good work
English
editPronunciation
edit- Rhymes: -ɜː(ɹ)k
Noun
editgood work (plural good works)
- (Christianity, chiefly in the plural) A person's beneficent action or deed, especially one of a charitable nature that advances one's progress toward salvation.
- 1859, Charles Kingsley, chapter 3, in The Good News of God:
- [E]verlasting life . . . must be a righteous and just life; a loving and merciful life; for God is righteous, just, loving, merciful; and more, it must be an useful life, a life of good works.
- 1910, Jeffery Farnol, chapter 27, in The Broad Highway:
- "Truth, sir, is that which can never pass away; the Truth of Life is Good Works, which abide everlastingly."
- 2009 February 22, Bonnie Rochman, “Why Catholic Indulgences Are Making a Comeback”, in Time, retrieved 15 August 2014:
- "The church's teaching has evolved," Walsh says. "Part of indulgences is not just saying special prayers, but also doing good works."
References
edit- “good work”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.