da bhala is the final term in the Sikh prayer called the Ardas.

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Satnam

Satnam (Gurmukhi:ਸਤਿ ਨਾਮੁ) is the main word that appears in the Sikh sacred scripture called the Guru Granth Sahib.

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Satsangi

A follower of Swaminarayan is referred to as a Satsangi (Devnagari: सत्सन्गी).

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Scientific foreknowledge in sacred texts

Scientific foreknowledge in sacred texts is the belief that certain sacred texts document an awareness of the natural world that was later discovered by technology and science.

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Scott Schultz (producer)

Scott Schultz (born September 15, 1971) is an American television producer, artist and musician, best known for his collaborative work with Christian Jacobs in the creation of the Nick Jr. children's television series Yo Gabba Gabba! and The Hub series The Aquabats! Super Show!.

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Scripture (disambiguation)

Scripture is that portion of literature deemed authoritative for establishing instructions within any of a number of specific religious traditions, especially the Abrahamic religions Scripture or scripture may also refer to.

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Sea of Faith (TV series)

Sea of Faith was a six-part documentary television series, presented on BBC television in 1984 by Don Cupitt.

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Second Book of Enoch

The Second Book of Enoch (usually abbreviated 2 Enoch, and otherwise variously known as Slavonic Enoch or The Secrets of Enoch) is a pseudepigraphic text (a text whose claimed authorship is unfounded) of the Old Testament.

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Second Temple Judaism

Second Temple Judaism is Judaism between the construction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem, c. 515 BCE, and its destruction by the Romans in 70 CE.

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Seminary

Seminary, school of theology, theological seminary, Early-Morning Seminary, and divinity school are educational institutions for educating students (sometimes called seminarians) in scripture, theology, generally to prepare them for ordination as clergy, academia, or ministry.

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Seminary of the Southwest

Seminary of the Southwest (formally The Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Southwest and informally SSW) is an Episcopal seminary in Austin, Texas.

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Sensus fidelium

Sensus fidei (sense of the faith), also called sensus fidelium (sense of the faithful), when exercised by the body of the faithful as a whole, is "the supernatural appreciation of faith on the part of the whole people, when, from the bishops to the last of the faithful, they manifest a universal consent in matters of faith and morals."CCC,.

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Sephardi Jews

Sephardi Jews, also known as Sephardic Jews or Sephardim (סְפָרַדִּים, Modern Hebrew: Sefaraddim, Tiberian: Səp̄āraddîm; also Ye'hude Sepharad, lit. "The Jews of Spain"), originally from Sepharad, Spain or the Iberian peninsula, are a Jewish ethnic division.

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Sergei Nikolaevich Trubetskoy

Prince Sergei Nikolaevich Trubetskoy (1862–1905) was a Russian religious philosopher.

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Sermons of Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift, as Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin, produced many sermons during his tenure from 1713 to 1745.

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Sesenebnef

Sesenebnef was an Ancient Egyptian chief lector priest of the Thirteenth Dynasty, around 1750 BC.

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Seth

Seth (translit;; "placed", "appointed"; Σήθ), in Judaism, Christianity, Mandaeism, and Islam, was the third son of Adam and Eve and brother of Cain and Abel, who were the only other of their children mentioned by name in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible).

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Seven churches of Asia

The Seven Churches of Revelation, also known as the Seven Churches of the Apocalypse and the Seven Churches of Asia, are seven major churches of Early Christianity, as mentioned in the New Testament Book of Revelation.

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Shabda

Shabda, or, is the Sanskrit word for "speech sound".

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Shikasta

Re: Colonised Planet 5, Shikasta (often shortened to Shikasta) is a 1979 science fiction novel by Doris Lessing, and is the first book in her five-book Canopus in Argos series.

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Shimon ben Lakish

Shim‘on ben Lakish (שמעון בן לקיש; שמעון בר לקיש Shim‘on bar Lakish or bar Lakisha), better known by his nickname Reish Lakish (c. 200 — c. 275), was an amora who lived in the Roman province of Syria Palaestina in the third century.

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Shiv shishya

A Shiv shishya or Shiv shisya is a disciple of Lord Shiva who worships Shiva as their Guruteacher, in the Hindu religion.It is mentioned in various texts of Hindus that Lord Shiva works as teacher.One of the primary 'Shlokes',preaching of hindus state that 'Guru Brahama Guru Vishnu Guru Devo Maheshwara',which also tells the existence of Shiva as Guru.

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Siddhanta Shikhamani

Siddhantha Shikhamani is a religious scripture of the Panchacharyas tradition of Veerashaivas, a subtradition within Lingayatism.

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Sigo

Sigo (Sequanus; Seine; died 580 AD) was a Burgundian abbot of the sixth century.

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Sikh discipline

A Sikh is required by the Sikh Gurus to live a disciplined life by doing pure and righteous deeds and actions.

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Sikh scriptures

The principal Sikh scripture is the Adi Granth (First Scripture), more commonly called the Guru Granth Sahib.

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Singing Christmas Tree

A Singing Christmas Tree, sometimes called a Living Christmas Tree, is an artificial Christmas tree filled with singers used as part of nativity plays.

