I'd say he has potential to be on par with the rest of our attacking force — he just isn't quite
as cultured yet.
Not exact matches
Yet modern work
culture treats sleep
as practically expendable.
Yet he struggled to integrate the two
cultures — and, in a precursor of things to come, took over
as CEO.
Though calculations of the environmental impact of Dr Post's lab - grown meat have
yet to be published, early indications suggest that
cultured meat could reduce the need for land and water by
as much
as 90 % and overall energy use by up to 70 %.
«His arrival was billed
as a positive change in
culture for Uber,
yet he hasn't bothered to visit the office or even get in touch.
GFI's science and technology department is involved in the development and promotion of the science of plant - based
cultured meat, dairy, and egg technologies.33 They are currently focused on core foundational work — making connections with organizations and writing white papers and «mind maps» — and
as such they do not
yet have a significant track record.34 They have produced Technological Readiness Assessments — documents detailing the current state of technology, and evaluating where more research is needed.35 All the research GFI does is published, so that the industry
as a whole can benefit.36 One of their biggest successes over the last year are the presentations that Senior Scientist Liz Specht gave to various venture capitalist firms.
Yet shortly after the council, the high
culture of the West took a sharp turn toward an aggressive and hegemonic secularism that now manifests itself
as Christophobia: a deep hostility to gospel truth (especially moral truth) and a determination to drive Christians who affirm those truths out of public life and into a privatized existence on the margins of society.
Concerned
as he was to assert his distinctiveness within Viennese intellectual circles by every possible means, he
yet retained a lifelong lingering desire to lose himself in German
culture, and above all, in the German language.
Pattaya focused on the worldwide evangelization task, in terms of specific strategies for reaching tribes,
cultures, communities and groups
as yet unaware of the gospel.
This came
as an irony to me later, because our wanderlust
culture impressed upon me that travel should teach you that life is not ultimately about you; and
yet, I traveled for me.
Yet it is surely a sign of the impoverishment of common
culture and the common good — and an index of the degree to which liberal order has succeeded in establishing itself
as both — that we are virtually required to equate love of country with devotion to the animating philosophy of the regime rather than to, say, the tales of our youth, the lay of the land and the bend in the road, and «peace and quiet and good tilled earth.»
Yet, while McVeigh rejected God altogether, Breivik writes in his manifesto that he is not religious, has doubts about God's existence, does not pray, but does assert the primacy of Europe's «Christian
culture»
as well
as his own pagan Nordic
culture.
Jeremy, I realize that your thesis here presents theology
as distinctive and «based to some degree on out
culture, worldview, and what we have learned / experienced thus far in life»
Yet, for those who are living in Christ (and not themselves), this is not (no longer) so.
These individuals best qualify
as Catholic writers, and
yet they are currently the least visible in a literary
culture where at present only the third group, the dissidents, has any salience.
But what critics who point to these reasons for the loss of certainty seem too often to forget is that the Church is never only a function of a
culture nor ever only a supercultural community; that the problem of its ministers is always how to remain faithful servants of the Church in the midst of cultural change and
yet to change culturally so
as to be true to the Church's purpose in new situations.
It may be that the
culture war is better thought of
as an effort to move forward, to a
yet - to - really - arrive fourth stage, one in which real effort to practice postmodern conservatism will be made by society, doing its best to partially revive lost things, informed by many decades of experiencing the awful consequences of full modernity.
One dimension of the anti-life
culture to which Church documents and pro-life movements in general have,
as yet, paid little attention is the denial of the spiritual soul in each human person...
Yet, there can be no doubt that it is characteristic of religious experience to transcend cultural conditions,
as the same scholar has documented so well in his essays in Christ and
Culture.
It keeps a critical distance from
culture, and
yet sees it
as useful in the Christian life if kept within its appropriate bounds.
There are still active terrorist organizations in all of those religions,
cultures as well
yet they don't seem to recieve any extra attention nor are they checked because of their past actions.
Though possessing many common cultural traits found also in Europe and the West, the much closer similarities between the
cultures of Iran or Persia and India have led scholars to distinguish an Indo - Iranian branch of the larger whole
as having early separated itself from the central or original Aryan migration, perhaps moving eastward from the,
as yet, not certainly located origin of the Aryan group.
Whereas, earlier, it had been believed that the Aryans found only peoples of relatively undeveloped
culture, now it is known that at least some of these early Indians had developed the arts to a high degree, that they even had a kind of hieroglyphic writing, not
yet deciphered, and probably an equally well developed religion which, suppressed for a time, gradually reasserted itself and greatly modified Vedic religion, gradually transforming it into the Hinduism
as practiced in India today.
Some gems of wisdom travel from one
culture to another,
yet each regards them
as its own.
Yet, in the
culture as a whole, and
as a percentage of the population, Evangelicalism is losing ground.
Yet not too many of us think that we need to throw our children to popular
culture willy - nilly, I can't think of anyone who denies the importance of a stable and loving family for a child, anyone who thinks that by creating a strong community we are abdicating our roles
as parents, not at all.
Yet secularity became so much a part of western
culture that the mission of bringing Christianity to the rest of the world has spread secularity
as well.
Yet,
as in the case of capitalism and nationalism, the faith which grew out of modern
culture has modified that
culture.
There are also universalistic political faiths such
as Marxism and democracy which are rooted in the
cultures of particular nations and civilizations,
yet which hold the ideal of universal justice.
