• Redemptor

    Origin

    From , redemptoure, from , from .

    Full definition of redemptor

    Noun

    redemptor

    (plural redemptors)
    1. One who redeems (especially used of Jesus).
      • 1512, The History of Helyas, Knight of the Swan. From the Edition Printed by Copland., Ryght swet lady and sacred mayden mother of the savyour and redemptor Jesu Chryst what syne myght I have commysed towarde thy dere sonne Jesu Christ that .vii. dogges ben yssued out of my bodi wherbi I have lost the love of my husband the moste pleasaunt and the best that ever woman might have chosen.
      • 1518?, Domynike Mancyn, Here Begynneth a Ryght Frutefull Treatyse / Intituled ...
        The Myrrour of Good Maners / Cõteynyng the .iiii. Vertues / Called Cardynall Chapter Howe no couetous wretche can haue the trewe vertu of magnanimite, Nor this deth is graunted / nat vnto euery man // Whiche coueyte for to dye: for ChriÅ¿t our Å¿auyour // Some wold fayne be martyrs / by Å¿werde
        but they ne can // That is a Å¿pecy all grace / of our dere redemptour // But this Å¿ayd other deth / to vanquyÅ¿Å¿he all errour // To tame this frayle body / and luÅ¿t to mortyfy // To euery one wyllyng: is graunted cõmouly
      • 1574, Iohn Caluine, The Institution of Christian Religion, And the redemptor Å¿ hall come to Sion,and vnto thẽ that turne frõ their vvickednes in Iacob.
      • 1600, John Hamilton, Catholic Tractates of the Sixteenth Century, 1573-1600 Chapter Ane Catholik and Facile Traictise, Gif Christs pretious bluid hes bein fruictful for the instruction of your Christian forbearis in the veritie of trew religion, and brocht thame to the æternel felicitie of immortal gloire, be his trew seruice: consider, I beseik your Maiestie, for the loue ye aucht to the honor of your redempteur, and caire ye suld haue of your awin saluation, what ye can answere to your souerain and seuere Iudge, when he sal ask of yow in the day of discussion, why ye seruit him not in the vnitie of that faith, ...
      • Wallace Ben-Hur|chapter=XI|page=352|passage=“Six to one—the difference between a Roman and a Jew. And, having found it, now, O redemptor of the flesh of swine, let us on. The amount—and quickly. The consul may send for thee, and I will then be bereft.”
      • 18 July 1896, Its redeemability converts the redemptors into rent-chargers, and, according to an official report quoted in Mr. Dowell’s “History of Taxation in England,” ever since Pitt’s rearrangement the unredeemed amounts have been regarded as a fixed charge on properties, subject to which they have been bought and sold many times over.
      • 1969, Holy Laughter: Essays on Religion in the Comic Perspective, The clown and the comedian—morphologically, if not historically, related as they are to the seasonal drama portraying the return of cosmos to chaos—are the quaint redemptors of the carnival who recapture that formless paradise of carefree naïveté prior to the often painful and alienating distinctions between man and animal, male and female, good and evil, sacred and profane.
      • 1989, Marginated Groups in Spanish and Portuguese History: Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Meeting of the Society for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, April 1986, During the middle of the century, the relatively uniform view of the poor as part of the natural order split into two conflicting positions: one comprising the earlier view of the poor as the redemptors of the rich, meekly accepting their lot in much the same way as the lepers who had no choice but to be stigmatized by their disease; and that of the poor as antisocial reprobates categorized as socially undesirable.

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