Sentences with phrase «always in danger»

I really don't like clutter so «things» are always in danger of going in the trash or donation bin around me.
«The resume liar is always in danger of getting caught,» says Isaacs, «and this could happen many years into their tenure.»
There are many moving parts to the legal profession, and the tectonic plates are always in danger of shifting — as illustrated, for example, by Quebec's recent decision to withdraw from the mobility scheme after having belonged only for a few years.
Any team that only ever plays behind closed doors to its own adoring fans is always in danger of a nasty shock when it eventually comes out blinking into the sunlight.
They... supplied theories and slogans... radicalized it... Having no genuine authority and feeling always in danger of being unceremoniously told to mind his own business, he [the intellectual] must flatter, promise and incite, nurse left wings and scowling minorities, sponsor doubtful or submarginal cases, appeal to fringe ends...»
Sociologists are always in danger of being seen as paranoids, all the more so when they oppose powerful vested interests.
Leonardo predicted the difficulties that would confront artists five centuries later when they tried to produce purely abstract paintings which are always in danger of becoming aesthetic Rohrschach blots on to which viewers project their own figurative fantasies.
Indoor cats are always in danger of becoming obese because they can't run as much as they can outdoors or in the wild.
A puppy off - leash is always in danger; accidents happen very quickly.
What's interesting about American Sniper, which works from a dicey script by Jason Hall that's always in danger of becoming either a rote action thriller meted out in shootouts or a rote antiwar melodrama about how veterans never quite make it back home, is how obstinately it resists this narrative.
Aquarius (Kleber Mendonça Filho, 2016) Even though the film is localised to a Brazilian apartment building, the events echo our current world of rapid development where the past is always in danger of being demolished for a shiny new future.
drama are always in danger of eye - glazing dullness.
Dramas exploring the nature of death and the true meaning of life are always in danger of tipping over into extreme sentimentality, and this one very quickly gets bogged down in buckets of syrup.
Like any surreal entertainment, Atlanta is always in danger of becoming too precious, hitting that «Life Aquatic» phase where quirky style becomes empty weirdness.
I'm always in danger when I go to my local shopping mall.
I am always in danger of making things too matchy matchy.
«I was always in the danger zone, and every year I would come down with pneumonia,» Sharp says.
«I want them to do whatever they have to do to make sure that not only do the rent laws get renewed, because we're always in danger, in a sunset year when the laws come up for renewal, we're always in danger of additional weakening amendments.»
You're always in danger.
The broader lesson for us is that we are always in danger of having our theology culturally influenced.
Precisely because a congregation has «material» bases and is necessarily located at some point in conflicts within a society which may tend to privilege its access to the material resources it needs, a congregation's practices are always in danger of serving to preserve the social arrangements from which they profit and of obscuring the inequalities inherent in those arrangements.
This age, however (to keep to the example we have chosen), will not be content solely with a Catholic universal ethics of essence which in itself does not touch the moral difficulties of the present time, nor with a purely Protestant situation ethics which is always in danger of degenerating into an empty formal ethics of mere subjectivity of an existentialist kind.
Beauty, of course, is always in danger of degenerating into monotony on the one hand or chaos on the other.
They are always in danger of narrowing the pattern of the church's vocation until it is conceived in terms of an exaggerated asceticism or of a mechanical sacramentalism or of an inflexible clericalism.
Yet we can only speak in succession of what appears in contemporaneousness; in discourse we must abstract relations, such as love, from the terms related and the terms from each other, so that we are always in danger of speaking of God without reference to the being he loves and that loves him; of speaking about religion or love of God as distinct from ethics or the love of neighbor.
Hence the concept is always in danger of relativisation.
The Church of England was always in danger of being co-opted by the state — witness Keble's Assize Sermon, which launched the Oxford Movement in response to state interference in the structure of the Anglican Church.
Our parish church, where all of our children were baptized and which I imagined being the church of my daughters» weddings (and my funeral), was wonderful, if half - filled and always in danger of being consolidated with other churches.
The symbol was always in danger of being cut loose from history.
But the attempt at reinterpretation is always in danger of becoming something quite different; that which Paul called, «preaching another Jesus and another Gospel.»»
Living on the frontier, their lives always in danger from Indian attacks, struggling against nature for a living, accustomed to the raw, untamed life, these people were prepared for revivalistic religion which touched the emotions.
It is clear that philosophy, no less than theology, has always taken it for granted that man has to a greater or lesser degree erred and gone astray, or at least that he is always in danger of so doing.