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Sir William Lawrence, 1st Baronet

Sir William Lawrence, 1st Baronet (16 July 1783 – 5 July 1867) was an English surgeon who became President of the Royal College of Surgeons of London and Serjeant Surgeon to the Queen.

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Sirius

Sirius (a romanization of Greek Σείριος, Seirios,."glowing" or "scorching") is a star system and the brightest star in the Earth's night sky.

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Social effects of evolutionary theory

The social effects of evolutionary thought have been considerable.

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Societal attitudes toward homosexuality

Societal attitudes toward homosexuality vary greatly in different cultures and different historical periods, as do attitudes toward sexual desire, activity and relationships in general.

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Society of Science, Letters and Art

The Society of Science, Letters and Art, also known as the Society of Science or SSLA, was a soi-disant learned society which flourished between 1882 and 1902.

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Solomon ben Abraham of Montpellier

Solomon ben Abraham ben Samuel, also known as Solomon of Montpellier, was a Provençal rabbi and Talmudist of the first half of the 13th century.

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Solomon Spalding

Solomon Spalding (February 20, 1761 – October 20, 1816) was the author of two related texts: an unfinished manuscript entitled Manuscript Story – Conneaut Creek, and an unpublished historical romance about the lost civilization of the mound builders of North America called Manuscript, Found.

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Somatic theory

Somatic theory is a theory of human social behavior based loosely on the somatic marker hypothesis of António Damásio, which proposes a mechanism by which emotional processes can guide (or bias) behavior, particularly decision-making, as well as the attachment theory of John Bowlby and the self psychology of Heinz Kohut, especially as consolidated by Allan Schore.

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Some Kind of Zombie

Some Kind of Zombie is the fourth studio album released by Audio Adrenaline.

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Song of Ascents

Song of Ascents is a title given to fifteen of the Psalms, 120–134 (119–133 in the Septuagint and the Vulgate), each starting with the ascription Shir Hama'aloth (שִׁיר המַעֲלוֹת, meaning "Song of the Ascents").

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Sortes Sanctorum

Drawing the Sortes Sanctorum (Lots of the saints) or Sortes Sacrae (Holy Lots) was a type of divination or cleromancy practiced in early Christianity, derived and adapted from the ancient Roman sortes, as seen in the Greek Sortes Homericae and Roman Sortes Virgilianae.

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Sources of sharia

Various sources of sharia are used by Islamic jurisprudence to elucidate the body of Islamic law.

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South High School (Salt Lake City)

South High School was a high school in Salt Lake City, Utah, which operated from 1931 to 1988.

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Special revelation

Special revelation is a theological term used mainly by evangelical scientists and Christian theologians which refers to the belief that knowledge of God and of spiritual matters can be discovered through supernatural means, such as miracles or the scriptures, a disclosure of God's truth through means other than through man's reason.

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Spiritual practice

A spiritual practice or spiritual discipline (often including spiritual exercises) is the regular or full-time performance of actions and activities undertaken for the purpose of inducing spiritual experiences and cultivating spiritual development.

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Spirituali

The Spirituali were members of a reform movement within the Roman Catholic Church, which existed from the 1530s to the 1560s.

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Spirituality

Traditionally, spirituality refers to a religious process of re-formation which "aims to recover the original shape of man," oriented at "the image of God" as exemplified by the founders and sacred texts of the religions of the world.

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Springfield Presbytery

The Springfield Presbytery was an independent presbytery that became one of the earliest expressions of the Stone-Campbell Movement.

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Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka (Sinhala: ශ්‍රී ලංකා; Tamil: இலங்கை Ilaṅkai), officially the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, is an island country in South Asia, located in the Indian Ocean to the southwest of the Bay of Bengal and to the southeast of the Arabian Sea.

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St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney

St Andrew's Cathedral is the cathedral church of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney in the Anglican Church of Australia.

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St Joseph's College, Edmonton

St.

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St Mary's Church, Nantwich

St Mary's Church is in the centre of the market town of Nantwich, Cheshire, England.

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St. Germain (Theosophy)

St.

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Standard Thai Astrology Manual

The Standard Thai Astrology Manual by Luang Wisandarunkon (Lang) consist of 153 Holy Books of prophecy.

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Standard Tibetan

Standard Tibetan is the most widely spoken form of the Tibetic languages.

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Standard works

The standard works of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) are the four books that currently constitute its open scriptural canon.

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Stations of the Resurrection

The Stations of the Resurrection, also known by the Latin name Via Lucis (Way of Light), are a form of Christian devotion, encouraging meditation upon the Resurrection of Jesus Christ and some of the Resurrection appearances and other episodes recorded in the New Testament.

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Strangers No Longer

"Strangers No Longer: Together on the Journey of Hope" is a pastoral letter written by both the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Mexican Episcopal Conference.

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Stromata

The Stromata (Στρώματα) or Stromateis (Στρωματεῖς, "Patchwork"), also called Miscellanies, is the third in Clement of Alexandria's (c. 150 – c. 215) trilogy of works on the Christian life.

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Sulpitius the Pious

Sulpitius (or Sulpicius) the Pious or "the Débonnaire" (died 17 January 644) was a 7th-century bishop of Bourges and saint.

