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Answer for the clue "Set free, as from a sin ", 7 letters:
absolve

Alternative clues for the word absolve

Word definitions for absolve in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. 1 (context transitive English) To set free, release or discharge (from obligations, debts, responsibility etc.). (First attested around 1350 to 1470.) (R:SOED5: page=9) 2 (context transitive obsolete English) To resolve; to explain; to solve. (Attested ...

Usage examples of absolve.

We are willing to absolve you from them provided that first, with a sincere heart and unfeigned faith, in our presence you abjure, curse and detest the said errors and heresies, and every other error and heresy contrary to the Catholic and Apostolic Church in the manner and form we will prescribe to you.

And since according to those same canonical institutions all such are to be condemned as heretics, but you holding to wiser counsel and returning to the bosom of our Holy Mother the Church have abjured, as we have said, all vile heresy, therefore we absolve you from the sentence of excommunication by which you were deservedly bound as one hateful to the Church of God.

Then he imposed a penance of prayer and fasting, and then absolved them.

But according to John 8 Christ absolved the adulterous woman without Penance.

It seemed to Smith, upon reading the individual reports, that many of them would have been absolved before their cases got beyond the deputy level, so flimsy were the accusations made against them.

Aurelia in Pistoja, to fall with tears at her feet, to be pardoned and absolved, to rise to the life of honour and respect once more.

I read, and turning my face to the Heavens, thanked God that I was absolved by the dear subject of my crimes.

The Army absolved him of all wrongdoing and offered to reinstate him if he wished.

He watched it, then dropped another daisy into the water, and after that another, and sat watching them with bright, absolved eyes, crouching near on the bank.

She seemed to have passed into a kind of dream world, absolved from the conditions of actuality.

Unless I set my will, unless I absolve myself from the rhythm of life, fix myself and remain static, cut off from living, absolved within my own will.

But to live mechanised and cut off within the motion of the will, to live as an entity absolved from the unknown, that is shameful and ignominious.

Now it is evident that in Penance something is done so that something holy is signified both on the part of the penitent sinner, and on the part of the priest absolving, because the penitent sinner, by deed and word, shows his heart to have renounced sin, and in like manner the priest, by his deed and word with regard to the penitent, signifies the work of God Who forgives his sins.

Eucharist the priest perfects the sacrament by merely pronouncing the words over the matter, so the mere words which the priest while absolving pronounces over the penitent perfect the sacrament of absolution.

Not at all unhandsome, yet, now that she knew, she could see his indebtedness, the sure burden upon him, and the truth that, for him, for every child he might sire, there would be no absolving the stigma.