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To doctrine
noun
A belief or tenet, especially about philosophical or theological matters.
Exact(41)
It sat light to doctrine, and tried to accommodate many.
Given these realities, it's misleading to elevate Libya to doctrine, let alone an "apotheosis".
But CELAP has a light attachment to doctrine compared with other party schools.
Now, the issue is how obedient he or she is to doctrine.
There is bitter talk on both left and right of the deselection of MPs who don't adhere to doctrine.
None of the potential changes to doctrine facing the contemporary Church compare with the depth of this revision.
Similar(19)
They referred to religious doctrine to explain their refusal of vaccination.
Both adhere to doctrines that for most people will be distant: unreconstructed Communism and traditional Catholicism.
The focus on Jesus narrowed to ideas, to "beliefs about" and not only "belief in," and to doctrines.
His teachings on personal holiness bore a resemblance to doctrines of the Wesleyan Holiness tradition.
They weren't attached to doctrines and they didn't care how people arrived at love.
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