eschaton


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Synonyms for eschaton

(New Testament) day at the end of time following Armageddon when God will decree the fates of all individual humans according to the good and evil of their earthly lives

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
And it places more continuity between seeing God today and seeing God in the eschaton.
Re-divinization causes the transfer of meaning from the transcendent God and human existence to history the result of which was an immanentization of Christian eschaton and spread of the the "end of story" idea that was the basis of political religions.
Para Miranda, la verdad del evangelio proferida por el Nuevo Testamento consiste en la antedicha esperanza de realizacion del eschaton. Miranda se propone demostrar este acerto en El ser y el mesias a partir de una caracterizacion exegetica del evangelio y las cartas de Juan.
Hoffman 1) expects a redemptive eschaton and she, in the end, 2) reveals that she really believes that Jesus will return in a Second Coming when he will wipe away all tears.
Often through his use of Twitter, Trump has inspired reveries in white nationalist and anti-Semitic circles as easily as he's signaled eschaton to liberals and many conservatives.
Even when resurrection is delayed to the eschaton, it still depends on God's authoritarian power.
Some interpretations of the Christian "eschaton," or ending, present a quite different scenario from the common trope of the rapture.
McC notes, "The vision of the eschaton in Evagrius's Great Letter ...
On the penultimate Sunday of the liturgical year, the Church invites her children to focus on the eschaton, the last realities: Death, afterlife, judgment, and reward or punishment.
However, three bloggers-Josh Marshall, Glenn Reynolds, and Atrios-picked up the story and wrote about it on their online blogs Talking Points, Instapundit, and Eschaton respectively (p.
Will had taken to his Washington Post column to decry Bradford's attachment to the "nostalgic Confederate remnant within the conservative movement." Among Bradford's offenses was proposing that Lincoln was a "Gnostic" in the sense that Voegelin used the term, a philosophical radical seeking to "immanentize the eschaton." Corrington himself had a more concrete complaint about the 16th president: as he put it in a 1964 letter to Anthony Blond, the British editor who had published And Wait for the Night, Lincoln stood "in relation to the South very much as Khrushchev did to Hungary, as the United Nations apparatchiks did to Katanga."
Richard Middleton (Professor of Biblical Worldview and Exegesis, Northeastern Seminary and Adjunct Professor of Theology, Roberts Wesleyan College) is a 336 page treatise organized and presented in five major parts: From Creation to Eschaton; Holistic Salvation in the Old Testament; The New Testament's Vision of Cosmic Renewal; Problem Texts for Holistic Eschatology; The Ethics of the Kingdom.
“The Common Book of Witchcraft and Wicca” has been published via Eschaton Books by Witch School International (http://www.WitchSchool.com), the world's premier school of Witchcraft, which is itself no stranger to controversy.