Definify.com
Definition 2024
revealed_religion
revealed religion
English
Noun
revealed religion (countable and uncountable, plural revealed religions)
- (uncountable) The type of religion which relies on communication originating directly from a divine being (as reported by prophets, mystics, disciples, etc.) to establish what religious beliefs are authoritative and acceptable.
- 1856, Charles Kingsley, Alton Locke, Tailor and Poet, ch. 16:
- I am in no wise anxious to weaken the antithesis between natural and revealed religion. Science may help the former, but it has absolutely nothing to do with the latter.
- 1909, H. G. Wells, Tono Bungay, ch. 2:
- I avowed outright my entire disbelief in the whole scheme of revealed religion.
- 2010 Sep. 19, Rachel Donadio and John F. Burns, "Pope Ends British Trip With Beatification," New York Times (retrieved 12 Aug 2015):
- The pope praised Cardinal Newman . . . for “his insights into the relationship between faith and reason, into the vital place of revealed religion in a civilized society.”
- 1856, Charles Kingsley, Alton Locke, Tailor and Poet, ch. 16:
- (countable) A particular system of religious beliefs based on such communication from a divine being.
- 1713, Jonathan Swift, Writings on Religion and the Church, Vol. I, ch. 6:
- Cicero . . . destroyed the whole revealed religion of the Greeks and Romans (for why should not theirs be a revealed religion as well as that of Christ?)
- 1892, George Gissing, Born In Exile, ch. 4:
- "The more I study these objections, the less able I am to see how they come in conflict with belief in Christianity as a revealed religion."
- 1901, Upton Sinclair, King Midas, ch. 1:
- But very few of the world's real thinkers believe in revealed religions any more—they have come to see them simply as guesses of humanity at God's great sacred mystery.
- 2001 Oct. 7, David Selbourne, "This war is not about terror, it's about Islam," Telegraph (UK) (retrieved 12 Aug 2015):
- [T]he fount of Islamic energy . . . : the desire to protect the purity of the Islamic faith and to vindicate its claim to be the final revealed religion on earth.
- 1713, Jonathan Swift, Writings on Religion and the Church, Vol. I, ch. 6: