fbpx
Wikipedia

Faith

Faith is confidence or trust in a person, thing, or concept.[1] In the context of religion, faith is "belief in God or in the doctrines or teachings of religion".[2] According to Merriam-Webster's Dictionary, faith has multiple definitions, including "something that is believed especially with strong conviction", "complete trust", "belief and trust in and loyalty to God", as well as "a firm belief in something for which there is no proof".[3]

Faith (Armani), by Mino da Fiesole

Religious people often think of faith as confidence based on a perceived degree of warrant, or evidence,[4][5] while others who are more skeptical of religion tend to think of faith as simply belief without evidence.[6][7]

In the Roman world, 'faith' (Latin: fides) was understood without particular association with gods or beliefs. Instead, it was understood as a paradoxical set of reciprocal ideas: voluntary will and voluntary restraint in the sense of father over family or host over guest, whereby one party willfully surrenders to a party who could harm but chooses not to, thereby entrusting or confiding in them.[8]

Accordingly to Thomas Aquinas, faith is "an act of the intellect assenting to the truth at the command of the will".[9]

Religion has a long tradition, since the ancient world, of analyzing divine questions using common human experiences such as sensation, reason, science, and history that do not rely on revelation—called Natural theology.[10]

Etymology edit

The English word faith finds its roots in the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) root *bheidh-, signifying concepts of trust, confidence, and persuasion. This root has given rise to various terms across different languages, such as Greek πίστις (pístis) meaning faith, and Latin fidēs (fidēs) meaning trust, faith, confidence.[11]

Furthermore, the Proto-Indo-European root *were-o- adds another layer to the word's etymology, emphasizing the notions of truth and trustworthiness. This root is evident in English words like veracity, verity, and verify, as well as in Latin with verus (verus) meaning true.[11]

The term faith in English emerged in the mid-13th century, evolving from Anglo-French and Old French forms like feid (feid) and feit (feit), ultimately tracing back to the Latin fidēs (fidēs). This Latin term, rooted in the PIE *bheidh- root, encompassed meanings such as trust, confidence, and belief.[11]

Stages of faith development edit

James W. Fowler (1940–2015) proposes a series of stages of faith development (or spiritual development) across the human lifespan. His stages relate closely to the work of Piaget, Erikson, and Kohlberg regarding aspects of psychological development in children and adults. Fowler defines faith as an activity of trusting, committing, and relating to the world based on a set of assumptions of how one is related to others and the world.[12]

Stages of faith
  1. Intuitive-Projective: confusion and of high impressionability through stories and rituals (pre-school period).
  2. Mythic-Literal: provided information is accepted to conform with social norms (school-going period).
  3. Synthetic-Conventional: the faith acquired is concreted in the belief system with the forgoing of personification and replacement with authority in people or groups that represent one's beliefs (early late adolescence).
  4. Individuative-Reflective: the person critically analyzes adopted and accepted faith with existing systems of faith. Disillusion or strengthening of faith happens in this stage. Based on needs, experiences, and paradoxes (early adulthood).
  5. Conjunctive faith: people realize the limits of logic and, facing the paradoxes or transcendence of life, accept the "mystery of life" and often return to the sacred stories and symbols of the pre-acquired or re-adopted faith system. This stage is called negotiated settling in life (mid-life).
  6. Universalizing faith: this is the "enlightenment" stage where the person comes out of all the existing systems of faith and lives life with universal principles of compassion and love and in service to others for uplift, without worries and doubt (middle-late adulthood, 45–65 years old and beyond).[13][full citation needed]

No hard-and-fast rule requires that people pursue faith by going through all six stages. There is a high probability for people to be content and fixed in a particular stage for a lifetime; stages 2–5 are such stages. Stage 6 is the summit of faith development. This state is often[quantify] considered as "not fully" attainable.[14]

Religious faith edit

Christianity edit

 
Triumph of Faith over Idolatry by Jean-Baptiste Théodon (1646–1713)

The word translated as "faith" in English-language editions of the New Testament, the Greek word πίστις (pístis), can also be translated as "belief", "faithfulness", or "trust".[15] Faith can also be translated from the Greek verb πιστεύω (pisteuo), meaning "to trust, to have confidence, faithfulness, to be reliable, to assure".[16] Christianity encompasses various views regarding the nature of faith. Some see faith as being persuaded or convinced that something is true.[17] In this view, a person believes something when they are presented with adequate evidence that it is true. The 13th-century theologian Saint Thomas Aquinas did not hold that faith is mere opinion: on the contrary, he held that it represents a mean (understood in the Aristotelian sense) between excessive reliance on science (i.e. demonstration) and excessive reliance on opinion.[18]

According to Teresa Morgan, faith was understood by early Christians within the cultural milieu of the period as a relationship that created a community based on trust, instead of a set of mental beliefs or feelings of the heart.[19]

Numerous commentators discuss the results of faith. Some believe that true faith results in good works, while others believe that while faith in Jesus brings eternal life, it does not necessarily result in good works.[20]

Regardless of the approach taken to faith, all Christians agree that the Christian faith (in the sense of Christian practice) is aligned with the ideals and the example of the life of Jesus. The Christian contemplates the mystery of God and his grace and seeks to know and become obedient to God. To a Christian, the faith is not static, but causes one to learn more of God and to grow in faith; Christian faith has its origin in God.[21]

In Christianity, faith causes change as it seeks a greater understanding of God. Faith is not fideism or simple obedience to a set of rules or statements.[22] Before Christians have faith, but they must also understand in whom and in what they have faith. Without understanding, there cannot be true faith, and that understanding is built on the foundation of the community of believers, the scriptures and traditions, and on the personal experiences of the believer.[23]

Strength of faith edit

Christians may recognize different degrees of faith when they encourage each other to, and themselves strive to, develop, grow, and/or deepen their faith.[24] This may imply that one can measure faith. Willingness to undergo martyrdom indicates a proxy for depth of faith but does not provide an everyday measurement for the average contemporary Christian. Within the Calvinist tradition the degree of prosperity[25] may serve as an analog of the level of faith.[26] Other Christian strands may rely on personal self-evaluation to measure the intensity of an individual's faith, with associated difficulties in calibrating to any scale. Solemn affirmations of a creed (a statement of faith) provide broad measurements of details.[clarification needed] Various tribunals of the Inquisition, however, concerned themselves with precisely evaluating the orthodoxy of the faith of those it examined – to acquit or to punish in varying degrees.[27]

The classification of different degrees of faith allows that faith and its expression may wax and wane in fervor—during the lifetime of a faithful individual and/or over the various historical centuries of a society with an embedded religious system. Thus, one can speak of an "Age of Faith"[28] or of the "decay" of a society's religiosity into corruption,[29] secularism,[30] or atheism,[31]—interpretable as the ultimate loss of faith.[32]

Christian apologetic views edit

In contrast to Richard Dawkins' view of faith as "blind trust, in the absence of evidence, even in the teeth of evidence",[33] Alister McGrath quotes the Oxford Anglican theologian W. H. Griffith Thomas (1861–1924), who states that faith is "not blind, but intelligent" and that it "commences with the conviction of the mind based on adequate evidence...", which McGrath sees as "a good and reliable definition, synthesizing the core elements of the characteristic Christian understanding of faith".[34]

American biblical scholar Archibald Thomas Robertson (1863–1934) stated that the Greek word pistis used for "faith" in the New Testament (over two hundred forty times), and rendered "assurance" in Acts 17:31, is "an old verb meaning 'to furnish', used regularly by Demosthenes for bringing forward evidence."[35] Tom Price (Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics) affirms that when the New Testament talks about faith positively it only uses words derived from the Greek root [pistis] which means "to be persuaded".[36]

British Christian apologist John Lennox argues that "faith conceived as a belief that lacks warrant is very different from faith conceived as a belief that has warrant". He states that "the use of the adjective 'blind' to describe 'faith' indicates that faith is not necessarily, or always, or indeed normally, blind". "The validity, or warrant, of faith or belief depends on the strength of the evidence on which the belief is based." "We all know how to distinguish between blind faith and evidence-based faith. We are well aware that faith is only justified if there is evidence to back it up." "Evidence-based faith is the normal concept on which we base our everyday lives."[37]

Peter S. Williams holds that "the classic Christian tradition has always valued rationality and does not hold that faith involves the complete abandonment of reason while believing in the teeth of evidence".[38] Quoting Moreland, faith is defined as "a trust in and commitment to what we have reason to believe is true".

Regarding doubting Thomas in John 20:24–31, Williams points out that "Thomas wasn't asked to believe without evidence". He was asked to believe based on the other disciples' testimony. Thomas initially lacked the first-hand experience of the evidence that had convinced them... Moreover, the reason John gives for recounting these events is that what he saw is evidence... Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples... But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the son of God, and that believing ye might have life in his name. John 20:30–31."[39]

Concerning doubting Thomas, Michael R. Allen wrote: "Thomas's definition of faith implies adherence to conceptual propositions for the sake of personal knowledge, knowledge of and about a person qua person".[40]

Kenneth Boa and Robert M. Bowman Jr. describe a classic understanding of faith that is referred to as evidentialism, and which is part of a larger epistemological tradition called classical foundationalism, which is accompanied by deontologism, which holds that humans must regulate their beliefs following evidentialist structures. They show how this can go too far,[how?][41] and Alvin Plantinga deals with it.[clarification needed] While Plantinga upholds that faith may be the result of evidence testifying to the reliability of the source (of the truth claims), yet he sees having faith as being the result of hearing the truth of the gospel with the internal persuasion by the Holy Spirit moving and enabling him to believe. "Christian belief is produced in the believer by the internal instigation of the Holy Spirit, endorsing the teachings of Scripture, which is itself divinely inspired by the Holy Spirit. The result of the work of the Holy Spirit is faith."[42]

Catholicism edit

The four-part Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC) gives Part One to "The Profession of Faith". This section describes the content of faith. It elaborates and expands, particularly upon the Apostles' Creed. CCC 144 initiates a section on the "Obedience of Faith".[citation needed]

In the theology of Pope John Paul II, faith is understood in personal terms as a trusting commitment of person to person and thus involves Christian commitment to the divine person of Jesus Christ.[43]

Methodism edit

In Methodism, faith plays an important role in justification, which occurs during the New Birth.[44] The Emmanuel Association, a Methodist denomination in the conservative holiness movement, teaches:[45]

Living faith is the gift of God (Ephesians 2:8; Romans 4:16) imparted to the obedient heart through the Word of God (Romans 10:17), and the ministry of the Holy Ghost (Ephesians 2:18). This faith becomes effective as it is exercised by man with the aid of the Spirit, which aid is always assured when the heart has met the divine condition (Hebrews 5:9). Living faith is to be distinguished from intellectual confidence which may be in the possession of any unawakened soul (Romans 10:1–4).

— Principles of Faith, Emmanuel Association of Churches[45]

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints edit

The Articles of Faith of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints states that "faith in the Lord Jesus Christ" is the first principle of the gospel.

Some alternative, yet impactful, ideas regarding the nature of faith were presented by church founder Joseph Smith[46] in a collection of sermons, which are now published as the Lectures on Faith.[47]

  • Lecture 1 explains what faith is;
  • Lecture 2 describes how mankind comes to know about God;
  • Lectures 3 and 4 make clear the necessary and unchanging attributes of God;
  • Lecture 5 deals with the nature of God the Father, his Son Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost;
  • Lecture 6 proclaims that the willingness to sacrifice all earthly things is a prerequisite to gaining faith in salvation;
  • Lecture 7 treats the fruits of faith—perspective, power, and eventually perfection.[48]

Buddhism edit

Faith in Buddhism (saddhā, śraddhā) refers to a serene commitment to the practice of the Buddha's teaching and trust in enlightened or highly developed beings, such as Buddhas or bodhisattvas (those aiming to become a Buddha).[49][50]: 388–89  Buddhists usually recognize multiple objects of faith, but many are especially devoted to one particular object of faith, such as one particular Buddha.[49][51][50]: 386, 396–7 

In early Buddhism, faith was focused on the Three Jewels or Refuges, namely, Gautama Buddha, his teaching (the Dhamma), and the community of spiritually developed followers, or the monastic community seeking enlightenment (the Sangha). Although offerings to the monastic community were valued highest, early Buddhism did not morally condemn peaceful offerings to deities.[52]: 74–5, 81  A faithful devotee was called upāsaka or upāsika, for which no formal declaration was required.[53] In early Buddhism, personal verification was valued highest in attaining the truth, and sacred scriptures, reason, or faith in a teacher were considered less valuable sources of authority.[54] As important as faith was, it was a mere initial step to the path to wisdom and enlightenment, and was obsolete or redefined at the final stage of that path.[52]: 49–50 [50]: 384, 396–7 

While faith in Buddhism does not imply "blind faith", Buddhist practice nevertheless requires a degree of trust, primarily in the spiritual attainment of Gautama Buddha. Faith in Buddhism can still be described as faith in the Three Jewels (the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha). It is intended to lead to the goal of enlightenment, or bodhi, and Nirvana. Volitionally, faith implies a resolute and courageous act of will. It combines the steadfast resolution that one will do a thing with the self-confidence that one can do it.[55]

In the later stratum of Buddhist history, especially Mahāyāna Buddhism, faith was given a much more important role.[56]: 172 [57] The concept of the Buddha Nature was developed, as devotion to Buddhas and bodhisattvas residing in Pure Lands became commonplace.[58] With the arising of the cult of the Lotus Sūtra, faith gained a central role in Buddhist practice,[59] which was further amplified with the development of devotion to the Amitabha Buddha in Pure Land Buddhism.[60][61]: 123  In the Japanese form of Pure Land Buddhism, under the teachers Hōnen and Shinran, only entrusting faith toward the Amitabha Buddha was believed to be a fruitful form of practice, as the practice of celibacy, morality, and other Buddhist disciplines were dismissed as no longer effective in this day and age, or as contradicting the virtue of faith.[61]: 122–3 {{Harvey2013}}[62] Faith was defined as a state similar to enlightenment, with a sense of self-negation and humility.[63]

Thus, the role of faith increased throughout Buddhist history. However, from the nineteenth century onward, Buddhist modernism in countries like Sri Lanka and Japan, and also in the West, has downplayed and criticized the role of faith in Buddhism. Faith in Buddhism still has a role in modern Asia and the West but is understood and defined differently than in traditional interpretations.[56]: 378, 429, 444 [64] Within the Dalit Buddhist Movement communities, taking refuge is defined not only as a religious, but also a political choice.[65]

Hinduism edit

Bhakti (Sanskrit: भक्ति) literally means "attachment, participation, fondness for, homage, faith, love, devotion, worship, purity".[66] It was originally used in Hinduism, referring to devotion and love for a personal god or a representational god by a devotee.[67] In ancient texts such as the Shvetashvatara Upanishad, the term simply means participation, devotion, and love for any endeavor, while in the Bhagavad Gita, it connotes one of the possible paths of spirituality and towards moksha, as in bhakti marga.[68]

Ahimsa, also referred to as nonviolence, is a fundamental tenet of Hinduism that advocates harmonious and peaceful co-existence and evolutionary growth in grace and wisdom for all humankind unconditionally.[relevant?]

