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apologetics
[ uh-pol-uh-jet-iks ]
noun
- the branch of theology concerned with the defense or proof of Christianity using rational argument:
In the face of evidence-based objections from the scientific community, creation apologetics has had to evolve to survive.
- reasoning in defense of any theory or doctrine, typically drawing on a set of established responses to specific criticisms:
Capitalist apologetics often claim, quite convincingly, that unrestricted market competition safeguards democracy.
apologetics
/ əˌpɒləˈdʒɛtɪks /
noun
- the branch of theology concerned with the defence and rational justification of Christianity
- a defensive method of argument
Word History and Origins
Origin of apologetics1
Example Sentences
But Mr. Johnston, whose work at the 57,000-member megachurch in Plano, Texas, centers on apologetics and cultural engagement, isn’t opposed to digital versions of the world’s best-selling book.
It is not too much to say that conservative apologetics is a vast rhetorical structure that purports to say one thing when it means another.
Those remarks echoed a previous bout of Putin apologetics by Mr. Berlusconi last month on one of the country’s most prominent political talk shows.
Christopher Check, president of the apologetics website Catholic Answers, called Mr. Newsom’s project a “deadly blasphemy” for “co-opting Sacred Scripture in the service of abortion.”
Sure enough, Fuentes quickly became a verified member, putting his openly white nationalist beliefs and Nazi apologetics into the realm of the "truths" that Trump is protecting.
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