Yet it would be a mistake to regard Dietrich
as simply a
culture warrior, for that would reduce his powerful witness to partisan politics.
Pope Benedict has called for a Year of Faith in which we are to return to our own foundations - spiritual and doctrinal, especially
as outlined in Vatican II - so that we can take up the task of re-evangelising our scientificallysophisticated
yet now largely faithless
culture.
And
yet much of Christian
culture regards sin and confession
as individual concerns.
Yet the law does not exist in a vacuum, and the degeneration of legal terminology occurs at the same time
as the broader breakdown of concepts in
culture.
Muslims love the drama and making it obvious «i am muslim» hence why they wear stupid burqa's when it is
culture and not religion,
yet use religion
as the excuse and fasting.
There are megalithic structures on our planet we don't
yet know who built them — such
as Puma Punku, Baalbek, Gobekli Tepe, great pyramid of giza, pyramids in Mexico — the list is endless... These
cultures all say in their scriptures that gods either built these structures or gods helped them build them.
In any event, an awareness that certain polar contrasts (such
as subjective - objective, public - private, body - mind, organism - machine, feeling - thought, and perhaps nature -
culture) are indissoluble,
yet fundamental, is one of the most important aspects of Whitehead's philosophic thought.
Partisan Review was then in its heyday
as one of America's leading journals of politics and
culture, decidedly left of center and
yet consistently anti-Stalinist.
Just
as, in general, good works are distinct from faith and not to be identified with it, and
yet are also demanded by faith and not to be separated from it, so justice in its political meaning
as right structures of society and
culture is both distinct from faith and demanded by it, and hence neither identifiable with faith nor separable from it.
«But groups like these have engendered a
culture that identifies
as Christian,
yet despises the [victims and the oppressed].
Our
culture has humanized us beyond that point, but we can not
yet conceive them
as our comrades in the fields of heaven We have,
as the phrase goes, no use for them, and it oppresses us to think of their survival.
Yet, in our
culture, the Catholic belief that same - sex attraction is «objectively disordered» is sometimes itself regarded
as «homophobic».
Following Lesslie Newbigin and others, a church that is missional understands that God's mission calls and sends the church of Jesus Christ, locally and globally, to be a missionary church in its own society, in the
cultures in which it finds itself, and globally among all peoples who do not
yet confess Jesus
as Lord.
The
culture may
yet have been Puritan at its roots, but the courts replaced the churches
as the vehicle for expressing the moral standards of that
culture.
Once started there was no stopping him, and Luther found
yet another identity
as poet and composer, and the principal originator of a whole new tradition of German church liturgy, rooted in the existing musical
culture, and destined to reach its marvellous climax at Leipzig in the work of Johann Sebastian Bach.
Yet there is a remarkable sense in which the Super Bowl functions
as a major religious festival for American
culture, for the event signals a convergence of sports, politics and myth.
@Mass Debater «I have read many works that study the history of the Jewish people and their
culture as found apart from biblical sources, I have
yet to find one that did not include supposition about the veracity of it's own work, with none claiming absolute truth
as to who the authors of the bible or who the historical figure of Moses could have been.»
I so do understand the questions of «why» and «what's the point» and and and... It's still a struggle at times to pick myself up and serve the «churched»
as I've been doing for more than a decade now in two different countries to three different
cultures, in three different languages...
yet I'm also grateful that it's providing me with platform to promote a bigger vision and dream God might have for us
as we find in the life of Jesus.
Yet, sadly, it seems not to occur to many such persons that had they, by accident of birth, been reared in a different faith
culture they might well believe just
as passionately in a different «one true faith» that today is totally alien to them.
Yet food is not a sector like any other: it is fundamental to our health and well - being
as individuals; to who we are
as a
culture; and ultimately to our very survival
as a species.
There is no real answer to the question you have posed because this club has once again hedged their bets on doing the bare minimum then hoping for the best... if they were serious about changing the stagnant
culture that has permeated the club since our move from the Highbury, we would have immediately released and / or moved several players in the early days of the window... this would have demonstrated to the fans that they were serious about addressing our obvious inadequacies... likewise this would have forced them to bring in replacements because they couldn't have used the lame excuse Wenger is presently spewing about having too many players... we functionally have the same amount of players
as we did when the window first opened but he didn't say jack about it then... he simply waited until the inevitable happened then pulled out his excuse Rolodex, closed his eyes and randomly drew the «too many players» card... the more he opens his mouth, the more I understand his «god» complex when it relates to all things Arsenal... what other manager could continually do the same dumb shit, not address obvious concerns for years, speak to the fans in such a condescending manner, face enormous criticism from many of his former star players and be the architect of so many failed player signings
yet be one of the highest paid managers with the longest tenure in Europe... maybe Kroenke is colourblind and instead of seeing all the red flags he can only see the GREEN ones ($ $ $)
But i must complement wenger he has changed the
culture of the club and given the team a spirit But does that give him the right to neglect the needs of the fans for some trophies Arsenal tickets are the most expensive
yet the fans settle for good football
as opposed to winning football
as mentioned on this blog i don't get it But wenger knows once you keep the share holders happy then your in business It puzzles me that a modern manager can go six (6) yes six seasons without a single trophy and some people can come here making bone dry excuses, the ambition of the club has dropped wenger can coach at no other top club in Europe and not win a trophy he would be shown the door.