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Sun Myung Moon

Sun Myung Moon (Korean 문선명 Mun Seon-myeong; born Mun Yong-myeong; 25 February 1920 – 3 September 2012) was a Korean religious leader, also known for his business ventures and support of social and political causes.

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Sunday School (LDS Church)

Sunday School (formerly the Deseret Sunday School Union) is an official auxiliary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).

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Supernatural

The supernatural (Medieval Latin: supernātūrālis: supra "above" + naturalis "natural", first used: 1520–1530 AD) is that which exists (or is claimed to exist), yet cannot be explained by laws of nature.

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Supplication against the Ordinaries

The Supplication against the Ordinaries was a petition passed by the House of Commons in 1532.

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Susanna Rowson

Susanna Rowson, née Haswell (1762 – 2 March 1824) was a British-American novelist, poet, playwright, religious writer, stage actress, and educator.

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Swami Nikhilananda

Swami Nikhilananda (1895–1973), born Dinesh Chandra Das Gupta was a direct disciple of Sri Sarada Devi.

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Swiss minaret referendum, 2009

The federal popular initiative "against the construction of minarets" was a successful popular initiative in Switzerland to prevent the construction of minarets on mosques.

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Sydney Bahá'í Temple

The Sydney Bahá'í House of Worship or Sydney Bahá'í Temple is situated in Ingleside, a northern suburb of Sydney, Australia.

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Sylvester Gozzolini

Saint Silvestro Guzzolini (1177 – 26 November 1267) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Silvestrini.

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Symeon the New Theologian

Symeon the New Theologian (sometimes spelled "Simeon") (Συμεὼν ὁ Νέος Θεολόγος; 949–1022 AD) was a Byzantine Christian monk and poet who was the last of three saints canonized by the Eastern Orthodox church and given the title of "Theologian" (along with John the Apostle and Gregory of Nazianzus).

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Systematic theology

Systematic theology is a discipline of Christian theology that formulates an orderly, rational, and coherent account of the doctrines of the Christian faith.

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Tablet (religious)

A tablet, in a religious context, is a term used for certain religious texts.

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Tad Williams

Robert Paul "Tad" Williams (born 14 March 1957 in San Jose, California) is an American fantasy and science fiction writer.

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Tages

Tages was a founding prophet of Etruscan religion who is known from reports by Latin authors of the late Roman Republic and Roman Empire.

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Taizé - Music of Unity and Peace

Taizé - Music of Unity and Peace is the 2015 studio album by the ecumenical Taizé Community from the eponymous village in France.

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Taizé Community

The Taizé Community is an ecumenical Christian monastic community in Taizé, Saône-et-Loire, Burgundy, France.

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Talmud Torah

Talmud Torah schools were created in the Jewish world, both Ashkenazic and Sephardic, as a form of religious school for boys of modest backgrounds, where they were given an elementary education in Hebrew, the Scriptures (especially the Pentateuch), and the Talmud (and Halakha).

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Talmudical hermeneutics

Talmudical hermeneutics (Hebrew: מידות שהתורה נדרשת בהן) defines the rules and methods for the investigation and exact determination of the meaning of the Scriptures, within the framework of Rabbinic Judaism.

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Taltoli Jama Mosque

The Taltoli Jama Masjid (formerly known as the Munshibari Jama Masjid) is a 19th-century Jama Masjid of the village of Taltoli in Comilla, Bangladesh.

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Tao Hongjing

Tao Hongjing (456-536), courtesy name Tongming, was a polymath Chinese author, scholar, calligrapher, waidan alchemist, pharmacologist, and astronomer during the Northern and Southern dynasties (420-589).

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Taoism

Taoism, also known as Daoism, is a religious or philosophical tradition of Chinese origin which emphasizes living in harmony with the Tao (also romanized as ''Dao'').

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Tarabai Shinde

Tarabai Shinde (1850–1910) was a feminist activist who protested patriarchy and caste in 19th century India.

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Tazkirul Quran

Tazkirul Quran is a commentary on the Qur'an, written in Urdu by Maulana Wahiduddin Khan, in 1983.

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Teachings and impacts of Ayyavazhi

The Ayyavazhi includes a corpus of teachings of its initiator Ayya Vaikundar in the form of instructions and slogans found in the religious book Akilattirattu.

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Tell Mar Elias

Tell Mar Elias is a tell, i. e., a mound of several archaeological strata, located only a little beyond the northwest limits of Ajloun in the Ajloun Governorate in northern Jordan and in the historical region Gilead referenced in Sacred Scripture.

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Terma (religion)

Terma ("hidden treasure") are various forms of hidden teachings that are key to Vajrayana or Tibetan Buddhist and Bon religious traditions. The belief is that these teachings were originally esoterically hidden by various adepts such as Padmasambhava and dakini such as Yeshe Tsogyal (consorts) during the 8th century, for future discovery at auspicious times by other adepts, who are known as tertöns. As such, terma represent a tradition of continuous revelation in Vajrayana or Tibetan Buddhism. Termas are a part of tantric literature.

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Text

A text (literary theory) is any object that can be read, including.

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Textual criticism

Textual criticism is a branch of textual scholarship, philology, and literary criticism that is concerned with the identification of textual variants in either manuscripts or printed books.

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Thích Thanh Từ

Thích Thanh Từ (born July 24, 1924) is a Vietnamese Zen Buddhist monk.

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The 23rd Psalm

"The 23rd Psalm" is the tenth episode of the second season of Lost, and the 35th episode overall.

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The Abolition of Britain

The Abolition of Britain: From Lady Chatterley to Tony Blair (US subtitle: From Winston Churchill to Princess Diana) is the first book by British conservative journalist Peter Hitchens, published in 1999.

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The Cartoon History of the Universe

The Cartoon History of the Universe is a book series about the history of the world.

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The Christ Myth

The Christ Myth, first published in 1909, was a book by Arthur Drews on the Christ myth theory.

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The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), often informally known as the Mormon Church, is a nontrinitarian, Christian restorationist church that is considered by its members to be the restoration of the original church founded by Jesus Christ.

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The Courts of Chaos

The Courts of Chaos is fantasy novel by American writer Roger Zelazny, the fifth book in the Chronicles of Amber series.

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The Esoteric Character of the Gospels

"The Esoteric Character of the Gospels" is an article published in three parts: in November-December 1887, and in February 1888, in the theosophical magazine ''Lucifer''; it was written by Helena Blavatsky.

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The Female Eunuch

The Female Eunuch is a 1970 book by Germaine Greer that became an international bestseller and an important text in the feminist movement.

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The Form of Preaching

The Form of Preaching is a 14th-century style book or manual about a preaching style known as the "thematic sermon", or "university-style sermon", by Robert of Basevorn.

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The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is a satirical book written by Bobby Henderson that embodies the main beliefs of the religion of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster or Pastafarianism.

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The Holocaust in Latvia

The Holocaust in Latvia refers to the war crimes of Nazis and Nazi collaborators victimizing Jews during the occupation of Latvia by Nazi Germany.

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The Joseph Smith Papers

The Joseph Smith Papers (or Joseph Smith Papers Project) is a project researching, collecting, and publishing all manuscripts and documents created by, or under the direction of, Joseph Smith, Jr., the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement.

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The Koran Interpreted

The Koran Interpreted is a translation of the Qur'an (the Islamic religious text) by Arthur John Arberry.

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The Lamentation of a Sinner

The Lamentation of a Sinner is a three-part sequence of reflections published by the English queen Catherine Parr, the sixth wife and widow of Henry VIII, as well as the first woman to publish in English under her own name.

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The Little Red Hen

The Little Red Hen is an old folk tale of the fable type, most likely of Russian origin.

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The Lord's Ranch

The Lord's Ranch is the name of an outreach ministry located in Vado, New Mexico, United States, that ministers heavily to the poor in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico.

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The Message of The Qur'an

The Message of the Qur'an is an English translation and interpretation of the Qur'an by Muhammad Asad, an Austrian Jew who converted to Islam.

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The Nine Billion Names of God

"The Nine Billion Names of God" is a 1953 science fiction short story by British writer Arthur C. Clarke.

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The Reason of Church-Government Urged against Prelaty

The Reason of Church-Government Urged against Prelaty is an essay by English poet John Milton distributed as one of a series of religious pamphlets by the writer.

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The Salvation Army

The Salvation Army is a Protestant Christian church and an international charitable organisation structured in a quasi-military fashion.

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The Satanic Bible

The Satanic Bible is a collection of essays, observations, and rituals published by Anton LaVey in 1969.

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The Trouble with Islam Today

The Trouble with Islam Today, original title The Trouble with Islam is a 2004 book critical of Islam written by Irshad Manji, styled in an open-letter addressed to concerned citizens worldwide - Muslim or not.

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The Vision to the Youth Bartholomew

The Vision to the Youth Bartholomew (Видение отроку Варфоломею) is a painting by the Russian artist Mikhail Nesterov, the first and best known work in his series on Sergius of Radonezh, a medieval Russian saint.

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The Visual Bible: Acts

The Visual Bible: Acts is a 1994 Christian film that depicts the events of the Acts of the Apostles from the New Testament.

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The Voice of Human Justice

The Voice of Human Justice is an English translation of Sautu'l 'Adālati'l Insaniyah (صوت العدالة الإنسانية), a book written in Arabic by George Jordac, a Christian author from Lebanon.

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The Word of the Lord

The Word of the Lord refers to one of two books of scripture used by certain factions of the Latter Day Saint movement.

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Theological hermeneutics

Theological hermeneutics is a field of theology.

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Theological Library of Caesarea Maritima

The Theological Library of Caesarea Maritima, or simply the Library of Caesarea, was the library of the Christians of Caesarea Maritima in Palestine in ancient times.

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Theological virtues

Theological virtues are virtues associated in Christian theology and philosophy with salvation resulting from the grace of God.

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Third Council of Toledo

The Third Council of Toledo (589) marks the entry of Visigothic Spain into the Catholic Church, and known for codifying the filioque clause into Western Christianity.

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Thirty-nine Articles

The Thirty-nine Articles of Religion (commonly abbreviated as the Thirty-nine Articles or the XXXIX Articles) are the historically defining statements of doctrines and practices of the Church of England with respect to the controversies of the English Reformation.

