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redemption


5 definitions found

redemption - Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 :

  redemption \re*demp"tion\ (r[-e]*d[e^]mp"sh[u^]n), n. [F.
     r['e]demption, L. redemptio. See redeem, and cf. ransom.]
     The act of redeeming, or the state of being redeemed;
     repurchase; ransom; release; rescue; deliverance; as, the
     redemption of prisoners taken in war; the redemption of a
     ship and cargo. Specifically:
     (a) (Law) The liberation of an estate from a mortgage, or the
         taking back of property mortgaged, upon performance of
         the terms or conditions on which it was conveyed; also,
         the right of redeeming and reentering upon an estate
         mortgaged. See Equity of redemption, under Equity.
     (b) (Com.) Performance of the obligation stated in a note,
         bill, bond, or other evidence of debt, by making payment
         to the holder.
     (c) (Theol.) The procuring of God's favor by the sufferings
         and death of Christ; the ransom or deliverance of sinners
         from the bondage of sin and the penalties of God's
         violated law.
         [1913 Webster]
  
               In whom we have redemption through his blood.
                                                    --Eph. i. 7.
         [1913 Webster]

redemption - WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) :

  redemption
      n 1: (theology) the act of delivering from sin or saving from
           evil [syn: redemption, salvation]
      2: repayment of the principal amount of a debt or security at or
         before maturity (as when a corporation repurchases its own
         stock)
      3: the act of purchasing back something previously sold [syn:
         redemption, repurchase, buyback]

redemption - Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary :

  Redemption
  the purchase back of something that had been lost, by the
  payment of a ransom. The Greek word so rendered is
  _apolutrosis_, a word occurring nine times in Scripture, and
  always with the idea of a ransom or price paid, i.e., redemption
  by a lutron (see Matt. 20:28; Mark 10:45). There are instances
  in the LXX. Version of the Old Testament of the use of _lutron_
  in man's relation to man (Lev. 19:20; 25:51; Ex. 21:30; Num.
  35:31, 32; Isa. 45:13; Prov. 6:35), and in the same sense of
  man's relation to God (Num. 3:49; 18:15).
  
    There are many passages in the New Testament which represent
  Christ's sufferings under the idea of a ransom or price, and the
  result thereby secured is a purchase or redemption (comp. Acts
  20:28; 1 Cor. 6:19, 20; Gal. 3:13; 4:4, 5; Eph. 1:7; Col. 1:14;
  1 Tim. 2:5, 6; Titus 2:14; Heb. 9:12; 1 Pet. 1:18, 19; Rev.
  5:9). The idea running through all these texts, however various
  their reference, is that of payment made for our redemption. The
  debt against us is not viewed as simply cancelled, but is fully
  paid. Christ's blood or life, which he surrendered for them, is
  the "ransom" by which the deliverance of his people from the
  servitude of sin and from its penal consequences is secured. It
  is the plain doctrine of Scripture that "Christ saves us neither
  by the mere exercise of power, nor by his doctrine, nor by his
  example, nor by the moral influence which he exerted, nor by any
  subjective influence on his people, whether natural or mystical,
  but as a satisfaction to divine justice, as an expiation for
  sin, and as a ransom from the curse and authority of the law,
  thus reconciling us to God by making it consistent with his
  perfection to exercise mercy toward sinners" (Hodge's Systematic
  Theology).

redemption - Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856) :

  REDEMPTION, contracts. The act of taking back by the seller from the buyer a 
  thing which had been sold subject to th right of repurchase. 
       2. The right of redemption then is an agreement by which the seller 
  reserves to himself the power of taking back the thing sold by returning the 
  price paid for it. As to the fund out of which a mortgaged estate is to be 
  redeemed, see Payment. Vide Equity of redemption. 
  
  

redemption - Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 :

  90 Moby Thesaurus words for "redemption":
     absolution, adoption, amendment, amends, amnesty, atonement,
     change of allegiance, change of heart, change of mind,
     circumcision, compensation, composition, compromise, conversion,
     deliverance, delivery, exculpation, excuse, exemption, exoneration,
     expiation, expiatory offering, extrication, freeing, grace,
     immunity, improvement, indemnification, indemnity, liberation,
     lifesaving, making amends, making good, making right, making up,
     new birth, new life, pardon, peace offering, piaculum,
     propitiation, quittance, ransom, rebirth, recapture, reclaiming,
     reclamation, recompense, recoup, recoupment, recovery,
     recrudescence, recuperation, redeemedness, redress, reform,
     reformation, regainment, regeneration, release, remission,
     remission of sin, renascence, renewal, reoccupation, reparation,
     replevin, replevy, repossession, reprieve, rescue, restitution,
     restoration, resumption, retake, retaking, retrieval, retrieve,
     revindication, revival, salvage, salvation, satisfaction, saving,
     second birth, shrift, sparing, spiritual purification, squaring,
     trover