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  2. Apr 2, 2024 · Christian dogma represents the foundational beliefs and doctrines that define the Christian faith. Rooted in Scripture and crystallized through centuries of theological reflection and ecumenical councils, these doctrines guide the life and worship of believers.

  3. dogma, the explication and officially acceptable version of a religious teaching. The development of doctrines and dogmas has significantly affected the traditions, institutions, and practices of the religions of the world.

    • Dogma and Doctrine
    • Dogma in World Religions
    • Dogma Outside of Religion
    • References

    While all dogmas are doctrines (religious teachings), not all doctrines are dogmas. Even though a doctrine may be widely accepted and firmly held by a religion, it is not classified as a dogma if it is acknowledged that the doctrine may be recognized as potentially imperfect, and therefore debatable. Dogmata, on the other hand, are unquestioned rel...

    Ancient Greek

    The concept of dogma first developed in Ancient Greece, although not in a particularly religious sense. The Platonists, as well as the Stoicsused the term to identify those opinions, teachings or arguments which seem right to all people. Dogma was also used to refer to a decree that legitimated authority of a person or group, or else a decision based on rational, moral principles. Dogmas formed the central tenets that were accepted by all members of a given school, and therefore distinguished...

    Judaism

    Though there is much diversity in belief and practice within Judaism, there are distinct ideas that are characteristic of Jewish faith and central to Jewish identity. For example, the acceptance of one God and the rejection of all others has been of the utmost importance for the Jewish people and is an idea also prevalent in all of the Abrahamic religions. Further, it is forbidden in the Jewish tradition to make any depiction of this god, due to the prohibition of idolatry. Today, Jews are ca...

    Christianity

    Christianity inherited the formative dogmas of Judaism but reinterpreted them in light of the view that Jesus was and is the messiah. When early Christianity became influenced by Hellenism (Greek culture and philosophy) the concept of dogma became more important to the early church. The key examples of actual dogmas come from patristic theological consensuses such as the Nicene Creed, which developed the doctrine of Trinity: the idea that one supreme God consisting of three personae— Father,...

    As is suggested by the Greek origins of the term, many non-religious beliefs are often described as dogmata, for example in the fields of politics or philosophy, as well as within society itself. The term dogmatism carries the implication that people adopt and maintain their beliefs in an uncritical and conformist fashion. Dogmata are the antithesi...

    Eliade, Mircea, Karl Rahner and Adolf Darlap (eds.). "Dogma," The Encyclopedia of Religion. MacMillan, 1987. ISBN 0028971353
    Matthews, W. R. Dogma in History and Thought. London: Nisbet & Co, 1929.
    McTaggart, John and Ellis McTaggart. Some Dogmas of Religion.London: Edward Arnold & Co., 1930.
  4. www.encyclopedia.com › philosophy-and-religionDogma | Encyclopedia.com

    May 23, 2018 · The clearest example of religious dogma in ancient philosophy comes from Plato. In the Republic (376eff.) he lays down two "ways in which God is to be spoken of" ( tupoi theologias ). The first is that God is good and the cause of good alone; the second is that God is true and incapable of change.

  5. Sep 18, 2012 · Thus for the Church to define a dogma, it must not only infallibly teach that a particular point is true but that it is a divinely revealed truth. From Theology to Dogma

  6. Dogma: the most authoritative teaching; Consensus: patterns of agreement; Theology: loving God with the mind; Symbolics: creeds and confessions; Development: the maturation of understanding; Schism: division over substantial matters; Controversy: fighting over the faith; Ecumenism: speaking the truth in love; God the Father

  7. Doctrine and dogma - Faith, Reason, Insight: Insofar as doctrines and dogmas represent conceptualizations of the human encounter with the divine mystery, they are bound to reflect the interplay of faith and reason in religious experience and to imply some notion of levels and stages in the progress of believers as they move from the threshold ...

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