Noun
The teaching of a particular religion, and its doctrines, beliefs etc.
(UK) The teaching about various religions; also known as religious studies.
Source: en.wiktionary.orgAnd the fundamental error in this line of questioning is that it frames government separation from religious education as an extension of hostility, instead of a liberty. Source: Internet
A large number of Muslim families send their children to attend part-time courses or even to pursue full-time religious education, which is imparted in Bengali and Arabic in madrasahs. Source: Internet
Article II of the Code Noir of 1724, required masters to provide their slaves with religious education, meaning Roman Catholicism. Source: Internet
Estimation of his works and character Melanchthon's importance for the Reformation lay essentially in the fact that he systematized Luther's ideas, defended them in public, and made them the basis of a religious education. Source: Internet
Christopher Clark, Iron Kingdom (2006) pp 419-21 A sharp controversy broke out in 1837-38 in the largely Catholic Rhineland over the religious education of children of mixed marriages, where the mother was Catholic and the father Protestant. Source: Internet
His Bar Mitzvah marked the end of Laurents's religious education and the beginning of his rejection of all fundamentalist religions, Laurents, Arthur. Source: Internet