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Thomas Aquinas

Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225 – 7 March 1274) was an Italian Dominican friar, Catholic priest, and Doctor of the Church.

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Thomas Greenhill (surgeon)

Thomas Greenhill (1669?–1740) was a surgeon who worked in London and was also author of a book Νεκροκηδεία (Greek, literally Dead-funeral) or The Art of Embalming on embalming.

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Thomas Newberry

Thomas Newberry (1811 – 16 January 1901) was an English Bible scholar and writer, most well known for his interlinear, which compared the Authorised Version of the Bible with the Hebrew and Koine Greek of the original texts, first published in 1883 by Hodder and Stoughton, London.

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Thomas of Ireland

Thomas of Ireland (1295before 1338), known as Thomas Hibernicus, not to be confused with the Franciscan friar Thomas de Hibernia (died c. 1270),Clarke (2004), "Hibernicus, Thomas (c. 1270 – c.1340)", ODNB.

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Thomas Woolston

Thomas Woolston (baptised November 1668 – 27 January 1733) was an English theologian.

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Thomism

Thomism is the philosophical school that arose as a legacy of the work and thought of Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274), philosopher, theologian, and Doctor of the Church.

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Three hares

The three hares (or three rabbits) is a circular motif or meme appearing in sacred sites from the Middle and Far East to the churches of Devon, England (as the "Tinners' Rabbits"), and historical synagogues in Europe.

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Tibet

Tibet is a historical region covering much of the Tibetan Plateau in Central Asia.

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Tibetan Buddhist canon

The Tibetan Buddhist canon is a loosely defined list of sacred texts recognized by various sects of Tibetan Buddhism.

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Tibetan culture

Tibet developed a distinct culture due to its geographic and climatic conditions.

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Timeline of Christian missions

This timeline of Christian missions chronicles the global expansion of Christianity through a listing of the most significant missionary outreach events.

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Timeline of LGBT history

The following is a timeline of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) history.

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Tishbe

Tishbe, sometimes transliterated as Thisbe, is, according to tradition, identical to the historical town of Listib ("el-Ishtib" or "el-Istib" in Arabic), the ruins of which are located 13 kilometers north of the Jabbok River (presently the Zarqa River) in the historical region Gilead referenced in Sacred Scripture, and just west of Mahanaim and only a little beyond the northwest limits of Ajloun in the Ajloun Governorate in northern Jordan.

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Titlo

Titlo is an extended diacritic symbol initially used in early Cyrillic manuscripts, e.g., in Old Church Slavonic and Old East Slavic languages.

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Together in Song

Together in Song: Australian Hymn Book II was published in 1999.

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Tommaso Martinelli

Tommaso Maria Martinelli (4 February 1827 - 30 March 1888) was a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Prefect of the Congregation of Rites.

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Tractatus Theologico-Politicus

Written by the Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza, the Tractatus Theologico-Politicus (TTP) or Theologico-Political Treatise was one of the most controversial texts of the early modern period.

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Translation

Translation is the communication of the meaning of a source-language text by means of an equivalent target-language text.

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Tree of life vision

The tree of life vision is a vision described and discussed in the Book of Mormon, one of the scriptures of the Latter Day Saint movement denominations, published by Joseph Smith in 1830.

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Tremont, Tennessee

Tremont is a region in the northwestern Great Smoky Mountains National Park, located in the southeastern United States.

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True Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite)

The True Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite) was a small Latter Day Saint faction which split from the Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite) in 1953 under its founder, Clyde Fletcher, and continued to exist until Fletcher's death in 1969.

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True Jesus Church

The True Jesus Church is a Christian Church that originated in China during the Pentecostal movement in the early twentieth century.

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Tudwal

Saint Tudwal (died c. 564), also known as Tual, Tudgual, Tugdual, Tugual, Pabu, Papu, or Tugdualus (Latin), was a Breton monk.

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Two Treatises of Government

Two Treatises of Government (or Two Treatises of Government: In the Former, The False Principles, and Foundation of Sir Robert Filmer, and His Followers, Are Detected and Overthrown. The Latter Is an Essay Concerning The True Original, Extent, and End of Civil Government) is a work of political philosophy published anonymously in 1689 by John Locke.

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Two-gospel hypothesis

The two-gospel hypothesis is that the Gospel of Matthew was written before the Gospel of Luke, and that both were written earlier than the Gospel of Mark.

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Tzitzak

Tzitzak (Çiçek; died 750), baptised Irene (Ειρήνη), was a Khazar princess, the daughter of khagan Bihar, who became empress by marriage to Eastern Roman Emperor Constantine V (r. 741-775).

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Ukrainian Bible Society

Ukrainian Bible Society (Українське Біблійне Товариство), is a religious non-profit organization, established by representatives of different Christian denominations in Ukraine, who recognize the Bible as the Word of God.

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Unfinished creative work

An unfinished creative work is a painting, novel, musical composition, or other creative work, that has not been brought to a completed state.

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Unfulfilled Christian religious predictions

This article lists predictions of notable religious figures that failed to come about in the specified time frame.

