How to Use doctrinal in a Sentence

doctrinal

adjective
  • That has left church members to proffer possible doctrinal justifications for it, some at odds with the church's present positions.
    Erin Alberty, Axios, 22 July 2024
  • And the Bible alone was the sole source of doctrinal truth (sola scriptura).
    Jamie Quatro, The New Yorker, 5 Aug. 2019
  • And so in addition to a doctrinal division, a visual schism between the north and the south, the Protestant and the Catholic, opened.
    Josephine Livingstone, The New Republic, 8 May 2018
  • Pearson is soon in the throes of a crisis of faith, which is only resolved by his doctrinal change of heart.
    Sarah Jones, The New Republic, 24 Apr. 2018
  • The church’s doctrinal office is led by Cardinal Luis Ladaria, who was handpicked by the pope and is seen as in lock step with him.
    Jason Horowitz, New York Times, 27 June 2021
  • For its part, the Ilse house demonstrates that the Bauhaus could inspire mash-ups as well as doctrinal purity.
    The Economist, 1 Aug. 2019
  • For many, the core doctrinal beliefs weren’t enough to ignore the jarring differences.
    The Salt Lake Tribune, 2 May 2021
  • In a big breach of doctrinal correctness, El Greco borrowed from all four Gospels.
    Brian T. Allen, National Review, 15 Aug. 2020
  • The history of Islam, its doctrinal texts (the Koran, the Sira and the Hadith), and the pronouncements of its preachers and interpreters (imams) confirm this.
    Cincinnati.com, 17 May 2017
  • The priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church is restricted to men only, based on doctrinal teaching that all of Jesus’ apostles were male.
    New York Times, 13 July 2022
  • But, as the Pope, Francis has full authority over the doctrinal office and plenty of ways to exercise it.
    Paul Elie, The New Yorker, 23 Mar. 2021
  • The more conciliatory rhetoric has stopped short of doctrinal changes.
    Washington Post, 16 Mar. 2021
  • And when considering the speed and scope of doctrinal change, Justice Ginsburg’s thoughts on Roe v. Wade may be relevant.
    Henry Gass, The Christian Science Monitor, 24 Sep. 2020
  • The decree, issued by the Vatican’s doctrinal body, leaned on language that gay Catholics have long found alienating.
    BostonGlobe.com, 10 May 2021
  • At one Colorado colony, a dozen children died from malnutrition in 1906, and other start-ups since then have been plagued with doctrinal disputes.
    Sam Kestenbaum, New York Times, 7 June 2018
  • Was their decision a worthy trade-off—or should judges be doctrinal absolutists in the tradition of Ginsburg and Scalia?
    Michael O’Donnell, The Atlantic, 29 Mar. 2020
  • Francis’s merely airing these questions — as well as the place of homosexuals in the church — represents to him a look into the abyss of doctrinal chaos.
    Andrew Sullivan, Daily Intelligencer, 20 Apr. 2018
  • He had been baptized a Christian, even if doctrinal affinity put him in the heretical Arian camp.
    Cullen Murphy, The Atlantic, 9 June 2020
  • Before he was elected pope in 2005, Benedict was a German cardinal who served as the Church's guardian of doctrinal orthodoxy.
    Frances D'emilio, USA TODAY, 12 Jan. 2023
  • This isn’t the doctrinal Wright, warning us of the disasters that capitalism creates.
    Imani Perry, The Atlantic, 7 May 2021
  • Nor does Francis, despite his compassion for African migrants to the rich world, find the African church easy to navigate, given the doctrinal conservatism of its leaders.
    The Economist, 7 Sep. 2019
  • Even so, the engineering ingenuity of the Ukrainians lies in stark contrast to the slow, plodding, doctrinal nature of the Russian advance.
    Eric Schmitt, BostonGlobe.com, 28 Aug. 2022
  • In these situations, ordinary folk, not the priestly class, were the guardians of doctrinal correctness.
    The Economist, 17 Dec. 2019
  • Cardinal O’Malley wrote to the prosecutor’s superior, the head of the Vatican’s doctrinal office, to protest the speech.
    Francis X. Rocca, WSJ, 14 Feb. 2019
  • In late August, the party’s leading doctrinal journal published a speech that Xi made in 2020 that hinted at internal debate.
    Chris Buckley, BostonGlobe.com, 22 Oct. 2022
  • This could be a doctrinal hook for union-busting antitrust lawyers who may argue that striking independent contractors are seeking to raise the price of goods and services, not their wages.
    Sandeep Vaheesan, The New Republic, 2 May 2022
  • The previous standard, offered by the Second Circuit in 1994, required accused students to jump through doctrinal hoops to raise a plausible claim.
    Kc Johnson, WSJ, 30 Sep. 2020
  • Thomas’s argument against substantive due process is more than doctrinal.
    Corey Robin, The New Yorker, 9 July 2022
  • That rite will be a simple one, the Vatican has said, in keeping with the wishes of Benedict, who for decades as a German cardinal had served as the Church’s guardian of doctrinal orthodoxy before he was elected pope in 2005.
    Frances D'emilio, BostonGlobe.com, 1 Jan. 2023
  • Trump’s own judicial appointees, many of whom have been old-school conservatives, have been willing to say no to him, and many of them have a doctrinal aversion to presidential unilateralism.
    Ramesh Ponnuru, Washington Post, 18 July 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'doctrinal.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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