AdjectiveBloomberg, by contrast, would be the most pro-immigration, pro-free trade, pro-Wall Street candidate in the race. The third-party candidate he would most resemble is John Anderson, the fiscally responsible, culturally liberal Republican who ran as an Independent in 1980. Anderson won 7% of the vote, mostly among the young, educated and secular. But today those people are partisan Democrats. Peter Beinart, Time, 11 Feb. 2008In the early twentieth century, priests and religious built centers for Catholic study and worship on secular campuses. Maurice Timothy Reidy, Commonweal, 7 Apr. 2006Some women, indeed, achieved great renown for their religious scholarship, becoming role models for their peers and silently challenging men, who for so long had held a monopoly in this area. Though they never carried the title of "rabbi" and in many cases eschewed the controversial "f-word" (feminism) altogether, these Orthodox women produced no less a revolution in the late twentieth century than women did in so many other realms, religious and secular alike. By challenging Judaism, they ended up strengthening Judaism. Jonathan D. Sarna, American Judaism, 2004The reforms of the nineteenth century and the needs of commercial and other contacts with Europe led to the enactment of new laws, modeled on those of Europe—commercial, civil, criminal, and finally constitutional. In the traditional order the only lawyers were the ulema, the doctors of the Holy Law, at once jurists and theologians. The secular lawyer, pleading in courts administering secular law, represented a new and influential element in society. Bernard Lewis, What Went Wrong?, 2002 Both secular and religious institutions can apply for the funds. that's an issue for the secular authorities, not the church See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Adjective
Jewish day schools, for instance, offer both religious and secular education. Laura Meckler, Anchorage Daily News, 9 Sep. 2022 Ordinary Jewish day schools, for instance, offer both religious and secular education. Laura Meckler, Washington Post, 9 Sep. 2022 The rule will apply to religious and secular facilities.BostonGlobe.com, 23 Aug. 2022 And if this becomes a secular trend, today’s value stocks will be tomorrow’s growth stocks. Bob Haber, Forbes, 28 May 2022 Though fervent believers in a secular shift to digital life and work, their leaders knew Covid-19 was pulling forward future growth, and that the boost would eventually dissipate. Greg Ip, WSJ, 4 May 2022 The number of nuclear powers in the world continues to go up — slowly, but the secular trend is clear. David Faris, The Week, 24 Mar. 2022 The environmental implications of the broad secular shift towards usership over ownership will be profound. Tien Tzuo, Fortune, 14 Apr. 2021 Alito has warned that, as Americans become more secular, the U.S. may become less attuned to the constitutional rights of religious citizens. Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker, 28 Aug. 2022
Noun
There can be no separation of the secular and the sacred. Harrison Smith, BostonGlobe.com, 17 Aug. 2022 During the next six months, MacAskill and Ord enjoined their friends and other moral philosophers to pledge a secular tithe. Gideon Lewis-kraus, The New Yorker, 8 Aug. 2022 Both men, who were about the same age, had grown up as working-class secular Jews in New York. Clay Risen, BostonGlobe.com, 5 July 2022 That Rushdie was raised a Muslim, albeit a secular, alcohol-loving Muslim who soon would declare his atheism, made his descriptions of the Prophet even more troubling than if some outsider had ignorantly portrayed the same. Siva Vaidhyanathan, The New Republic, 16 Aug. 2022 Both men, who were about the same age, had grown up as working-class secular Jews in New York. Clay Risen, BostonGlobe.com, 5 July 2022 Smith Pegues is known for impacting the lives of both secular and faith-based audiences and demographics. Lynnette Nicholas, Essence, 26 July 2022 Both men, who were about the same age, had grown up as working-class secular Jews in New York. Clay Risen, BostonGlobe.com, 5 July 2022 So how does McBride see himself and his old musical pals Stephens and Yates in this explosion of ideas that connect the dots between the sacred and the secular in a fresh way? A.d. Amorosi, Variety, 22 June 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Adjective and Noun
Middle English, from Anglo-French seculer, from Late Latin saecularis, from saeculum the present world, from Latin, generation, age, century, world; akin to Welsh hoedl lifetime