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Unification Church

The Unification Church (UC), also called the Unification movement and sometimes colloquially the "Moonies", is a worldwide new religious movement that was founded by and is inspired by Sun Myung Moon, a Korean religious leader also known for his business ventures and support of social and political causes.

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Uniform title

A uniform title in library cataloging is a title assigned to a work which either has no title or has appeared under more than one title.

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Unitarianism

Unitarianism (from Latin unitas "unity, oneness", from unus "one") is historically a Christian theological movement named for its belief that the God in Christianity is one entity, as opposed to the Trinity (tri- from Latin tres "three") which defines God as three persons in one being; the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

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United Arab Emirates Anti-Discrimination Law

The United Arab Emirates Anti-Discrimination Law was enacted in the United Arab Emirates on July 20, 2015, when it was signed by President Sheikh Khalifa.

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Unity of the Brethren

The Unity of the Brethren (Jednota bratrská; Latin: Unitas Fratrum), also known as the Czech or Bohemian Brethren, is a Protestant movement founded in the middle 15th century, whose roots are in the pre-Reformation work of Petr Chelčický and Jan Hus.

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Universal resurrection

Universal resurrection or general resurrection is a doctrine held by some Christian denominations which posits that all of the dead who have ever lived will be resurrected from the dead, generally to stand for a Last Judgment.

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Universidad San Anselmo de Canterbury

Universidad San Anselmo de Canterbury (Saint Anselm of Canterbury University) is an official seminary of the Episcopal Anglican Church of Chile.

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University of Religions and Denominations

The University of Religions and Denominations (دانشگاه اديان و مذاهب.) is a teaching and research center focusing on the study of religions and Islamic sects.

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University of Sargodha

The University of Sargodha (یونیورسٹی آف سرگودھا.) is a public research university based in Sargodha, Punjab, Pakistan.

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Uppsala Synod

The Uppsala Synod in 1593 was the most important synod of the Lutheran Church of Sweden.

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Upton Bishop

Upton Bishop is a small village in Herefordshire, England.

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Usury

Usury is, as defined today, the practice of making unethical or immoral monetary loans that unfairly enrich the lender.

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Ut unum sint

Ut unum sint (Latin: 'That they may be one') is an encyclical by Pope John Paul II of 25 May 1995.

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Vampire Noir

Vampire Noir is a 2007 vampire film/horror film that was directed by Scott Shaw.

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Vanessa Zoltan

Vanessa Zoltan is a humanist chaplain who describes herself as an "atheist chaplain".

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Vendetta Red

Vendetta Red is an American alternative rock band from Seattle, Washington that formed in 1998.

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Veneration of Mary in the Catholic Church

In the Catholic Church, the veneration of Mary, mother of Jesus, encompasses various Marian devotions which include prayer, pious acts, visual arts, poetry, and music devoted to the Blessed Virgin Mary.

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Venneesan

Venneesan was a mythical figure found in Ayyavazhi mythology.

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Victoria, Lady Welby

Victoria, Lady Welby (1837–1912), more correctly Lady Welby-Gregory, was a self-educated English philosopher of language, musician and water-colour artist.

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Victorinus of Pettau

Saint Victorinus of Pettau or of Poetovio (died 303 or 304) was an Early Christian ecclesiastical writer who flourished about 270, and who was martyred during the persecutions of Emperor Diocletian.

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Views on Ramakrishna

Ramakrishna (1836–1886), is a 19th-century Indian mystic whose teachings form the foundation of the Ramakrishna religious movement and the Ramakrishna Mission.

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Villana de' Botti

Blessed Villana de' Botti (1332 - 29 January 1361) was an Italian Roman Catholic professed member of the Third Order of Saint Dominic.

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Vinaya Pitaka

The (Pali; English: Basket of Discipline) is a Buddhist scripture, one of the three parts that make up the Tripitaka (literally. "Three Baskets").

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Vincent Strambi

Saint Vincenzo Strambi (1 January 1745 - 1 January 1824) - in religious Vincenzo Maria di San Paolo - was an Italian Roman Catholic prelate who was a professed member from the Passionists and served as the Bishop of Macerata-Tolentino from 1801 until his resignation in 1823.

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Vipera berus

Vipera berus, the common European adderMallow D, Ludwig D, Nilson G. (2003).

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Vishrava

Vishrava was the son of Pulatsya and the grandson of Brahma, the Creator, and a powerful Rishi as described in the great Hindu scripture epic Ramayana of Ancient India.

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Viswamaanava

Viswamaanava is a Hindu cultural ideology.

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Vittorio Trancanelli

Vittorio Trancanelli (26 April 1944 – 24 June 1998) was an Italian Roman Catholic doctor from Perugia.

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Vladimir Lenin

Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, better known by the alias Lenin (22 April 1870According to the new style calendar (modern Gregorian), Lenin was born on 22 April 1870. According to the old style (Old Julian) calendar used in the Russian Empire at the time, it was 10 April 1870. Russia converted from the old to the new style calendar in 1918, under Lenin's administration. – 21 January 1924), was a Russian communist revolutionary, politician and political theorist.

