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  2. Salvation in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvation_in_Christianity

    In Christian theology, justification is God's act of removing the guilt and penalty of sin while at the same time making a sinner righteous through Christ's atoning sacrifice. The means of justification is an area of significant difference among Catholicism, Orthodoxy, and Protestantism.

  3. Sacrifice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacrifice

    Marcus Aurelius and members of the Imperial family offer sacrifice in gratitude for success against Germanic tribes: contemporary bas-relief, Capitoline Museum, Rome. Sacrifice is the offering of material possessions or the lives of animals or humans to a deity as an act of propitiation or worship.

  4. Korban - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korban

    Korban Tamid – the biblical command to offer a daily morning and evening sacrifice (Numbers 28:1–8, Leviticus 1:11) On Shabbat and Rosh Chodesh , Biblical verses regarding the mussaf offerings for those days ( Numbers 28:9–10 and Numbers 28:11–15 respectively) are recited after the Korban Tamid .

  5. Christian views on sin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_views_on_sin

    In Christianity, it is generally understood that the death of Jesus was a sacrifice that relieves believers of the burden of their sins. However, the actual meaning of this precept is very widely debated. The traditional teaching of some churches traces this idea of atonement to blood sacrifices in the ancient Hebraic faith.

  6. Paschal mystery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paschal_mystery

    The Paschal mystery is central to Catholic faith and theology relating to the history of salvation.According to the Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, "The Paschal Mystery of Jesus, which comprises his passion, death, resurrection, and glorification, stands at the center of the Christian faith because God's saving plan was accomplished once for all by the redemptive death of ...

  7. Jephthah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jephthah

    Jephthah led the Israelites in battle against Ammon and, in exchange for defeating the Ammonites, made a vow to sacrifice whatever would come out of the door of his house first. When his daughter was the first to come out of the house, he immediately regretted the vow, which bound him to sacrifice his daughter to God. Jephthah carried out his vow.

  8. Moloch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moloch

    The view that Moloch refers to a type of sacrifice was challenged by John Day and George Heider in the 1980s. [35] Day and Heider argued that it was unlikely that biblical commentators had misunderstood an earlier term for a sacrifice as a deity and that Leviticus 20:5's mention of "whoring after Moloch" necessarily implied that Moloch was a god.

  9. Mortification in Catholic theology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortification_in_Catholic...

    The Roman Catholic Church has often held mortification of the flesh (literally, "putting the flesh to death"), as a worthy spiritual discipline. The practice is rooted in the Bible: in the asceticism of the Old and New Testament saints, and in its theology, such as the remark by Saint Paul, in his Epistle to the Romans, where he states: "If you live a life of nature, you are marked out for ...