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Adhere | A Wisdom Archive on Adhere |  | Adhere A selection of articles related to Adhere |  |
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Adhere |  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Pentecostalism - Pentecostal denominations and adherentsChristianity Today reported in an article titled World Growth at 19 Million a Year that according to historian Vinson Synan, dean of the Regent University School of Divinity in Virginia Beach, about 25 percent of the world's Christians are Pentecostal or charismatic.
The largest Pentecostal denominations in the United States are the Assemblies of God, the Church of God in Christ, Church of God (Cleveland) and the United Pentecostal Church. According to a Spring 1998 article in Christian History, there are ...
See also:Pentecostalism, Pentecostalism - Beliefs, Pentecostalism - Theology, Pentecostalism - History, Pentecostalism - Pentecostal denominations and adherents, Pentecostalism - Statistics, Pentecostalism - Pentecostalism outside the English speaking world, Pentecostalism - Leaders, Pentecostalism - Precursors, Pentecostalism - Early history, Pentecostalism - Theologians, Pentecostalism - Radio preachers and televangelists, Pentecostalism - Authors, Pentecostalism - Pastors and evangelists, Pentecostalism - Politicians, Pentecostalism - Other notables raised in the faith, Pentecostalism - Studies Read more here: » Pentecostalism: Encyclopedia II - Pentecostalism - Pentecostal denominations and adherents |
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| |  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Germanic neopaganism - Distribution of adherentsToday, Germanic Neopaganism is practiced primarily in Scandinavia, Germany, Britain, North America, Australia and New Zealand. Small communities are also found in many other countries, mostly in Western Europe (Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Italy, Portugal) and Russia.
The number of adherents worldwide is unknown, partly because of the lack of a clear definition separating Asatru from related currents. Those organised in some sort of organization number perhaps several hundred in North America, about 700 in Iceland, and a few hundred in both Scandinavia and Germany, with smaller ...
See also:Germanic neopaganism, Germanic neopaganism - Terminology, Germanic neopaganism - Ásatrú, Germanic neopaganism - Heathen, Germanic neopaganism - Odinism, Germanic neopaganism - Forn Siðr, Germanic neopaganism - Theodism, Germanic neopaganism - History, Germanic neopaganism - Distribution of adherents, Germanic neopaganism - Factions, Germanic neopaganism - Tenets, Germanic neopaganism - Rites, Germanic neopaganism - Artistic Output And Influence, Germanic neopaganism - Symbolism, Germanic neopaganism - List of Organizations Read more here: » Germanic neopaganism: Encyclopedia II - Germanic neopaganism - Distribution of adherents |
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|  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Ancient astronaut theory - Adherents and evidenceAncient Astronaut theories have been advanced by authors such as Charles Fort (1919), Peter Kolosimo (in his 1957 book, Il pianeta sconosciuto), Henri Lhote (1958), Matest M. Agrest (1959), Erich von Däniken (1968), Dr. S. Lunskaya (1970) Robert K. G. Temple (1976), Zecharia Sitchin (1978) and Richard Hoagland.
Erich von Däniken was foremost in popularizing ancient astronaut theories in the late 1960s and early 1970s with the 1968 publication of his best-selling Chariots of the Gods and its sequels. The evidence that v ...
See also:Ancient astronaut theory, Ancient astronaut theory - Adherents and evidence, Ancient astronaut theory - Earlier ideas, Ancient astronaut theory - Ancient astronauts in fiction Read more here: » Ancient astronaut theory: Encyclopedia II - Ancient astronaut theory - Adherents and evidence |
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| |  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Church of God with Signs Following - Number of adherentsThe exact membership is unknown, and has recently been estimated as low as 10002 and as high as 50003, with possibly fifty to a hundred congregations. According the Encyclopedia of American Religions, churches "can be found from central Florida to West Virginia and as far west as Columbus, Ohio." Each church body is independent and autonomous, and the denominational name is not consistent in all are ...
See also:Church of God with Signs Following, Church of God with Signs Following - History, Church of God with Signs Following - Worship, Church of God with Signs Following - Number of adherents, Church of God with Signs Following - Legality, Church of God with Signs Following - Footnotes Read more here: » Church of God with Signs Following: Encyclopedia II - Church of God with Signs Following - Number of adherents |
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|  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Religion and sexuality - Spreading sexual morality to non-adherentsMany cultures attempt to codify their prescriptions concerning individual sexual behaviours. Such codifications are frequently enacted as laws, extending their application beyond the culture to other cultures under the purview of the laws, including dissenters.
Most of the Islamic world has strict rules enforced with sometimes violent punishments to enforce Islamic moral codes, including sexual morality on their citizens, and often attempt to impose it on non-Muslims living within their societies. The same was true of various European ...
