Personal guilt is nothing more than the historical record of your sins. You committed them alone. That fact will never change. Not here and now. Not in the hereafter.
You are personally guilty. God didn't make you do it. Satan didn't make you do it. You alone are guilty. Personal guilt is non-transferable. That's why you still feel guilty even though you know that you are saved.
The second aspect is that of judicial guilt. This is guilt as an obligation to justice. Judicial guilt is transferable - one can be personally guilty but if someone else pays the penalty due, then the law has no further claim.
Guilt and sadness
guilt is when you are feeling sorry for someone because you did something bad to them and anger is when you are highly annoyed at a person!
yes
1) Guilt is generally linked with a moral transgression while shame is more linked with the notion of failure
Conscience. One must know the difference between right and wrong and recognize that one has done wrong that has caused harm. Guilt is the emotional response to that recognition.
judicial branch
Guilt trip is to cause someone to feel guilty, most of the time intentionally. There is no particular term 'guilty trip' but perhaps, it could be put in a way that it is an overindulgent holiday trip or just a generally wrong form of guilt trip.
The major physical manifestation of Dimmesdale's guilt is the mark on his chest that is revealed before his death. This is his own personal "scarlet letter" that surfaces due to his guilt.
Maybe a personal question or something that relate to their guilt.
The Puritans defined guilt as a deep sense of personal responsibility and shame for one's sins or wrongdoings. They viewed guilt as a manifestation of moral turpitude that required repentance and atonement to be absolved.
Barrie Anderson has written: 'Manufacturing guilt' -- subject(s): Judicial error, False imprisonment 'Escapade 297'
You can be factually guilty without being legally guilty. You may have actually committed the crime, but if it can't be proven in a court of law you aren't legally guilty.