n
One who follows or believes in an Abrahamic religion.
n
(historical, Christianity) A sect of reformers opposed to the Roman Catholic Church in the 12th century AD, considered heretics who were subject to the Albigensian Crusade; a branch of the Catharists, distinct from the Waldenses.
n
(Roman Catholicism) A putative current of Catholicism in the United States identified and condemned as heretical by Rome in the late 19th century, chiefly characterized by support for secularism and American institutions above Catholic doctrine.
n
(derogatory) Roman Catholicism; popery.
n
Support for Henry Barrowe (c. 1550–1593), English Puritan and separatist.
n
A follower of Henry Barrowe (c. 1550–1593), English Puritan and separatist.
n
A follower of Richard Baxter.
n
(historical) A supporter of English Quaker Isaac Crewdson and his book A Beacon to the Society of Friends, which claimed that too much emphasis was placed by Quakers on the Inner Light at the expense of Biblical authority.
n
A religious follower of John Biddle (1615–1662), English nontrinitarian and Unitarian.
n
A supporter of the religious doctrines of Thomas White (1593–1676), English Roman Catholic priest and scholar.
n
(Christianity, historical) A supporter of Blanchardism.
n
(historical) One of the French Protestants of the Cevennes region of south-central France, who raised an insurrection against the persecutions which followed the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685.
adj
Favoring French control over local church matters in conflicts with the Pope.
n
an adherent of the Eastern Orthodox Church, in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, who did not assent to the 1596 Union of Brest-Litovsk.
n
(historical) The beliefs and practices of the Feuillants.
n
(historical) A religious follower of Samuel Gorton (1593–1677), an early settler and civic leader of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations and President of the towns of Providence and Warwick. His outspoken religious beliefs differed from the dominant Puritan theology.
n
(historical) A supporter of the Haugean church reform movement.
n
(US, historical) A member or follower of the liberal party, headed by Elias Hicks, which, because of a change of views respecting the divinity of Christ and the Atonement, seceded from the conservative portion of the Quakers in 1827.
n
(historical) A member of the Holy Ghost and Us Society, a millenarian religious sect, under its local minister George W. Higgins in Maine, United States.
n
(rare) The beliefs and attitudes of the English Calvinist preacher William Huntington (1745-1813).
adj
Of or pertaining to the Jacobites.
n
(historical) The policies and reforms of Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor (1741–1790) of Austria.
n
(historical) A supporter of an early 17th-century reform movement within the Church of England, promulgated by Archbishop William Laud, that rejected the predestination upheld by the previously dominant Calvinism in favour of free will, and hence the possibility of salvation for all.
n
(historical) A Wyclifite.
n
Someone who believes that Christopher Marlowe was the main writer of works attributed to William Shakespeare.
n
A supporter of Martin Marprelate.
n
A supporter of James Clerk Maxwell.
n
A supporter of the Old Light religious movement.
n
(historical) A supporter of Oliver Cromwell.
n
The beliefs and principles of the Orléanists.
n
A believer in Patripassianism.
n
(historical) Religious support for Peter of Bruys.
n
Alternative letter-case form of pharisaism. [The doctrines and practices, or the character and spirit, of the Pharisees.]
n
(Christianity, historical) A member of a party in early Lutheranism who opposed the Gnesio-Lutherans.
n
(historical) A 19th-century French political and social movement of the first half of the 19th century, based on a perception that industrialization and scientific discovery would have profound changes on society.
n
(uncountable, paleologism) The devotion to or the teaching of the works and terminology of William Shakespeare.
n
(Christianity, historical) A radical Hussite; an adherent of radical Hussitism at the time of the Bohemian Reformation, who rejected the unique authority of the Catholic Church in matters of faith and was considered heretical.
adj
Pertaining to the Quaker preacher Jemima Wilkinson, known as the Public Universal Friend, or to the Society of Universal Friends.
n
(historical) A follower of John Wycliffe.
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