Aziz Augustine tarafından yazılan İtiraflar bize ortodokslukta biten entelektüel arayışın zamansız bir hikayesini anlatır. - Confessions by St. Augustine tells us the timeless story of an intellectual quest that ends in orthodoxy.
The beliefs and practices of the Eastern Orthodox Church, Greek Orthodox Church, Russian Orthodox Church, Serbian Orthodox Church, or of Orthodox Judaism
Literally, "right belief " Christianity, unlike most false religions, is not fundamentally a moral code It is a doctrinal system that dictates and requires a particular ethical code The outlines of Christianity were hammered out in the early ecumenical councils of the church in its first five centuries of its existence There can be no Christianity without this orthodoxy There are more specific orthodoxies For example, Reformed orthodoxy includes a broader range of Biblical belief It includes such doctrines emphasized at the time of the Reformation as the Bible as our final authority and justification by faith alone Reformed orthodoxy is expressed preeminently in the great Reformed confessions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Chalcedon supports both early ecumenical orthodoxy and Reformed orthodoxy
The old, traditional beliefs of a religion, political party, or philosophy can be referred to as orthodoxy. a conflict between Nat's religious orthodoxy and Rube's belief that his mission is to make money. orthodoxies an idea or set of ideas that is accepted by most people to be correct and right
Literally "correct belief", refers to a common tendency among some religions to promote common beliefs Compare this with the more Hellenistic "orthopraxy"
An orthodoxy is an accepted view about something. These ideas rapidly became the new orthodoxy in linguistics What was once a novel approach had become orthodoxy
A term used in a number of senses, of which the following are the most important: Orthodoxy in the sense of "right belief," as opposed to heresy (see pp 145-9); orthodoxy in the sense of a movement within Protestantism, especially in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, which laid emphasis upon need for doctrinal definition (see pp 68-71)
any practice or teaching that falls within the established framework of the conventions, beliefs and doctrines of a given religious tradition See also Heresy