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  2. Grace and favour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_and_favour

    A grace-and-favour home is a residential property owned by a monarch, government, or other owner and leased rent-free to a person as part of the perquisites of their employment, or in gratitude for services rendered. [1] Usage of the term is chiefly British. [1]

  3. Grace & Favour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_&_Favour

    A "grace and favour" is a home or other property owned by a monarch but given to the use of a faithful retainer upon retirement, as with the retired characters in this series. "Grace" is the surname of the owner of Grace Brothers (the fictional department store where the characters had previously worked) who had also been the previous owner of ...

  4. Divine grace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_grace

    The key difference between Shinran's school and other schools of Pure Land Buddhism is the idea that even this faith and the resulting small effort of reciting Amida's name is impossible without the intervening grace of Amida Buddha working in the deluded human being through the power of Amida's primal vow. Therefore, the recitation of Amida's ...

  5. Grace in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_in_Christianity

    The Old Testament use of the word includes the concept that those showing favor do gracious deeds, or acts of grace, such as being kind to the poor and showing generosity. [14] Descriptions of God's graciousness abound in the Torah / Pentateuch , for example in Deuteronomy 7:8 [ 16 ] and Numbers 6:24–27. [ 17 ]

  6. Chesed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chesed

    making peace between a person and another human being. A person who embodies chesed is known as a chasid ( hasid , חסיד ), one who is faithful to the covenant and who goes "above and beyond that which is normally required" [ 14 ] and a number of groups throughout Jewish history which focus on going "above and beyond" have called themselves ...

  7. Means of grace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Means_of_grace

    The means of grace in Christian theology are those things (the means) through which God gives grace. Just what this grace entails is interpreted in various ways: generally speaking, some see it as God blessing humankind so as to sustain and empower the Christian life; others see it as forgiveness, life, and salvation .

  8. Good works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_works

    It is up to us to commit to and acquire faith through God's mercy, so that we will see the need and have the will to do good works and deeds of righteousness, in the hope we will obtain God's final grace as the last Judgment. Good works is "a necessary consequence of a faith-filled heart," but it is only part of the requirement of salvation ...

  9. Common grace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_grace

    Common grace is a theological concept in Protestant Christianity, developed primarily in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Reformed/Calvinistic thought, referring to the grace of God that is either common to all humankind, or common to everyone within a particular sphere of influence (limited only by unnecessary cultural factors). It is common ...