See also:Religion and sexuality, Religion and sexuality - Introduction, Religion and sexuality - Spreading sexual morality to non-adherents, Religion and sexuality - Abrahamic religions and sexual morality, Religion and sexuality - Jewish views of sex and morality, Religion and sexuality - Christian views of sex and morality, Religion and sexuality - Muslim views of sex and morality, Religion and sexuality - Hindu views of sex and morality, Religion and sexuality - Buddhist views of sex and morality, Religion and sexuality - Neo-Pagan views of sex and morality, Religion and sexuality - Church of the SubGenius views on sex and morality, Religion and sexuality - Secularist views of sex and morality Read more here: » Religion and sexuality: Encyclopedia II - Religion and sexuality - Spreading sexual morality to non-adherents |
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| | | | |  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Guelphs and Ghibellines - HistoryGuelph (sometimes spelled Guelf) is most probably an Italian form of Welf, the family of the dukes of Bavaria (including the namesake Welf, as well as Henry the Lion). The Welfs were said to have used the name as a rallying cry during the Battle of Weinsberg in 1140, in which the rival Hohenstaufens of Swabia (led at the time by Conrad III) used Waiblingen, the name of a castle, as their cry. Waiblingen became subsequently Ghibelline in Italian. The names were likely introduced to Italy during the reign of Frederick Barb ...
See also:Guelphs and Ghibellines, Guelphs and Ghibellines - History, Guelphs and Ghibellines - Main Ghibelline cities, Guelphs and Ghibellines - Main Guelph Cities, Guelphs and Ghibellines - Variable adherence cities, Guelphs and Ghibellines - Trivia Read more here: » Guelphs and Ghibellines: Encyclopedia II - Guelphs and Ghibellines - History |
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| |  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Cartesian materialism - Controversies and criticisms
Cartesian materialism - A philosophy without adherents?.
Perhaps the primary objection to Dennett's use of the term Cartesian materialism is that it is a philosophy without adherents. In this view, Cartesian materialism is essential a "Straw Man" — an argument explicitly constructed just so it can to be refuted.
Cartesian materialism is unique in that almost no one admits to believing in it. Indeed, it is a point of intense debate as to h ...
See also:Cartesian materialism, Cartesian materialism - History, Cartesian materialism - Cartesian Dualism, Cartesian materialism - Materialism, Cartesian materialism - Dennett's Cartesian materialism, Cartesian materialism - Other uses of the term, Cartesian materialism - Controversies and criticisms, Cartesian materialism - A philosophy without adherents?, Cartesian materialism - Arguments Against Cartesian Materialism, Cartesian materialism - Arguments for Cartesian Materialism Read more here: » Cartesian materialism: Encyclopedia II - Cartesian materialism - Controversies and criticisms |
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|  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Legalism theology - In later Christian theologyIn Protestant, Evangelical, Christian theology, especially in popular versions of the same, the charge of legalism is an accusation of ignorance of the Christian Gospel, or of unbelief. In that context, to apply the criticism of legalism to a theological position or religious attitude, implies that the accused has over-turned the Gospel of salvation through faith and new life in Jesus Christ, and has substituted some principle ...
See also:Legalism theology, Legalism theology - In the New Testament, Legalism theology - In later Christian theology, Legalism theology - As a Label for Adherence to Manmade Rules, Legalism theology - External link Read more here: » Legalism theology: Encyclopedia II - Legalism theology - In later Christian theology |
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| |  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Luminiferous aether - The history of light and aetherSee also timeline of luminiferous aether.
Isaac Newton had assumed that light was made up of numerous small particles, in order to explain features such as its ability to travel in straight lines and reflect off surfaces. This theory was known to have its problems; although it explained reflection well, its explanation of refraction and diffraction was less pleasing. In order to explain refraction, in fact, Newton's Opticks (1704) postulated an "Aethereal Medium" transmitting vibrations faster than light, by which ...
See also:Luminiferous aether, Luminiferous aether - The history of light and aether, Luminiferous aether - Aether and classical mechanics, Luminiferous aether - Experiments, Luminiferous aether - End of aether?, Luminiferous aether - Continuing adherents, Luminiferous aether - Aether conceptions Read more here: » Luminiferous aether: Encyclopedia II - Luminiferous aether - The history of light and aether |
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| | |  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Luminiferous aether - End of aether?Aether theory was dealt another blow when the Galilean transformation and Newtonian dynamics were both modified by Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity, giving the mathematics of Lorentzian electrodynamics a new, "non-aether" context. Like most major shifts in scientific thought, the move away from aether theory did not happen immediately but, as experimental evidence built up, and as older scientists left the field and their place ...
See also:Luminiferous aether, Luminiferous aether - The history of light and aether, Luminiferous aether - Aether and classical mechanics, Luminiferous aether - Experiments, Luminiferous aether - End of aether?, Luminiferous aether - Continuing adherents, Luminiferous aether - Aether conceptions Read more here: » Luminiferous aether: Encyclopedia II - Luminiferous aether - End of aether? |
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|  |  |  | Adhere: Encyclopedia II - Church of God with Signs Following - WorshipThe practice usually consists of a worship service with singing, praying, speaking in tongues and preaching. The front of the church, behind the pulpit, is the designated area for handling snakes. Rattlesnakes, cottonmouths, and copperheads are the most common, but even cobras have been used. As the service crescendoes, those who feel "anointed" approach the front and begin to pick up the snakes, usually raising them into the air and sometimes allowing the snakes to crawl on their bodies. The snakes are considered symbols of Satan, and handl ...
See also:Church of God with Signs Following, Church of God with Signs Following - History, Church of God with Signs Following - Worship, Church of God with Signs Following - Number of adherents, Church of God with Signs Following - Legality, Church of God with Signs Following - Footnotes Read more here: » Church of God with Signs Following: Encyclopedia II - Church of God with Signs Following - Worship |
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