theologies in English

noun
1
the study of the nature of God and religious belief.
And after 11 long years of study, Frank has been awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in theology and religious studies.

Use "theologies" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "theologies" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "theologies", or refer to the context using the word "theologies" in the English Dictionary.

1. Synonyms for Animisms include polytheisms, dualisms, hagiologies, pantheisms, tritheisms, religions, theisms and theologies

2. This movement has led to many Liberation theologies, Black, Feminist and even Environmental.

3. Despite this, whole theologies have been erected on the theme of the Creator Spirit.

4. As with Calvinism, there are many types of Arminian theologies that diverge significantly from Arminius’s own teachings

5. Theocentrism (God-centeredness), an explicit recognition of this fact, is a characteristic of certain philosophies, religions, theologies (systematic and otherwise), and Asceticisms.

6. Taínos, Colonizers and Yoruba Slaves: Synthesizing their Theologies is an abbreviated title originating from the author’s Master thesis- Exploring Santeria, the Synthesization of the Theologies of the Taíno Indians of the Caribbean, the Spanish Colonizers and the West African Yoruba Slaves: Awakening the Consciousness Need for a Liberating and Personal Theology by Examining the

7. A true Biblicist will look for an exegetical solution to this problem, not a solution that is driven by philosophies about what freedom must require or theologies about what would make God unfair

8. This volume dispels this idea, and provides guiding insights into Augustinian/Thomistic renewal of biblical exegesis, and the theologies and philosophies of the Trinity, imago dei, love, and other crucial topics."―Andrew Jaspers, S.J., Maritain Notebook

9. Christocentric is a doctrinal term within Christianity, describing theological positions that focus on Jesus Christ, the second person of the Christian Trinity, in relation to the Godhead / God the Father or the Holy Spirit. Christocentric theologies make Christ the central theme about which all other theological positions/doctrines are oriented.

10. The terminology of “apophatic” and “Cataphatic” theologies, that is, the use of negation (apophasis) and affirmation (kataphasis) in our ways of talking about God, was introduced into Christian theology by the probably early-sixth-century author who wrote under the pseudonym of the Apostle Paul’s convert, Dionysius the Areopagite (generally referred to as Pseudo-Dionysius).

11. Apophatic theology and Apophatic anthropology A recent attempt to survey the whole of “Apophatic discourses” insists that “for negative theologies, it is possible to say only what God is not,” and that apophasis amounts to a series of “attempts to devise and, at the same time, to disqualify ways of talking about God.” 1 This approach figures the via negativa as a solution to a