Sentences with phrase «by schism»

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Even those affected by schism lost relatively small numbers.
Persian Asia was beyond western control not by schism, but as a matter of patriarchal privilege.

Not exact matches

Pluralism in the postmodern world is not only the way in which the world reconciles the schism created by the Enlightenment, but it is also a threat to the viability of the Enlightenment.
On the reading I propose, the Reformation schism was brought about instead by contingent human choices in a confused historical context defined less by clear and principled theological argument (though that of course was present) than by a peculiar and distinctively sixteenth - century combination of overheated and ever - escalating polemics, cold - blooded Realpolitik, and fervid apocalyptic dreaming.
This schism that CNN is trying to paint is a myth, created by them to ensure Obama gets elected.
The efforts of the denomination to prevent this, led and goaded by its evangelicals, are creating tensions that may lead to schism.
But the Scriptures teach us that at the same time it will be rent by a profound schism between those who wish to break out of themselves that they may become still more masters of the world, and those who, accepting Christ's word, passionately await the death of the world that they may be absorbed with it into God.
The Donatist schism originated in the years following the Great Persecution of Diocletian, which predated Augustine by several decades.
In fact, one could argue that some of the Church's most notable movements and schisms have been triggered by overcorrections that take centuries to balance back out.
Second, as the church was troubled by heresy and schism from within and by the State from without, uniformity of belief and practice became a necessity.
6Popper writes, for instance, that «the rejection of our theories by reality — is, in my view, the only information we can obtain from reality: all else is our own making» (Karl R. Popper, Quantum Theory and the Schism in Physics [Totawa, New Jersey: 1982] 3).
They looked around them and saw their tiny movement opposed by the greatest empire the world had known, opposed by local political and religious leaders, and riven by internal schism and heresy.
For Jones» great schism to occur, he demands that we leave churches that are not egalitarian; that ministers, pastors and leaders of non-egalitarian denominations and churches quit; that egalitarian authors not publish their books by houses that also publish complimentarians; and that if you speak at conferences without fair representation you decline the invitation.
His introduction of causal efficacy as a mode of perception is designed to overcome this schism, what he refers to as the «bifurcation of nature» introduced into philosophy by the dualism of Descartes and Locke.
Nevertheless, Whitehead is understandably reluctant to endorse the phenomenalist implications of his first version, since it seems to create a schism between the philosophic account of sign interpretation given in terms of correlations between experiences and the world as described by physics and the other sciences.
You shall not make a schism, but you shall pacify those that contend by bringing them together.
Shifts internal to religious organizations themselves are likely to focus on schisms and mergers, the resolution or reopening of conflicts between organizations, the assumption or abandonment of certain functions by religious organizations, or the emergence of new organizational forms.
My third term, schism, comes in a subtitle of another important work by Goen: Broken Churches.
The most significant schism was undoubtedly Martin Luther's, but earlier ones had involved the Coptics and Eastern Orthodox; subsequent ones are too numerous to mention, but spectacularly include the Southern versions of the Baptists and Methodists, whose adherents of nearly 2 centuries ago were more persuaded by the Biblical passages endorsing slavery than by the COMPETING Biblical passages commanding love of one's fellow man.
As it happens, when we ask about God's role in violence, later revelation in Scripture makes it pretty clear that God's only activity was to rescue us from our own violence, redeem us from the consequences of violence, and reconcile us to Himself and to one another from the schisms caused by violence.
But, in the meantime, while we are re-educating youth in new traditional religions and afterwards in ours, we shall not overtly lay a finger on existing churches, but we shall fight against them by criticism calculated to produce schism... (Emphasis added)
But within a few short years the Revolution led first to schism (with the «Civil Constitution of the Clergy» in 1790) and soon to the outright de - Christianisation of France, accompanied by the unleashing of the Terror, in which hundreds of thousands of innocent Catholics were murdered — not least the 115,000 peasants of the Vendée, slaughtered in the first genocide of the modern age.
The claim you make is based on the doctrine of Papal Supremacy over the Conciliar Kings, formulated by Dufay's mentor d'Ailly with the view of resolving the Great Western Schism on a permanent, defendable basis, and instigated by Pope Eugenius IV and his successors from 1433 onwards.
Baptism binds together all Christians, and is something held in common even by those divided following the Great Schism or by the Reformation, with a range of very different views being held among the latter group.
Earnest and able men were scandalized by both the schism and the corruption.
Thus the Great Schism was ended, not by Papal initiative but by a general council of the Church.
The other reason for schism was McIntyre's insistence on dispensationalist premillennialism, a distinctive form of prophetic teaching widely but not universally held by conservative evangelicals.
