Rosamond," he at length said, "you can be reasonable when you choose—and I do hope that you have sufficient confidence in your father to accord him your attention and to believe what he may state to you.
It is his own property to comprehend the reason of his counsels; it is our duty to believe what he reveals of them, without farther inquiry.
Once you used to believe what I said, and if you won't now, you won't.
He asks me to believe what--I've done makes no difference to him.
Don Quixote, my master, if I am to believe what I hear in these parts, is a madman of some sense, and a droll blockhead, and I am no way behind him.
All right Miss Annie, you don't need to believe what I say, but the little baby is in the kitchen and ma will tell you herself when she comes in.
Since therefore all things that can be known by natural reason are an object of science, it seems that there is no need to believe what can be proved by natural reason.
Secondly, because the intellect is convinced that it ought to believe what is said, though that conviction is not based on objective evidence.
Gregory is referring to the case of a man who has no will to believe what is of faith, unless he be induced by reasons.
But when a man has the will to believe what is of faith on the authority of God alone, although he may have reasons in demonstration of some of them, e.
Similarly, faith is contrasted with present possession, because Christ has promised us future blessings and future glories; and having confidence in the Person, we believe what He says, and know that we shall possess them.
How can we expect to receive growing divine illuminations if we affect to believe what we are convinced is untrue?
Good men are trying to believe what in their hearts they repudiate.
And I believe what an eminent minister said lately: "We ought to make our faith reasonable to reasonable minds.
When an intelligent heathen is converted to the Christian faith, and realizes that we profess to believe what we do not really believe, what will he think of us?
Now when we believe what he tells us with our heart, and do what he commands us because we love him, we are truly drinking his blood.
Moses told the people to believe what he told them and obey the commands he gave them.
But he is just as free to believe what is true and to will what is good.
Man is free as to his will and understanding--free to believe what is false and to do what is wrong.
Faith, then, I repeat once again, is faith in hope; we believe what we hope for.
When we are being fooled about ourselves, when we believe what we want to believe, and are not willing to change our minds about ourselves, what is there we can do?
And, by the same rule, he is more ready to believe what we alone assert, that it is not rightly received with them, than as they alone assert, that it is rightly so received.
As, therefore, he is the more ready to believe what we alone assert should be believed, so let him be the more ready to do what we alone declare should be done.
So that he is more ready to believe what we alone assert, that baptism is rightly received with us, than that it is not rightly so received, since that rests only on their assertion.
I am very willing to say, in order to give you satisfaction, that I believe whatis obscure, but I cannot say that I believe what is impossible.
I was, it is true, unwilling to believe what my reason told me was inevitably true.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "believe what" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.