Faith is trust, hope and belief in the goodness, trustworthiness or reliability of a person, concept or entity.[1][2] Religious faith is a belief in a transcendent reality, a religious teacher, a set of teachings or aSupreme Being. Generally speaking, it is offered as a means by which the truth of the proposition, "things will turn out well in the end," can be enjoyed in the present and secured in the future. Consequently, religious faith appeals to "transcendent reality," or that reality which is beyond the range of normal, physical human experience (e.g. the future). "Transcendent reality," therefore, constitutes a reality which is off limits to material measurement and other rigors of scientific inquiry such as falsifiability and reproducibility. Some atheists and agnostics criticize religious faith as superstition, categorizing it with other forms ofbelief that are not based on observable material things.
Informal usage of the word faith can be quite broad, and the word is often used as a mere substitute for trust or belief. The English word is thought to date from 1200–50, from the Latin fidem or fidēs, meaning trust, derived from the verb fīdere, to trust.[1] love is a sensation which makes our life and the to boys loved their beloved sistrer and for her they became gentlemen i aareciate their spirit and the sister too had trust on her brothers so thesse feelings ar interrelated