Sentences with phrase «first the quotes from»

You responded to the my first quote from the Bible, but not to the second.
I was thinking that if I were to meet PJ, I might argue with him over that first quote from Blessed above.
In response to the first quote from Palmer, we would say that one reason the Calvinist so clearly see election in this text is precisely because they read the Bible with preconceived notions about election.
First the quotes from the book and then the commentary:
[Correction and reversion, Dec. 24: The accidentally missing word «signal» has been restored in the first quote from Wegman.
First Quote from your link: The solar farms, which concentrate the sun's power on mirrors to produce heat used to generate electricity, could eventually produce enough electricity to power 675,000 homes.»

Not exact matches

Consider this quote from Reid Hoffman, CEO of LinkedIn: «If you're not embarrassed by the first version of your product, you've launched too late.»
My favorite quote from an early user: «It was like putting on glasses for the first time.»
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Layton was responding to criticism from Jack Mintz — the economist oft - quoted by Conservative Leader Stephen Harper as justification for his tax policies — that the cap - and - trade system the NDP proposed to cover the cost of $ 3.5 billion worth of green initiatives in the first year would raise gasoline prices by 10 cents per litre.
The above quote by Linda Bradford Raschke was the main one that I remembered from her interview when I first read The New Market Wizards about five or six years ago.
First, here is the most recent tax cut talk from Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, as quoted by the Globe and Mail: â $ œI can assure you that our government is by no means finished in our efforts to improve our tax system for the benefit of Canadian -LSB-...]
As a way to introduce the first, let me give you the quote from Merrill Lynch economist David Rosenberg about the rising threat of global trade protectionism: «The Financial Times weighs in on the rising threat of global trade protectionism in today's Lex Column on page 14 («Economic Patriotism»).
Nearly half — 47.6 percent — of income annuity quotes from advisors in the first quarter were for annuities with a cash refund death benefit (aka return of premium), compared with 40 percent in the first quarter of last year, according to the Cannex index of annuity queries.
As a way to introduce the first, let me give you the quote from Merrill Lynch economist David Rosenberg about the rising threat of global trade protectionism:
as i've often quoted here: «Strictly speaking, there is no such thing as science without presuppositions... a philosophy, a «faith» must always be there first, so that science can acquire from it a direction, a meaning, a limit, a method, a right to exist... It is still a metaphysical faith that underlies our faith in science.»
«lol, you really are a moron... first reread that post you quoted from me... where in that sentence does it say that latin was the original language for the bible — it says that there was an uproar over it being printed in another language other then latin --»
lol, you really are a moron... first reread that post you quoted from me... where in that sentence does it say that latin was the original language for the bible — it says that there was an uproar over it being printed in another language other then latin — thats because around the time of henry the 8th the only way to view the bible was in latin... the torah is the original bible, the new sh!t is just that, new — its an addition and thats all it will ever be!
Here's a quote for you — You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother's eye.
(Deut 6:4) And when asked by the scribes as to which commandment is the greatest, Jesus began by quoting from Deuteronomy, saying: «The first is,» Hear, O Israel, Jehovah our God is one Jehovah.»
If you have spent any time with young Evangelical Christians in these first decades of the twenty - first century, you will know that this verse from Micah is the one they are most likely to quote from the whole of Scripture.
When I first heard the «binders full of women» quote it didn't feel out of place with the «cattle class» treatment from HR, just more of the «same old, same old» really.
What I find quite amusing is that my Calvinist friends always start with Augustine but very rarely ever want to quote anything from those before him: the fathers of the first three centuries of the church.
That night of work downstairs reminded me of a quote from novelist A.S. Byatt that Elizabeth Gilbert shared on the first episode of her brilliant podcast, Magic Lessons.
The Church is, of course, not anti-science and there is a wonderful quote from Pius XII on the first page which illustrates this:
R. 2.24 quoted from I. Abrahams, Studies in Pharisaism and the Gospels: First Series [Cambridge: University Press, 1917], p. 142.)
