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"I Believe" is a popular song written by Ervin Drake, Irvin Abraham (as "Irvin Graham"), Jack Mendelsohn (as "Jimmy Shirl") and Al Stillman in 1953. [1] The most popular version was recorded by Italian-American singer Frankie Laine , and spent eighteen weeks at No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart .
I Believe (Dr. Alban album), and the title song, 1997; I Believe (Irfan Makki album), and the title song, 2011; I Believe (Johnny Cash album), a 1984 reissue of songs from A Believer Sings the Truth (1979)
"I Believe" is a single by the American alternative rock band Blessid Union of Souls from their 1995 debut album, Home. It was released in February 1995 by EMI Records . Vocalist Eliot Sloan wrote the song after the father of his girlfriend "Lisa" forced her to stop dating Sloan because of his race.
“I believe that there’s an element of it being a calling. A kind of message from God,” she reflects, noting that she didn’t grow up seeing female rabbis — the first American female rabbi ...
'I believe') is a prosaic rendition of Maimonides' thirteen-point version of the Jewish principles of faith. It is based on his Mishnah commentary to tractate Sanhedrin. The popular version of Ani Ma'amin is of a later date and has some significant differences with Maimonides' original version. It is of unknown authorship.
The phrase is based on a sentence of Augustine of Hippo (crede ut intellegas, [4] lit. "believe so that you may understand") [5] [2] to relate faith and reason. Augustine understood the saying to mean that a person must believe in something in order to know anything about God. [6] This sentence by Augustine is also inspired from Isaiah 7:9. [7]
The word nikoli, when stressed on the second syllable, means "never", when stressed on the first it is the locative case of Nikola, i.e. Nicholas; Spanish – cuando las vacas vuelen ("when cows fly") or cuando los chanchos vuelen ("when pigs fly"). Its most common use is in response to an affirmative statement, for example "I saw Mrs. Smith ...
Credulity is a person's willingness or ability to believe that a statement is true, especially on minimal or uncertain evidence. [1] [2] Credulity is not necessarily a belief in something that may be false: the subject of the belief may even be correct, but a credulous person will believe it without good evidence.