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Voree plates

The Voree plates, also called The Record of Rajah Manchou of Vorito, or the Voree Record, were a set of three tiny metal plates allegedly discovered by Latter Day Saint leader James J. Strang in 1845 in Voree, near Burlington, Wisconsin.

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Voree, Wisconsin

Voree (pronounced "Vor-ee") is an unincorporated community in the Town of Spring Prairie in Walworth County, Wisconsin, United States.

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Vulgar Latin

Vulgar Latin or Sermo Vulgaris ("common speech") was a nonstandard form of Latin (as opposed to Classical Latin, the standard and literary version of the language) spoken in the Mediterranean region during and after the classical period of the Roman Empire.

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W. T. Stead

William Thomas Stead (5 July 1849 – 15 April 1912) was an English newspaper editor who, as a pioneer of investigative journalism, became a controversial figure of the Victorian era.

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War against Islam conspiracy theory

War against Islam (also called the War on Islam or Attack on Islam) is a conspiracy theory narrative in Islamist discourse to describe an alleged conspiracy to harm, weaken or annihilate the societal system of Islam, using military, economic, social and cultural means.

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War College (The Salvation Army)

The Salvation Army War College was established in 2003 by Founders Majors Stephen Court and Danielle Strickland, along with Pioneers Captains Ruth and Ian Gillingham.

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Waraka ibn Nawfal

Waraka (or Waraqah) bin Nawfal ibn Asad ibn Abd-al-Uzza ibn Qusayy Al-Qurashi (Arabic ورقه بن نوفل بن أسد بن عبد العزّى بن قصي القرشي) was the paternal first cousin of Khadija, the first wife of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.

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Wartburg Theological Seminary

Wartburg Theological Seminary is a Lutheran (ELCA) seminary located in Dubuque, Iowa.

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Wedding

A wedding is a ceremony where two people are united in marriage.

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Wells Theological College

Wells Theological College began operation in 1840 within the Cathedral Close of Wells Cathedral.

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Wesleyan Reform Union

The Wesleyan Reform Union is an independent Methodist Connexion based in the United Kingdom.

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Whitinsville Christian School

Whitinsville Christian School is a pre-K-12 Christian day school, one of the oldest in Massachusetts.

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Willem Hessels van Est

Willem Hessels van Est (Latinized as Estius) (1542 – 20 September 1613) was a Dutch Catholic commentator on the Pauline epistles.

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William Alabaster

William Alabaster (also Alablaster, Arblastier) (27 February 1567buried 28 April 1640) was an English poet, playwright, and religious writer.

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William Brodie Gurney

William Brodie Gurney (1777–1855) was a famed English shorthand writer and philanthropist of the 19th century.

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William Cameron Townsend

William Cameron Townsend (July 9, 1896 – April 23, 1982) was a prominent twentieth-century American Christian missionary-linguist who founded Wycliffe Bible Translators and the Summer Institute of Linguistics (now SIL International), both of which have long had as primary emphases the translation of the Bible into minority languages and the development of literacy and bilingual education programs in those languages.

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William Dewsbury

William Dewsbury (ca. 1621–1688) was Quaker minister in the early period of the movement.

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William Edwy Vine

William Edwy Vine (1873–1949), commonly known as W.E. Vine, was an English Biblical scholar, theologian, and writer, most famous for Vine's Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words.

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William Kirby (entomologist)

William Kirby (19 September 1759 – 4 July 1850) was an English entomologist, an original member of the Linnean Society and a Fellow of the Royal Society, as well as a country priest, making him an eminent parson-naturalist.

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William M'Culloch

William M'Culloch (1691 – 18 December 1771) was Minister of Cambuslang during the extraordinary events of the Cambuslang Work (1742) when 30,000 people gathered in the hillsides near his church for preaching and communion.

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William Meninger

William Meninger, O.C.S.O. is an American Trappist monk, who is a noted spiritual teacher and the developer of Centering Prayer, a method of prayer which has become widespread throughout the world.

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Wolves in folklore, religion and mythology

The wolf is a common motif in the foundational mythologies and cosmologies of peoples throughout Eurasia and North America (corresponding to the historical extent of the habitat of the gray wolf).

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Women in the Catholic Church

In the history of the Catholic Church, laywomen and women in religious institutes have played a variety of roles and the church has affected societal attitudes to women throughout the world in significant ways.

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Women's suffrage

Women's suffrage (colloquial: female suffrage, woman suffrage or women's right to vote) --> is the right of women to vote in elections; a person who advocates the extension of suffrage, particularly to women, is called a suffragist.

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Word of God

Word of God or God's Word may refer to.

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Wotansvolk

Wotansvolk is a form of white nationalist, neo-völkisch paganism which was founded in the early 1990s by Ron McVan, Katja Lane and David Lane (1938–2007) while Lane was serving a 190-year prison sentence for his actions in connection with the white separatist revolutionary domestic terrorist organization group The Order, of which he was a member.

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Writ (disambiguation)

A writ is a legal document.

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Writer

A writer is a person who uses written words in various styles and techniques to communicate their ideas.

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Writers of Guru Granth Sahib

Guru Granth Sahib (ਗੁਰੂ ਗਰੰਥ ਸਾਹਿਬ;गुरु ग्रन्थ साहिब), is the central religious text of Sikhism, considered by Sikhs to be the final sovereign Guru of the religion.

