limbus - ορισμός. Τι είναι το limbus
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Τι (ποιος) είναι limbus - ορισμός

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Limbus (disambiguation); Limbal

Limbus         
·noun A border or margin; as, the limbus of the cornea.
II. Limbus ·noun An extramundane region where certain classes of souls were supposed to await the judgment.
III. Limbus ·noun Hence: Any real or imaginary place of restraint or confinement; a prison; as, to put a man in limbo.
limbus         
n.
[L.] See limbo.
limbus         
['l?mb?s]
¦ noun (plural limbi -b??) Anatomy the border of a structure, especially the junction of the cornea and sclera in the eye.
Origin
ME: from L., 'edge, border'.

Βικιπαίδεια

Limbus

Limbus (Lat. "edge, boundary") may refer to:

  • Corneal limbus, the border of the cornea and the sclera (the white of the eye)
  • Limbus of fossa ovalis, in the heart
  • Limbus 3 and Limbus 4, two line-ups of a German avant-garde musical group
  • Limbus, a type of garment trim added to the stola in Ancient Rome
  • Limbus Company, a gacha game.
Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για limbus
1. Limbo divides into Limbus Patrum, the temporary resting place of the souls of good persons who died before Jesus‘s resurrection, and Limbus Infantium, home for children who die without being freed from original sin (ie baptised). It is the latter that Pope Benedict XVI will abolish later today at a mass in Rome.
2. Although there is no basis for it in Scripture the traditional answer is Limbo, from the Latin limbus, meaning a hem, edge or boundary.
3. It is described as the temporary resting place of "the souls of good persons who died before the resurrection of Jesus" (limbus patrum) and the permanent home in the afterlife of "the unbaptised who die in infancy without having been freed from original sin" (limbus infantium). The most recent Catholic teaching on limbo dates back to 1'05 when Pope Pius X stated:"Children who die without being baptised go to limbo, where they don‘t enjoy God, but don‘t suffer either, because whilst carrying the original sin they don‘t deserve paradise but neither do they deserve Hell or purgatory." In the Middle Ages and the Renaissance limbo was great focus for writers and artists.