16 example sentences using unbelief.
Unbelief used in a sentence
Unbelief in a sentence as a noun
Germany is 27% unbelief and UK is 25%.
"So, second, to me, buying insurance is an act of unbelief.
The Bible even suggests that faith is hard - a man once said to Jesus "I believe; help my unbelief!
Assuming yes, how is that any less of an act of unbelief than buying insurance?
"They're not being criticized for unbelief in the unseen, but for unbelief when they should know better.
The excuses for rejection range from unbelief to insulting.
Einstein also said that "Mere unbelief in a personal God is no philosophy at all.
Can we tolerate the unbelief of other people, and treat them well?Or do we need everyone to be exactly like us?
God has insured his life for ever; and, hence, he should regard insurance offices as so many depots of unbelief.
"In fact, the only disciple who really cared about money was Judas, whose greed and unbelief caused him to betray Jesus for 30 pieces of silver.
No. I realise that I over-simplified that part by highlighting only two opposites: belief and unbelief.
I think it's these people that Dawkins has been helping, by essentially letting them know that 'unbelief' is a totally OK category for them to fall into.
I would want evidence that you and your friend were smart and had a decent understanding of the domain, and that your friend was in a similar state of unbelief about the plausibility of being convinced.
Actually, he was addressing the unbelief in a resurrection by the sect of the Sadducees, as well as the simplistic idea underlying their question that life after death will be a direct translation of life before.
Each of those churches accuse the other of unbelief; and for my own part, I disbelieve them all.> As it is necessary to affix right ideas to words, I will, before I proceed further into the subject, offer some other observations on the word revelation.
What needs to be explained is systematic cynicism or unbelief: it’s a pathological state that makes individuals miserable and society untenable.>> The public is disenchanted in the elites and their institutions, much in the way science disenchanted the world of fairies and goblins.>> All you need is a smart phone and a sufficient measure of anger against.>> The lust for destruction, rather than fascism or some “successor ideology,” looms as the great threat to democracy today.>> For all the anger, we live pretty comfortably within this evil old system.>> Websites must compete for attention and so practice the art of the rant.>> Newspapers are trying to survive by selling polarization.>> I have learned that the best way to be wrong in public is to make a prediction.>> On the web, you can vote on anything, at any time.
Unbelief definitions
a rejection of belief
See also: disbelief