forgiveness
forgiveness A re-establishment of personal relations after a rupture. Although in the OT God does not forgive automatically, as though that is what he exists for, he is described as always ready to forgive when the right conditions are in place (Neh. 9: 17). To a penitent sinner God's forgiveness is complete (Isa. 43: 25). The OT system of
sacrifices was designed as a concrete expression of repentance enabling God's forgiveness to be bestowed and guilt expiated.
In the NT there is the same emphasis on God's forgiveness, sometimes activated by Jesus himself (Mark 2: 5–6), and in the Church there is to be provision for members forgiving each other (John 20: 23; Jas. 5: 13–16) and the
Lord's Prayer anticipates God's forgiveness of our sins only when we have forgiven the sins of others (Matt. 6: 12). The parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15: 11–32) could be more appropriately entitled the Forgiving Father. That of the two debtors (Matt. 18: 21–35) ends with a stern warning: the unforgiving servant will be tortured until his debt should be repaid
in toto. Possibly there were members of Matthew's Church who were not showing a forgiveness to others expected from those who had been forgiven so much by God. The ending has almost certainly been attached to ' parable by the evangelist himself to accord with common contemporary practice of torturing a debtor by way of putting pressure on his relatives to contribute to his repayment. But it is incongruous. The meaning of the parable is straightforward enough: that God's free forgiveness should be imitated in our own relationships.
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Machiavelli: The First Century: Studies in Enthusiasm, Hostility, and Irrelevance.(Book review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 1/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...of its prologue spoken by Machiavel, and Barnabe Barnes's The Devil's Charter, perhaps because...still survives. (He seems not to know that Barnes also owned the Discorsi--see 'Barnabe Barnes's Ownership of Machiavelli's Discorsi...
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Ambition, Rank and Poetry in 1590s England.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 7/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...worryingly offbeat readings of Shakespeare, Sidney, Barnabe Barnes, and Jonson. Quoting Shakespeare's Lucrece, lines...opening chapter Huntington offers a social reading of Barnabe Barnes's Parthenophil and Parthenope and congratulates himself...
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Proportional Form in the Sonnet of Sidney Circle: Loving in Truth.(Review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 7/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...Mary Wroth, Henry Constable, Barnabe Barnes, and Michael Drayton, all followed...that while writers such as Baranabe Barnes and Michael Drayton were indeed...Perhaps it was to a poet such as Barnes that Harvey would have addressed...
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Ambition, Rank, and Poetry in 1590s England. .(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 6/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...because of their veiled but angry attacks on "the privileges and presumptions of nobility" (19). The third text, Barnabe Barnes' Parthenophil and Parthenophe (1593), generated immediate contempt "among courtiers and courtly aspirers" for...
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Echoes of Desire: English Petrachism and Its Counterdiscourses.
Magazine article from: Shakespeare Studies; 1/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...Within the Sonnet Tradition." Here the author discusses a number of English sonneteers, ranging from the neglected Barnabe Barnes and Bartholomew Griffin to such canonical figures as Wyatt, Sir John Davies, Michael Drayton, and Spenser. Although...
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Alison V. Scott. Selfish Gifts: The Politics of Exchange and English Courtly Literature 1580-1628.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Seventeenth-Century News; 9/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...Simultaneously, Scott's book is both a lesson in astute close-reading of sonnets from Shakespeare, Sidney, and Barnabe Barnes (Parthenophil and Parthenophe) and an historical account of the drama of the quest for patronage during specific...
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Beauty's Poisonous Properties.
Magazine article from: Shakespeare Studies; 1/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; IN THE FOURTH ACT of The Devil's Charter (1606), Barnabe Barnes portrays Lucretia Borgia entering "richly attired with a Phyal in her hand." In the midst of painting her face, she suddenly...
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The body politic: anatomy of a metaphor.(body-state metaphor)
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 8/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...time Shakespeare used in it Coriolanus. Writers continued however to be interested in elaborating the basic idea. Barnabe Barnes, for example, in his Foure Bookes of Offices of 1606 still had the king as head, but also compared riches to blood...
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Figuring Sex between Men from Shakespeare to Rochester.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Shakespeare Studies; 1/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...passionate poetry of Nicholas Oldisworth, much of it obsessed with his friend Richard Bacon; the sodomitical pope in Barnabe Barnes's intriguing 1607 play The Divils Charter; and a whole host of highly anxious translations of classical writers...
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The religious epigram in early Stuart England.
Magazine article from: Christianity and Literature; 6/22/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...of the epigram. The conversion of this form to religious use was similar to the use of the sonnet by Henry Lok and Barnabe Barnes, the lyric by Donne and Herbert (see especially the "Jordan" poems
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Barnabe Barnes
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Barnabe Barnes 1569?-1609, English poet. His major work is Parthenophil and Parthenophe (1593), a collection of sonnets, madrigals...
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Barnes, Barnabe
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Barnes, Barnabe (1571–1609), attempted, in 1598, to kill the recorder...melodramatic scenes as the murder of Lucrezia Borgia with poisoned face wash. Barnes's poetry is remarkable for its vigour and technical range.
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Henry Wriothesley Southampton, 3d earl of
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...educated at Cambridge, and gained favor at the court of Queen Elizabeth I. A generous patron of such writers as Barnabe Barnes, Thomas Nash, and John Florio, he is best known as the patron of William Shakespeare, who dedicated Venus and...
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