Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Cecilia Bembibre, in Ago. 2009
The figure of the acquitted is that of the one who has been redeemed and exonerated from a certain accusation that was applied to his person. Usually the term is used as qualifying adjective in both judicial and religious spheres, although in the former it is more frequent as a result of accusations, trials or complaints about certain subjects. In this sense, for a person to be considered acquitted he must undergo some type of trial that results in such a verdict.
Traditionally, the term acquitted is related to the acquittal granted by the religion Catholic to those who confess their sins to the priest. East ritual was and is traversed by the bestowal of the forgiveness of Jesus before the sins of the human being, being mortal and imperfect. After the confession, the priest or priest grants a pain accord (usually some preaching or religious action) and ensures absolution and forgiveness of sins in the name of the Holy Trinity.
On the other hand, absolution is a figure that is present when a priest or representative of the Catholic Church grants this
benefit on the bed of death to a person who has committed some kind of crime and he never came to ask for forgiveness or to serve his sentence for it.However, the word is not only used in the religious sphere, but also in the judicial sphere. In this sense, it maintains the same meaning: acquitted is the person who has gone through a trial process and who, before the lack of evidence or in the presence of evidence in her favor, she is redeemed from being judged as guilty before a fact or crime. The figure of acquittal can be applied in the judicial world to all kinds of acts, whether they are criminal, civil, political or otherwise, as long as a person or association of persons is accused by realization of the same.
Issues in Absolved