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词汇 antinomian
释义

Definition of antinomian in English:

antinomian

adjectiveantɪˈnəʊmɪənˌan(t)ēˈnōmēən
  • Denoting or relating to antinomians or their beliefs.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • These beliefs mark the outer limit of diversity in the generally antinomian culture of contemporary American liberalism.
    • Following Coughlin's analysis, we see how the laxity encouraged by an antinomian atmosphere results in the countenancing of sinful and criminal behavior which, in turn, produces a legalistic reaction.
    • Oddly enough, with the exception of those related to sex, American Christians tend to take an antinomian view of ‘physical sins.’
    • Blake was not an isolated rebel but part of an antinomian tradition, a radical underground, those who wrote within the assumptions of ‘enthusiasm,’ dating back at least to the seventeenth-century religious revolutionaries.
    • This strong sense of predestination is a characteristic element in Greene's work and explains much of its antinomian flavor.
    • Back distinguishes an avant garde from an antinomian stance by situating the latter ‘firmly within a tradition as much as she is in defiance of that tradition’.
    • It is not that the themes of modernization and antinomian desire could not be found in these texts, but that neglecting them makes it easier to evade the problem of rhetoric and audience in Blake.
    • I wonder if any acts my friends or I have ever engaged in, in tearooms or outside them, would have antinomian claims to validity.
    • Indeed, her writing falls within an American antinomian tradition and can be seen as an act of sustained radical revisionist historiography.
    • On one hand, Luther condemned Agricola's antinomian theology for its rejection of the law in the Christian life.
    • Health legislation is being used not to improve the state of the nation's health but to undermine its old, family-based values and to replace them with the antinomian morality of the urban elite.
    • They maintain a significant hold on political power; and since a lot of them have an antinomian streak, I doubt the rule of law would stand in their way, should we manage to loosen their grip.
    • Accusations of troublemaking and antinomian behaviour ensued, and he found himself under attack.
    • Of course, 1968 was fueled by powerful utopian and antinomian impulses.
    • He rejects antinomian ideas and upholds the believer's responsibility to co-operate with God in sanctification.
    • The antinomian Blake does, however, have at least one similarity with the oppositional Austen.
    • By the late sixties, however, critics routinely derided Capp as bitter and out of touch; the antinomian values of the generation that he mocked were ascendant.
    • There are offenders in the rich world, the worst in this regard, in some respects, being the French, though the antinomian intellectuals of Britain and America are not much better.
    • Since I haven't kept up with every antinomian argument since the time of the Huguenots, I only understand about half of his rants.
    • He would seem to be offering a kind of antinomian horology at worst, at best an unctuous pragmatism of local mores.
nounantɪˈnəʊmɪənˌan(t)ēˈnōmēən
  • A person who believes that Christians are released by grace from the obligation of observing the moral law.

    (与)唯信仰论(有关)的(认为蒙上帝恩典的基督教徒可不遵守道德律)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Why should parents fund the moral decivilization of their children at the hands of tenured antinomians?
    • Some, notably the antinomians, were theologically unorthodox; their obsession with personal “conversion” led them to question whether the “visible saints” governing the colony were truly saintly.
    • I don't think you made a real distinction between eternal security and perseverance of the saints in your article, and yes, dealing with antinomians has made me sensitive to that.
    • Antinomians will not yield it lawful to a believer to pray for remission of sins.
    • I'm not an Antinomian, but I've thought about it!
    • In my first pastorate, I had often to battle with Antinomians,—that is, people who held that, because they believed themselves to be elect, they might live as they liked.
    • Liberals find it necessary to deny recurring suspicions that they are antinomians, moral relativists, and secularists set on removing religious values from the public square.
    • In the context of the Boston church, which already taught a Covenant of Grace, the objections of the Antinomians centered on the concept of sanctification.

Derivatives

  • antinomianism

  • noun
    • There are the two extremes of legalism and antinomianism to avoid.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Never underestimate the power of antinomianism veiled in the language of love.
      • The specific issue of antinomianism perks my interest.
      • The church that once accused Luther's teachings of antinomianism has consistently made room for repeat offenders, the kind of sinners whom Protestants are quick to remove from church rolls.
      • It genders the antinomianism which is going to cause a large part of professing Christendom as well as the world, to take the mark of the Beast when he appears.
      • The concern about antinomianism shown by Schlissel, Shepherd and others should also be shown by other evangelicals.
      • The whole lecture has a morally subversive ring, and the savour of antinomianism about it.
      • The history of the Church, Coughlin notes, displays periods of both legalism and antinomianism.
      • God's law is holy, just, and good, and no one wants the gospel of grace accused of antinomianism.
      • The answer often lies as much in titillation as in antinomianism.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from medieval Latin Antinomi, the name of a 16th-century sect in Germany alleged to hold this view, from Greek anti- 'opposite, against' + nomos 'law'.

