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HOME | Definition of sin (SIN, Sin)


    Sin \Sin\, adv., prep., & conj.
    Old form of Since. [Obs. or Prov. Eng. & Scot.]
    [1913 Webster]

    Sin that his lord was twenty year of age. --Chaucer.
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    Sin \Sin\, n. [OE. sinne, AS. synn, syn; akin to D. zonde, OS.
    sundia, OHG. sunta, G. s["u]nde, Icel., Dan. & Sw. synd, L.
    sons, sontis, guilty, perhaps originally from the p. pr. of
    the verb signifying, to be, and meaning, the one who it is.
    Cf. Authentic, Sooth.]
    1. Transgression of the law of God; disobedience of the
    divine command; any violation of God's will, either in
    purpose or conduct; moral deficiency in the character;
    iniquity; as, sins of omission and sins of commission.
    [1913 Webster]

    Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin.
    --John viii.
    34.
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    Sin is the transgression of the law. --1 John iii.
    4.
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    I think 't no sin.
    To cozen him that would unjustly win. --Shak.
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    Enthralled
    By sin to foul, exorbitant desires. --Milton.
    [1913 Webster]

    2. An offense, in general; a violation of propriety; a
    misdemeanor; as, a sin against good manners.
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    I grant that poetry's a crying sin. --Pope.
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    3. A sin offering; a sacrifice for sin.
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    He hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin.
    --2 Cor. v.
    21.
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    4. An embodiment of sin; a very wicked person. [R.]
    [1913 Webster]

    Thy ambition,
    Thou scarlet sin, robbed this bewailing land
    Of noble Buckingham. --Shak.
    [1913 Webster]

    Note: Sin is used in the formation of some compound words of
    obvious signification; as, sin-born; sin-bred,
    sin-oppressed, sin-polluted, and the like.
    [1913 Webster]

    Actual sin, Canonical sins, Original sin, Venial sin.
    See under Actual, Canonical, etc.

    Deadly sins, or Mortal sins (R. C. Ch.), willful and
    deliberate transgressions, which take away divine grace;
    -- in distinction from vental sins. The seven deadly sins
    are pride, covetousness, lust, wrath, gluttony, envy, and
    sloth.

    Sin eater, a man who (according to a former practice in
    England) for a small gratuity ate a piece of bread laid on
    the chest of a dead person, whereby he was supposed to
    have taken the sins of the dead person upon himself.

    Sin offering, a sacrifice for sin; something offered as an
    expiation for sin.
    [1913 Webster]

    Syn: Iniquity; wickedness; wrong. See Crime.
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    Sin \Sin\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Sinned; p. pr. & vb. n.
    Sinning.] [OE. sinnen, singen, sinegen, AS. syngian. See
    Sin, n.]
    1. To depart voluntarily from the path of duty prescribed by
    God to man; to violate the divine law in any particular,
    by actual transgression or by the neglect or nonobservance
    of its injunctions; to violate any known rule of duty; --
    often followed by against.
    [1913 Webster]

    Against thee, thee only, have I sinned. --Ps. li. 4.
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    All have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.
    --Rom. iii.
    23.
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    2. To violate human rights, law, or propriety; to commit an
    offense; to trespass; to transgress.
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    I am a man
    More sinned against than sinning. --Shak.
    [1913 Webster]

    Who but wishes to invert the laws
    Of order, sins against the eternal cause. --Pope.
    [1913 Webster] Sinaic

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    sin
    n 1: estrangement from god [syn: sinfulness, wickedness]
    2: an act that is regarded by theologians as a transgression of
    God's will [syn: sinning]
    3: ratio of the opposite side to the hypotenuse of a
    right-angled triangle [syn: sine]
    4: (Akkadian) god of the moon; counterpart of Sumerian Nanna
    5: the 21st letter of the Hebrew alphabet
    6: violent and excited activity; "they began to fight like sin"
    [syn: hell]
    v 1: commit a sin; violate a law of God or a moral law [syn: transgress,
    trespass]
    2: commit a faux pas or a fault or make a serious mistake; "I
    blundered during the job interview" [syn: blunder, boob,
    goof]
    [also: sinning, sinned]

    WordNet (r) 2.0


    120 Moby Thesaurus words for "sin":
    aberrancy, aberration, abomination, atrocity, bad, breach,
    commit sin, crime, crime against humanity, criminal tendency,
    criminality, criminosis, deadly sin, debt, defectiveness,
    deficiency, delinquency, delusion, demerit, dereliction, deviancy,
    diablerie, disgrace, distortion, do amiss, do wrong, enormity, err,
    errancy, erroneousness, error, evil, evil courses, evildoing,
    failure, fallaciousness, fallacy, falseness, falsity, fault,
    faultiness, feloniousness, felony, flaw, flawedness, genocide,
    guilty act, hamartia, heavy sin, heresy, heterodoxy, illusion,
    impropriety, indiscretion, inexpiable sin, infamy, iniquity,
    injury, injustice, knavery, lapse, lawbreaking, malefaction,
    malfeasance, malpractice, malum, malversation, minor wrong,
    misapplication, misconduct, misconstruction, misdeed, misdemeanor,
    misdoing, misfeasance, misinterpretation, misjudgment, misprision,
    misprision of treason, mortal sin, nonfeasance, obliquity, offend,
    offense, omission, outrage, peccadillo, peccancy, perversion,
    positive misprision, reprobacy, scandal, self-contradiction, shame,
    shortcoming, sin of commission, sin of omission, sinful act,
    sinfulness, slip, thou scarlet sin, tort, transgress,
    transgression, trespass, trip, unorthodoxy, untrueness, untruth,
    untruthfulness, unutterable sin, venial sin, vice, viciousness,
    villainy, wickedness, wrong, wrong conduct, wrongdoing,
    wrongness

    Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0


    Sin
    is "any want of conformity unto or transgression of the law of
    God" (1 John 3:4; Rom. 4:15), in the inward state and habit of
    the soul, as well as in the outward conduct of the life, whether
    by omission or commission (Rom. 6:12-17; 7:5-24). It is "not a
    mere violation of the law of our constitution, nor of the system
    of things, but an offence against a personal lawgiver and moral
    governor who vindicates his law with penalties. The soul that
    sins is always conscious that his sin is (1) intrinsically vile
    and polluting, and (2) that it justly deserves punishment, and
    calls down the righteous wrath of God. Hence sin carries with it
    two inalienable characters, (1) ill-desert, guilt (reatus); and
    (2) pollution (macula).", Hodge's Outlines.

    The moral character of a man's actions is determined by the
    moral state of his heart. The disposition to sin, or the habit
    of the soul that leads to the sinful act, is itself also sin
    (Rom. 6:12-17; Gal. 5:17; James 1:14, 15).

    The origin of sin is a mystery, and must for ever remain such
    to us. It is plain that for some reason God has permitted sin to
    enter this world, and that is all we know. His permitting it,
    however, in no way makes God the author of sin.

    Adam's sin (Gen. 3:1-6) consisted in his yielding to the
    assaults of temptation and eating the forbidden fruit. It
    involved in it, (1) the sin of unbelief, virtually making God a
    liar; and (2) the guilt of disobedience to a positive command.
    By this sin he became an apostate from God, a rebel in arms
    against his Creator. He lost the favour of God and communion
    with him; his whole nature became depraved, and he incurred the
    penalty involved in the covenant of works.

    Original sin. "Our first parents being the root of all
    mankind, the guilt of their sin was imputed, and the same death
    in sin and corrupted nature were conveyed to all their
    posterity, descending from them by ordinary generation." Adam
    was constituted by God the federal head and representative of
    all his posterity, as he was also their natural head, and
    therefore when he fell they fell with him (Rom. 5:12-21; 1 Cor.
    15:22-45). His probation was their probation, and his fall their
    fall. Because of Adam's first sin all his posterity came into
    the world in a state of sin and condemnation, i.e., (1) a state
    of moral corruption, and (2) of guilt, as having judicially
    imputed to them the guilt of Adam's first sin.

    "Original sin" is frequently and properly used to denote only
    the moral corruption of their whole nature inherited by all men
    from Adam. This inherited moral corruption consists in, (1) the
    loss of original righteousness; and (2) the presence of a
    constant proneness to evil, which is the root and origin of all
    actual sin. It is called "sin" (Rom. 6:12, 14, 17; 7:5-17), the
    "flesh" (Gal. 5:17, 24), "lust" (James 1:14, 15), the "body of
    sin" (Rom. 6:6), "ignorance," "blindness of heart," "alienation
    from the life of God" (Eph. 4:18, 19). It influences and
    depraves the whole man, and its tendency is still downward to
    deeper and deeper corruption, there remaining no recuperative
    element in the soul. It is a total depravity, and it is also
    universally inherited by all the natural descendants of Adam
    (Rom. 3:10-23; 5:12-21; 8:7). Pelagians deny original sin, and
    regard man as by nature morally and spiritually well;
    semi-Pelagians regard him as morally sick; Augustinians, or, as
    they are also called, Calvinists, regard man as described above,
    spiritually dead (Eph. 2:1; 1 John 3:14).

    The doctrine of original sin is proved, (1.) From the fact of
    the universal sinfulness of men. "There is no man that sinneth
    not" (1 Kings 8:46; Isa. 53:6; Ps. 130:3; Rom. 3:19, 22, 23;
    Gal. 3:22). (2.) From the total depravity of man. All men are
    declared to be destitute of any principle of spiritual life;
    man's apostasy from God is total and complete (Job 15:14-16;
    Gen. 6:5,6). (3.) From its early manifestation (Ps. 58:3; Prov.
    22:15). (4.) It is proved also from the necessity, absolutely
    and universally, of regeneration (John 3:3; 2 Cor. 5:17). (5.)
    From the universality of death (Rom. 5:12-20).

    Various kinds of sin are mentioned, (1.) "Presumptuous sins,"
    or as literally rendered, "sins with an uplifted hand", i.e.,
    defiant acts of sin, in contrast with "errors" or
    "inadvertencies" (Ps. 19:13). (2.) "Secret", i.e., hidden sins
    (19:12); sins which escape the notice of the soul. (3.) "Sin
    against the Holy Ghost" (q.v.), or a "sin unto death" (Matt.
    12:31, 32; 1 John 5:16), which amounts to a wilful rejection of
    grace.

    Sin, a city in Egypt, called by the Greeks Pelusium, which
    means, as does also the Hebrew name, "clayey" or "muddy," so
    called from the abundance of clay found there. It is called by
    Ezekel (Ezek. 30:15) "the strength of Egypt, "thus denoting its
    importance as a fortified city. It has been identified with the
    modern Tineh, "a miry place," where its ruins are to be found.
    Of its boasted magnificence only four red granite columns
    remain, and some few fragments of others.

    Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary


    Sin, bush

    Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)




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