Difference between revisions of "Agnosticism"

From OrthodoxWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: Agnosticism is the belief that humans cannot know or understand God or anything of a supra-material order. It is not a complete denial of God's existence, but rather a belief in an...)
 
m (el)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Agnosticism is the belief that humans cannot know or understand [[God]] or anything of a supra-material order. It is not a complete denial of [[God]]'s existence, but rather a belief in an incurable ignorance; the belief that there is no [[God]] is today generally termed "[[atheism]]" (although etymologically that is incorrect (see [[atheism]])). Both positions are condemned by the [[Orthodox Church]], often explicitly, but at all other times implicitly, for being a belief in error for denial (explicit in the case of atheists and some agnostics, implicit in the case of other agnostics) of the truth of [[God]] and [[Jesus Christ]].
+
'''Agnosticism''' is the belief that humans cannot know or understand [[God]] or anything of a supra-material order. It is not a complete denial of God's existence, but rather a belief in an incurable ignorance; the belief that there is no God is today generally termed ''[[atheism]]''. Both positions are condemned by the [[Orthodox Church]], often explicitly, but at all other times implicitly, for being a belief in error for denial (explicit in the case of atheists and some agnostics, implicit in the case of other agnostics) of the truth of God and [[Jesus Christ]].
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Heresies]]
 +
 
 +
[[el:Αγνωστικισμός]]
 +
[[es:Agnosticismo]]

Latest revision as of 13:11, June 2, 2008

Agnosticism is the belief that humans cannot know or understand God or anything of a supra-material order. It is not a complete denial of God's existence, but rather a belief in an incurable ignorance; the belief that there is no God is today generally termed atheism. Both positions are condemned by the Orthodox Church, often explicitly, but at all other times implicitly, for being a belief in error for denial (explicit in the case of atheists and some agnostics, implicit in the case of other agnostics) of the truth of God and Jesus Christ.