In a letter to Europe Jordanus mentions that he was deeply troubled by a «horrible schism among the people in reference to me.»»
The Amish church was founded in 1693 when there was a schism between the Swiss and Alsatian churches in Switzerland, led by Jakob Ammann.
Ultimately, the problems faced by Labour over Europe are nothing when compared to the enormous schism currently dividing the Conservatives.
Trump didn't issue additional sanctions against Russia Monday, contradicting an announcement by his United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley and underscoring the schism between the president and his national security team.
The schism between Boughton and the immigrant community has largely healed and he continues to be re-elected by wide margins in a city where Democrats outnumber Republicans.
I also think that the a left schism may end end up being replaced by a right schism.
WARRENSBURG — For years, southbound travelers on Route 9 were greeted by a sign highlighting one of the Adirondack Park's most divisive schisms: more
BY DIANE DIMOND Terror attacks on American soil, mass murders in church, widespread serial sexual assaults, unwarranted police shootings, continued gang activity in major cities, nationwide political schisms — 2017 news headlines were both frightening and disheartening.
The schism, which began just after Gov. Andrew Cuomo took office, had pitted a handful of independent Democrats led by state Sen. Jeffrey Klein against the mainline Democratic caucus, run by state Sen. Andrea Stewart - Cousins.
[10] Although Owen was one of the founding members of the party, he was not always enthusiastic about creating a schism on the centre - left, saying to the Glasgow Herald in January 1981 that he felt «haunted by the possibility that, if the Labour Party splits, the Centre Left will never again form the Government in Britain».
In a nutshell: we were suitably impressed by its functionality and free offerings, but mystified by the apparent schism in its personality.
But it's hard to avoid the sense that some of Spielberg's fascinations ought to have been reined in here, particularly as he takes on subject matter that encompasses the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Americans and ushered in a domestic schism that seems ever closer to repeating itself by the day.
The films that seem to fall out of that purview, About Schmidt and Morvern Callar, show themselves ultimately to be pictures moved by the deaths of a loved one or, as with Wendigo, studies of the dynamics of family from surface ideal to subversive schism.
Her stark call - out inspires sharp divisions in a small town where general respect for the authorities is undermined by accusations of brutality against minorities, opening up schisms that disturb the façade of a countryside idyll.
The best is a hallucinogenic striptease (by «veteran con» Rosalba Neri) before a high society crowd that plays like how a lot of Eyes Wide Shut probably should have played: erotic, charged with class schisms and the toll of exploitation on all women, even those in the audience.
By Dylan Wiliam There is a long - standing schism amongst people who write dictionaries.
The real reason may be more nuanced than that — the moves made by Walmart and Target seem more like the sign of a deepening schism between strictly online retailers and those with brick - and - mortar businesses to maintain.
Written by MARK WAID Art by MARCOS MARTIN Colors by MUNSTA VICENTE / Letters by VC's JOE CARAMAGNA With Fear Itself and its aftermath, Spider - Island, Schism and Regenesis all happening within a few weeks of each other, a lot of Marvel readers probably don't have a ton of extra space on their pull lists.
His experimental documentary, Joined by Divisions, investigates deeply entrenched schisms between African - American and Caucasian working - class communities.
This schism between interior and exterior was blown away in the final section, «Utopia Station», a tour de force of performative curating by Molly Nesbit, Hans Ulrich Obrist and Rirkrit Tiravanija, and tellingly the only part of «Dreams and Conflicts» in possession of a sense of humour (Hanru's was too heavy - handed for my liking).
Each 30 inch - thick panel has two faces, a formal schism that is mimicked conceptually: one side of the work displays a representational world while the other is constituted by a white mesh representing the loose underpinnings of reality.
McNeil speaks of why he became interested in art; his early influences; becoming interested in modern art after attending lectures by Vaclav Vytlacil; meeting Arshile Gorky; the leading figures in modern art during the 1930s; his interest in Cézanne; studying with Jan Matulka and Hans Hofmann; his experiences with the WPA; the modern artists within the WPA; the American Abstract Artists (A.A.A.); a group of painters oriented to Paris called The Ten; how there was an anti-surrealism attitude, and a surrealist would not have been permitted in A.A.A; what the A.A.A. constituted as abstract art; a grouping within the A.A.A. called the Concretionists; his memories of Léger; how he assesses the period of the 1930s; the importance of Cubism; what he thinks caused the decline of A.A.A.; how he assesses the period of the 1940s; his stance on form and the plastic values in art; his thoughts on various artists; the importance of The Club; the antipathy to the School of Paris after the war; how Impressionism was considered in the 40s and 50s; slides of his paintings from 1937 to 1962, and shows how he developed as an artist; the problems of abstract expressionism; organic and geometric form; the schisms in different art groups due to politics; his teaching techniques; why he feels modern painting declined after 1912; the quality of A.A.A. works; stretching his canvases, and the sizes he uses; his recent works, and his approaches to painting.
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