In Hinduism, most of the Vedic prayers begins with the chants of Om. Om is the Sanskrit symbol that amazingly resonates the peacefulness ensconced within one's higher self. Om is considered to have a profound effect on the body and mind of the one who chants and also creates a calmness, serenity, healing, strength of its own to prevail within and also in the surrounding environment.[relevant?]

Islam edit

In Islam, a believer's faith in the metaphysical aspects of Islam is called Iman (Arabic: الإيمان), which is complete submission to the will of God, not unquestioning or blind belief.[69] A man must build his faith on well-grounded convictions beyond any reasonable doubt and above uncertainty.[70] According to the Quran, Iman must be accompanied by righteous deeds and the two together are necessary for entry into Paradise.[71] In the Hadith of Gabriel, Iman in addition to Islam and Ihsan form the three dimensions of the Islamic religion.

Muhammad referred to the six axioms of faith in the Hadith of Gabriel: "Iman is that you believe in God and His Angels and His Books and His Messengers and the Hereafter and the good and evil fate [ordained by your God]."[72] The first five are mentioned together in the Qur'an.[73] The Quran states that faith can grow with remembrance of God.[74] The Qur'an also states that nothing in this world should be dearer to a true believer than faith.[75]

Judaism edit

Judaism recognizes the positive value of Emunah[76] (generally translated as "faith", or "trust in God") and the negative status of the Apikorus (heretic), but faith is not as stressed or as central as it is in some other religions, especially Christianity or Islam.[77] Faith could be a necessary means for being a practicing religious Jew, but the emphasis is placed on true knowledge, true prophecy, and practice rather than on faith itself. Very rarely does it relate to any teaching that must be believed.[78] Judaism does not require one to explicitly identify God (a key tenet of Christian faith, which is called Avodah Zarah (foreign worship) in Judaism, a minor form of idol worship, a big sin and strictly forbidden to Jews). Rather, in Judaism, one is to honor a (personal) idea of God, supported by the many principles quoted in the Talmud to define Judaism, mostly by what it is not. Thus there is no established formulation of Jewish principles of faith which are mandatory for all (observant) Jews.

In the Jewish scriptures, trust in God – Emunah – refers to how God acts toward his people and how they are to respond to him; it is rooted in the everlasting covenant established in the Torah, notably[78] Deuteronomy 7:9:

Know therefore that the LORD thy God, He is God; the faithful God, who keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love Him and keep His commandments to a thousand generations;[79]

— Tanakh, Deuteronomy 7:9

The specific tenets that compose required belief and their application to the times have been disputed throughout Jewish history. Today many, but not all, Orthodox Jews have accepted Maimonides's Thirteen Principles of Belief.[80]

A traditional example of Emunah as seen in the Jewish annals is found in the person of Abraham. On several occasions, Abraham both accepts statements from God that seem impossible and offers obedient actions in response to direction from God to do things that seem implausible.[81]

The Talmud describes how a thief also believes in G‑d: On the brink of his forced entry, as he is about to risk his life—and the life of his victim—he cries out with all sincerity, "G‑d help me!" The thief has faith that there is a G‑d who hears his cries, yet it escapes him that this G‑d may be able to provide for him without requiring that he abrogate G‑d's will by stealing from others. For emunah to affect him in this way he needs study and contemplation.[76]

Sikhism edit

Faith is not a religious concept in Sikhism. However, the five Sikh symbols, known as Kakaars or Five Ks (in Punjabi known as pañj kakkē or pañj kakār), are sometimes referred to as the Five articles of Faith. The articles include kēs (uncut hair), kaṅghā (small wooden comb), kaṛā (circular steel or iron bracelet), kirpān (sword/dagger), and kacchera (special undergarment). Baptised Sikhs are bound to wear those five articles of faith, at all times, to save them from bad company and keep them close to God.[82]

Baháʼí Faith edit

In the Baháʼí Faith, faith is meant, first, as conscious knowledge, second, as the practice of good deeds,[83] and ultimately as the acceptance of the divine authority of the Manifestations of God.[84] In the religion's view, faith and knowledge are both required for spiritual growth.[84] Faith involves more than outward obedience to this authority, but also must be based on a deep personal understanding of religious teachings.[84]

Secular faith edit

Secular faith refers to a belief or conviction that is not based on religious or supernatural doctrines.[85] Secular faith can arise from a wide range of sources and can take many forms, depending on the individual's beliefs and experiences, including:

Philosophy
Many secular beliefs are rooted in philosophical ideas, such as humanism or rationalism. These belief systems often emphasize the importance of reason, ethics, and human agency, rather than relying on supernatural or religious explanations.
Science
Scientific discoveries and advancements can also inspire secular faith. For example, the theory of evolution has led many people to have faith in the power of natural selection and the process of evolution, rather than in a divine creator.
Personal values and principles
People may develop secular faith based on their own values and principles, such as a belief in social justice or environmentalism.
Community and culture
Secular faith can also be influenced by the values and beliefs of a particular community or culture. For example, some people may have faith in the principles of democracy, human rights, or freedom of expression.

Epistemological analysis edit

The epistemological study focuses on epistemic justification, the rationality of belief, and various related issues. A justified belief is a belief that is well-supported by evidence and reasons, and that is arrived at through a reliable and trustworthy process of inquiry.

Faith is often regarded as a form of belief that may not necessarily rely on empirical evidence. However, when religious faith does make empirical claims, these claims need to undergo scientific testing to determine their validity. On the other hand, some beliefs may not make empirical claims and instead focus on non-empirical issues such as ethics, morality, and spiritual practices. In these cases, it may be necessary to evaluate the validity of these beliefs based on their internal coherence and logical consistency, rather than empirical testing.

There is a wide spectrum of opinion concerning the epistemological validity of faith[86] — that is, whether it is a reliable way to acquire true beliefs.

Fideism edit

Fideism is considered to be a philosophical position rather than a comprehensive epistemological theory. It maintains that faith is independent of reason, or that reason and faith are hostile to each other and faith is superior at arriving at particular truths (see natural theology). Fideism is not a synonym for religious belief but describes a particular philosophical proposition concerning the relationship between faith's appropriate jurisdiction at arriving at truths, contrasted against reason. It states that faith is needed to determine some philosophical and religious truths, and it questions the ability of reason to arrive at all truth. The word and concept had its origin in the mid to late-19th century by way of Catholic thought, in a movement called Traditionalism. The Roman Catholic Magisterium has, however, repeatedly condemned fideism.[87]

Critics of fideism suggest that it is not a justified or rational position from an epistemological standpoint. Fideism holds that religious beliefs cannot be justified or evaluated based on evidence or reason and that faith alone is a sufficient basis for belief. This position has been criticized because it leads to dogmatism, irrationality, and a rejection of the importance of reason and evidence in understanding the world.[88]

William Alston argues that while faith is an important aspect of religious belief, it must be grounded in reason and evidence to be justified.[89]

Religious epistemology edit

Religious epistemologists formulated and defended reasons for the rationality of accepting belief in God without the support of an argument.[90] Some religious epistemologists hold that belief in God is more analogous to belief in a person than belief in a scientific hypothesis. Human relations demand trust and commitment. If belief in God is more like belief in other persons, then the trust that is appropriate to persons will be appropriate to God. American psychologist and philosopher William James offers a similar argument in his lecture The Will to Believe.[90][91]

Foundationalism is a view about the structure of justification or knowledge.[92] Foundationalism holds that all knowledge and justified belief are ultimately based upon what are called properly basic beliefs. This position is intended to resolve the infinite regress problem in epistemology. According to foundationalism, a belief is epistemically justified only if it is justified by properly basic beliefs. One of the significant developments in foundationalism is the rise of reformed epistemology.[92]

Reformed epistemology is a view about the epistemology of religious belief, which holds that belief in God can be properly basic. Analytic philosophers Alvin Plantinga and Nicholas Wolterstorff develop this view.[93] Plantinga holds that a person may rationally believe in God even though the person does not possess sufficient evidence to convince an agnostic. One difference between reformed epistemology and fideism is that the former requires defense against known objections, whereas the latter might dismiss such objections as irrelevant.[94] Plantinga developed reformed epistemology in Warranted Christian Belief as a form of externalism that holds that the justification-conferring factors for a belief may include external factors.[95]

Some theistic philosophers have defended theism by granting evidentialism but supporting theism through deductive arguments whose premises are considered justifiable. Some of these arguments are probabilistic, either in the sense of having weight but being inconclusive or in the sense of having a mathematical probability assigned to them.[90] Notable in this regard are the cumulative arguments presented by British philosopher Basil Mitchell and analytic philosopher Richard Swinburne, whose arguments are based on Bayesian probability.[96] In a notable exposition of his arguments, Swinburne appeals to an inference for the best explanation.[97]

Professor of Mathematics and philosopher of science at University of Oxford John Lennox justifies his religious belief in Jesus's resurrection and miracles by believing God's capability of breaking the commonly recognized law of nature.[98] John Lennox has stated, "Faith is not a leap in the dark; it's the exact opposite. It's a commitment based on evidence… It is irrational to reduce all faith to blind faith and then subject it to ridicule. That provides a very anti-intellectual and convenient way of avoiding intelligent discussion." He criticises Richard Dawkins as a famous proponent of asserting that faith equates to holding a belief without evidence, thus that it is possible to hold belief without evidence, for failing to provide evidence for this assertion.[99][clarification needed]

Critics of reformed epistemology argue that it fails to provide a compelling justification for belief in God and that it is unable to account for the diversity of religious belief and experience. They also argue that it can lead to a kind of epistemic relativism, in which all religious beliefs are considered equally valid and justified, regardless of their content or coherence. Despite these criticisms, reformed epistemology has been influential in the contemporary philosophy of religion and continues to be an active area of debate and discussion.[100]

Empirical claims edit

Many religious beliefs are intended to be metaphorical or symbolic, but there are also religious beliefs that are taken quite literally by believers. For example, some Christians believe that the Earth was created in six literal days, and some Muslims believe that the Quran contains scientific facts that were not known to humans at the time of its revelation. Furthermore, even if a religious belief is intended to be metaphorical or symbolic, it can still be subject to empirical testing if it makes claims about the world. For example, the claim that the Earth is the center of the universe can be interpreted as a metaphorical representation of humanity's special place in the cosmos, but it also makes an empirical claim that can be tested by scientific observation.[101]

Morality & Faith edit

From a scientific perspective, morality is not dependent on faith.[citation needed] While some individuals may claim that their morality is rooted in their faith or religious beliefs, there is evidence to suggest that morality is also influenced by other factors, such as social and cultural norms, empathy, and reason. Studies have shown that individuals from diverse cultural and religious backgrounds tend to share many moral values, suggesting that morality is not solely dependent on faith. Additionally, research in the fields of psychology, neuroscience, and evolutionary biology has shed light on the biological and cognitive mechanisms underlying moral decision-making, providing further evidence that morality is not exclusively dependent on faith.[102]

Criticism edit

Bertrand Russell wrote:[6]

Christians hold that their faith does good, but other faiths do harm. At any rate, they hold this about the communist faith. What I wish to maintain is that all faiths do harm. We may define "faith" as a firm belief in something for which there is no evidence. Where there is evidence, no one speaks of "faith". We do not speak of faith that two and two are four or that the earth is round. We only speak of faith when we wish to substitute emotion for evidence. The substitution of emotion for evidence is apt to lead to strife, since different groups substitute different emotions. Christians have faith in the Resurrection; communists have faith in Marx's Theory of Value. Neither faith can be defended rationally, and each therefore is defended by propaganda and, if necessary, by war.

