Sentences with phrase «about human flesh»

How about human flesh and its muscles?

Not exact matches

If your business model revolves more around river tours and large bodies of water, the mighty kraken, complete with lots of morbid jokes about your service to the creature, ferrying tourists to feed its unending hunger for human flesh, may do a better job of making your employees feel like they are part of something greater.
«Night of the Living Dead,» made for about $ 100,000, featured flesh - hungry ghouls trying to feast on humans holed up in a Pennsylvania house.
The only debatable aspect about him was simply, is he God in human flesh?
You follow a religion that glorifies eating human flesh and drinking blood and you're upset about a statue?
Because, my God, though I lack the soul - zeal and the sublime integrity of your saints, I yet have received from you an overwhelming sympathy for all that stirs within the dark mass of matter; because I know myself to be irremediably less a child of heaven than a son of earth; therefore I will this morning climb up in spirit to the high places, bearing with me the hopes and the miseries of my mother; and there — empowered by that priesthood which you alone (as I firmly believe) have bestowed on me — upon all that in the world of human flesh is now about to be born or to die beneath the rising sun I will call down the Fire.
I'm passionate about finding life before death, the extraordinary in the ordinary, the divine in the daily, and the flesh and blood of human community.
Vicious rumors circulated about their immorality and that they ate human flesh and drank human blood.
If it is true, as Holloway argues, that the very foundations of matter and the identity of human nature are aligned upon the coming of the Word made flesh, then a society which is uncertain about the existence of God and whether Man has any meaning or purpose must be subject to crisis, alienation and chaos even more inevitably than CiV is able to show.
Paul adds that he did not consult human authorities (flesh and blood, apostles) about this, but went away to Arabia.
Do we lose the power of the claim that an itinerant Jewish preacher who taught about love and was murdered by the political establishment of his time was God become human flesh if we turn out to mean only that it's useful to say that?
There are four affirmations about Jesus Christ that historically have been stressed in Christian faith: (1) Jesus is truly human, bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh, living a human life under the same human conditions any one of us faces — thus Christology, statement of the significance of Jesus, must start «from below,» as many contemporary theologians are insisting; (2) Jesus is that one in whom God energizes in a supreme degree, with a decisive intensity; in traditional language he has been styled «the Incarnate Word of God»; (3) for our sake, to secure human wholeness of life as it moves onward toward fulfillment, Jesus not only lived among us but also was crucified for us — this is the point of talk about atonement wrought in and by him; (4) death was not the end for him, so it is not as if he never existed at all; in some way he triumphed over death, or was given victory over it, so that now and forever he is a reality in the life of God and effective among humankind.
The Council of Ephesus insisted that what Christians hold true about God is that God is not unwilling to get involved in the flesh and blood of human life.
I think by you praying for Mr. Hawking is more for your benefit than his — because he could care less about Jesus, or the interpretations that Man / people / humans made of flesh have made about him.
You hold the firmest convictions about Our Lord; believing him to be truly «of David's line in his manhood», yet Son of God by the divine will and power; truly born of a virgin; baptised by John «for his fulfilling of all righteousness»; and in the days of Pontius Pilate and Herod the Tetrarch truly pierced by nails in his human flesh (a fruit imparting life to us from his most blessed passion), so that by his resurrection he might set up a beacon for all time to call together his saints and believers, whether Jews or Gentiles, in the one bodyof his Church» (Smyrna I, 1 - 6).
«Lacking a coherent picture of what a good human life looks like, we have filled the gap with quantified measures that tell us little or nothing about how far flesh - and - blood human beings are flourishing in all aspects of their experience.
It is not about eating nothing for a period of time, but about eating little or modestly, so that the human flesh gets subdued a little.
Linking a strange story in Genesis about «sons of God» who lust after «daughters of men» to the story of the angels who visit Abraham's nephew Lot, New Testament writers concluded that the mingling of human and divine flesh is an intolerable sin.
Peter said, «So, since Christ suffered in the flesh, you also arm yourselves with the same attitude, because the one who has suffered in the flesh has finished with sin, in that he spends the rest of his time on earth concerned about the will of God and not human desires.»
The name means, «God with us» and it's all about the miracle of God becoming flesh and then dwelling among human beings.
The Israeli military talks about attacks on the Gaza strip as «mowing the lawn», reducing human flesh to grass and murder to Sunday afternoon gardening.
PALISADES, NEW YORK — When human ancestors began scavenging for meat regularly on the open plains of Africa about 2.5 million years ago, they apparently took more than their fair share of flesh.
The near - infrared light that causes the nanotubes to fluoresce can penetrate about eight centimeters into human tissue, so physicians could potentially shine the light through skin and flesh to look for fluorescence from nanotubes signaling the presence of cancer cells.
What the movie needs is a director, and what it gets instead is Pitof, a French visual - effects maestro so much fonder of technological wizardry than of human flesh that he manages to turn even his slinky, sinuous star attraction into a digitized synthespian frolicking about endless CGI cityscapes.
But just when Eigil's vegetarianism and love of animals seems bound to reveal the truth about Svend & Co, the script pulls a fast one and his presence ends up jeopardising Bjarne's budding romance with Astrid (Kruse), a local girl whose uncle just so happens to have eaten human flesh before (yes, really).
There's nothing groundbreaking about Anders Thomas Jensen's blessedly non-Dogme The Green Butchers, the latest movie to mine the consumption of human flesh for laughs (even the title suggests a cheeky allusion to Soylent Green)-- but for a comedy, that most culturally - specific of genres, the Danish production travels remarkably well.
I don't remember that part of Disney's animated classic, but then again, in a movie where zombiefied pirates have no interest in human flesh, it's probably best not to spend too much time thinking about it.
I've never been such a fan of the genre as something about the undead just hunting on human flesh never seemed appealing.
Unlike their elders, they can think, feel, learn, and accommodate the fungus without allowing it to rot and disfigure their bodies... too bad about that lingering, hard - to - control craving for human flesh.
The movie is as much about parading human flesh as it is about aquatic carnage.
«The much buzzed - about horror series, TOKYO GHOUL, presents a frightening world where monsters called Ghouls live among us, seemingly the same as normal people in every way, except for their endless craving for human flesh.
It is about what it means to be human: is it just about having flesh and bones, or does it mean more than that?
In reality, I felt her paintings were too easy and glib in their mottled flesh, and just not serious enough about the challenge of depicting the human body with blobs of pigment on canvas.
Sometimes elegant, sometimes haunting, the photographs in Flesh / Water hover between the worlds of anxiety and serenity, forming a portrait of water that functions as an evolving question about the past, present, and future relationship humans have both with each other and the natural world.
Paint Made Flesh examines the ways in which European and American painters have used oil paint and the human body to convey enduring human vulnerabilities, among them anxieties about desire, appearance, illness, aging, war, and death.
But how about eliminating the billions of animals bred just so humans can gobble their flesh!
This argument is not fleshed out in any way, eg, discussions about the rate of change and human settlements mostly lead to a repeating of the original argument.
«The Stranger in the Woods» is a quick and entertaining read, fleshed out with interesting observations about other famous historical hermits, the age - old attraction of solitude, and the effect of the wilderness on the human psyche; but mostly, it's just enormously entertaining.
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