Godhead 英 ['gɒdhed]   美 ['ɡɑdhɛd]

Godhead

Godhead  英 ['gɒdhed] 美 ['ɡɑdhɛd]

n. 神性;上帝 

名词复数:godheads 

Ancient Egyptians, just as the Christians, recognized in words the unity of the Godhead, while worshipping many deities that possessed certain influence on human affairs. 古埃及人,正如基督徒一样,在口头上承认神性的统一但却崇拜许多神。
Christianity may be the world’s most embodied religion, built around the idea that God could become man and that a man—one, specific, historical being—could have Godhead in him. 基督教大概是世界上最能体现人类精神情感的宗教。 它的创立基于这样一种思想:上帝可以化身为人,而一个人——具体来说,一个历史人物,也可以具有神性。

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  • n. 神性;上帝
  • 1. Ancient Egyptians, just as the Christians, recognized in words the unity of the Godhead, while worshipping many deities that possessed certain influence on human affairs.

    古埃及人,正如基督徒一样,在口头上承认神性的统一但却崇拜许多神。

  • 2. Christianity may be the world’s most embodied religion, built around the idea that God could become man and that a man—one, specific, historical being—could have Godhead in him.

    基督教大概是世界上最能体现人类精神情感的宗教。 它的创立基于这样一种思想:上帝可以化身为人,而一个人——具体来说,一个历史人物,也可以具有神性。

  • 3. Forasmuch then as we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art and man's device.

    我们既是神所生的,就不当以为神的神性像人用手艺,心思,所雕刻的金,银,石。

  • godhead (n.) c. 1200, "divine nature, deity, divinity," from god + Middle English -hede (see -head). Along with maidenhead, the sole survival of this form of the suffix. Old English had godhad "divine nature." Parallel form godhood is from early 13c., now chiefly restricted to "state or condition of being a god."
god·head / ˈɡɒdhed ; NAmE ˈɡɑːdhed / noun the Godhead [singular ] ( formal) used in the Christian religion to mean God, including the Father, Son and Holy Spirit (基督教中指上帝,包括圣父、圣子和圣灵)上帝 godhead godheads god·head / ˈɡɒdhed ; NAmE ˈɡɑːdhed /
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