— Will Religious Faith Cure Our Troubles?

Evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins criticizes all faith by generalizing from specific faith in propositions that conflict directly with scientific evidence.[103] He describes faith as belief without evidence; a process of active non-thinking. He states that it is a practice that only degrades our understanding of the natural world by allowing anyone to make a claim about nature that is based solely on their personal thoughts, and possibly distorted perceptions, that does not require testing against nature, cannot make reliable and consistent predictions, and is not subject to peer review.[104]

Philosophy professor Peter Boghossian argues that reason and evidence are the only way to determine which "claims about the world are likely true". Different religious traditions make different religious claims, and Boghossian asserts that faith alone cannot resolve conflicts between these without evidence. He gives an example of the belief held by Muslims that Muhammad (who died in the year 632) was the last prophet, and the contradictory belief held by Mormons that Joseph Smith (born in 1805) was a prophet. Boghossian asserts that faith has no "built-in corrective mechanism". For factual claims, he gives the example of the belief that the Earth is 4,000 years old. With only faith and no reason or evidence, he argues, there is no way to correct this claim if it is inaccurate. Boghossian advocates thinking of faith either as "belief without evidence" or "pretending to know things you don't know".[105]

Friedrich Nietzsche expressed his criticism of the Christian idea of faith in passage 51 of The Antichrist:[106]

The fact that faith, under certain circumstances, may work for blessedness, but that this blessedness produced by an idée fixe by no means makes the idea itself true, and the fact that faith actually moves no mountains, but instead raises them up where there were none before: all this is made sufficiently clear by a walk through a lunatic asylum. Not, of course, to a priest: for his instincts prompt him to the lie that sickness is not sickness and lunatic asylums not lunatic asylums. Christianity finds sickness necessary, just as the Greek spirit had need of a superabundance of health—the actual ulterior purpose of the whole system of salvation of the church is to make people ill. And the church itself—doesn't it set up a Catholic lunatic asylum as the ultimate ideal?—The whole earth as a madhouse?—The sort of religious man that the church wants is a typical décadent; the moment at which a religious crisis dominates a people is always marked by epidemics of nervous disorder; the "inner world" of the religious man is so much like the "inner world" of the overstrung and exhausted that it is difficult to distinguish between them; the "highest" states of mind, held up before mankind by Christianity as of supreme worth, are actually epileptoid in form—the church has granted the name of holy only to lunatics or to gigantic frauds in majorem dei honorem....

Gustave Le Bon emphasizes the irrational nature of faith and suggests that it is often based on emotions rather than reason. He argues that faith can be used to manipulate and control people, particularly in the context of religious or political movements. In this sense, Le Bon views faith as a tool that can be wielded by those in power to shape the beliefs and behaviors of the masses.[107]

See also edit

 
Shinto faith
  • Blue skies research – Curiosity-driven scientific research, without a clear practical goal
  • Delusion – Psychological fixation of holding false beliefs in spite of clearly disqualifying proofs
  • Dogma – Belief(s) accepted by members of a group without question
  • Faith and rationality – Two approaches that exist in varying degrees of conflict or compatibility
  • Incorrigibility – Property of a philosophical proposition
  • Life stance – Person's relation with what they accept as being of ultimate importance
  • Major religious groups
  • Numinous – Arousing spiritual or religious emotion; mysterious or awe-inspiring
  • Pascal's wager – Argument that posits human beings bet with their lives that God either exists or does not
  • Philosophy of religion – Branch of philosophy
  • Piety – Religious devotion or spirituality
  • Rationalism – Epistemological view centered on reason
  • Religious conversion – Adoption of religious beliefs
  • Saint Faith – Gallo-Roman saint
  • Simple church – Private Christian gathering
  • Spectrum of theistic probability – Way of categorizing one's belief regarding the probability of the existence of a deity
  • Theological virtues – Christian ethics
  • There are no atheists in foxholes – Claim that high-stress situations prompt everyone to believe in god
  • Truthiness – Quality of preferring concepts or facts one wishes to be true, rather than actual truth
  • Worldview – Fundamental cognitive orientation of an individual or society