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Y Beibl cyssegr-lan

Y Beibl cyssegr-lan sef Yr Hen Destament, a'r Newydd' by William Morgan, was the first whole translated version of the Bible to appear in Welsh in 1588.

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Yahweh

Yahweh (or often in English; יַהְוֶה) was the national god of the Iron Age kingdoms of Israel (Samaria) and Judah.

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Yazdânism

Yazdânism, or the Cult of Angels, is a pre-Islamic, native religion of the Kurds.

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Yazidi Book of Revelation

The Yazidi Book of Revelation (Kitêba Cilwe in Kurdish; also transliterated as Kitab Al Jilwah) is one of two books on the Yazidi religion written in the style of a holy book in the Kurmanji dialect of the Northern Kurdish language, the other being the Yazidi Black Book (Mishefa Reş in Kurdish).

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Yazidis

The Yazidis, or Yezidis (Êzidî), are a Kurdish-speaking people, indigenous to a region of northern Mesopotamia (known natively as Ezidkhan) who are strictly endogamous.

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Yehuda Glantz

Yehuda Julio Glantz (יהודה חוליו גלאנץ; born March 19, 1958 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) is a musician composer, singer, songwriter and producer living in Jerusalem Israel.

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Yiddish literature

Yiddish literature encompasses all those belles-lettres written in Yiddish, the language of Ashkenazic Jewry which is related to Middle High German.

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Yoruba religion

The Yoruba religion comprises the traditional religious and spiritual concepts and practices of the Yoruba people.

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Yuquan Shenxiu

Yuquan Shenxiu (606?–706) was one of the most influential Chan masters of his day, a Patriarch of the East Mountain Teaching of Chan Buddhism.

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Zakir Naik

Zakir Abdul Karim Naik (born 18 October 1965) is an Indian Islamic preacher,Hope, Christopher.

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Zekr (software)

Zekr (Arabic:ذكر) is an open source Quranic desktop application.

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Zevs Cosmos

Zevs Cosmos (also found as Zeus) (born Esyedepeea Aesfyza) is a Canadian social nudity activist and the founder of the Nudist Christian Church of the Blessed Virgin Jesus (NCCBVJ).

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Zohar Amar

Zohar Amar (born 1960) is a Professor in the Department of Land of Israel Studies at Bar-Ilan University, whose research specialties are: natural history in ancient times; the identification of the flora of the Land of Israel and identification of the fauna of the Land of Israel according to descriptions in classical Jewish sources; the material culture and realia of daily life in the Middle Ages as reflected in agriculture and commerce; the history of medicine and ethno-pharmacology.

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Zoroastrianism

Zoroastrianism, or more natively Mazdayasna, is one of the world's oldest extant religions, which is monotheistic in having a single creator god, has dualistic cosmology in its concept of good and evil, and has an eschatology which predicts the ultimate destruction of evil.

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Zwickau prophets

The Zwickau prophets were three men of the Radical Reformation from Zwickau, Electorate of Saxony in the Holy Roman Empire, who were possibly involved in a disturbance in nearby Wittenberg and its evolving Reformation in early 1522.

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1250s

The 1250s decade ran from January 1, 1250, to December 31, 1259.

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1251

Year 1251 (MCCLI) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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13th century in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in the 13th century.

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19 Kids and Counting

19 Kids and Counting (formerly 17 Kids and Counting and 18 Kids and Counting) is an American reality television show that aired on the cable channel TLC for seven years until its cancellation in 2015.

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1978 Revelation on Priesthood

The 1978 Revelation on Priesthood was a revelation announced by leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) that reversed a long-standing policy excluding men of black African descent from the priesthood.

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1988 Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church

The 1988 Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church (Поме́стный собо́р Ру́сской правосла́вной це́ркви 1988 года) was the fourth in the history of the Russian Orthodox Church.

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2 Baruch

2 Baruch is a Jewish pseudepigraphical text thought to have been written in the late 1st century AD or early 2nd century AD, after the destruction of the Temple in AD 70.

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2009 ELCA Churchwide Assembly

The 2009 ELCA Churchwide Assembly was the eleventh biennial Churchwide Assembly of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

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494

Year 494 (CDXCIV) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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754

Year 754 (DCCLIV) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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Redirects here:

Ancient scripture, Book of God, Hierographology, Hierography, Hierology (text), Hierology (texts), Hierology (textual criticism), Holy Book, Holy Books, Holy Scripture, Holy Scriptures, Holy Text, Holy Writ, Holy Writs, Holy book, Holy books, Holy script, Holy scripture, Holy text, Holy writ, Holywrit, List of religious texts, Religious Scriptures, Religious Text, Religious book, Religious scripture, Religious texts, Religious writings, Sacred Scripture, Sacred Scriptures, Sacred Texts, Sacred book, Sacred scripture, Sacred text, Sacred texts, Sacred writ, Sacred writings, Scriptural, Scripture, Scriptures, Scripute, Sifrei Kodesh, The Holy Scriptures, The Scriptures, Unscriptural, World Scripture, World scripture, Written word of God, 🕅.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_text

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