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      • From an adjective prefixed to the name of a canonized person, it came to be used in English by c. 1200 as a noun, "a specific canonized Christian," also "one of the elect, a member of the body of Christ, one consecrated or set apart to the service of God," also in an Old Testament sense "a pre-Christian prophet."
      www.etymonline.com › word › sanctimony
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  2. Dec 8, 2021 · From an adjective prefixed to the name of a canonized person, it came to be used in English by c. 1200 as a noun, "a specific canonized Christian," also "one of the elect, a member of the body of Christ, one consecrated or set apart to the service of God," also in an Old Testament sense "a pre-Christian prophet."

    • Français (French)

      sanctimony (n.) Les années 1530, "piété, dévotion,...

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      sanctimony 뜻: 신성함; 1530년대, "신앙심, 경건함, 성스러움"은 현재는 사용되지 않는...

    • Italiano (Italian)

      Significato di sanctimony: santità; 1530s, "pietà,...

    • Pragmatic

      pragmatic. (adj.). 1610s, "meddlesome, impertinently busy,"...

    • Sanctuary

      sanctuary. (n.). early 14c., seintuarie, sentwary, etc.,...

    • Sanctity

      "holiness, godliness, blessedness," from Old French...

    • Sanctify

      "to consecrate, set apart for sacred use;" c. 1400, "to...

  3. The First Council of Nicaea (in modern Turkey), called by Constantine in (325), and the First Council of Constantinople called by Theodosius in 381, produced an affirmation of tradition in the form of the Nicene Creed.

  4. The earliest known use of the noun sanctimony is in the mid 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for sanctimony is from 1541, in the writing of Thomas Elyot, humanist and diplomat.

  5. Dec 6, 2022 · It seems that the church father Tertullian (AD 160–225) was the first to apply the term Trinity to God. Tertullian uses the term in Against Praxeus, written in 213 to explain and defend the Trinity against the teaching of his contemporary Praxeus, who espoused the Monarchian heresy.

  6. Jan 20, 2024 · In the November/December 2012 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review, Dead Sea Scroll and early Christianity scholar Geza Vermes explored the origin of Christianity by examining the characteristics of the Jewish Jesus movement to see how it developed into a distinctly gentile religion.

  7. Etymology. Middle French sanctimonie, from Latin sanctimonia, from sanctus. First Known Use. 1534, in the meaning defined at sense 1. Time Traveler. The first known use of sanctimony was in 1534. See more words from the same year. Dictionary Entries Near sanctimony.

  8. Jan 13, 2023 · As early as the sixth century, St. Caesarius (470–542), the bishop of Arles and one of Christianity’s first best-selling authors, rebuked Christians who signed themselves while on their way to steal or commit adultery. But no trace of superstition or magic marred the sign of the cross in its origins.

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