References edit

  1. ^ "Meaning of faith in English". Cambridge Dictionary. Cambridge University Press. from the original on March 2, 2019. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  2. ^ "Definition of faith". Dictionary.com. from the original on 2023-03-09. Retrieved 2023-03-03.
  3. ^ "faith". Webster's Dictionary. from the original on 2023-03-03. Retrieved 2023-03-03.
  4. ^ Plantinga, Alvin (January 27, 2000). Warranted Christian Belief. USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 169–199. ISBN 978-0-19-513192-5. Retrieved November 27, 2019.
  5. ^ Boa, Kenneth D.; Bowman, Robert M. Jr. (March 1, 2006). "Warranted Christian Belief". Faith Has Its Reasons: Integrative Approaches to Defending the Christian Faith. USA: IVP Books. pp. 251–255. ISBN 978-0-8308-5648-0.
  6. ^ a b Russell, Bertrand. . Human Society in Ethics and Politics. Archived from the original on 2020-11-12. Retrieved 16 August 2009.
  7. ^ Kaufmann, Walter Arnold (1961). The Faith of a Heretic. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-16548-6. Faith means intense, usually confident, a belief that is not based on evidence sufficient to command assent from every reasonable person
  8. ^ Barton, Carlin; Boyarin, Daniel (2016). Imagine No Religion: How Modern Abstractions Hide Ancient Realities. Fordham University Press. pp. 115, 242. ISBN 978-0-8232-7120-7.
  9. ^ "Faith and Reason". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on 2023-05-07. Retrieved 2023-05-07. As unforced belief, faith is 'an act of the intellect assenting to the truth at the command of the will' (Summa theologiae, II/II, Q. 4, art. 5); and it is because this is a free and responsible act that faith is one of the virtues... Aquinas thus supported the general (though not universal) Christian view that revelation supplements, rather than cancels or replaces, the findings of sound philosophy.
  10. ^ "Natural Theology". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. University of Tennessee. from the original on 2021-05-08. Retrieved 2023-05-07. For purposes of studying natural theology, Jews, Christians, Muslims, and others will bracket and set aside for the moment their commitment to the sacred writings or traditions they believe to be God's word. Doing so enables them to proceed together to engage in the perennial questions about God using the sources of evidence that they share by virtue of their common humanity, for example, sensation, reason, science, and history. Agnostics and atheists, too, can engage in natural theology. For them, it is simply that they have no revelation-based views to bracket and set aside in the first place.
  11. ^ a b c "Faith - Online Etymology Dictionary". Etymology Online. Retrieved February 25, 2024.
  12. ^ Evans, Nancy; Forney, Deanna; Guido, Florence; Patton, Lori; Renn, Kristen (2010). Student Development in College: Theory, Research, and Practice (Second ed.). Jossey-Bass. ISBN 978-0-7879-7809-9.
  13. ^ Works of Daniel J. Levinson
  14. ^ Fowler, J.W., Stages of Faith – The Psychology of Human Development and the Quest for Meaning[full citation needed]
  15. ^ "Strong's Greek: 4102. πίστις (pistis) – faith, faithfulness". biblehub.com. from the original on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  16. ^ Thomas, Robert L., ed. (1981). New American standard exhaustive concordance of the Bible. Nashville, Tenn.: A.J. Holman. pp. 1674–75. ISBN 0-87981-197-8.
  17. ^ Wilkin, Robert N. (2012). The Ten Most Misunderstood Words in the Bible. Corinth, Tex.: GES. p. 221.
  18. ^
    • Aquinas, Thomas. "Faith". Summa Theologiae. Secunda Secundae Partis, Q. 1. from the original on 2018-05-27. Retrieved 2018-05-26.
    • Kraut, Richard (2018). "Aristotle's Ethics: 5. The Doctrine of the Mean". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. from the original on 10 November 2022. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  19. ^ Morgan, Teresa Jean (2015). Roman Faith and Christian Faith: Pistis and Fides in the Early Roman Empire and Early Churches. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-872414-8. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2023-03-01.
  20. ^ Myers, Jeremy D. "The Gospel Under Siege" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-09-11.
  21. ^ Wuerl, Donald W. (2004). The Teaching of Christ: A Catholic Catechism for Adults, Edition: 5, revised. Huntingdon, Ind.: Our Sunday Visitor Pub. Division. p. 238. ISBN 1-59276-094-5. Retrieved 21 April 2009. [dead link]
  22. ^ Migliore, Daniel L. (2004). Faith seeking understanding: an introduction to Christian theology. Grand Rapids, Mich: W.B. Eerdmans. pp. 3–8.
  23. ^ Inbody, Tyron (2005). The faith of the Christian church: an introduction to theology. Grand Rapids, Mich.: William B. Eerdmans. pp. 1–10.
  24. ^ For example Draw Near to God: 100 Bible Verses to Deepen Your Faith. Zondervan. 2019. ISBN 978-0-310-45388-8. Retrieved 25 September 2019.[page needed]
  25. ^ Compare prosperity theology.
  26. ^ Compare: Weber, Max (1905). The Protestant Ethic and the 'Spirit' of Capitalism: and Other Writings. Penguin twentieth-century classics. Translated by Baehr, Peter; Wells, Gordon C. New York: Penguin (published 2002). ISBN 978-1-101-09847-9. from the original on 13 January 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2019. In the course of its development, Calvinism made a positive addition: the idea of the necessity of putting one's faith to the test [Bewährung des Glaubens] in secular working life. [...] It thus provided the positive motivation [Antrieb] for asceticism, and with the firm establishment of its ethics in the doctrine of predestination, the spiritual aristocracy of the monks, who stood outside and above the world, was replaced by the spiritual aristocracy of the saints in the world, predestined by God from eternity [...].
  27. ^ Peters, Edward (1988). "The Inquisition in Literature and Art". Inquisition (reprint ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press (published 1989). p. 225. ISBN 978-0-520-06630-4. Retrieved 25 September 2019. The costuming of those convicted [...] was the result of careful planning and indicated specific gradations of guilt. There was never a single, simple sanbenito, for example, but a different kind of sanbenito for different crimes and degrees of heresy, with corresponding headgear [...]. The garb of the penitents, the procession with inquisitorial banners and crosses, the careful design of the seating and sequence of the ceremony made the auto-de-fé itself 'a work of art [...]' [...]. [...] The aim of the auto-de-fé, as its name suggests, is the 'act of faith,' that is, the liturgical demonstration of the truth of the faith and the error and evil of its enemies.
  28. ^
    • Tanner, Norman (2009). The Ages of Faith: Popular Religion in Late Medieval England and Western Europe. Volume 56 of International Library of Historical Studies. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 161. ISBN 978-1-84511-760-3. Retrieved 28 October 2021. After all, was not the Middle Ages the 'age of faith' par execellence, the time when the whole of Europe was united not only in its belief but also in a common view of society?
    • Durant, Will (7 June 2011) [1950]. The Age of Faith. Volume 4 of The Story of Civilization. Simon and Schuster (published 2011). ISBN 978-1-4516-4761-7. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  29. ^ The Norton History of Modern Europe. 1971. p. 129. Retrieved 28 October 2021. Luther attacked not the corruption of institutions but what he believed to be the corruption of faith itself.
  30. ^ Haught, James A. (2010). Fading Faith: The Rise of the Secular Age. Gustav Broukal Press. ISBN 978-1-57884-009-0. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  31. ^ Brown, Callum G (12 January 2017). Becoming Atheist: Humanism and the Secular West. London: Bloomsbury Publishing (published 2017). p. 2. ISBN 978-1-4742-2455-0. Retrieved 28 October 2021. By the 1990s, the liberalization of Western culture allowed the individual in most countries to be comfortably alienated from church and faith without fear of censure or social stigma [...].
  32. ^ Kalla, Krishen Lal (1989). The Mid-Victorian Literature and Loss of Faith (1 ed.). New Delhi: Mittal Publications. p. 205. ISBN 978-81-7099-155-7. Retrieved 28 October 2021. In the mid-Victorian era [...] new scientific discoveries broke out giving rise to agnosticism, scepticism and atheism. All important writers of this age came under the influence of rationalism and their writings are a record of the struggle in their minds between faith and loss of faith. Some, like Swinburne and J. Thomson (B.V.) became atheists [...].
  33. ^ Dawkins, Richard (1989). The Selfish Gene (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 198.
  34. ^ McGrath, Alister E. (2008). The Order of Things: Explorations in Scientific Theology. John Wiley & Sons. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-4051-2556-7.
  35. ^ Robertson, Archibald Thomas. Word Pictures in the New Testament. Chapter 17. from the original on 2015-01-08. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  36. ^ Price, Thomas (9 November 2007). "Faith is about 'just trusting' God isn't It?". from the original on 21 February 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  37. ^ Lennox, John (2011). Gunning for God: Why the New Atheists Are Missing the Target. United Kingdom: Lion. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-7459-5322-9.
  38. ^ Williams, Peter S. (2013). "§1.4". A Faithful Guide to Philosophy: A Christian Introduction to the Love of Wisdom. Authentic Media Inc. ISBN 978-1-78078-310-9. from the original on 2023-05-29. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
  39. ^ Williams, Peter S. (2013). A Faithful Guide to Philosophy: A Christian Introduction to the Love of Wisdom. Authentic Media. pp. Chapter 1.4. ISBN 978-1-84227-811-6.
  40. ^ Allen, Michael (2009). The Christ's Faith: A Dogmatic Account. London: T&T Clark Studies in Systematic Theology. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-567-03399-4.
  41. ^ Boa, Kenneth; Bowman, Robert M. (March 1, 2006). Faith Has Its Reasons: Integrative Approaches to Defending the Christian Faith. USA: IVP Books. p. 253. ISBN 978-0-8308-5648-0.
  42. ^ Plantinga, Alvin (2000). Warranted Christian Belief. USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 250, 291. ISBN 0-19-513192-4.
  43. ^ Dulles, Avery (2003). The Splendor of Faith: The Theological Vision of Pope John Paul II. New York: Crossroad Publishing Company. pp. vii–viii. ISBN 0-8245-2121-8.
  44. ^ Elwell, Walter A. (1 May 2001). Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Baker Reference Library). Baker Publishing Group. p. 1268. ISBN 978-1-4412-0030-3. This balance is most evident in Wesley's understanding of faith and works, justification and sanctification... Wesley, in a sermon entitled 'Justification by Faith', makes an attempt to define the term accurately. First, he states what justification is not. It is not being made actually just and righteous (that is sanctification). It is not being cleared of the accusations of Satan, nor of the law, nor even of God. We have sinned, so the accusation stands. Justification implies pardon, the forgiveness of sins...Ultimately for the true Wesleyan salvation is completed by our return to original righteousness. This is done by the work of the Holy Spirit...The Wesleyan tradition insists that grace is not contrasted with law but with the works of the law. Wesleyans remind us that Jesus came to fulfill, not destroy the law. God made us in his perfect image, and he wants that image restored. He wants to return us to a full and perfect obedience through the process of sanctification... Good works follow after justification as its inevitable fruit. Wesley insisted that Methodists who did not fulfill all righteousness deserved the hottest place in the lake of fire.
  45. ^ a b Guidebook of the Emmanuel Association of Churches. Logansport: Emmanuel Association. 2002. p. 7.
  46. ^ Smith was not the sole author: "Authorship and History of the Lectures on Faith". Religious Studies Center. from the original on 2020-06-25. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-10-08. Retrieved 2018-10-08.
  48. ^ Dahl, Larry E. . The Lectures on Faith in Historical Perspective. Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University, Religious Studies Center. Archived from the original on 2018-10-08. Retrieved 2018-10-08.[date missing]
  49. ^ a b Gómez, Luis O. (2004). (PDF). In Buswell, Robert E. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Buddhism. New York [u.a.]: Macmillan Reference USA, Thomson Gale. pp. 277–9. ISBN 0-02-865720-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 12, 2015.
  50. ^ a b c Jayatilleke, K.N. (1963), (PDF), George Allen & Unwin, ISBN 1-134-54287-9, archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-11
  51. ^ Kinnard, Jacob N. (2004). (PDF). In Buswell, Robert E. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Buddhism. New York [u.a.]: Macmillan Reference USA, Thomson Gale. p. 907. ISBN 0-02-865720-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 12, 2015.
  52. ^ a b Lamotte, Etienne (1988), [History of Indian Buddhism: from the origins to the Saka era] (PDF) (in French), translated by Webb-Boin, Sara, Louvain-la-Neuve: Université catholique de Louvain, Institut orientaliste, ISBN 90-6831-100-X, archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-02-15
  53. ^ Tremblay, Xavier (2007). "The spread of Buddhism in Serindia". In Heirman, Ann; Bumbacher, Stephan Peter (eds.). The spread of Buddhism (online ed.). Leiden: Brill Publishers. p. 87. ISBN 978-90-04-15830-6.
  54. ^ Fuller, Paul (2004). The notion of diṭṭhi in Theravāda Buddhism: the point of view. London: RoutledgeCurzon. p. 36. ISBN 0-203-01043-4.[dead link]
  55. ^ Conze, Edward (1993). The Way of Wisdom: The Five Spiritual Faculties. Buddhist Publication Society. ISBN 978-955-24-0110-7. from the original on 2008-12-23. Retrieved 2009-01-19.
  56. ^ a b Harvey, Peter (2013), An introduction to Buddhism: teachings, history and practices (PDF) (2nd ed.), New York: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-85942-4, (PDF) from the original on 2017-02-20
  57. ^ Leaman, Oliver (2000). (PDF). London [u.a.]: Routledge. p. 212. ISBN 0-415-17357-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-05-15.
  58. ^
  59. ^ Shields, James Mark (2013). (PDF). In Emmanuel, Steven M. (ed.). A companion to Buddhist philosophy. Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 512, 514. ISBN 978-0-470-65877-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 16, 2015.
  60. ^ Hsieh, Ding-hwa (2009). "Buddhism, Pure Land". In Cheng, Linsun; Brown, Kerry (eds.). Berkshire encyclopedia of China. Great Barrington, MA: Berkshire Publishing Group. pp. 236–7. ISBN 978-0-9770159-4-8.
  61. ^ a b Green, Ronald S. (2013), (PDF), in Emmanuel, Steven M. (ed.), A companion to Buddhist philosophy, Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell, ISBN 978-0-470-65877-2, archived from the original (PDF) on March 16, 2015
  62. ^ Hudson, Clarke (2005). (PDF). In Jones, Lindsay (ed.). Encyclopedia of religion. Vol. 2 (2nd ed.). Detroit: Thomson Gale. p. 1294. ISBN 0-02-865997-X. Archived from the original on 2017-03-02.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  63. ^
  64. ^
  65. ^ Dore, Bhavya (1 October 2016). "Rising caste-related violence pushes many Indians to new faith". Houston Chronicle. Religion News Service. Hearst Newspapers. from the original on 24 September 2017. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
  66. ^ Monier-Williams, Sanskrit Dictionary, 1899.[full citation needed]
  67. ^
    • . Bhakti | Hinduism, Devotion & Rituals | Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Archived from the original on 2020-12-29.
    • Pechelis, Karen (2011). "Bhakti Traditions". In Frazier, Jessica; Flood, Gavin (eds.). The Continuum Companion to Hindu Studies. Bloomsbury. pp. 107–121. ISBN 978-0-8264-9966-0.
  68. ^ Lochtefeld, John (2014). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism. New York: Rosen Publishing. pp. 98–100. ISBN 978-0-8239-2287-1. Also see articles on bhaktimārga and jnanamārga.
  69. ^
    • al-Farāhī, Hamīd al-Dīn (1998). Majmū'ah Tafāsīr (2nd ed.). Faran Foundation. p. 347.
    • Denny, Frederick M. An Introduction to Islam (3rd ed.). p. 405.
  70. ^ Swartley, Keith E. (2005-11-02). Encountering the World of Islam. InterVarsity Press. ISBN 978-0-8308-5644-2.
  71. ^ Quran 95:6
  72. ^ Muslim, Al-Jami' al-sahih, 22, (no. 93).
  73. ^ Quran 2:285
  74. ^ Quran 8:2
  75. ^ Quran 9:24
  76. ^ a b "What Is Emunah – Beyond Belief – Essentials". chabad.org. from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  77. ^ Segal, Alan (1990). Paul the Convert. Yale University Press. pp. 128, 148, 175. ISBN 0-300-04527-1. For a Jew, faith fundamentally precedes anything as well, but there is no need to distinguish between it and law. Jews perform the commandments because they are commanded by God, not because they guarantee justification. This arrangement assumes a prior faith commitment and prior act on God's part in justifying that never needs to be discussed"..."For Paul, giving up special claims to the performance of ceremonial Torah was part of his dissonance over leaving Pharisiasism and entering an apocalyptic community based on faith".."The rabbi..."felt individuals maintain righteousness through observing God's commandments"..."Paul"..."through faith,"..."justification is something that God grants in response to faith and thought the rabbis would not disagree they did not see Torah and faith in opposition
  78. ^ a b Brueggemann, Walter (2002). Reverberations of faith: a theological handbook of Old Testament themes. Louisville, Ky.: Westminster John Knox Press. pp. 76–78. ISBN 0-664-22231-5.
  79. ^ Plaut, W.G. (1981). The Torah – A Modern Commentary. N.Y.: Union of American Hebrew Congregations.
  80. ^
    • Rabbi Shmuel Boteach. . The Wolf Shall Lie With the Lamb. Archived from the original on 2006-02-08.
    • For a history of this dispute see: Shapiro, Marc. The Limits of Orthodox Theology: Maimonides' Thirteen Principles Reappraised. Littman Library of Jewish Civilization.
  81. ^ Genesis 12–15
  82. ^ . realsikhism.com. Archived from the original on 7 October 2015. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  83. ^ "The Bahá'í Community of Canada". www.bahai.ca. from the original on 2022-02-22. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  84. ^ a b c Smith, P. (1999). A Concise Encyclopedia of the Baháʼí Faith. Oxford, UK: Oneworld Publications. p. 155. ISBN 1-85168-184-1.
  85. ^
    • Kurtz, Paul (November 25, 2008). Forbidden Fruit: The Ethics of Secularism.
    • Zuckerman, Phil. Society without God: What the Least Religious Nations Can Tell Us About Contentment.
  86. ^ Lewis, C.S. (2001). Mere Christianity: a revised and amplified edition, with a new introduction, of the three books, Broadcast talks, Christian behaviour, and Beyond personality. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco. ISBN 0-06-065292-6.
  87. ^ Amesbury, Richard. "Fideism". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  88. ^ Audi, R. (2005). "Fideism". The Cambridge dictionary of philosophy. Cambridge University Press.
  89. ^ Alston, W.P. (1986). Divine nature and human language: Essays in philosophical theology. Cornell University Press.
  90. ^ a b c Clark, Kelly James (2 October 2004). "Religious Epistemology". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. from the original on 3 November 2011. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  91. ^ James, William. "1896". New World. 5: 327–347. from the original on 7 October 2011. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  92. ^ a b Poston, Ted (10 June 2010). "Foundationalism". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. from the original on 3 November 2011. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  93. ^ Plantinga, Alvin; Wolterstorff, Nicholas (1983). Faith and Rationality: Reason and Belief in God. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 0-268-00964-3.
  94. ^ Forrest, Peter (11 March 2009). "The Epistemology of Religion". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  95. ^ Plantinga, Alvin (2000). Warranted Christian Belief. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513192-4.
  96. ^
  97. ^
  98. ^ "God Delusion Debate (Dawkins – Lennox)". YouTube. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2023-03-06. ...having produced some sort of a case for a kind of deistic God, perhaps some God — The Great Physicist who adjusted the laws and constants of the universe. That's all very grand and wonderful and then suddenly we come down to the resurrection of Jesus. It's so petty, it's so trivial...
  99. ^ Lennox, John (2009). God's Undertaker: Has Science Buried God?. Lion UK.
  100. ^ Kim, Joseph (June 8, 2011). Reformed Epistemology and the Problem of Religious Diversity. Pickwick Publications.
  101. ^
    • Plantinga, A. (2011). Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism. Oxford University Press.
    • Yāndell, Keith (January 1995). The Epistemology of Religious Experience. New Series. Vol. 104. Oxford University Press. pp. 219–222.
  102. ^
    • Harris, S. (2010). The moral landscape: How science can determine human values. Simon and Schuster.
    • Sinnott-Armstrong, W. (2004). Morality without God?. Oxford University Press.
    • Flanagan, Owen J. (1984). The Science of the Mind. MIT Press.
  103. ^ Dawkins, Richard (2008). The God Delusion. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-618-91824-9.
  104. ^ Dawkins, Richard (January–February 1997). . American Humanist Association. Archived from the original on 30 October 2012. Retrieved 15 March 2008.
  105. ^ Peter Boghossian (2013). A Manual for Creating Atheists. Pitchstone Publishing. p. 31. ISBN 978-1-939578-09-9.
  106. ^ Nietzsche, Friedrich (1999). The Anti-Christ. Translated by Mencken, H.L. Chicago: Sharp Press. p. 144.
  107. ^ Le Bon, Gustave (1896). The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind.

Further reading edit

  • Gupta, Nijay K. Paul and the Language of Faith. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2020. ISBN 978-1-4674-5837-5
  • Sam Harris, The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason, W. W. Norton (2004), 336 pages, ISBN 0-393-03515-8
  • Morgan, Teresa. Roman Faith and Christian Faith: Pistis and Fides in the Early Roman Empire and Early Churches. Oxford University Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0-19-872414-8.
  • Stephen Palmquist, "Faith as Kant's Key to the Justification of Transcendental Reflection", The Heythrop Journal 25:4 (October 1984), pp. 442–455. Reprinted as Chapter V in Stephen Palmquist, Kant's System of Perspectives (Lanham: University Press of America, 1993).
  • D. Mark Parks, "Faith/Faithfulness" Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary. Eds. Chad Brand, Charles Draper, Archie England. Nashville: Holman Publishers, 2003.
  • by Swami Tripurari
  • Baba, Meher: Discourses, San Francisco: Sufism Reoriented, 1967.
  • Richard Dawkins' God Delusion (online reading)

Classic reflections on the nature of faith edit

The Reformation view of faith edit

The Catholic view of faith edit

  • Deharbe, Joseph (1912). "Chapter 1: On Faith in General" . A Complete Catechism of the Catholic Religion. Translated by Rev. John Fander. Schwartz, Kirwin & Fauss.
  • Pope, Hugh (1909). "Faith" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 5. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Slater S.J., Thomas (1925). "Book V: Part I: On Faith" . A manual of moral theology for English-speaking countries. Burns Oates & Washbourne Ltd.

