Excommunication in a sentence as a noun

Yes - letting go isn't about excommunication, it's about "You do your thing, and that's fine.

Do you have prison sentences or civil excommunication about that?

Violations can lead to excommunication from career services office.

At the time Richard Williamson had his excommunication removed, the Vatican did not know he was a Holocaust denier.

Pope Laureate Guru will send out his acolytes to deliver his inquisition and excommunication!

The "racist" tag has become a contemporary excommunication.

The civil liberties problem is the effective excommunication of bad actors, by some particular definition.

If it's not Greece it's whatever is the hot topic of the day like social issue that even saying you don't care about will result in social excommunication> or the Ukraine war or whatever.

>> He had no choice, really -- this industry works people overlong and threatens them with excommunication if they complain, knowing full well that enthusiastic young talent will gladly come fill in at a lower wage.

I do not know enough about Islam to know whether there is something resembling 'excommunication' in the Roman Catholic church, but if there is it would make sense to apply it to those who commit such acts of violence.

There is a procedure similar to religious excommunication for the courageous souls that dare to leap and study things that ca not yet be thoroughly explained in the conservative way using an increasing amount of evidence.

>> So maybe we ought to be more careful about\n >> how we use the term.\n >\n > Or, maybe we ought to be more careful about\n > saying sexist things!\n\nReworded in the context of McCarthyism: >> In this society, being labelled a "Communist"\n >> is pretty close to excommunication.

The article does a lot of discounting 'the vikings where no more "bloodthirsty than other warriors of the period" over and over, and then contradicting it by "pope placed limits on Christian warfare and threatened excommunication for leaders who became unduly aggressive.

The reason Benedict removed these excommunications was to restore peace with the ultra-traditionalists who reject the Second Vatican Council, in much the same way Catholics have been working to restore peace with other Christians who do not accept the Catholic orthodoxy.

If "association" with the reprehensible is sufficient grounds for "excommunication", a random walk through Wikipedia should be sufficient to convince oneself that one can trivially "excomunnicate" everything; reductio ad absurdum, hence mere association is not enough.

Excommunication definitions

noun

the state of being excommunicated

See also: exclusion censure

noun

the act of banishing a member of a church from the communion of believers and the privileges of the church; cutting a person off from a religious society

See also: excision