-
known as an apostate.
Undertaking apostasy is
called apostatizing (or
apostasizing – also
spelled apostacizing). The term
apostasy is used by sociologists...
- starvation,
having refused an
offer of 'many
riches and goods' in
return for
apostasizing"" The
Trial of the Templars,
Malcolm Barber, p.22 John
Jordan (2018)...
-
According to
Jerome he
later joined the
Montanist sect and may have
apostasized; however,
modern scholars dispute this.
Scant reliable evidence exists...
-
According to sharia, to be
found guilty the
accused must at the time of
apostasizing be
exercising free will, an adult, and of
sound mind, and have refused...
-
Manalo in the last days. They
believe that the
first century church apostasized in that century, or in the 4th
century due to
false teachings. INC says...
- the
patriarchate of
Nicholas I Mystikos. Al-Mas‘udi
reports that they
apostasized in 932, but this
seems to have been short-lived. The
Alans are collectively...
-
impossible to say with
certainty how many men of the
cloth were
forced to
apostasize. For
strategic reasons, the
Ottomans forcibly converted Christians living...
-
villages to
report on
hidden missionaries or
Catholics that had not
apostasized. The
first missionary arrested during this (and
later executed) was the...
-
minds that the
Scriptures taught that a true
believer was
capable of
apostasizing. They
formalized their views in "The
Opinion of the Remonstrants" (1618)...
-
Anatolius (c. 268 – 282/283), a
native of
Alexandria in
Egypt Stephen,
apostasized during the
Diocletianic ****cution (303–313)
Theodotus (303/313 – c...