Sentences with phrase «whose hands rests»

O Lord Chief of the gods Who alone art exalted on earth and in Heaven,... O Merciful Gracious Father in Whose hands rests the life of the whole world, O Lord, Thy divinity is full of awe, like the far - off Heaven and the broad ocean O Creator of the land... begetter of gods and men who dost build dwellings and establish offerings... O mighty Leader whose deep inner being no god understands... O Father, begetter of all things, who lookest upon all living things... Who is exalted in Heaven?

Not exact matches

On the other hand, such strikes, he said, also act as a deterrent to Hezbollah, whose missile capabilities could mean that the air force and the rest of the Israeli military will fight any future Lebanon war with their own bases under attack.
On one hand, e-commerce is killing traditional brick - and - mortar business, but on the other, you'll have a hard time finding a company whose future growth strategy doesn't rest on developing its online channels.
Yet she on earth hath union With God the Three in One, And mystic sweet communion With those whose rest is won, With all her sons and daughters Who, by the Master's hand Led through the deathly waters, Repose in Eden land.
And whatever happens, will any of the characters in whose hands this fictional life rests appeal to an authority beyond «striving for good in a way which [makes] sense to the individual»?
It is difficult to picture an ageing Eto'o (who turned 33 last month) get the upper hand on a peaking Thiago Silva (29), whose careless conceding of a penalty at Parc des Princes was made up for by a faultless performance thourgout the rest of the evening.
This doesn't bode well for Paterson, whose fate now rests in the hands of Albany County DA David Soares.
«You have the hands of a craftsman, not an artist,» says a friendly village priest (Paolo Bonacelli) to an American expatriate whose identity is ambiguous but whose face is recognizable to the rest of us as George Clooney's.
A pair of gray suede gloves abandoned on a department store counter; a small 35 mm still camera obscuring a woman's face except for her eyes; an electric train set; a finger on the disconnect button of a telephone; an ungloved, well - manicured hand resting briefly on another woman's shoulder: Todd Haynes's Carol is not a Hitchcockian thriller, although it is adapted from the second novel by Patricia Highsmith, whose first, Strangers on a Train, was the basis for one of the master of suspense's great movies.
Paula is a perfect villain, easy to hate without being truly terrifying, in exactly the way that an adult would be to a kid whose fate rests in her hands.
Fortunately for the 80 million American children whose education rests in teachers» hands, some of our nation's brightest, most ambitious, and dedicated individuals continue to enter the field.
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