Tis sooth I say, for e'en In this belief I will to live and die.
Assoilzie me, that I may have no teen, Maid, that without breach of virginity Didst bear our Lord that in the Host is seen: In this belief I will to live and die.
In view of much criticism of this belief it is perhaps necessary to emphasize the fact that a belief in Mary's exemption from original sin does not imply a belief that she was exempt from the need of redemption.
It is the rule, and not the exception, that savage societies are founded upon this belief.
The discovery of the wide distribution of the social arrangements based on this beliefis entirely due to Mr. J.
On this beliefin man's power to affect events beyond the limits of natural possibility is based the whole theory of MAGIC, the whole power of sorcerers.
The-worship of images in all times and places is essentially founded on this belief in the incarnation of spirits and the numen of fetishes.
This belief is directly founded on the fanciful personification and incarnation of a power in speech itself, in song, and in sound.
There is no part of ecclesiastical history more curious than the effects of this belief in alternately assisting or impeding the progress of different Churches.
See a strong passage, on the universality of this belief, in Plotinus, 1st Enn.
This belief, however, assured though it was, did not save them from a cowardly desertion of Him whom they believed to be God's representative on earth.
And it is this man, who seems alone capable of being compared with Jesus, that explicitly sets Him immeasurably above himself, and devotes his life to the promulgation of this belief.
This belief, however, did not tell upon the mass, because, through fear of excommunication, those who were convinced dared not utter their conviction.
Joan of Arc, the noblest of all the victims of this belief, perished by English hands, though on French soil, and under the sentence of a French bishop.
He rejected the crude religious ideas of his nation, was opposed to anthropomorphism, but considered it his duty to conform publicly to this belief.
This belief is indeed effective in removing all the ideas which are awake in the mind which would interfere with the willingness to submit to the suggestions of the hypnotizer.
This belief in the future entrance of a change frequently demands an artificial reënforcement.
This belief may be reënforced to strong autosuggestion which may then overcome other factors that hinder sleep.
We are conscious of this belief ourselves, we observe it in others.
What are the limits, if limits there are, to this belief of the uniformity of nature, and to the reasoning based on that belief?
The languages and the literature of the world bear witness to the universality of this belief.
The myths which we have already described give the only possible explanation of this belief.
The following tale, illustrative of this belief, was told me by the Rev.
The following tale exhibits another phase of this belief.
The following stories have reference to this belief.
This belief in the power of averting lightning by mechanical means, prevailed on the continent of India as well as in Ceylon, and one of the early Bengalese histories of the temple of Juggernauth, written between the years A.
This belief is embodied in the following distich: A woman, a spaniel, and a walnut-tree, The more you whip them the better they be.
In giving the following, it should be premised it is a popular notion that the wren is the wife of the robin; and Mr. Chambers mentions an extraordinary addition to this belief current in Scotland, that the wren is the paramour of the tom-tit!
Many will not kill a spider on account of this belief, which is supposed to be derived from the romantic story of King Robert Bruce and the spider.
Some writers think they have traced this belief to the symbolism of ancient mythology, where the dog stands for the howling night-wind, on which the souls of the dead rode to the banks of the Styx, but this hypothesis seems quite far-fetched.
In "Curious Myths," Mr. Baring-Gould refers the genesis of this belief to the Book of Numbers.
This belief is not, apparently, confined to the Bechuana clan which has the crocodile for its totem, but is shared by all the other clans; all of them certainly hold the crocodile in respect.
M81 This belief is illustrated by folk-tales told by many peoples.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "this belief" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.