请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 Augustinian
释义

Definition of Augustinian in English:

Augustinian

adjective ˌɔːɡəˈstɪnɪənˌɔɡəˈstɪniən
  • 1Relating to St Augustine of Hippo or his doctrines.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Her Augustinian estimate of human nature enables her to discern that our worst temptations arise not from raw hatred but from disordered love.
    • He, too, holds the Augustinian view that in matters divine we need to love before we know.
    • Myrc and others viewed the Augustinian doctrine of salvation by grace as a deception of the devil and a heresy.
    • For this he could rely on the Augustinian argument that the use of force against religious deviation was justified both to protect orthodoxy and to compel heretics to abjure their errors for their own good.
    • Here we have medieval Augustinian evangelicalism at its most pure and sublime.
    • Before the Enlightenment, Christian theology in the Augustinian tradition provided the dominant paradigm for interpreting evil.
    • Allen finds continuity, however, in an enduring Augustinian counterposing of church and culture.
    • In promoting this call for true justice, the pope's challenge will be to temper his Augustinian skepticism about the earthly city with a sense of God's abiding presence in his world.
    • Niebuhr's critique stemmed from the Augustinian theology of original sin.
    • Luther takes a traditional Augustinian approach to the subject matter of theology, defining it as the knowledge of God and the self in mutual relation.
    • Bernard regularly served as papal diplomat to emperor and king, dedicated to his Augustinian vision of the harmony arising out of the right ordering of the powers of church and state.
  • 2Relating to a religious order observing a rule derived from St Augustine's writings.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In 1848 he took holy orders in the Augustinian monastery where he also became choirmaster.
    • In the aftermath of this conquest, Franciscan and Augustinian missionaries moved quickly into Michoacan to establish a Catholic presence.
    • You have the Augustinian teaching orders, which introduced Classical humanist methods of education for young people to Europe.
    • They followed the Augustinian rule and were divided into three classes: knights, chaplains, and serving brothers.
    • It certainly produced its share of deviants, among them the Augustinian friar who would destroy its unity, Martin Luther.
    • Luther, who had been an Augustinian monk in his youth, roundly condemned this whole idea.
    • The meeting was hosted by the official committee elected last September to liaise with the Augustinian order in deciding the best and most appropriate use for the Abbey complex when the Friars leave this Summer.
noun ˌɔːɡəˈstɪnɪənˌɔɡəˈstɪniən
  • 1A member of an Augustinian order.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Orders of monks and nuns multiplied over the years: Benedictines, Dominicans, Cistercians, Augustinians, Carmelites and others.
    • He joined the Augustinians and was ordained a priest in 1946.
    • Christian outposts founded by Dominicans, Franciscans, and Augustinians grew into towns.
    • Eventually, he placed a ban on the Augustinians, forbidding them from building any new convents or churches without express permission of the bishop.
    • By the mid-1400s the property was being used for religious purposes by the Augustinians, an association that ceased when the property was granted to Roger Jones.
    • The Church of Ireland congregation in Galway has offered its facilities at the Collegiate Church to the Augustinians to celebrate Mass there.
    • The Augustinians are now withdrawing from Ballyhaunis, they say, because of the ageing profile of their priests and the lack of vocations.
    • As a result, the work of the Augustinians on the Missions can be continued for the benefit of the less well off of Africa.
    • In a statement the Order says that ‘at their recent chapter assembly, the Irish Augustinians unanimously endorsed the re-organisation decisions of their Council.’
    • As he himself observes, contemporary Augustinians have been good and conscientious democrats.
  • 2An adherent of the doctrines of St Augustine.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We may be Augustinians in our theology, but we are all socialized to be Pelagians in our profession, to exaggerate the importance of personal effort and personal worthiness.
    • Ratzinger is a theological Augustinian who equates the heavenly city with the church and the earthly city with the world; hence the strong opposition between the church and the world in his thinking.
    • Orthodox Augustinians, however, assumed that Christ's return and the subsequent end of the world would be unannounced.