Not exact matches

To teachers, law enforcement, first responders and medical professionals who responded so bravely in the face of danger: We THANK YOU for your courage — and we are here for you, ALWAYS!
As to the increase in numbers, a little reflection should persuade even those Jews who, like Professor Namier, think of numbers as dangerous («to a nation rooted in its own soil... they mean strength and security, but for us, outside Palestine, they have always constituted a danger») that the danger here is more apparent than real.
When a company's sales slow or if a firm is involved in a major lawsuit, however, stock prices can plummet, which is always a danger when investing in stocks.
Chris: Well the one everyone always talks about is of course precious metals, and that's because they understand the true nature of money and what money represents, what it does not represent, and therefore they understand the dangers of a Fiat currency in today's world and its ability to create inflation.
Again, I want to empathize that in critiquing such things there is always the danger of blaming the victim.
The responsibility of bishops is and always has been, as Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis and other bishops have explained in great detail, to protect the integrity of the sacrament, to prevent public scandal that creates confusion about the Church's teaching, and to avoid the danger of people receiving the sacrament, as St. Paul puts it, to their damnation.
Yet while the Afro - Asian peoples are still in a sense unachieved — still not formidable as autonomous and well - constituted powers — there is always a danger that if the Western nations withdraw their interest from them, a vacuum will be formed, a vacuum which Soviet Russia will infallibly try to fill.
The danger of a reduction of God to an aspect of humanity and its religiosity has always lurked in the background, however, and all too often taken over the foreground.
Update (Nov. 18): «There is always a danger in being the 28th speaker in a conference,» said Rick Warren during his speech today at Pope Francis's marriage conference.
In an unfallen world it would always have been welcomed with joy, but the reality of sin means that it is most often heard either with a sadness borne of honesty that leads to repentance and peace, or else by a shrug of dismissive indifference and then by bitter and angry rejection — well, the Lord spoke frankly about the lethal danger that lay down that road!
With some entailment of that danger always implicit in superlatives, one may raise the question whether any other single contribution from whatever source since human culture emerged from the stone ages has had the far - reaching effect upon history that Israel in this regard has exerted both through the mediums of Christianity and Islam and directly through the world of Jewish thinkers themselves.
There is always the danger of distortion in relating stories about one's church, accentuating the achievements and minimizing the failures.
Referring to the criticism made by Peter Beyerhaus and some others that in the World Council's emphasis on social and political justice there is present a social utopianism which denies the fact of sin and affirms a self - redemptive humanism, Thomas admitted that the danger is always present, but pointed out the opposite danger of not admitting the fact of divine grace and the power of righteousness it releases for a daring faith in the realms of social and political action.
Schillebeeckx notes the danger of overemphasizing «our one - sidedly technological consumer society» and urges «the interplay of official teaching authority and the teaching authority of believers and their theologians (always in some tension).»
In hyperarousal, the «fight or flight» defence mechanism we all have is over-sensitised and manifests itself in a general tendency to be always on the look out for threat or dangeIn hyperarousal, the «fight or flight» defence mechanism we all have is over-sensitised and manifests itself in a general tendency to be always on the look out for threat or dangein a general tendency to be always on the look out for threat or danger.
Pereiro says that the members shared a view on the need to recover that essential spirituality without which doctrine, principles and life would always be in danger of decay.
There is always a danger in ministry that under the pretense of exercising discipline we turn the ministry of governance into «the purpose of domination.
Yet, there will always be a danger inherent in these attempts.
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