Sentences with phrase «reading about your bit»

Reading about your bit of forgotten memory, brought back one of my own.

Not exact matches

Despite having read quite a bit about the store before I went there, there were still some big surprises.
«What I love about digital reading is the bits of stolen time,» he says.
You know, I've been reading a bit over the weekend and there has been some talk about the regulatory aspects.
Two days later, you read about another «new» fitness program and try a little bit of that.
After reading about Tan Le, the co-founder of Emotiv, and her vision of a world in which machines respond to our mental commands using implanted sensors [«Reality Bites,» December 2008], I couldn't help thinking that this is the same kind of hype Dean Kamen engaged in when he predicted that entire cities would one day be built around the Segway.
It's hard not to feel a bit competitive after reading about all these young entrepreneurs.
But yes, I'd like to be reading about you finally paying off that last bit of mortgage debt while I'm sitting on the beach sipping lemonade later this year.
It is a bit morbid but how about a Facebook Page - yes I know it is against # 2 but it is worth reading to understand the product idea.
Being able to talk about economic concepts with a bit more knowledge than we have, requires reading this book.
Let's talk about this last bit — the inflation target — a bit more, though this conversation... Read more
I'm crunching on other stuff so this will be brief, but I've been reading a fair bit of commentary about how Trump's fiscal plans — infrastructure investment and tax cuts — won't help the economy; «they'll be recessionary, they'll deliver higher inflation and interest rates, they'll force the Fed to move from brake - tapping to brake - slamming.»
Ezra Klein: So I'm going to give a little bit of a quick Singapore overview for folks who aren't as read in on it, and if anybody would like to learn a lot more about this, they can search my name and Singaporean healthcare system.
That is, using bitcoin as currency:... [Read More] A Bit More About Bitcoin...
If you want to see a bit more about my view on passive income, and part of the journey to me arriving at this goal, then week 22 is worth a quick read.
You need to read a bit about the theory of evolution.
You can read a little bit about it here.
Dude, you are WAY out of your element, having read the bible, a couple of times I might add, I can assure you that I know probably about as much about your religion as you do and quite a bit more about the many religions out there apart from christianity.
Nothing wrong with that.As for those who believe that atheist are spawns of the devil, maybe you should take up reading more about them, as most atheists have learned quite a bit about religion.
I have to say from what I have read about it, it is a bit like a Star Trek episode where they time travel and because of the implications nothing quite makes sense in the end.
You can read a little bit more about how I've changed in Acts 2 and 3.
Truth be told, I feel a bit out of my depth when I speak with «real feminists,» the kind who have actually studied feminist theory, who have read deeply and broadly about issues related to gender equality.
Have you ever read (or heard about) «scandalous freedom», by Steve Brown... it's a bit odd, but he's got some very good points on that question...
If people would only pause and think critically about what they believe and do a tiny bit of reading, we might get somewhere.
You can read a bit more about it in Luke 16 (Ezek 32:18 - 19, 24; Ps 63:9; Isa 44:23 indicates that «the lower parts of the earth» refers to death or the grave).
I think I know a little bit about how to read Scripture «in context.»
Not try to get one little bit of scripture, and then go on about 3 points that will lead me to better understand something about my walk with Him... but just read.
Read a little bit about science, or go back to school, before you make unqualified comments like this.
I have to say, after lurking about your blog a bit, I was very surprised to read this post.
Haven't read your story yet.would like to share ours with u and your wife sumtime.read a bit here on your blog and already I'm like, that's so my husband and I at the moment!in my opinion you are one of the few people who I can actually relate to as a follower of christ.hopefully more people will become real about where they are at, going beyond the bullshit that is fed to us that has nothing to do with following Jesus.thanx for listening.
This is to davidnfran hay David you might have brought this up in a previous post I haven't read, but i did read quit a bit about your previous comments and replies at the beginning of this blog, so I was just wondering in light of what hebrews 6 and 10 say how would you enterprite passages like romans 8 verses 28 thrue 39 what point could paul have been trying to make in saying thoughs amazing things in romans chapter 8 verses 28 thrue 39 in light of hebrews 6 and 10, Pauls says that god foreknew and also predestined thoughs whom he called to be conformed to the image of his son so that he would be the first born among many brothers and then he goes on saying that neither death nor life nor angels nor rulers nor things present nor things to come nor powers nor hight nor death can ever separate us from the love of god in christ jesus so how would i inturprate that in light of that warning in hebrews 6 and 10,
I remember in college, many moons ago, thinking that since I was so very opinionated about religion, I really should make sure I was familiar with the Bible... So I read it... cover to cover... I can tell you, I honestly didn't enjoy it... it's NOT a great read... bits are interesting, and of course very familiar... I took me almost the whole year, but I got through it... So imagine my surprise some time later when I found myself at an after conference gathering, that just so happened to have an inexplicably number of overtly religious attendants (inexplicable because it was a hi - tech network security conference) and after listening quietly for a while, jumped in with the statement «well, you've all read the bible cover to cover, as have I»....
When we read about Jesus feeding the 5,000 after several hours of teaching, He didn't dismiss everyone to grab a bite at some stop on the way home.
And know a bit about Islam, though I don't think I've had a chance to read the koran.
In the coming weeks, we'll be diving into some excellent books about how to read the Bible — N.T. Wright» sScripture and the Authority of God, Peter Enns» Inspiration and Incarnation, Eugene Peterson's Eat This Book, and more — but before we get there, we've got to do a bit of deconstructing.
It's a rare occasion then, when a friend or colleague tells you they want to know more about the Church and about Christ and, invariably, that they have tried reading the Bible and found it, well, a bit hard.
Brian's eyebrows nearly hit his hairline when I told him a bit about the whole fall - out of an offensive post, and the subsequent challenging (read: crazy - making)...
«Saved by...», yeah just don't read those gory bits about sacrificing animals to god, and that bit about don't eat shellfish.
She is a bit vague here, but she puts forth some interesting ideas about how the Emergent Church might come to operate using the basic principles of network theory and crowd sourcing... which is interesting, but more detailed than I can handle in a single post — so read the book!
I think I will blog a bit about it after reading your comments and looking at your art.
Read about this tasty bit of news in http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/19/us/19rekers.html
-- I've read the bit about the «crucified ego» a lot, lately.
I think that maybe what I have presented is a bit of a stretch, but if I am going to maintain some bit of sense of the inerrancy of this text, I can see no other way of reading about the drowning of the Egyptian army in Exodus 14 through the lens of Jesus Christ dying on the cross for His enemies.
I'd read a fair bit about apologetics at the time, but nothing quite prepared me for that kind of pressure.
Reading the first part of your post, I thought you were writing satire... a bit farther on I could see that you were being serious about the Bible!
The Enneagram: A Christian Perspective by Richard Rohr and Andreas Ebert:: I've been doing a bit more reading about the Enneagram, thanks to my friend, Leigh Kramer, who is an Enneagram Coach.
Brian's eyebrows nearly hit his hairline when I told him a bit about the whole fall - out of an offensive post, and the subsequent challenging (read: crazy - making) discussion spinning out of control.
But I read Genesis a bit differently from him, and I am therefore less sanguine than he is about the penultimate prospects of our knowledge under any description, even the description of knowing as an act of love.
Many Arab scholars, who have great respect for Sir Hamilton Gibb's scholarship, are a bit hesitant about giving the book unqualified approval because of its Western flavor: one young Arab who started to translate it into Arabic gave up when he found that the Mullahs who could not read English were very critical when they read his version.
I read quite a bit here on your blog site and what you had to say about this subject surprises me in light of that and seems to be in contrast to what I would expect given your background.
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