deification

See also: déification

English

Etymology

From Middle English deificacion, from Middle French deifier + -acion or borrowed directly from Latin deificātiō, from deificō (deify) + -tiō (noun suffix), from deus (god) + -ficō (make). Equivalent to deify + -ication. In the Christian theological sense influenced by the use of deificātiō as Latin translation of Byzantine Greek θέωσις (théōsis).

Pronunciation

  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -eɪʃən

Noun

deification (usually uncountable, plural deifications)

  1. The act of deifying; exaltation to divine honors; apotheosis.
  2. Excessive praise.
  3. A deified embodiment.
    • 2013, Ann Leckie, Ancillary Justice:
      We went through the main hall, four-armed Amaat looming, the air still smelling of incense and the heap of flowers at the god's feet and knees, back to a tiny chapel tucked into a corner, dedicated to an old and now-obscure provincial god, one of those personifications of abstract concepts so many pantheons hold, in this case a deification of legitimate political authority.
  4. (Christianity, theology) Union with God; theosis.
    • 2010, Paul M. Collins, Partaking in Divine Nature: Deification and Communion, page 108:
      There is an experiential component to Maximos’ writings: he draws upon the reality of the contemplative life and in doing so secures deification as the goal of the monastic spiritual life in Orthodoxy.

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