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de fide
[ de-fee-de; English dee-fi-dee ]
adjective
- of the faith: a phrase used in the Roman Catholic Church to qualify certain teachings as being divinely revealed, belief in them therefore being obligatory.
de fide
/ diː ˈfaɪdɪ /
adjective
- RC Church (of a doctrine) belonging to the essentials of the faith, esp by virtue of a papal ruling
Word History and Origins
Origin of de fide1
Example Sentences
Dogm. de Fide Catholica, c. iii.
And being such, was certain, irreversible, obligatory on the inward belief and reception of all subjects of the Church, or what is called de fide.
This crisis seemed to have arrived on Saturday, March 26, when the preamble of the Schema de Fide was to have been voted on.
When has a definition de fide been a luxury of devotion and not a stern, painful necessity?
It is directed that all objections or proposals for modifications of the Schemata are first to be handed over in writing to the Presidents and referred by them to the Commission de Fide, which rejects or admits them at its pleasure.
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