External links edit

  • John Bishop; Daniel J. McKaughan (July 15, 2022). "Faith". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Elizabeth Jackson. "Faith: Contemporary Perspectives". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • James Swindal. "Faith: Historical Perspectives". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Peter Forrest (June 22, 2021). "The Epistemology of Religion". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • "Free and open courses with videos, help and review, about the 10 biggest religions in the world". study.com/academy.
  • Faith in Judaism chabad.org
  • We'd be better off without religion? Panellists: Christopher Hitchens, Nigel Spivey, Richard Dawkins, rabbi Juliet Neuberger, AC Grayling and Roger Scruton.
  • The God Delusion Debate (Dawkins – Lennox) (Dawkins believes the law of nature and denies Jesus resurrection and miracles; Lennox believes Jesus resurrection and miracles with justification by God's capability of breaking the commonly recognized law of nature.)
  • Dialogue with Professor Richard Dawkins, Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams and Professor Anthony Kenny (four topics: the nature of individual human beings, the origin of the human species, thirdly the origin of life on Earth, and finally the origin of the universe)

faith, this, article, about, religious, belief, trust, people, other, things, trust, social, science, other, uses, faith, disambiguation, confidence, trust, person, thing, concept, context, religion, faith, belief, doctrines, teachings, religion, according, me. This article is about religious belief For trust in people or other things see Trust social science For other uses of faith see Faith disambiguation Faith is confidence or trust in a person thing or concept 1 In the context of religion faith is belief in God or in the doctrines or teachings of religion 2 According to Merriam Webster s Dictionary faith has multiple definitions including something that is believed especially with strong conviction complete trust belief and trust in and loyalty to God as well as a firm belief in something for which there is no proof 3 Faith Armani by Mino da FiesoleReligious people often think of faith as confidence based on a perceived degree of warrant or evidence 4 5 while others who are more skeptical of religion tend to think of faith as simply belief without evidence 6 7 In the Roman world faith Latin fides was understood without particular association with gods or beliefs Instead it was understood as a paradoxical set of reciprocal ideas voluntary will and voluntary restraint in the sense of father over family or host over guest whereby one party willfully surrenders to a party who could harm but chooses not to thereby entrusting or confiding in them 8 Accordingly to Thomas Aquinas faith is an act of the intellect assenting to the truth at the command of the will 9 Religion has a long tradition since the ancient world of analyzing divine questions using common human experiences such as sensation reason science and history that do not rely on revelation called Natural theology 10 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Stages of faith development 3 Religious faith 3 1 Christianity 3 1 1 Strength of faith 3 1 2 Christian apologetic views 3 1 3 Catholicism 3 1 4 Methodism 3 1 5 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 3 2 Buddhism 3 3 Hinduism 3 4 Islam 3 5 Judaism 3 6 Sikhism 3 7 Bahaʼi Faith 4 Secular faith 5 Epistemological analysis 5 1 Fideism 5 2 Religious epistemology 5 3 Empirical claims 5 4 Morality amp Faith 5 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Classic reflections on the nature of faith 8 2 The Reformation view of faith 8 3 The Catholic view of faith 9 External linksEtymology editThe English word faith finds its roots in the Proto Indo European PIE root bheidh signifying concepts of trust confidence and persuasion This root has given rise to various terms across different languages such as Greek pistis pistis meaning faith and Latin fides fides meaning trust faith confidence 11 Furthermore the Proto Indo European root were o adds another layer to the word s etymology emphasizing the notions of truth and trustworthiness This root is evident in English words like veracity verity and verify as well as in Latin with verus verus meaning true 11 The term faith in English emerged in the mid 13th century evolving from Anglo French and Old French forms like feid feid and feit feit ultimately tracing back to the Latin fides fides This Latin term rooted in the PIE bheidh root encompassed meanings such as trust confidence and belief 11 Stages of faith development editMain article James W Fowler Stages of Faith James W Fowler 1940 2015 proposes a series of stages of faith development or spiritual development across the human lifespan His stages relate closely to the work of Piaget Erikson and Kohlberg regarding aspects of psychological development in children and adults Fowler defines faith as an activity of trusting committing and relating to the world based on a set of assumptions of how one is related to others and the world 12 Stages of faithIntuitive Projective confusion and of high impressionability through stories and rituals pre school period Mythic Literal provided information is accepted to conform with social norms school going period Synthetic Conventional the faith acquired is concreted in the belief system with the forgoing of personification and replacement with authority in people or groups that represent one s beliefs early late adolescence Individuative Reflective the person critically analyzes adopted and accepted faith with existing systems of faith Disillusion or strengthening of faith happens in this stage Based on needs experiences and paradoxes early adulthood Conjunctive faith people realize the limits of logic and facing the paradoxes or transcendence of life accept the mystery of life and often return to the sacred stories and symbols of the pre acquired or re adopted faith system This stage is called negotiated settling in life mid life Universalizing faith this is the enlightenment stage where the person comes out of all the existing systems of faith and lives life with universal principles of compassion and love and in service to others for uplift without worries and doubt middle late adulthood 45 65 years old and beyond 13 full citation needed No hard and fast rule requires that people pursue faith by going through all six stages There is a high probability for people to be content and fixed in a particular stage for a lifetime stages 2 5 are such stages Stage 6 is the summit of faith development This state is often quantify considered as not fully attainable 14 Religious faith editChristianity edit nbsp Triumph of Faith over Idolatry by Jean Baptiste Theodon 1646 1713 Main article Faith in Christianity The word translated as faith in English language editions of the New Testament the Greek word pistis pistis can also be translated as belief faithfulness or trust 15 Faith can also be translated from the Greek verb pisteyw pisteuo meaning to trust to have confidence faithfulness to be reliable to assure 16 Christianity encompasses various views regarding the nature of faith Some see faith as being persuaded or convinced that something is true 17 In this view a person believes something when they are presented with adequate evidence that it is true The 13th century theologian Saint Thomas Aquinas did not hold that faith is mere opinion on the contrary he held that it represents a mean understood in the Aristotelian sense between excessive reliance on science i e demonstration and excessive reliance on opinion 18 According to Teresa Morgan faith was understood by early Christians within the cultural milieu of the period as a relationship that created a community based on trust instead of a set of mental beliefs or feelings of the heart 19 Numerous commentators discuss the results of faith Some believe that true faith results in good works while others believe that while faith in Jesus brings eternal life it does not necessarily result in good works 20 Regardless of the approach taken to faith all Christians agree that the Christian faith in the sense of Christian practice is aligned with the ideals and the example of the life of Jesus The Christian contemplates the mystery of God and his grace and seeks to know and become obedient to God To a Christian the faith is not static but causes one to learn more of God and to grow in faith Christian faith has its origin in God 21 In Christianity faith causes change as it seeks a greater understanding of God Faith is not fideism or simple obedience to a set of rules or statements 22 Before Christians have faith but they must also understand in whom and in what they have faith Without understanding there cannot be true faith and that understanding is built on the foundation of the community of believers the scriptures and traditions and on the personal experiences of the believer 23 Strength of faith edit Christians may recognize different degrees of faith when they encourage each other to and themselves strive to develop grow and or deepen their faith 24 This may imply that one can measure faith Willingness to undergo martyrdom indicates a proxy for depth of faith but does not provide an everyday measurement for the average contemporary Christian Within the Calvinist tradition the degree of prosperity 25 may serve as an analog of the level of faith 26 Other Christian strands may rely on personal self evaluation to measure the intensity of an individual s faith with associated difficulties in calibrating to any scale Solemn affirmations of a creed a statement of faith provide broad measurements of details clarification needed Various tribunals of the Inquisition however concerned themselves with precisely evaluating the orthodoxy of the faith of those it examined to acquit or to punish in varying degrees 27 The classification of different degrees of faith allows that faith and its expression may wax and wane in fervor during the lifetime of a faithful individual and or over the various historical centuries of a society with an embedded religious system Thus one can speak of an Age of Faith 28 or of the decay of a society s religiosity into corruption 29 secularism 30 or atheism 31 interpretable as the ultimate loss of faith 32 Christian apologetic views edit In contrast to Richard Dawkins view of faith as blind trust in the absence of evidence even in the teeth of evidence 33 Alister McGrath quotes the Oxford Anglican theologian W H Griffith Thomas 1861 1924 who states that faith is not blind but intelligent and that it commences with the conviction of the mind based on adequate evidence which McGrath sees as a good and reliable definition synthesizing the core elements of the characteristic Christian understanding of faith 34 American biblical scholar Archibald Thomas Robertson 1863 1934 stated that the Greek word pistis used for faith in the New Testament over two hundred forty times and rendered assurance in Acts 17 31 is an old verb meaning to furnish used regularly by Demosthenes for bringing forward evidence 35 Tom Price Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics affirms that when the New Testament talks about faith positively it only uses words derived from the Greek root pistis which means to be persuaded 36 British Christian apologist John Lennox argues that faith conceived as a belief that lacks warrant is very different from faith conceived as a belief that has warrant He states that the use of the adjective blind to describe faith indicates that faith is not necessarily or always or indeed normally blind The validity or warrant of faith or belief depends on the strength of the evidence on which the belief is based We all know how to distinguish between blind faith and evidence based faith We are well aware that faith is only justified if there is evidence to back it up Evidence based faith is the normal concept on which we base our everyday lives 37 Peter S Williams holds that the classic Christian tradition has always valued rationality and does not hold that faith involves the complete abandonment of reason while believing in the teeth of evidence 38 Quoting Moreland faith is defined as a trust in and commitment to what we have reason to believe is true Regarding doubting Thomas in John 20 24 31 Williams points out that Thomas wasn t asked to believe without evidence He was asked to believe based on the other disciples testimony Thomas initially lacked the first hand experience of the evidence that had convinced them Moreover the reason John gives for recounting these events is that what he saw is evidence Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ the son of God and that believing ye might have life in his name John 20 30 31 39 Concerning doubting Thomas Michael R Allen wrote Thomas s definition of faith implies adherence to conceptual propositions for the sake of personal knowledge knowledge of and about a person qua person 40 Kenneth Boa and Robert M Bowman Jr describe a classic understanding of faith that is referred to as evidentialism and which is part of a larger epistemological tradition called classical foundationalism which is accompanied by deontologism which holds that humans must regulate their beliefs following evidentialist structures They show how this can go too far how 41 and Alvin Plantinga deals with it clarification needed While Plantinga upholds that faith may be the result of evidence testifying to the reliability of the source of the truth claims yet he sees having faith as being the result of hearing the truth of the gospel with the internal persuasion by the Holy Spirit moving and enabling him to believe Christian belief is produced in the believer by the internal instigation of the Holy Spirit endorsing the teachings of Scripture which is itself divinely inspired by the Holy Spirit The result of the work of the Holy Spirit is faith 42 Catholicism edit The four part Catechism of the Catholic Church CCC gives Part One to The Profession of Faith This section describes the content of faith It elaborates and expands particularly upon the Apostles Creed CCC 144 initiates a section on the Obedience of Faith citation needed In the theology of Pope John Paul II faith is understood in personal terms as a trusting commitment of person to person and thus involves Christian commitment to the divine person of Jesus Christ 43 Methodism edit In Methodism faith plays an important role in justification which occurs during the New Birth 44 The Emmanuel Association a Methodist denomination in the conservative holiness movement teaches 45 Living faith is the gift of God Ephesians 2 8 Romans 4 16 imparted to the obedient heart through the Word of God Romans 10 17 and the ministry of the Holy Ghost Ephesians 2 18 This faith becomes effective as it is exercised by man with the aid of the Spirit which aid is always assured when the heart has met the divine condition Hebrews 5 9 Living faith is to be distinguished from intellectual confidence which may be in the possession of any unawakened soul Romans 10 1 4 Principles of Faith Emmanuel Association of Churches 45 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints edit The Articles of Faith of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints states that faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is the first principle of the gospel Some alternative yet impactful ideas regarding the nature of faith were presented by church founder Joseph Smith 46 in a collection of sermons which are now published as the Lectures on Faith 47 Lecture 1 explains what faith is Lecture 2 describes how mankind comes to know about God Lectures 3 and 4 make clear the necessary and unchanging attributes of God Lecture 5 deals with the nature of God the Father his Son Jesus Christ and the Holy Ghost Lecture 6 proclaims that the willingness to sacrifice all earthly things is a prerequisite to gaining faith in salvation Lecture 7 treats the fruits of faith perspective power and eventually perfection 48 Buddhism edit Main article Faith in Buddhism Faith in