¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Antinomians
1. antinomian [n] - See also: antinomian
Lexicographical Neighbors of Antinomians
Literary usage of Antinomians
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Historical Writings of John Fiske by John Fiske (1902)
"One of the antinomians . i /- . . , i with the chief objections to the antinomians
was that they professed to have their minds illumined by a divine light ..."
2. Institutes of Ecclesiastical History, Ancient and Modern by Johann Lorenz Mosheim, James Murdock (1841)
"The antinomians, are over rigid Calvinists, who are thought, by the other
Presbyterians, to abuse Calvin^ doctrine of the absolute decrees of God to the ..."
3. A Theological Dictionary: Containing Definitions of All Religious Terms; a by Charles Buck (1830)
"antinomians, those who maintain that the law is of no use or obligation under
the Gospel dispensation, or who hold doctrines that cica ri y supersede the ..."
4. English Colonies in America by John Andrew Doyle (1889)
"ROGER WILLIAMS AND THE antinomians.t The history of New England during the
seventeenth century resolves itself into three successive epochs. ..."
5. The Works of Thomas Shepard: First Pastor of the First Church, Cambridge by Thomas Shepard (1853)
"The fundamental error of antinomians ariseth from this — in imagining the ...
The law (say some of the antinomians) is to be • kept as an eternal rule of ..."
6. American Book Prices Current (1921)
"(46) $145.00. of the Rise, Reign and Ruine of the antinomians, etc. Lond., Ralph
Smith, 1644. Sm. 4to. WELLES (C.). Three years Wanderings in California and ..."
7. The Religious World Displayed, Or, A View of Judaism, Paganism, Christianity by Robert Adam (1809)
"The antinomians derive their name from two Greek words, 'am, signifying, against,
and repos, a law ; their favourite tenet being, that the law is not a rule ..."