Definition of antinomian in US English:

antinomian

adjectiveˌan(t)ēˈnōmēən
  • Relating to the view that Christians are released by grace from the obligation of observing the moral law.

    (与)唯信仰论(有关)的(认为蒙上帝恩典的基督教徒可不遵守道德律)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I wonder if any acts my friends or I have ever engaged in, in tearooms or outside them, would have antinomian claims to validity.
    • By the late sixties, however, critics routinely derided Capp as bitter and out of touch; the antinomian values of the generation that he mocked were ascendant.
    • They maintain a significant hold on political power; and since a lot of them have an antinomian streak, I doubt the rule of law would stand in their way, should we manage to loosen their grip.
    • This strong sense of predestination is a characteristic element in Greene's work and explains much of its antinomian flavor.
    • There are offenders in the rich world, the worst in this regard, in some respects, being the French, though the antinomian intellectuals of Britain and America are not much better.
    • He rejects antinomian ideas and upholds the believer's responsibility to co-operate with God in sanctification.
    • The antinomian Blake does, however, have at least one similarity with the oppositional Austen.
    • Health legislation is being used not to improve the state of the nation's health but to undermine its old, family-based values and to replace them with the antinomian morality of the urban elite.
    • Of course, 1968 was fueled by powerful utopian and antinomian impulses.
    • Back distinguishes an avant garde from an antinomian stance by situating the latter ‘firmly within a tradition as much as she is in defiance of that tradition’.
    • Since I haven't kept up with every antinomian argument since the time of the Huguenots, I only understand about half of his rants.
    • Indeed, her writing falls within an American antinomian tradition and can be seen as an act of sustained radical revisionist historiography.
    • On one hand, Luther condemned Agricola's antinomian theology for its rejection of the law in the Christian life.
    • Blake was not an isolated rebel but part of an antinomian tradition, a radical underground, those who wrote within the assumptions of ‘enthusiasm,’ dating back at least to the seventeenth-century religious revolutionaries.
    • Accusations of troublemaking and antinomian behaviour ensued, and he found himself under attack.
    • Following Coughlin's analysis, we see how the laxity encouraged by an antinomian atmosphere results in the countenancing of sinful and criminal behavior which, in turn, produces a legalistic reaction.
    • It is not that the themes of modernization and antinomian desire could not be found in these texts, but that neglecting them makes it easier to evade the problem of rhetoric and audience in Blake.
    • He would seem to be offering a kind of antinomian horology at worst, at best an unctuous pragmatism of local mores.
    • Oddly enough, with the exception of those related to sex, American Christians tend to take an antinomian view of ‘physical sins.’
    • These beliefs mark the outer limit of diversity in the generally antinomian culture of contemporary American liberalism.
nounˌan(t)ēˈnōmēən
  • A person holding antinomian beliefs.

    持唯信仰论的人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Why should parents fund the moral decivilization of their children at the hands of tenured antinomians?
    • Liberals find it necessary to deny recurring suspicions that they are antinomians, moral relativists, and secularists set on removing religious values from the public square.
    • Some, notably the antinomians, were theologically unorthodox; their obsession with personal “conversion” led them to question whether the “visible saints” governing the colony were truly saintly.
    • I don't think you made a real distinction between eternal security and perseverance of the saints in your article, and yes, dealing with antinomians has made me sensitive to that.
    • I'm not an Antinomian, but I've thought about it!
    • In the context of the Boston church, which already taught a Covenant of Grace, the objections of the Antinomians centered on the concept of sanctification.
    • Antinomians will not yield it lawful to a believer to pray for remission of sins.
    • In my first pastorate, I had often to battle with Antinomians,—that is, people who held that, because they believed themselves to be elect, they might live as they liked.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from medieval Latin Antinomi, the name of a 16th-century sect in Germany alleged to hold this view, from Greek anti- ‘opposite, against’ + nomos ‘law’.

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