Buddhism saddha sraddha refers to a serene commitment to the practice of the Buddha s teaching and trust in enlightened or highly developed beings such as Buddhas or bodhisattvas those aiming to become a Buddha 49 50 388 89 Buddhists usually recognize multiple objects of faith but many are especially devoted to one particular object of faith such as one particular Buddha 49 51 50 386 396 7 In early Buddhism faith was focused on the Three Jewels or Refuges namely Gautama Buddha his teaching the Dhamma and the community of spiritually developed followers or the monastic community seeking enlightenment the Sangha Although offerings to the monastic community were valued highest early Buddhism did not morally condemn peaceful offerings to deities 52 74 5 81 A faithful devotee was called upasaka or upasika for which no formal declaration was required 53 In early Buddhism personal verification was valued highest in attaining the truth and sacred scriptures reason or faith in a teacher were considered less valuable sources of authority 54 As important as faith was it was a mere initial step to the path to wisdom and enlightenment and was obsolete or redefined at the final stage of that path 52 49 50 50 384 396 7 While faith in Buddhism does not imply blind faith Buddhist practice nevertheless requires a degree of trust primarily in the spiritual attainment of Gautama Buddha Faith in Buddhism can still be described as faith in the Three Jewels the Buddha Dharma and Sangha It is intended to lead to the goal of enlightenment or bodhi and Nirvana Volitionally faith implies a resolute and courageous act of will It combines the steadfast resolution that one will do a thing with the self confidence that one can do it 55 In the later stratum of Buddhist history especially Mahayana Buddhism faith was given a much more important role 56 172 57 The concept of the Buddha Nature was developed as devotion to Buddhas and bodhisattvas residing in Pure Lands became commonplace 58 With the arising of the cult of the Lotus Sutra faith gained a central role in Buddhist practice 59 which was further amplified with the development of devotion to the Amitabha Buddha in Pure Land Buddhism 60 61 123 In the Japanese form of Pure Land Buddhism under the teachers Hōnen and Shinran only entrusting faith toward the Amitabha Buddha was believed to be a fruitful form of practice as the practice of celibacy morality and other Buddhist disciplines were dismissed as no longer effective in this day and age or as contradicting the virtue of faith 61 122 3 Harvey2013 62 Faith was defined as a state similar to enlightenment with a sense of self negation and humility 63 Thus the role of faith increased throughout Buddhist history However from the nineteenth century onward Buddhist modernism in countries like Sri Lanka and Japan and also in the West has downplayed and criticized the role of faith in Buddhism Faith in Buddhism still has a role in modern Asia and the West but is understood and defined differently than in traditional interpretations 56 378 429 444 64 Within the Dalit Buddhist Movement communities taking refuge is defined not only as a religious but also a political choice 65 Hinduism edit Main articles Bhakti and Faith in Hinduism Bhakti Sanskrit भक त literally means attachment participation fondness for homage faith love devotion worship purity 66 It was originally used in Hinduism referring to devotion and love for a personal god or a representational god by a devotee 67 In ancient texts such as the Shvetashvatara Upanishad the term simply means participation devotion and love for any endeavor while in the Bhagavad Gita it connotes one of the possible paths of spirituality and towards moksha as in bhakti marga 68 Ahimsa also referred to as nonviolence is a fundamental tenet of Hinduism that advocates harmonious and peaceful co existence and evolutionary growth in grace and wisdom for all humankind unconditionally relevant In Hinduism most of the Vedic prayers begins with the chants of Om Om is the Sanskrit symbol that amazingly resonates the peacefulness ensconced within one s higher self Om is considered to have a profound effect on the body and mind of the one who chants and also creates a calmness serenity healing strength of its own to prevail within and also in the surrounding environment relevant Islam edit Main article Iman Islam In Islam a believer s faith in the metaphysical aspects of Islam is called Iman Arabic الإيمان which is complete submission to the will of God not unquestioning or blind belief 69 A man must build his faith on well grounded convictions beyond any reasonable doubt and above uncertainty 70 According to the Quran Iman must be accompanied by righteous deeds and the two together are necessary for entry into Paradise 71 In the Hadith of Gabriel Iman in addition to Islam and Ihsan form the three dimensions of the Islamic religion Muhammad referred to the six axioms of faith in the Hadith of Gabriel Iman is that you believe in God and His Angels and His Books and His Messengers and the Hereafter and the good and evil fate ordained by your God 72 The first five are mentioned together in the Qur an 73 The Quran states that faith can grow with remembrance of God 74 The Qur an also states that nothing in this world should be dearer to a true believer than faith 75 Judaism edit Main article Jewish principles of faith Judaism recognizes the positive value of Emunah 76 generally translated as faith or trust in God and the negative status of the Apikorus heretic but faith is not as stressed or as central as it is in some other religions especially Christianity or Islam 77 Faith could be a necessary means for being a practicing religious Jew but the emphasis is placed on true knowledge true prophecy and practice rather than on faith itself Very rarely does it relate to any teaching that must be believed 78 Judaism does not require one to explicitly identify God a key tenet of Christian faith which is called Avodah Zarah foreign worship in Judaism a minor form of idol worship a big sin and strictly forbidden to Jews Rather in Judaism one is to honor a personal idea of God supported by the many principles quoted in the Talmud to define Judaism mostly by what it is not Thus there is no established formulation of Jewish principles of faith which are mandatory for all observant Jews In the Jewish scriptures trust in God Emunah refers to how God acts toward his people and how they are to respond to him it is rooted in the everlasting covenant established in the Torah notably 78 Deuteronomy 7 9 Know therefore that the LORD thy God He is God the faithful God who keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love Him and keep His commandments to a thousand generations 79 Tanakh Deuteronomy 7 9 The specific tenets that compose required belief and their application to the times have been disputed throughout Jewish history Today many but not all Orthodox Jews have accepted Maimonides s Thirteen Principles of Belief 80 A traditional example of Emunah as seen in the Jewish annals is found in the person of Abraham On several occasions Abraham both accepts statements from God that seem impossible and offers obedient actions in response to direction from God to do things that seem implausible 81 The Talmud describes how a thief also believes in G d On the brink of his forced entry as he is about to risk his life and the life of his victim he cries out with all sincerity G d help me The thief has faith that there is a G d who hears his cries yet it escapes him that this G d may be able to provide for him without requiring that he abrogate G d s will by stealing from others For emunah to affect him in this way he needs study and contemplation 76 Sikhism edit Main articles Sikhism and Five Ks Faith is not a religious concept in Sikhism However the five Sikh symbols known as Kakaars or Five Ks in Punjabi known as panj kakke or panj kakar are sometimes referred to as the Five articles of Faith The articles include kes uncut hair kaṅgha small wooden comb kaṛa circular steel or iron bracelet kirpan sword dagger and kacchera special undergarment Baptised Sikhs are bound to wear those five articles of faith at all times to save them from bad company and keep them close to God 82 Bahaʼi Faith edit In the Bahaʼi Faith faith is meant first as conscious knowledge second as the practice of good deeds 83 and ultimately as the acceptance of the divine authority of the Manifestations of God 84 In the religion s view faith and knowledge are both required for spiritual growth 84 Faith involves more than outward obedience to this authority but also must be based on a deep personal understanding of religious teachings 84 Secular faith editSee also Secular religion Secular faith refers to a belief or conviction that is not based on religious or supernatural doctrines 85 Secular faith can arise from a wide range of sources and can take many forms depending on the individual s beliefs and experiences including Philosophy Many secular beliefs are rooted in philosophical ideas such as humanism or rationalism These belief systems often emphasize the importance of reason ethics and human agency rather than relying on supernatural or religious explanations Science Scientific discoveries and advancements can also inspire secular faith For example the theory of evolution has led many people to have faith in the power of natural selection and the process of evolution rather than in a divine creator Personal values and principles People may develop secular faith based on their own values and principles such as a belief in social justice or environmentalism Community and culture Secular faith can also be influenced by the values and beliefs of a particular community or culture For example some people may have faith in the principles of democracy human rights or freedom of expression Epistemological analysis edit justification of faith redirects here For the concept of justification by faith see sola fide See also Epistemology The epistemological study focuses on epistemic justification the rationality of belief and various related issues A justified belief is a belief that is well supported by evidence and reasons and that is arrived at through a reliable and trustworthy process of inquiry Faith is often regarded as a form of belief that may not necessarily rely on empirical evidence However when religious faith does make empirical claims these claims need to undergo scientific testing to determine their validity On the other hand some beliefs may not make empirical claims and instead focus on non empirical issues such as ethics morality and spiritual practices In these cases it may be necessary to evaluate the validity of these beliefs based on their internal coherence and logical consistency rather than empirical testing There is a wide spectrum of opinion concerning the epistemological validity of faith 86 that is whether it is a reliable way to acquire true beliefs Fideism edit Main article Fideism Fideism is considered to be a philosophical position rather than a comprehensive epistemological theory It maintains that faith is independent of reason or that reason and faith are hostile to each other and faith is superior at arriving at particular truths see natural theology Fideism is not a synonym for religious belief but describes a particular philosophical proposition concerning the relationship between faith s appropriate jurisdiction at arriving at truths contrasted against reason It states that faith is needed to determine some philosophical and religious truths and it questions the ability of reason to arrive at all truth The word and concept had its origin in the mid to late 19th century by way of Catholic thought in a movement called Traditionalism The Roman Catholic Magisterium has however repeatedly condemned fideism 87 Critics of fideism suggest that it is not a justified or rational position from an epistemological standpoint Fideism holds that religious beliefs cannot be justified or evaluated based on evidence or reason and that faith alone is a sufficient basis for belief This position has been criticized because it leads to dogmatism irrationality and a rejection of the importance of reason and evidence in understanding the world 88 William Alston argues that while faith is an important aspect of religious belief it must be grounded in reason and evidence to be justified 89 Religious epistemology edit See also Religious epistemology reformed epistemology foundationalism and basic belief Religious epistemologists formulated and defended reasons for the rationality of accepting belief in God without the support of an argument 90 Some religious epistemologists hold that belief in God is more analogous to belief in a person than belief in a scientific hypothesis Human relations demand trust and commitment If belief in God is more like belief in other persons then the trust that is appropriate to persons will be appropriate to God American psychologist and philosopher William James offers a similar argument in his lecture The Will to Believe 90 91 Foundationalism is a view about the structure of justification or knowledge 92 Foundationalism holds that all knowledge and justified belief are ultimately based upon what are called properly basic beliefs This position is intended to resolve the infinite regress problem in epistemology According to foundationalism a belief is epistemically justified only if it is justified by properly basic beliefs One of the significant developments in foundationalism is the rise of reformed epistemology 92 Reformed epistemology is a view about the epistemology of religious belief which holds that belief in God can be properly basic Analytic philosophers Alvin Plantinga and Nicholas Wolterstorff develop this view 93 Plantinga holds that a person may rationally believe in God even though the person does not possess sufficient evidence to convince an agnostic One difference between reformed epistemology and fideism is that the former requires defense against known objections whereas the latter might dismiss such objections as irrelevant 94 Plantinga developed reformed epistemology in Warranted Christian Belief as a form of externalism that holds that the justification conferring factors for a belief may include external factors 95 Some theistic philosophers have defended theism by granting evidentialism but supporting theism through deductive arguments whose premises are considered justifiable Some of these arguments are probabilistic either in the sense of having weight but being inconclusive or in the sense of having a mathematical probability assigned to them 90 Notable in this regard are the cumulative arguments presented by British philosopher Basil Mitchell and analytic philosopher Richard Swinburne whose arguments are based on Bayesian probability 96 In a notable exposition of his arguments Swinburne appeals to an inference for the best explanation 97 Professor of Mathematics and philosopher of science at University of Oxford John Lennox justifies his religious belief in Jesus s resurrection and miracles by believing God s capability of breaking the commonly recognized law of nature 98 John Lennox has stated Faith is not a leap in the dark it s the exact opposite It s a commitment based on evidence It is irrational to reduce all faith to blind faith and then subject it to ridicule That provides a very anti intellectual and convenient way of avoiding intelligent discussion He criticises Richard Dawkins as a famous proponent of asserting that faith equates to holding a belief without evidence thus that it is possible to hold belief without evidence for failing to provide evidence for this assertion 99 clarification needed Critics of reformed epistemology argue that it fails to provide a compelling justification for belief in God and that it is unable to account for the diversity of religious belief and experience They also argue that it can lead to a kind of epistemic relativism in which all religious beliefs are considered equally valid and justified regardless of their content or coherence Despite these criticisms reformed epistemology has been influential