My favorite shorthand way of speaking about what post-critical naivete is with a single line from a Native American storyteller, which I quote in a footnote at the end of Chapter 1 of Meeting Jesus Again for The First Time, so you may be familiar with it.
To that end, let me first indicate that Whitehead is quoting from his principle of relativity when he says that «it belongs to the nature of every «being» that it is a potential for every «becoming».»
But you might be just as right in that he quoted the first line from the psalm and meant the whole.
And when there are quotes from individuals of the Bible who lived in the first and second century?
The God of the Old Testament was a false god, just like any other god at the time, Jesus was the first and only revelation from God Himself and any reliance of his on Jewish theology was merely a cultural phenomenon where he quoted occasional truths that Jews had happened across while worshiping the false God.
The Hebrews passage I quoted is very clear but I'll add this from Paul in 1 Timothy who warned the young widows who «waxed wanton against Christ» that they risked «damnation, because they have cast off their first faith».
The first astronauts looking upon the earth quoted Scripture as from that perspective we get a glimpse of God.
Note from the quote from above «At first there wasn't even anything Christian about them; that element pushed itself in of its own accord».
It is widely recognized that when Paul wrote to the Corinthians on this subject about the middle of the first century, he was quoting a well - established credal formula which he had received from early Christian tradition and which ran, «Christ died for our sins, in accordance with the scriptures; he was buried; he was raised to life on the third day, according to the scriptures.»
I am quoting from the first essay of that book.
As the epistles from which we have quoted belong to the fifties of the first century, they are evidence of prime value for the content of the early kerygma.
I think the first sentence was an imitation of the Joker's quote from the Dark Knight... but I could be wrong lol
The Road my Cormac McCarthy Fiction is the lie that tells the truth truer (a quote by Portland novelist, Tom Spanbauer) The Road is a meditative, dark read with a thin thread of light shining from first to last page.
Our first feature presents a thematic summary of this document, quoting from it extensively.
This is a quote from Alan Knox: «The biggest problem in the modern church is not trying to recreate the first century church today.
The articles concerning this quoted many scriptures that supported it against what I learned from the first website and so I clung to them.
Whitehead includes in this discussion a passage from SMW which he calls a «summary» of the first passage quoted above.
Its theology is sound and is backed up by numerous quotes, from Scripture first of all; then from the Magisterium (especially John Paul II and Trent), the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the Church Fathers (Cyprian, Ambrose, John Chrysostom, Augustine), Doctors (Aquinas, Alphonsus), Mystics (St John of the Cross, St Teresa, St Faustina, Julian of Norwich) and others such as the Cure d'Ars, Archbishop Fulton Sheen and Scott Hahn.
However, right next to thestatements quoted, we read a passage in the seventh chapter of First Corinthians that leads us to see differently Paul's teaching as a whole: «I wish that all were as I myself am, [he repeats his favorite argument for abstaining from marriage]- but each has his own special gift from God, one of one kind, and one of another» (1 Cor 7:7).
The church historian, Eusebius, writing around 325, quoting an «orthodox» writer, who had written against the Montanists, records: «It is thus evident that these prophetesses, from the day they wee filled with the spirit, were the first to leave their husbands.
Let me clarify what I mean by religious experience by quoting from William James» land - mark book, The Varieties of Religious Experience, which was first published in 1902.
I have quoted these passages from Whitehead for two reasons: first, because he is the «founding father» of the Process conceptuality; and second, because what he says in them points to God as «pure unbounded Love» and to our own human existence as intended to be a creaturely love (doubtless imperfect and defective because finite and mortal).
The last one you quoted was from Revelation and God was talking about Jezebel a person but also a spirit this is the first part of that scripture, You are permitting that woman — that Jezebel who calls herself a prophet — to lead My servants astray.
I return to the quote I gave from Erasmus in my first article commenting on Steve's views: «the Bible will give Christ to you, in an intimacy so close that he would be less visible to you if he stood before your eyes».
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