gospel vs skepticism

gospel

noun
  • An account of those aspects of Jesus' life, generally written during the first several centuries of the Common Era. 

  • A message expected to have positive reception or effect, one promoted as offering important (or even infallible) guiding principles. 

  • The first section of the Christian New Testament scripture, comprising the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, concerned with the birth, ministry, passion, and resurrection of Jesus. 

  • That which is absolutely authoritative (definitive). 

  • Gospel music. 

  • The teaching of Divine grace as distinguished from the Law or Divine commandments. 

verb
  • To instruct in, declare, or communicate the gospel; to evangelise. 

skepticism

noun
  • Doubt or disbelief of religious doctrines 

  • The practice or philosophy of being a skeptic. 

  • The doctrine that absolute knowledge is not possible 

  • A studied attitude of questioning and doubt 

  • A methodology that starts from a neutral standpoint and aims to acquire certainty though scientific or logical observation. 

How often have the words gospel and skepticism occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )