Lawrence was right when he said «perpetual»
Christian bogeymen, and not only specific to Hitler's Nazi Germany.
Not exact matches
Christians who work in the natural sciences are dogged by a persistent
bogeyman: a singular creature called the God of the gaps.
Such exploratory questions about core
Christian teachings reflect an Emergent trait that disturbs critics who see the
bogeyman of theological liberalism at work.
While I can understand that the 18 - certificate content may make a strong case for this approach, I'm again concerned that
Christians neither wave placards at an imagined
bogeyman, nor miss the opportunity to relate to one of the major cultural stories of the day.
Josh Brolin's Lt. Det.
Christian «Bigfoot» Bjornsen emerges as another product of
bogeyman / mythological figure: the stoic representative of law and order who, at one point, plays a mean trick on Doc by making him think Shasta's been found dead, while at another he's seen as henpecked and small as his wife (Delaina Mitchell) berates Doc for the shrink bills he's inspired.