atonement$5706$ - определение. Что такое atonement$5706$
Diclib.com
Словарь ChatGPT
Введите слово или словосочетание на любом языке 👆
Язык:

Перевод и анализ слов искусственным интеллектом ChatGPT

На этой странице Вы можете получить подробный анализ слова или словосочетания, произведенный с помощью лучшей на сегодняшний день технологии искусственного интеллекта:

  • как употребляется слово
  • частота употребления
  • используется оно чаще в устной или письменной речи
  • варианты перевода слова
  • примеры употребления (несколько фраз с переводом)
  • этимология

Что (кто) такое atonement$5706$ - определение

DOCTRINE IN CHRISTIANITY
Vicarious Atonement; Vicarious atonement
  • [[El Greco]]'s ''Jesus Carrying the Cross'', 1580.

Limited atonement         
CALVINIST DOCTRINE THAT ONLY THE SINS OF THE ELECT WERE ATONED FOR BY JESUS'S DEATH
Particular redemption; Definite atonement; Limited Atonement; Atonement (limited view); Special grace; Redemption, Particular; Limitarianism (Christianity)
Limited atonement (also called definite atonement or particular redemption) is a doctrine accepted in some Christian theological traditions. It is particularly associated with the Reformed tradition and is one of the five points of Calvinism.
Our Lady of the Atonement         
Our Lady of Atonement
Our Lady of the Atonement (Latin: Domina Nostra Adunationis) is a title of the Blessed Virgin Mary first invoked by Father (Louis) Paul T. Wattson, S.
Atonement (novel)         
NOVEL BY IAN MCEWAN
Atonement: A Novel
Atonement is a 2001 British metafictional novel written by Ian McEwan. Set in three time periods, 1935 England, Second World War England and France, and present-day England, it covers an upper-class girl's half-innocent mistake that ruins lives, her adulthood in the shadow of that mistake, and a reflection on the nature of writing.

Википедия

Substitutionary atonement

Substitutionary atonement, also called vicarious atonement, is a central concept within Western Christian theology which asserts that Jesus died "for us", as propagated by the Western classic and objective paradigms of atonement in Christianity, which regard Jesus as dying as a substitute for others, "instead of" them.

Substitutionary atonement has been explicated in the "classic paradigm" of the Early Church Fathers, namely the ransom theory, as well as in Gustaf Aulen's demystified reformulation, the Christus Victor theory; and in the "objective paradigm," which includes Anselm of Canterbury's satisfaction theory, the Reformed period's penal substitution theory, and the Governmental theory of atonement.