Sunday, February 16, 2020

Difference between trust and faith

1. Faith is more commonly considered as a spiritual concept. It is considered as an allegiance, duty or loyalty to one person or being.
2. Faith is a more commonly used in a spiritual context
3. Faith is telling them the secret. That's it. No further instructions and knowing that their judgment would never fail you.
4. Faith is the epitome or quintessence of trust
5. Faith is inexplicable or mysterious.
6. Faith is an unconscious trait
7. Faith has been called “the substance of hope.”
8. Faith is the surrender of the mind.
9. Faith is the abandonment of scientific principles.
10. Dictionary.com defines ‘Faith’ as:
• Confidence or trust in a person or thing
• Belief that is not based on proof
• Belief in God or in the doctrines or teachings of religion
• A system of religious belief
And
1. Trust is an important concept in relationships.
2. Trust is a conscious trait.
3. Trust is telling your friend a secret and asking them not to reveal it and knowing that they won't reveal it because you told them not to.
4. Trust is a fundamental provision of daily life and living.
5. Trust becomes a largely positive ideal not only giving life purpose but reaffirming human value.
6. We are required to have trust in each other — which is actually the noblest of virtues.
7. Society would be much better off with more trust
8. Trust and believe have deeper meanings when it comes to using it in relationships. Trust would actually mean that a person places complete confidence and reliance in another person.
9. Trust is the core conviction of judgment based on knowledge, instinct, and experience.
10. Dictionary.com defines ‘Trust’ as:
• Reliance on the integrity, strength, ability, surety, etc., of a person or thing; confidence.
• Confident expectation of something; hope.
• Confidence in the certainty of future payment for property or goods received; credit: to sell merchandise on trust.
• A person on whom or thing on which one relies: God is my trust.
• The condition of one to whom something has been entrusted.

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