Heretic vs Church - What's the difference?
heretic | church |
Someone who, in the opinion of others, believes contrary to the fundamental tenets of a religion he claims to belong to.
* '>citation
(countable) A Christian house of worship; a building where religious services take place.
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Christians collectively seen as a single spiritual community; Christianity.
* Acts 20:28, New International Version:
(countable) A local group of people who follow the same Christian religious beliefs, local or general.
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(countable) A particular denomination of Christianity.
(uncountable, countable, as bare noun) Christian worship held at a church; service.
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A (non-Christian) religion; a religious group.
* 2007 , Scott A. Merriman, Religion and the Law in America ,
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*:Thenne after this lady was delyuerd and chirched / there came a knyghte vnto her / his name was sire Bromel la pleche / the whiche was a grete lord and he hadde loued that lady longe / and he euermore desyred her to wedde her / and soo by no meane she coude putte hym of
*1971 , , Religion and the Decline of Magic , Folio Society 2012, page 36:
*:Nor did it [the Church] accept that the woman should stay indoors until she had been churched .
(label) To educate someone religiously, as in in a church.
As nouns the difference between heretic and church
is that heretic is someone who, in the opinion of others, believes contrary to the fundamental tenets of a religion he claims to belong to while church is a Christian house of worship; a building where religious services take place.As an adjective heretic
is heretical; of or pertaining to heresy or heretics.As a verb church is
to conduct a religious service for (a woman) after childbirth.As a proper noun Church is
{{surname}.heretic
English
Alternative forms
* (archaic), (obsolete), heretick (obsolete), (l) (archaic)Noun
(en noun)- In the framework of traditional medical ethics, the patient
deserves humane attention only insofar as he is potentially
healthy and is willing to be healthy—just as in the framework
of traditional Christian ethics, the heretic deserved humane
attention only insofar as he was potentially a true believer and
was willing to become one. In the one case, people are
accepted as human beings only because they might be healthy
citizens; in the other, only because they might be faithful
Christians. In short, neither was heresy formerly, nor is sick-
ness now, given the kind of humane recognition which, from
the point of view of an ethic of respect and tolerance, they
deserve.
Synonyms
* apostate * withersakeAntonyms
* orthodoxAnagrams
* ----church
English
Alternative forms
* churche (obsolete)Noun
- There is a lovely little church in the valley.
- This building used to be a church before being converted into a library.
- These worshippers make up the Church of Christ.
- Be shepherds of the church of God, which he bought with his own blood.
- The Church''' of England separated from the Roman Catholic '''Church in 1534.
page 313
- Among these, the church must investigate fundemental questions,
- She goes to a Wiccan church down the road.