Religious
in sentence
2625 examples of Religious in a sentence
Non-absolutists believe that no single person can hold ownership or knowledge of absolute truth, even when it comes to
religious
beliefs.
It's simply the painfully uninspired name given to everyone who checks off the box "none" when Pew Research asks them about their
religious
affiliation.
And so now, when I reflect back on my spiritual quest, even though I did not find God, I found a home in this: even today, in a world fractured by religious, ethnic, political, philosophical, and racial divides, even with all of our obvious differences, at the end of the day, and the most fundamental level, we are all the same.
It's a question of cultural and
religious
control of women's sexuality.
Do you want a
religious
service or an informal party, or do you want to go out with a bang, literally, in a firework?
That, I think, is maximal tolerance for
religious
freedom.
And you also know many
religious
people who hide behind their sanctity instead of doing good works.
And for those of you who love the arts, aren't you glad you invited me here to brighten your day? (Laughter) (Applause) Now, rather than saying that we're on the brink of our own annihilation, I prefer to believe that we are engaged in a fundamental reformation, a reformation like the
religious
Reformation of the 16th century.
The arts reformation, like the
religious
Reformation, is spurred in part by technology, with indeed, the printing press really leading the charge on the
religious
Reformation.
But I want to be clear, just as the
religious
Reformation did not spell the end to the formal Church or to the priesthood; I believe that our artistic institutions will continue to have importance.
I don't think, even though we often hear, you know, hear the ethical and moral reasons, the
religious
reasons, "Here's why caring and giving will make you happier."
Although Miguel was not religious, he accompanied Sharon to church every Sunday, where he was welcomed into the congregation.
I would like to make it very clear that I am not at all
religious.
This movie and several other movies from the 1950s with a
religious
overtone, such as The Robe, Quo Vadis, and Samson and Delilah, unfortunately depict all pagans or anybody who isn't a Jew or Christian as morally depraved and decadent.
Got this off of usenet, so I wasn't prepared for the heavy (and I do mean EXCEPTIONALLY heavy)
religious
theme.
Although I'm not too much of a
religious
person, I still had relatively high hopes for this movie, as it does have the amazing Steve Carrell, and its prequel, Bruce Almighty, was actually a creative and clever Christian-themed comedy.
This nauseating, sickly and almost unbearably tedious misfire probably works as
religious
propaganda but has no entertainment value beyond a few wisecracks from George Burns.
It's a leaden load of old cobblers that has far too much self-justifying, 'explanatory
' religious
waffle but barely any decent dialogue and certainly a total absence of anything even approaching magic or charm.
Even
religious
Christians must be ashamed or furious by watching their beliefs being posted like this.
I am not a Christian nor very
religious.
The
religious
significance of Christmas is forgotten and replaced with cute kids, clueless grownups, and dopey villains.
A good movie about Darwin could be educational, thoughtful, and deeply inspiring, even in a
religious
sense - but that would contradict the soap-opera intentions of this flick.
Religious
themed films aren't the main choice for a lot of people but angels at war is.
Every scene with the Fremen's fake
religious
cermonies, specially the "water of life" cermony.
Turns out the drug experiments have given them the ability to sense another world....the world of
religious
fantasy!--complete with cardboard demons who look like they are made of Papier Mache.
This is one of those
religious
horror films which never explain why the forces of "evil" are 10,000 times stronger than those of "good".
Instead of ending with the heavy-handed
religious
mumbo jumbo, the film should have kept the focus on being a frothy road movie with maybe some undertones about fate and superstition vs. logic peppered through.
No tension, pithy
religious
(what religion?)
NBC had a chance to make a powerful
religious
epic along the lines of "The Ten Commandments" and "The Greatest Story Ever Told," and instead they chose to make some halfhearted cartoon that was more like "Waterworld" than anything else.
Tough guy Robert Kerman (Cannibal Holocaust) teams up with Janet Agren (The Gates of Hell; here with an intolerable accent) to search the jungles of New Guinea for Agren's sister, who's been brainwashed by the leader of a
religious
cult (Ivan Rassimov).
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