in the contemporary philosophy of religion and continues to be an active area of debate and discussion 100 Empirical claims edit Many religious beliefs are intended to be metaphorical or symbolic but there are also religious beliefs that are taken quite literally by believers For example some Christians believe that the Earth was created in six literal days and some Muslims believe that the Quran contains scientific facts that were not known to humans at the time of its revelation Furthermore even if a religious belief is intended to be metaphorical or symbolic it can still be subject to empirical testing if it makes claims about the world For example the claim that the Earth is the center of the universe can be interpreted as a metaphorical representation of humanity s special place in the cosmos but it also makes an empirical claim that can be tested by scientific observation 101 Morality amp Faith edit See also Morality Evolution From a scientific perspective morality is not dependent on faith citation needed While some individuals may claim that their morality is rooted in their faith or religious beliefs there is evidence to suggest that morality is also influenced by other factors such as social and cultural norms empathy and reason Studies have shown that individuals from diverse cultural and religious backgrounds tend to share many moral values suggesting that morality is not solely dependent on faith Additionally research in the fields of psychology neuroscience and evolutionary biology has shed light on the biological and cognitive mechanisms underlying moral decision making providing further evidence that morality is not exclusively dependent on faith 102 Criticism edit See also Anti abortion violence September 11 attacks and 7 July 2005 London bombings Bertrand Russell wrote 6 Christians hold that their faith does good but other faiths do harm At any rate they hold this about the communist faith What I wish to maintain is that all faiths do harm We may define faith as a firm belief in something for which there is no evidence Where there is evidence no one speaks of faith We do not speak of faith that two and two are four or that the earth is round We only speak of faith when we wish to substitute emotion for evidence The substitution of emotion for evidence is apt to lead to strife since different groups substitute different emotions Christians have faith in the Resurrection communists have faith in Marx s Theory of Value Neither faith can be defended rationally and each therefore is defended by propaganda and if necessary by war Will Religious Faith Cure Our Troubles Evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins criticizes all faith by generalizing from specific faith in propositions that conflict directly with scientific evidence 103 He describes faith as belief without evidence a process of active non thinking He states that it is a practice that only degrades our understanding of the natural world by allowing anyone to make a claim about nature that is based solely on their personal thoughts and possibly distorted perceptions that does not require testing against nature cannot make reliable and consistent predictions and is not subject to peer review 104 Philosophy professor Peter Boghossian argues that reason and evidence are the only way to determine which claims about the world are likely true Different religious traditions make different religious claims and Boghossian asserts that faith alone cannot resolve conflicts between these without evidence He gives an example of the belief held by Muslims that Muhammad who died in the year 632 was the last prophet and the contradictory belief held by Mormons that Joseph Smith born in 1805 was a prophet Boghossian asserts that faith has no built in corrective mechanism For factual claims he gives the example of the belief that the Earth is 4 000 years old With only faith and no reason or evidence he argues there is no way to correct this claim if it is inaccurate Boghossian advocates thinking of faith either as belief without evidence or pretending to know things you don t know 105 Friedrich Nietzsche expressed his criticism of the Christian idea of faith in passage 51 of The Antichrist 106 The fact that faith under certain circumstances may work for blessedness but that this blessedness produced by an idee fixe by no means makes the idea itself true and the fact that faith actually moves no mountains but instead raises them up where there were none before all this is made sufficiently clear by a walk through a lunatic asylum Not of course to a priest for his instincts prompt him to the lie that sickness is not sickness and lunatic asylums not lunatic asylums Christianity finds sickness necessary just as the Greek spirit had need of a superabundance of health the actual ulterior purpose of the whole system of salvation of the church is to make people ill And the church itself doesn t it set up a Catholic lunatic asylum as the ultimate ideal The whole earth as a madhouse The sort of religious man that the church wants is a typical decadent the moment at which a religious crisis dominates a people is always marked by epidemics of nervous disorder the inner world of the religious man is so much like the inner world of the overstrung and exhausted that it is difficult to distinguish between them the highest states of mind held up before mankind by Christianity as of supreme worth are actually epileptoid in form the church has granted the name of holy only to lunatics or to gigantic frauds in majorem dei honorem Gustave Le Bon emphasizes the irrational nature of faith and suggests that it is often based on emotions rather than reason He argues that faith can be used to manipulate and control people particularly in the context of religious or political movements In this sense Le Bon views faith as a tool that can be wielded by those in power to shape the beliefs and behaviors of the masses 107 See also edit nbsp Shinto faithBlue skies research Curiosity driven scientific research without a clear practical goal Delusion Psychological fixation of holding false beliefs in spite of clearly disqualifying proofs Dogma Belief s accepted by members of a group without question Faith and rationality Two approaches that exist in varying degrees of conflict or compatibility Incorrigibility Property of a philosophical proposition Life stance Person s relation with what they accept as being of ultimate importance Major religious groups Numinous Arousing spiritual or religious emotion mysterious or awe inspiring Pascal s wager Argument that posits human beings bet with their lives that God either exists or does not Philosophy of religion Branch of philosophy Piety Religious devotion or spirituality Rationalism Epistemological view centered on reason Religious conversion Adoption of religious beliefs Saint Faith Gallo Roman saintPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Simple church Private Christian gatheringPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Spectrum of theistic probability Way of categorizing one s belief regarding the probability of the existence of a deity Theological virtues Christian ethics There are no atheists in foxholes Claim that high stress situations prompt everyone to believe in god Truthiness Quality of preferring concepts or facts one wishes to be true rather than actual truth Worldview Fundamental cognitive orientation of an individual or societyReferences edit Meaning of faith in English Cambridge Dictionary Cambridge University Press Archived from the original on March 2 2019 Retrieved March 1 2019 Definition of faith Dictionary com Archived from the original on 2023 03 09 Retrieved 2023 03 03 faith Webster s Dictionary Archived from the original on 2023 03 03 Retrieved 2023 03 03 Plantinga Alvin January 27 2000 Warranted Christian Belief USA Oxford University Press pp 169 199 ISBN 978 0 19 513192 5 Retrieved November 27 2019 Boa Kenneth D Bowman Robert M Jr March 1 2006 Warranted Christian Belief Faith Has Its Reasons Integrative Approaches to Defending the Christian Faith USA IVP Books pp 251 255 ISBN 978 0 8308 5648 0 a b Russell Bertrand Will Religious Faith Cure Our Troubles Human Society in Ethics and Politics Archived from the original on 2020 11 12 Retrieved 16 August 2009 Kaufmann Walter Arnold 1961 The Faith of a Heretic Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16548 6 Faith means intense usually confident a belief that is not based on evidence sufficient to command assent from every reasonable person Barton Carlin Boyarin Daniel 2016 Imagine No Religion How Modern Abstractions Hide Ancient Realities Fordham University Press pp 115 242 ISBN 978 0 8232 7120 7 Faith and Reason Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2023 05 07 Retrieved 2023 05 07 As unforced belief faith is an act of the intellect assenting to the truth at the command of the will Summa theologiae II II Q 4 art 5 and it is because this is a free and responsible act that faith is one of the virtues Aquinas thus supported the general though not universal Christian view that revelation supplements rather than cancels or replaces the findings of sound philosophy Natural Theology Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy University of Tennessee Archived from the original on 2021 05 08 Retrieved 2023 05 07 For purposes of studying natural theology Jews Christians Muslims and others will bracket and set aside for the moment their commitment to the sacred writings or traditions they believe to be God s word Doing so enables them to proceed together to engage in the perennial questions about God using the sources of evidence that they share by virtue of their common humanity for example sensation reason science and history Agnostics and atheists too can engage in natural theology For them it is simply that they have no revelation based views to bracket and set aside in the first place a b c Faith Online Etymology Dictionary Etymology Online Retrieved February 25 2024 Evans Nancy Forney Deanna Guido Florence Patton Lori Renn Kristen 2010 Student Development in College Theory Research and Practice Second ed Jossey Bass ISBN 978 0 7879 7809 9 Works of Daniel J Levinson Fowler J W Stages of Faith The Psychology of Human Development and the Quest for Meaning full citation needed Strong s Greek 4102 pistis pistis faith faithfulness biblehub com Archived from the original on 17 October 2015 Retrieved 14 October 2015 Thomas Robert L ed 1981 New American standard exhaustive concordance of the Bible Nashville Tenn A J Holman pp 1674 75 ISBN 0 87981 197 8 Wilkin Robert N 2012 The Ten Most Misunderstood Words in the Bible Corinth Tex GES p 221 Aquinas Thomas Faith Summa Theologiae Secunda Secundae Partis Q 1 Archived from the original on 2018 05 27 Retrieved 2018 05 26 Kraut Richard 2018 Aristotle s Ethics 5 The Doctrine of the Mean The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Archived from the original on 10 November 2022 Retrieved 6 May 2022 Morgan Teresa Jean 2015 Roman Faith and Christian Faith Pistis and Fides in the Early Roman Empire and Early Churches Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 872414 8 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2023 03 01 Myers Jeremy D The Gospel Under Siege PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2015 09 11 Wuerl Donald W 2004 The Teaching of Christ A Catholic Catechism for Adults Edition 5 revised Huntingdon Ind Our Sunday Visitor Pub Division p 238 ISBN 1 59276 094 5 Retrieved 21 April 2009 dead link Migliore Daniel L 2004 Faith seeking understanding an introduction to Christian theology Grand Rapids Mich W B Eerdmans pp 3 8 Inbody Tyron 2005 The faith of the Christian church an introduction to theology Grand Rapids Mich William B Eerdmans pp 1 10 For example Draw Near to God 100 Bible Verses to Deepen Your Faith Zondervan 2019 ISBN 978 0 310 45388 8 Retrieved 25 September 2019 page needed Compare prosperity theology Compare Weber Max 1905 The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism and Other Writings Penguin twentieth century classics Translated by Baehr Peter Wells Gordon C New York Penguin published 2002 ISBN 978 1 101 09847 9 Archived from the original on 13 January 2023 Retrieved 25 September 2019 In the course of its development Calvinism made a positive addition the idea of the necessity of putting one s faith to the test Bewahrung des Glaubens in secular working life It thus provided the positive motivation Antrieb for asceticism and with the firm establishment of its ethics in the doctrine of predestination the spiritual aristocracy of the monks who stood outside and above the world was replaced by the spiritual aristocracy of the saints in the world predestined by God from eternity Peters Edward 1988 The Inquisition in Literature and Art Inquisition reprint ed Berkeley University of California Press published 1989 p 225 ISBN 978 0 520 06630 4 Retrieved 25 September 2019 The costuming of those convicted was the result of careful planning and indicated specific gradations of guilt There was never a single simple sanbenito for example but a different kind of sanbenito for different crimes and degrees of heresy with corresponding headgear The garb of the penitents the procession with inquisitorial banners and crosses the careful design of the seating and sequence of the ceremony made the auto de fe itself a work of art The aim of the auto de fe as its name suggests is the act of faith that is the liturgical demonstration of the truth of the faith and the error and evil of its enemies Tanner Norman 2009 The Ages of Faith Popular Religion in Late Medieval England and Western Europe Volume 56 of International Library of Historical Studies Bloomsbury Academic p 161 ISBN 978 1 84511 760 3 Retrieved 28 October 2021 After all was not the Middle Ages the age of faith par execellence the time when the whole of Europe was united not only in its belief but also in a common view of society Durant Will 7 June 2011 1950 The Age of Faith Volume 4 of The Story of Civilization Simon and Schuster published 2011 ISBN 978 1 4516 4761 7 Retrieved 28 October 2021 The Norton History of Modern Europe 1971 p 129 Retrieved 28 October 2021 Luther attacked not the corruption of institutions but what he believed to be the corruption of faith itself Haught James A 2010 Fading Faith The Rise of the Secular Age Gustav Broukal Press ISBN 978 1 57884 009 0 Retrieved 28 October 2021 Brown Callum G 12 January 2017 Becoming Atheist Humanism and the Secular West London Bloomsbury Publishing published 2017 p 2 ISBN 978 1 4742 2455 0 Retrieved 28 October 2021 By the 1990s the liberalization of Western culture allowed the individual in most countries to be comfortably alienated from church and faith without fear of censure or social stigma Kalla Krishen Lal 1989 The Mid Victorian Literature and Loss of Faith 1 ed New Delhi Mittal Publications p 205 ISBN 978 81 7099 155 7 Retrieved 28 October 2021 In the mid Victorian era new scientific discoveries broke out giving rise to agnosticism scepticism and atheism All important writers of this age came under the influence of rationalism and their writings are a record of the struggle in their minds between faith and loss of faith Some like Swinburne and J Thomson B V became atheists Dawkins Richard 1989 The Selfish Gene 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 198 McGrath Alister E 2008 The Order of Things Explorations in Scientific Theology John Wiley amp Sons p 33 ISBN 978 1 4051 2556 7 Robertson Archibald Thomas Word Pictures in the New Testament Chapter 17 Archived from the original on 2015 01 08 Retrieved 2014 01 26 Price Thomas 9 November 2007 Faith is about just trusting God isn t It Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Retrieved 23 January 2014 Lennox John 2011 Gunning for God Why the New Atheists Are Missing the Target United Kingdom Lion p 55 ISBN 978 0 7459 5322 9 Williams Peter S 2013 1 4 A Faithful Guide to Philosophy A Christian Introduction to the Love of Wisdom Authentic Media Inc ISBN 978 1 78078 310 9 Archived from the original on 2023 05 29 Retrieved 2023 05 29 Williams Peter S 2013 A Faithful