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Unredeemed

Unredeemed is an adjective describing something that has not been redeemed. In religious contexts, redemption refers to deliverance from sin or bondage, often through a savior or divine act. A person or soul that is unredeemed has not experienced this deliverance, according to traditions that emphasize redemption as a transformative state. The term is frequently used in Christian discourse to distinguish between those who have accepted grace and those who have not. In broader moral discourse, "unredeemed" can describe characters or situations considered morally unredeemed or unrecovered.

In secular use, "unredeemed" can describe tangible items that have not been redeemed, such as vouchers, coupons,

In literature and popular culture, "unredeemed" appears as a descriptive term for themes of failure to attain

or
rewards,
or
tickets
that
remain
unclaimed.
It
can
also
be
used
metaphorically
to
denote
something
that
remains
unrecovered
or
not
reconciled,
such
as
an
unredeemed
promise
or
an
unredeemed
debt
(though
the
latter
tends
to
be
described
as
"unsettled"
or
"unpaid").
The
word
derives
from
redeemer,
from
Old
French
redemere
or
redemmer,
from
Latin
redimere
"to
buy
back,"
with
the
English
prefix
un-.
redemption,
moral
ambiguity,
or
the
persistence
of
past
harms.
As
with
many
English
adjectives
formed
from
"redeem,"
the
precise
implications
of
"unredeemed"
depend
on
context,
including
religious
tradition,
genre,
and
authorial
intent.