Faith as commitment

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Removed the section "Faith as commitment" because as it stands it is not well written section. If someone wants to re-write it, get the text from history.

(reasoning in italics): Sometimes, faith means a belief in a relationship with a deity. redundant.

In this case, "faith" is used in the sense of "fidelity." not explained

For many Jews, the Hebrew Bible and Talmud depict a committed but contentious relationship between their God and the Children of Israel. This is covered in "Judaism" with a link to "Main article: Jewish principles of faith"

For a lot of people, faith or the lack thereof, is an important part of their identity, for example a person who identifies himself or herself as a Muslim or a skeptic. way to generic for an article that goes into so much detail elsewhere, maybe add to intro?

According to Michael Green (theologian) faith is "Self-commitment on the basis of evidence". unreferenced, if included it needs expanding and explanation.

Sikh Faith

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With reference to this article on Faith "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faith", you forgot to include the Sikh Faith. Kindly reseach and include that to this section, because like Hindu, Christianity, Buddhu, and Islam faiths, Sikh faith is a major world religion. Thanks. Good work on the article!

It is ignorant and inaccurate to say "Faith itself is not a religious concept in Sikhism." There are many hundreds of references to faith in the main Sikh scripture, the Sri Guru Granth Sahib. Please research and correct accordingly! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.27.183.74 (talk) 05:56, 21 July 2020 (UTC)Reply

To those complaining of atheist/secular bias

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You will never be happy here. As twisted and biased in favor of what the masses think as it is, wiki/an encyclopedia, is still nonetheless fact based. A wiki article perforce will attempt to describe, i.e. to recount the facts of faith. So facts and faith, the source of your complaint are in fundamental opposition, faith is what you have when you believe without evidence or rather without even the possibility of evidence. Believers want their faith confirmed not confronted which is what describing it in a factitious way does.

It will be interesting to see how this article develops over time and in particular if the difference between faith granted (with the possibility of retraction) vs the other kind which is what the article is currently about cleaves cleanly rather than skirting as the academic obfuscation under the current epistemology § does. Lycurgus (talk) 13:18, 31 October 2021 (UTC)Reply

In response, representing secular writers, I find it obvious that the secular everyday usage of the very real word is heavily discounted by the current state of the article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2600:1700:5B70:2970:F424:9FB4:7590:D407 (talk) 15:46, 11 November 2024 (UTC)Reply

Calvinism vs Prosperity Theology

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The sentence "Within the Calvinist tradition the degree of prosperity[52] may serve as an analog of level of faith." seems to imply that Calvinism is similar to the prosperity gospel, which I don't believe is true. Calvinism is usually defined by TULIP and the page on Calvinism makes no mention of prosperity theology. Lastly, anecdotally, all the Calvinists I know are vehemently opposed to the prosperity gospel. Does anyone have a reason this sentence shouldn't be deleted? Kmaricq (talk) 02:22, 12 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

And "Variety"..

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Замените слово "вероятность" словом "частотность".

Станет меньше пыли и тумана .. 176.59.211.14 (talk) 03:11, 19 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

Judaism section needs revisions and objectivity check

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"Judaism does not require one to explicitly identify God" is extremely vague at best. God is pretty explicitly identified in the religion as the creator of heaven and earth who did everything described in the Torah. This is especially confusing next to the claim that explicitly defining God is "a key tenet of Christian faith." Is this alluding to the trinity? If so, calling it an "explicit identification of God" and further the only such identification in Judeo-Christian religious literature is at best opinionative and unsupported. 73.75.44.166 (talk) 07:09, 16 November 2024 (UTC)Reply