Guide to Philosophy A Christian Introduction to the Love of Wisdom Authentic Media pp Chapter 1 4 ISBN 978 1 84227 811 6 Allen Michael 2009 The Christ s Faith A Dogmatic Account London T amp T Clark Studies in Systematic Theology p 80 ISBN 978 0 567 03399 4 Boa Kenneth Bowman Robert M March 1 2006 Faith Has Its Reasons Integrative Approaches to Defending the Christian Faith USA IVP Books p 253 ISBN 978 0 8308 5648 0 Plantinga Alvin 2000 Warranted Christian Belief USA Oxford University Press pp 250 291 ISBN 0 19 513192 4 Dulles Avery 2003 The Splendor of Faith The Theological Vision of Pope John Paul II New York Crossroad Publishing Company pp vii viii ISBN 0 8245 2121 8 Elwell Walter A 1 May 2001 Evangelical Dictionary of Theology Baker Reference Library Baker Publishing Group p 1268 ISBN 978 1 4412 0030 3 This balance is most evident in Wesley s understanding of faith and works justification and sanctification Wesley in a sermon entitled Justification by Faith makes an attempt to define the term accurately First he states what justification is not It is not being made actually just and righteous that is sanctification It is not being cleared of the accusations of Satan nor of the law nor even of God We have sinned so the accusation stands Justification implies pardon the forgiveness of sins Ultimately for the true Wesleyan salvation is completed by our return to original righteousness This is done by the work of the Holy Spirit The Wesleyan tradition insists that grace is not contrasted with law but with the works of the law Wesleyans remind us that Jesus came to fulfill not destroy the law God made us in his perfect image and he wants that image restored He wants to return us to a full and perfect obedience through the process of sanctification Good works follow after justification as its inevitable fruit Wesley insisted that Methodists who did not fulfill all righteousness deserved the hottest place in the lake of fire a b Guidebook of the Emmanuel Association of Churches Logansport Emmanuel Association 2002 p 7 Smith was not the sole author Authorship and History of the Lectures on Faith Religious Studies Center Archived from the original on 2020 06 25 Retrieved 2020 03 06 Lectures on Faith Archived from the original on 2018 10 08 Retrieved 2018 10 08 Dahl Larry E Authorship and History of the Lectures on Faith The Lectures on Faith in Historical Perspective Provo Utah Brigham Young University Religious Studies Center Archived from the original on 2018 10 08 Retrieved 2018 10 08 date missing a b Gomez Luis O 2004 Faith PDF In Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism New York u a Macmillan Reference USA Thomson Gale pp 277 9 ISBN 0 02 865720 9 Archived from the original PDF on September 12 2015 a b c Jayatilleke K N 1963 Early Buddhist theory of knowledge PDF George Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 134 54287 9 archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 11 Kinnard Jacob N 2004 Worship PDF In Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism New York u a Macmillan Reference USA Thomson Gale p 907 ISBN 0 02 865720 9 Archived from the original PDF on September 12 2015 a b Lamotte Etienne 1988 Histoire du Bouddhisme Indien des origines a l ere Saka History of Indian Buddhism from the origins to the Saka era PDF in French translated by Webb Boin Sara Louvain la Neuve Universite catholique de Louvain Institut orientaliste ISBN 90 6831 100 X archived from the original PDF on 2015 02 15 Tremblay Xavier 2007 The spread of Buddhism in Serindia In Heirman Ann Bumbacher Stephan Peter eds The spread of Buddhism online ed Leiden Brill Publishers p 87 ISBN 978 90 04 15830 6 Fuller Paul 2004 The notion of diṭṭhi in Theravada Buddhism the point of view London RoutledgeCurzon p 36 ISBN 0 203 01043 4 dead link Conze Edward 1993 The Way of Wisdom The Five Spiritual Faculties Buddhist Publication Society ISBN 978 955 24 0110 7 Archived from the original on 2008 12 23 Retrieved 2009 01 19 a b Harvey Peter 2013 An introduction to Buddhism teachings history and practices PDF 2nd ed New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85942 4 archived PDF from the original on 2017 02 20 Leaman Oliver 2000 Eastern philosophy key readings PDF London u a Routledge p 212 ISBN 0 415 17357 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 05 15 Bielefeldt Carl 2004 Japan PDF In Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism New York u a Macmillan Reference USA Thomson Gale pp 389 90 ISBN 0 02 865720 9 Archived from the original PDF on September 12 2015 Reynolds Frank E Hallisey Charles 1987 Buddha PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of religion Vol 2 2nd ed Detroit Thomson Gale p 1068 ISBN 0 02 865997 X Archived from the original on 2017 03 02 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Shields James Mark 2013 Political Interpretations of the Lotus Sutra PDF In Emmanuel Steven M ed A companion to Buddhist philosophy Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell pp 512 514 ISBN 978 0 470 65877 2 Archived from the original PDF on March 16 2015 Hsieh Ding hwa 2009 Buddhism Pure Land In Cheng Linsun Brown Kerry eds Berkshire encyclopedia of China Great Barrington MA Berkshire Publishing Group pp 236 7 ISBN 978 0 9770159 4 8 a b Green Ronald S 2013 East Asian Buddhism PDF in Emmanuel Steven M ed A companion to Buddhist philosophy Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 470 65877 2 archived from the original PDF on March 16 2015 Hudson Clarke 2005 Buddhist meditation East Asian Buddhist meditation PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of religion Vol 2 2nd ed Detroit Thomson Gale p 1294 ISBN 0 02 865997 X Archived from the original on 2017 03 02 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Conze Edward 2003 1951 Buddhism its essence and development Mineola N Y Dover Publications p 158 ISBN 0 486 43095 2 Archived from the original on 2017 11 22 Retrieved 2017 11 20 Dobbins James C 2002 Jodo Shinshu Shin Buddhism in medieval Japan Honolulu University of Hawaii Press pp 34 5 ISBN 0 8248 2620 5 Gombrich Richard F 2006 Theravada Buddhism a social history from ancient Benares to modern Colombo PDF 2nd ed London u a Routledge pp 196 7 ISBN 0 415 36508 2 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 11 17 Retrieved 2017 11 20 Ahn Juhn 2004 Popular conceptions of Zen PDF In Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism New York u a Macmillan Reference USA Thomson Gale p 924 ISBN 0 02 865720 9 Archived from the original PDF on September 12 2015 Dore Bhavya 1 October 2016 Rising caste related violence pushes many Indians to new faith Houston Chronicle Religion News Service Hearst Newspapers Archived from the original on 24 September 2017 Retrieved 23 September 2017 Monier Williams Sanskrit Dictionary 1899 full citation needed Bhakti Bhakti Hinduism Devotion amp Rituals Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Archived from the original on 2020 12 29 Pechelis Karen 2011 Bhakti Traditions In Frazier Jessica Flood Gavin eds The Continuum Companion to Hindu Studies Bloomsbury pp 107 121 ISBN 978 0 8264 9966 0 Lochtefeld John 2014 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism New York Rosen Publishing pp 98 100 ISBN 978 0 8239 2287 1 Also see articles on bhaktimarga and jnanamarga al Farahi Hamid al Din 1998 Majmu ah Tafasir 2nd ed Faran Foundation p 347 Denny Frederick M An Introduction to Islam 3rd ed p 405 Swartley Keith E 2005 11 02 Encountering the World of Islam InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 5644 2 Quran 95 6 Muslim Al Jami al sahih 22 no 93 Quran 2 285 Quran 8 2 Quran 9 24 a b What Is Emunah Beyond Belief Essentials chabad org Archived from the original on 17 April 2020 Retrieved 14 October 2015 Segal Alan 1990 Paul the Convert Yale University Press pp 128 148 175 ISBN 0 300 04527 1 For a Jew faith fundamentally precedes anything as well but there is no need to distinguish between it and law Jews perform the commandments because they are commanded by God not because they guarantee justification This arrangement assumes a prior faith commitment and prior act on God s part in justifying that never needs to be discussed For Paul giving up special claims to the performance of ceremonial Torah was part of his dissonance over leaving Pharisiasism and entering an apocalyptic community based on faith The rabbi felt individuals maintain righteousness through observing God s commandments Paul through faith justification is something that God grants in response to faith and thought the rabbis would not disagree they did not see Torah and faith in opposition a b Brueggemann Walter 2002 Reverberations of faith a theological handbook of Old Testament themes Louisville Ky Westminster John Knox Press pp 76 78 ISBN 0 664 22231 5 Plaut W G 1981 The Torah A Modern Commentary N Y Union of American Hebrew Congregations Rabbi Shmuel Boteach The 13 Principles and the Resurrection of the Dead The Wolf Shall Lie With the Lamb Archived from the original on 2006 02 08 For a history of this dispute see Shapiro Marc The Limits of Orthodox Theology Maimonides Thirteen Principles Reappraised Littman Library of Jewish Civilization Genesis 12 15 Sikhism Five Articles of Faith realsikhism com Archived from the original on 7 October 2015 Retrieved 14 October 2015 The Baha i Community of Canada www bahai ca Archived from the original on 2022 02 22 Retrieved 2022 02 22 a b c Smith P 1999 A Concise Encyclopedia of the Bahaʼi Faith Oxford UK Oneworld Publications p 155 ISBN 1 85168 184 1 Kurtz Paul November 25 2008 Forbidden Fruit The Ethics of Secularism Zuckerman Phil Society without God What the Least Religious Nations Can Tell Us About Contentment Lewis C S 2001 Mere Christianity a revised and amplified edition with a new introduction of the three books Broadcast talks Christian behaviour and Beyond personality San Francisco HarperSanFrancisco ISBN 0 06 065292 6 Amesbury Richard Fideism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 14 October 2015 Audi R 2005 Fideism The Cambridge dictionary of philosophy Cambridge University Press Alston W P 1986 Divine nature and human language Essays in philosophical theology Cornell University Press a b c Clark Kelly James 2 October 2004 Religious Epistemology Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on 3 November 2011 Retrieved 23 October 2011 James William 1896 New World 5 327 347 Archived from the original on 7 October 2011 Retrieved 23 October 2011 a b Poston Ted 10 June 2010 Foundationalism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on 3 November 2011 Retrieved 23 October 2011 Plantinga Alvin Wolterstorff Nicholas 1983 Faith and Rationality Reason and Belief in God Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 0 268 00964 3 Forrest Peter 11 March 2009 The Epistemology of Religion Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 23 October 2011 Plantinga Alvin 2000 Warranted Christian Belief New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 513192 4 Basic Mitchell The Justification of Religious Belief London Macmillan Swinburne Richard The Existence of God Oxford Clarendon Press Forrest Peter 1996 God without the Supernatural Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 3255 2 Swinburne Richard Is there a God Oxford Oxford University Press God Delusion Debate Dawkins Lennox YouTube Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2023 03 06 having produced some sort of a case for a kind of deistic God perhaps some God The Great Physicist who adjusted the laws and constants of the universe That s all very grand and wonderful and then suddenly we come down to the resurrection of Jesus It s so petty it s so trivial Lennox John 2009 God s Undertaker Has Science Buried God Lion UK Kim Joseph June 8 2011 Reformed Epistemology and the Problem of Religious Diversity Pickwick Publications Plantinga A 2011 Where the Conflict Really Lies Science Religion and Naturalism Oxford University Press Yandell Keith January 1995 The Epistemology of Religious Experience New Series Vol 104 Oxford University Press pp 219 222 Harris S 2010 The moral landscape How science can determine human values Simon and Schuster Sinnott Armstrong W 2004 Morality without God Oxford University Press Flanagan Owen J 1984 The Science of the Mind MIT Press Dawkins Richard 2008 The God Delusion Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 618 91824 9 Dawkins Richard January February 1997 Is Science a Religion American Humanist Association Archived from the original on 30 October 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2008 Peter Boghossian 2013 A Manual for Creating Atheists Pitchstone Publishing p 31 ISBN 978 1 939578 09 9 Nietzsche Friedrich 1999 The Anti Christ Translated by Mencken H L Chicago Sharp Press p 144 Le Bon Gustave 1896 The Crowd A Study of the Popular Mind Further reading editGupta Nijay K Paul and the Language of Faith Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 2020 ISBN 978 1 4674 5837 5 Sam Harris The End of Faith Religion Terror and the Future of Reason W W Norton 2004 336 pages ISBN 0 393 03515 8 Morgan Teresa Roman Faith and Christian Faith Pistis and Fides in the Early Roman Empire and Early Churches Oxford University Press 2015 ISBN 978 0 19 872414 8 Stephen Palmquist Faith as Kant s Key to the Justification of Transcendental Reflection The Heythrop Journal 25 4 October 1984 pp 442 455 Reprinted as Chapter V in Stephen Palmquist Kant s System of Perspectives Lanham University Press of America 1993 D Mark Parks Faith Faithfulness Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary Eds Chad Brand Charles Draper Archie England Nashville Holman Publishers 2003 On Faith and Reason by Swami Tripurari Baba Meher Discourses San Francisco Sufism Reoriented 1967 Richard Dawkins God Delusion online reading Classic reflections on the nature of faith edit Martin Buber I and Thou Paul Tillich The Dynamics of FaithThe Reformation view of faith edit John Calvin The Institutes of the Christian Religion 1536 R C Sproul Faith Alone Baker Books 1 February 1999 ISBN 9780801058493The Catholic view of faith edit Deharbe Joseph 1912 Chapter 1 On Faith in General A Complete Catechism of the Catholic Religion Translated by Rev John Fander Schwartz Kirwin amp Fauss Pope Hugh 1909 Faith In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 5 New York Robert Appleton Company Slater S J Thomas 1925 Book V Part I On Faith A manual of moral theology for English speaking countries Burns Oates amp Washbourne Ltd External links edit nbsp Look up pistis in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Look up faith in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Faith nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Faith John Bishop Daniel J McKaughan July 15 2022 Faith Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Elizabeth Jackson Faith Contemporary Perspectives Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy James Swindal Faith Historical Perspectives Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Peter Forrest June 22 2021 The Epistemology of Religion Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Free and open courses with videos help and review about the 10 biggest religions in the world study com academy Faith in Judaism chabad org Pew Research Center Reports on Religion We d be better off without religion Panellists Christopher Hitchens Nigel Spivey Richard Dawkins rabbi Juliet Neuberger AC Grayling and Roger Scruton The God Delusion Debate Dawkins Lennox Dawkins believes the law of nature and denies Jesus resurrection and miracles Lennox believes Jesus resurrection and miracles with justification by God s capability of breaking the commonly recognized law of nature Dialogue with Professor Richard Dawkins Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams and Professor Anthony Kenny four topics the nature of individual human beings the origin of the human species thirdly the origin of life on Earth and finally the origin of the universe Portal nbsp Religion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Faith amp oldid 1218531669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.