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Christianity
[kris-chee-an-i-tee]
noun
plural
Christianitiesthe Christian religion, including the Catholic, Protestant, and Eastern Orthodox churches.
Christian beliefs or practices; Christian quality or character.
Christianity mixed with pagan elements; the Christianity of Augustine's thought.
a particular Christian religious system.
She followed fundamentalist Christianity.
the state of being a Christian.
conformity to the Christian religion or to its beliefs or practices.
Christianity
/ ˌkrɪstɪˈænɪtɪ /
noun
the Christian religion
Christian beliefs, practices or attitudes
a less common word for Christendom
Christianity
The religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus Christ. Christians (see also Christian) believe that Jesus Christ is the Messiah, sent by God. They believe that Jesus, by dying and rising from the dead, made up for the sin of Adam and thus redeemed the world, allowing all who believe in him to enter heaven. Christians rely on the Bible (see also Bible) as the inspired word of God. (See also gospel, Nativity, Resurrection, salvation (see also salvation), and Sermon on the Mount.)
Word History and Origins
Origin of Christianity1
Example Sentences
It was like walking down to the roots of Christianity.
The heavenly finger’s subtle specter of warped Christianity gets emphatic in a 1917 pietà designed by J. Maxwell Miller to celebrate Confederate women in Maryland.
And the station's vaulted and arched concourse, with a dome decorated with Persian motifs, features religious frescoes and artworks honouring Christianity's Virgin Mary, the mother of Christ.
The British journalist and biographer had by this time been a thorn in the side of Anglophone Christianity for two decades.
“We see both Christianity and Judaism. I love Hebrew. It’s a gorgeous language and there are divine secrets in those words.”
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