Gospel in a sentence as a noun

Instead of the gospel, people read HBR or HBR-aping tech publications.

Some of what Google does is tech industry gospel - for example things like technical interviews.

He presents theories as gospel truth, making no mention of any caveats or qualifiers that you'd find in a more serious work.

If you go around holding people to a guess as if it were some kind of gospel biblical contract then yes, they will lie their *** off to protect themselves.

How about deciding what's best for now instead of trying to interpret the words of a couple of guys 200 years ago as a gospel about how the internet should work?

The Microsoft of old used to take as gospel the need for backwards compatibility so always avoided breaking changes.

The reason fads can be successful usually have less to do with the specific mechanics and minutiae of their gospel and more to do with the fact that you're conscientious about what you're putting into your body and diligent about treating it well.

His 'expertise' in software, personal attacks on other developers and tedious self-promotion don't really convince me that he's got the know-how to get into hardware production, but rather that he's found a way to make money off his sycophantic fan-base of mediocre programmers who take his word as gospel.

Gospel definitions

noun

the four books in the New Testament (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) that tell the story of Christ's life and teachings

See also: Gospel Gospels evangel

noun

an unquestionable truth; "his word was gospel"

noun

folk music consisting of a genre of a cappella music originating with Black slaves in the United States and featuring call and response; influential on the development of other genres of popular music (especially soul)

noun

the written body of teachings of a religious group that are generally accepted by that group

See also: creed

noun

a doctrine that is believed to be of great importance; "Newton's writings were gospel for those who followed"