Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sin> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 46 of
46
with 100 items per page.
- Sin abstract "In Abrahamic contexts, sin is the act of violating God's will. Sin can also be viewed as anything that violates the ideal relationship between an individual and God; or as any diversion from the ideal order for human living. To sin has been defined as "to miss the mark".Sins fall in a spectrum from minor errors to deadly misdeeds. Catholicism regards the least corrupt sins as venial sins—which are part of human living and carry immediate consequences on earth, and, if unrepented for, more painful purgation, assuming the person is destined to heaven, as it is written in the formation letter "Purgatory", "most of the early Fathers of the Church speak of a cleansing fire, though we cannot tell whether this means actual or spiritual fire." Conversely, sins of great evil are mortal sins—which bring the consequence of hell if they are not addressed either through an act of perfect contrition or going to confession about them.Sins of careless living are consideredTemplate:By whom? destructive and lead to greater sins. Another concept of sin deals with things that exist on Earth but not in Heaven. Food, for example, while a necessary good for the (health of the temporal) body, is not of (eternal) transcendental living and therefore its excessive savoring is considered a sin.Sin has also been categorizedTemplate:By whom? as an inevitable act that was passed down from generation to generation by the common ancestor, Adam. Like a disease, sin is the curse that poisons the heart of every human thereafter. It is believed that every person is completely full of sin and cannot help thinking and acting on it. Romans 3:22-24 states: "This righteousness is given through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe. There is no difference between Jew and Gentile, / for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, / and all are justified freely by His grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus."".
- Sin thumbnail Forbidden_fruit.jpg?width=300.
- Sin wikiPageExternalLink 27.
- Sin wikiPageExternalLink 73340159.
- Sin wikiPageExternalLink __P6B.HTM.
- Sin wikiPageID "28307".
- Sin wikiPageRevisionID "604675086".
- Sin hasPhotoCollection Sin.
- Sin subject Category:Christian_hamartiology.
- Sin subject Category:Christian_philosophy.
- Sin subject Category:Crimes_in_religion.
- Sin subject Category:Religious_belief_and_doctrine.
- Sin subject Category:Religious_terminology.
- Sin subject Category:Sin.
- Sin comment "In Abrahamic contexts, sin is the act of violating God's will. Sin can also be viewed as anything that violates the ideal relationship between an individual and God; or as any diversion from the ideal order for human living. To sin has been defined as "to miss the mark".Sins fall in a spectrum from minor errors to deadly misdeeds.".
- Sin label "Grzech".
- Sin label "Pecado".
- Sin label "Pecado".
- Sin label "Peccato".
- Sin label "Péché".
- Sin label "Sin".
- Sin label "Sünde".
- Sin label "Zonde".
- Sin label "Грех".
- Sin label "خطيئة".
- Sin label "宗教における罪".
- Sin label "罪 (宗教)".
- Sin sameAs Hřích.
- Sin sameAs Sünde.
- Sin sameAs Αμαρτία.
- Sin sameAs Pecado.
- Sin sameAs Bekatu.
- Sin sameAs Péché.
- Sin sameAs Dosa.
- Sin sameAs Peccato.
- Sin sameAs 宗教における罪.
- Sin sameAs 죄.
- Sin sameAs Zonde.
- Sin sameAs Grzech.
- Sin sameAs Pecado.
- Sin sameAs m.0709n.
- Sin sameAs Q60227.
- Sin sameAs Q60227.
- Sin wasDerivedFrom Sin?oldid=604675086.
- Sin depiction Forbidden_fruit.jpg.
- Sin isPrimaryTopicOf Sin.