Salvation
How We Say It
salΒ·vayΒ·shΙn
Where It Comes From
Latin salvatio β rescue, deliverance. From salvare β to save. Related to salve and safe. Originally theological β rescue from sin and its consequences β before migrating to secular promise.
How It's Been Used
Political movements regularly appropriate the emotional charge of salvation β rescue from existential threat, from corruption, from decline. The messianic register in political speech borrows directly from religious tradition. 'He alone can fix it' is salvation language applied to a candidate.