English language

How to pronounce protestantism in English?

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Type Words
Type of christian religion, christianity
Has types arminianism, baptistic doctrine, calvinism, christian science, congregationalism, evangelicalism, fundamentalism, lutheranism, mennonitism, methodism, mormonism, pentecostalism, predestinarianism, presbyterianism, puritanism, trinitarianism, wesleyanism, anabaptism, wesleyism, anglicanism

Examples of protestantism

protestantism
Protestantism calls for people to listen to the Scriptures and speak about them.
From the economist.com
It seems that protestantism and corruption are incompatible due to a God's law.
From the economist.com
It is essentially something like American fundamentalist protestantism, or Islam.
From the scienceblogs.com
The worst aspects of Ulster protestantism seem to be embodied in the Orange Order.
From the economist.com
You obviously don't have much familiarity with many branches of protestantism.
From the economist.com
Protestantism has both conservative and liberal theological strands within it.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Protestantism was the only approved form of worship of the Three Kingdoms.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The founders of the 1st Czechoslovak Republic were very much in favour of protestantism.
From the economist.com
As a matter of fact, sola fide is a central tenet of most protestantism.
From the economist.com
More examples
  • The theological system of any of the churches of western Christendom that separated from the Roman Catholic Church during the Reformation
  • (protestant) of or relating to Protestants or Protestantism; "Protestant churches"; "a Protestant denomination"
  • Protestantism is one of the four major divisions within Christianity (or five, if Anglicanism is considered separately) together with the Eastern Orthodox churches, the Oriental Orthodox churches, and the Roman Catholic Church. ...
  • (protestant) this sense?) of greater quality or merit
  • (Protestant) noun: a. a member of any of several church denominations denying the universal authority of the Pope and affirming the Reformation principles of justification by faith alone, the priesthood of all believers, and the primacy of the Bible as the only source of revealed truth b. ...
  • (Protestant) A person who protests the granting of a license or permit and who appears as an intervenor in the hearing to determine whether the license or permit application should be approved.
  • (Protestant) Strictly speaking, Protestants were those Roman Catholic clergy and lay people in and around the sixteenth century who sought to reform the Roman Catholic Church from within, but whose efforts were rewarded with excommunication. ...
  • (Protestant) 1. A member of one of the thousands of sects of Christendom that splintered off the original apostate Roman Catholic church. ...
  • (Protestant) A person who believes in Christ and has been baptized, but who does not profess the Catholic faith in its entirety, but rather is a member of a Protestant church or ecclesial community whose roots are in the Reformation, begun in the sixteenth century.