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  2. Solemn vow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solemn_vow

    A solemn vow is a certain vow ("a deliberate and free promise made to God about a possible and better good") taken by an at least 18 year old person individual after completion of the novitiate in a Catholic religious institute. It is solemn insofar as the Church recognizes it as such. [1] [2]

  3. Covenant (religion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covenant_(religion)

    Christianity asserts that God made an additional covenant through Jesus Christ, called the "New Covenant". A covenant in its most general sense and historical sense , is a solemn promise to engage in or refrain from a specified action.

  4. Religious vows - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_vows

    In the Christian tradition, such public vows are made by the religious – cenobitic and eremitic – of the Catholic Church, Lutheran Churches, Anglican Communion, and Eastern Orthodox Churches, whereby they confirm their public profession of the evangelical counsels of poverty, chastity, and obedience or Benedictine equivalent.

  5. Promise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promise

    In Christian ethics, a distinction is made between simple promises and oaths or vows. An oath is a promise invoking God as a witness. [9] A vow is a solemn form of a promise typically made to commit oneself to a moral good with God as witness, and binds oneself to its fulfillment over time. [10]

  6. Oath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oath

    The word comes from Anglo-Saxon āþ: "judicial swearing, solemn appeal to deity in witness of truth or a promise"; from Proto-Germanic *aiþaz; from Proto-Indo-European *oi-to-: "an oath". Common to Celtic and Germanic, possibly a loan-word from one to the other, but the history is obscure and it may be non-Indo-European, in reference to ...

  7. Vow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vow

    A vow is an oath, but an oath is only a vow if the divine being is the recipient of the promise and is not merely a witness. Therefore, in Acts 23:21, over forty men, enemies of Paul, bound themselves, under a curse, neither to eat nor to drink till they had slain him. In the Christian Fathers we hear of vows to abstain from flesh diet and wine ...

  8. Covenant theology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covenant_theology

    The Mosaic covenant, found in Exodus 19–24 and the book of Deuteronomy, expands on the Abrahamic promise of a people and a land. Repeatedly mentioned is the promise of the Lord, "I will be your God and you will be my people" (cf. Exodus 6:7, Leviticus 26:12), particularly displayed as His glory-presence comes to dwell in the midst of the people.

  9. Religious profession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_profession

    In the Catholic Church, a religious profession is the solemn admission of men or women into consecrated life by means of the pronouncement of religious vows, typically the evangelical counsels. Usage [ edit ]