Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- Like a god; godlike in form.
- Conformable to the character or will of God.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adjective Godlike, or of a godlike form.
- adjective rare Conformable to the will of God.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective
godlike - adjective
conformable to thewill ofGod
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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And for this reason it shines within us in simplicity, and makes us deiform, that is, like unto God.
The Adornment of the Spritual Marriage 1293-1381 1916
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He was much for liberty of conscience: And being disgusted with the dry systematical way of those times, he studied to raise those who conversed with him to a nobler set of thoughts, and to consider religion as a seed of a deiform nature, (to use one of his own phrases.)
Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles Various
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His intellect was patrician -- almost deiform in the old Roman sense.
The Orchard of Tears Sax Rohmer 1921
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And as he is newly born internally so it cometh to pass also outwardly; the external man is transformed, so that he is deiform, or like in form unto God.
The Following of Christ. c. 1300-1361 1910
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It is one of his foundation principles that "we worship God best when we resemble Him most," [66] and if that is true, then the whole energy of one's being should concentrate upon the cultivation of "the deiform nature," "the nativity from Above."
Spiritual Reformers in the 16th & 17th Centuries Rufus Matthew Jones 1905
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It bestows grace and that grace called _lumen gloriae_, light of glory, endowing the soul with a faculty beyond its natural needs or merits, so disposes the soul that it becomes deiform and is rendered capable of immediate intuition of the Divine Essence.
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Augustine, we change not this divine Food into our substance, but rather are transmuted and transformed by it into Himself, and thus are made deiform, and of one nature with Him.
Meditations on the Life and Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ. c. 1300-1361 1875
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We have within us, notwithstanding all our transgressions, what the old divines used to call a 'deiform nature,' capable of being lifted up into the participation of divinity, capable of being cleansed from all the spots and stains which make us so unlike
Expositions of Holy Scripture Second Corinthians, Galatians, and Philippians Chapters I to End. Colossians, Thessalonians, and First Timothy. Alexander Maclaren 1868
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In this unity the spirit must always be like unto God, by grace and virtue, or unlike Him by mortal sin; for man is made in the likeness of God, which he must understand in the sense of grace; for grace is a deiform light which shines through us and makes us like unto God; and without this light we cannot be united supernaturally to God, even though we can never lose the image of God, nor our natural unity in Him.
Light, Life, and Love : selections from the German mystics of the middle ages William Ralph Inge 1907
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Speaking particularly of Whichcote, he says: "Being disgusted with the dry systematical way of those times, he studied to raise those who conversed with him to a nobler set of thoughts, and to consider religion as _a seed of a deiform nature_ (to use one of his own phrases).
Spiritual Reformers in the 16th & 17th Centuries Rufus Matthew Jones 1905
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