errancy
IPA: ˈɛrʌnsi
noun
- the state of being in error; fallibility
- holding the view that the Pope is not infallible
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Examples of "errancy" in Sentences
- For rigorous scholarship usually precludes errancy.
- The revelation of sexual errancy was juicier than flour hoarding.
- Personally I think this article doesn't need mention of errancy on either side.
- If it has to be precisely a claim to "errancy" in so many words, that might be harder.
- Maybe my roots are just too conservative but I'm just uncomfortable with the language of 'errancy' when it comes to Scripture.
- If you serve long enough, errors are inevitable, but leaders should be judged not for their errancy, but how they handle mistakes when they do come up.
- At this point I don't agree with the idea of biblical errancy, though my own view of inerrancy probably isn't precisely what you find in the formal statements affirming this view.
- If the inerrancy position is fraught with danger and can easily become ludicrous in practice, is not the errancy hermeneutic just if not more fraught with danger and ludicrous in practice?
- It is true that signs must be qualified by matter - we must recognize their material autonomy (and, hence, their "errancy") - but, I'm claiming, it is perhaps to recognize the semiological character of matter itself.
- Whether "fiscal errancy" includes tax incentives like the IBC is yet to be made clear, but even the policy world's language of crisis resolution tips discussion toward the punitive and away from the genuinely recuperative.
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