Last year Arctic ice melted make so many polar
bears faced die situation.
Not exact matches
People like you usually have insurance and never had to
face the devastating fact a loved one will
die, even though there is medicine or care that could save them, just because they don't have insurance or their child is
born with a preventable birth defect because they couldn't afford pre-natal care or had to choose between eating / shelter or medical care / prescriptions... the self - centered extreme right.
But if we really experience the Nativity we are
faced with the heartache and suffering embedded deep in the nature of the event: No decent place for his birth, the fear of discovery by the wrong people, all the children who
died because he was
born, the anxious flight into a foreign country.
Wouldn't it be egg on your
face if you just happened to be
born into the wrong religion and chose the wrong god and when you
die you find you were duped as your parents were, etc. etc. and you wind up roasting in the hell of the god you rejected and this god has more respect for an atheist who actually demands evidence?
A self
face to
face with Christ is a self potentiated by the prodigious concession of God, potentiated by the prodigious emphasis which falls upon it for the fact that God also for the sake of this self let Himself to be
born, became man, suffered,
died.
Nicholas DiNapoli, who was
born in 1924 in Roslyn,
faced tragedy at a young age: his 38 - year - old father
died of a heart attack when the boy was 11, then the family lost their house, Thomas DiNapoli said.
This is
borne out by the film's relative lack of interest in anything that happens after Grant
dies — the compelling story of the cell phone footage, the trial, the controversial verdict, and the unrest and memorialization that followed is told mostly through curt, pre-credit-roll titles.Yet the film also tries hard for a verite style, as opposed to something more allegorical, and so we have to conclude that we're supposed to accept its less believable moments at
face value.
Ethan Hawke —
Born to Be Blue Chances are you probably missed this Chuck Baker biopic during it's quick and quiet release, but catch up to it soon: Hawke's portrait of
dying hope in the
face of addiction and artistic submission is one of his most passionate and surprising performances.
-- Could I neither
die then nor gaze at her
face every day, I would need to recreate it through painting or sculpture, or through fatherhood, until a second such
face could be
born.
Faustus was a plastic surgeon who murdered and disfigured all of his patients, before
dying due to the giant
bear trap he grafted onto his
face.
A second studio he maintains in Spain led to his 2008 Barcelona exhibition It's
Boring To
Die [2011] where the
faces began to break through.
Fergus, Boy in Blue 1928 oil on canvas Robert Henri
born Cincinnati, Ohio 1865
died New York, N.Y. 1929 Museum Purchase 65.214 In this portrait of a village child from Ireland's Achille Island, Robert Henri painted the
face without blending the hues on the canvas.