Dictionary Definition
dogma
Noun
1 a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true
without proof [syn: tenet]
2 a doctrine or code of beliefs accepted as
authoritative; "he believed all the Marxist dogma" [also: dogmata (pl)]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Dogma
English
Etymology
From dogma philosophical tenet, from Greek dogma (genitive dogmatos) opinion, tenet, literally that which one thinks is true, from dokein to seem good, think (see decent). Treated in the 17c. -18c. as Greek, with plural dogmata.Translations
- Czech: dogma
- Danish: dogme
- Dutch: dogma
- German: Dogma
- Portuguese: dogma
- Swedish: dogm
Czech
Noun
Declension
Portuguese
Noun
dogmaExtensive Definition
wikt Dogma Dogma (the
plural is either dogmata or dogmas, Greek ,
plural ) is the established belief or doctrine held by a religion, ideology or any kind of
organization,
thought to be authoritative and not to be
disputed, doubted or diverged
from. While in the context of religion the term is largely
descriptive, outside of religion its current usage tends to carry a
pejorative connotation—referring to concepts as being
"established" only according to a particular point of view, and
thus one of doubtful foundation. This pejorative connotation is
even stronger with the term dogmatic, used to describe a person of
rigid beliefs who is not open to rational argument.
Dogma in religion
Religious dogmata, when properly conceived, reach back to proofs other than themselves, and ultimately to faith. Perhaps the pinnacle of organized exposition of theological dogma is the Summa Theologica by Thomas Aquinas, who proposed this relationship between faith and objection: "If our opponent believes nothing of divine revelation, there is no longer any means of proving the articles of faith by reasoning, but only of answering his objections—if he has any—against faith" (I 1 8).Dogmata are found in many religions such as
Christianity,
and Judaism, where they
are considered core principles that must be upheld by all followers
of that religion. As a fundamental element of religion, the term
"dogma" is assigned to those theological tenets which are
considered to be well demonstrated, such that their proposed
disputation or revision effectively means that a person no longer
accepts the given religion as his or her own, or has entered into a
period of personal doubt. Dogma is distinguished from theological
opinion regarding those things considered less well-known. Dogmata
may be clarified and elaborated but not contradicted in novel
teachings (e.g.,
Galatians 1:8-9). Rejection of dogma is considered heresy in certain religions, and
may lead to expulsion from the religious group.
For most of Eastern
Christianity, the dogmata are contained in the Nicene Creed
and the canons of two, three, or seven ecumenical
councils (depending on whether one is Nestorian,
Oriental
Orthodox, or Eastern
Orthodox). These tenets are summarized by St.
John of Damascus in his Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith,
which is the third book of his main work, titled The Fount of
Knowledge. In this book he takes a dual approach in explaining each
article of the Eastern Orthodox faith: one for Christians, where he
uses quotes from the Bible and,
occasionally, from works of other Fathers of the
Church, and the second, directed both at non-Christians (but
who, nevertheless, hold some sort of religious belief) and at
atheists, where he
attempts to employ Aristotelian
logic and dialectics, especially
reductio
ad absurdum.
Catholics also hold as dogma the decisions of
fourteen later councils and two decrees promulgated by popes exercising papal
infallibility (see immaculate
conception and Assumption
of Mary). Protestants
to differing degrees affirm portions of these dogmata, and often
rely on denomination-specific 'Statements of Faith' which summarize
their chosen dogmata (see, e.g., Eucharist).
In Islam, the dogmatic
principles are contained in the aqidah. However, the dogmatic
principles are built after examining God's signs, and truths. Islam
condemns belief without logic.
Within many Christian denominations, dogma is
instead referred to as "doctrine".
dogma in Catalan: Dogma
dogma in Czech: Dogma
dogma in Danish: Dogme
dogma in German: Dogma
dogma in Estonian: Dogma
dogma in Modern Greek (1453-): Δόγμα
dogma in Spanish: Dogma
dogma in Esperanto: Dogmo
dogma in French: Dogme
dogma in Western Frisian: Dogma
dogma in Korean: 교리
dogma in Indonesian: Dogma
dogma in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Dogma
dogma in Italian: Dogma
dogma in Hebrew: דוגמה
dogma in Latin: Dogma
dogma in Lithuanian: Dogma
dogma in Hungarian: Dogma
dogma in Dutch: Dogma_(algemeen)
dogma in Japanese: 教義
dogma in Norwegian: Dogme
dogma in Uzbek: Dogma
dogma in Polish: Dogmat
dogma in Portuguese: Dogma
dogma in Russian: Догмат
dogma in Simple English: Dogma
dogma in Slovak: Dogma
dogma in Slovenian: Verska resnica
dogma in Finnish: Dogmi
dogma in Swedish: Dogm
dogma in Turkish: Dogmatizm
dogma in Ukrainian: Догмат