Rhymes

Argentinian, Arminian, Carthaginian, Darwinian, dominion, Guinean, Justinian, Ninian, Palestinian, Sardinian, Virginian
 
 

Definition of Augustinian in US English:

Augustinian

adjectiveˌɔɡəˈstɪniənˌôɡəˈstinēən
  • 1Relating to St. Augustine of Hippo or his theological doctrines.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Niebuhr's critique stemmed from the Augustinian theology of original sin.
    • Myrc and others viewed the Augustinian doctrine of salvation by grace as a deception of the devil and a heresy.
    • Allen finds continuity, however, in an enduring Augustinian counterposing of church and culture.
    • He, too, holds the Augustinian view that in matters divine we need to love before we know.
    • In promoting this call for true justice, the pope's challenge will be to temper his Augustinian skepticism about the earthly city with a sense of God's abiding presence in his world.
    • Before the Enlightenment, Christian theology in the Augustinian tradition provided the dominant paradigm for interpreting evil.
    • For this he could rely on the Augustinian argument that the use of force against religious deviation was justified both to protect orthodoxy and to compel heretics to abjure their errors for their own good.
    • Here we have medieval Augustinian evangelicalism at its most pure and sublime.
    • Her Augustinian estimate of human nature enables her to discern that our worst temptations arise not from raw hatred but from disordered love.
    • Luther takes a traditional Augustinian approach to the subject matter of theology, defining it as the knowledge of God and the self in mutual relation.
    • Bernard regularly served as papal diplomat to emperor and king, dedicated to his Augustinian vision of the harmony arising out of the right ordering of the powers of church and state.
  • 2Relating to a religious order observing a rule derived from St. Augustine's writings.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The meeting was hosted by the official committee elected last September to liaise with the Augustinian order in deciding the best and most appropriate use for the Abbey complex when the Friars leave this Summer.
    • You have the Augustinian teaching orders, which introduced Classical humanist methods of education for young people to Europe.
    • In 1848 he took holy orders in the Augustinian monastery where he also became choirmaster.
    • Luther, who had been an Augustinian monk in his youth, roundly condemned this whole idea.
    • In the aftermath of this conquest, Franciscan and Augustinian missionaries moved quickly into Michoacan to establish a Catholic presence.
    • It certainly produced its share of deviants, among them the Augustinian friar who would destroy its unity, Martin Luther.
    • They followed the Augustinian rule and were divided into three classes: knights, chaplains, and serving brothers.
nounˌɔɡəˈstɪniənˌôɡəˈstinēən
  • 1A member of an Augustinian order.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In a statement the Order says that ‘at their recent chapter assembly, the Irish Augustinians unanimously endorsed the re-organisation decisions of their Council.’
    • The Church of Ireland congregation in Galway has offered its facilities at the Collegiate Church to the Augustinians to celebrate Mass there.
    • By the mid-1400s the property was being used for religious purposes by the Augustinians, an association that ceased when the property was granted to Roger Jones.
    • The Augustinians are now withdrawing from Ballyhaunis, they say, because of the ageing profile of their priests and the lack of vocations.
    • Christian outposts founded by Dominicans, Franciscans, and Augustinians grew into towns.
    • Orders of monks and nuns multiplied over the years: Benedictines, Dominicans, Cistercians, Augustinians, Carmelites and others.
    • Eventually, he placed a ban on the Augustinians, forbidding them from building any new convents or churches without express permission of the bishop.
    • As he himself observes, contemporary Augustinians have been good and conscientious democrats.
    • He joined the Augustinians and was ordained a priest in 1946.
    • As a result, the work of the Augustinians on the Missions can be continued for the benefit of the less well off of Africa.
  • 2An adherent of the doctrines of St. Augustine.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We may be Augustinians in our theology, but we are all socialized to be Pelagians in our profession, to exaggerate the importance of personal effort and personal worthiness.
    • Ratzinger is a theological Augustinian who equates the heavenly city with the church and the earthly city with the world; hence the strong opposition between the church and the world in his thinking.
    • Orthodox Augustinians, however, assumed that Christ's return and the subsequent end of the world would be unannounced.
 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/11/10 17:34:53