It's broken down
by chapters so you can find sections of the video that are most useful to you.
Not exact matches
«There was this perception that if you wanted to do a job in Bangladesh but didn't have the expertise, you could do
so by bribery,» says Iftekhar Zaman, executive director of TI's Bangladesh
chapter.
The biggest radio broadcaster in the US with nearly 850 radio stations, iHeartMedia, formerly called Clear Channel Communications — which was acquired
by private equity firms Bain Capital and Thomas H. Lee Partners in a leveraged buyout at the apex of the LBO boom just before the Financial Crisis — has finally filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy, after threatening to do
so since 2010.
So I'm listening to
chapter 8 and
by now you'd think this guy would offer techniques, methods, tips etc..
«For anyone driven crazy
by the faux warm and fuzzy PR of the
so - called sharing economy Steven Hill's Raw Deal: How the «Uber Economy» and Runaway Capitalism Are Screwing American Workers should be required reading... Hill is an extremely well - informed skeptic who presents a satisfyingly blistering critique of high tech's disingenuous equating of sharing with profiteering... Hill includes two
chapters listing potential solutions for the crises facing U.S. workers... Hill stresses the need for movement organizing to create a safety net strong enough to save the millions of workers currently being shafted in venture capital's brave new world.»
[RICHARD SWIFT] I just finished reading The Sun Also Rises
by Hemingway.He's really inspiring «cause his writing is just
so simple.It's almost to the point of boredom.Like, «Why does he spend a whole
chapter on what happened in this bar?»
At bottom, changes in a school's concrete identity come
by decisions it makes, deliberately or inadvertently, about three factors we noted in
chapter 2 that distinguish schools from one another: Whether to construe what the Christian thing is all about in some one way, and if
so, how; what sort of community a theological school ought to be; how best to go about understanding God.
As was explained in
Chapter Two, the Wahhabi movement was inspired
by the teachings of Ibn Taymiyya, the great reformer who sought to save the Muslim world from doctrinal divisive forces
so it could be more powerful in withstanding foreign aggression.
Theological schools do
so through practices of self - governing that, as I argued in
chapter 8, must be qualified in certain respects
by the fact that they are theological schools.
now I liken this passage to what God said concerning the priest in the book of Numbers 18th
chapter he said that their inheritance was of the tithes of the children of Israel and
so too me its right on point as too those who are chosen
by God whether Pastor, Evangelist or Apostle etc..
This is from the Presbyterian Confession of Faith, and copied and pasted from spurgeon.org «
Chapter 10, Section 3: «Man,
by his fall into a state of sin, hath wholly lost all ability of will to any spiritual good accompanying salvation;
so as a natural man being altogether averse from that good, and dead in sin, is not able,
by his own strength, to convert himself, or to prepare himself thereunto.»
This is why teaching
chapter by chapter and verse
by verse is
so very important.
Towards the end of the last
chapter, I spoke of the mistake,
so frequent in the past, of looking at human existence in terms of a substantial self to which experiences happened or
by which experiences are had.
In that
chapter Paul gives an account of how Christ appeared to, or was seen
by (the Greek word may be translated either way), first Peter, then the Twelve, and
so on, until «last of all» he was «seen
by,» or «appeared to,» Paul himself.
The one thing that I have not
so far stressed, and I end this
chapter by stressing it, is that any profound analysis of our humanity demonstrates all too plainly that we are defective creatures.
But the great objection to the argument advanced
by Dr. Dodd is (1) the probability that Luke — that is, the author of Acts — had seen and used the Gospel of Mark before writing these early
chapters of his «second volume»; if
so, he would naturally have the pattern of Mark still in mind.
In
Chapters 14 and 15 - the
so - called Passion story — we find a continuous narrative, telling in detail how Jesus was seized
by his enemies, tried and put to death.
The traditional view, most profoundly developed
by St. Augustine in the eleventh
chapter of his Confessions, is that time is a feature of the created world, and
so is itself something created.
«All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man dies, one
chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a better language; and every
chapter must be
so translated; God employs several translators; some pieces are translated
by age, some
by sickness, some
by war, some
by justice; but God's hand is in every translation, and his hand shall bind up all our scattered leaves again for that library where every book shall lie open to one another.»
He is always keen to present the truth about the Catholic Church's promotion of science, and
so the first
chapters of his new bookare dedicated to that issue, starting with an analysis of the positive attitude to science taken
by Pope John Paul ii, who held as a guiding principle «the harmony existing between scientific truth and revealed truth.»
Mathew
chapter 5 vs 5 and 6 When you pray you are not to be a hypocrite for they love to stand in public
so as to be seen
by men..
So in the final
chapter, Lanzetta questions post-Conciliar approaches to ecumenism where the «dogmatic» (to do with knowing the truth) is juxtaposed to the «pastoral» «which starts out from the historic and pragmatic fact, and on behalf of this aims at possible dialogue, without changing teaching, but de facto neither improving understanding of it, but even with the risk of altering its significance
by virtue of the dialogue method chosen...».
There is too much in these three
chapters to cover in a verse
by verse fashion,
so I will just be pointing out a few highlights as we go through.
Here in communion with the brethren we come nearest to the Resurrection Body of Christ; and
so Paul writes in the following
Chapter 11 (a passage which has received far too little consideration) if this Lord's Supper were partaken of
by all members of the community in a completely worthy manner, then the union with Jesus» Resurrection Body would be
so effective in our own bodies that even now there would be no more sickness or death (1 Corinthians 1 1:28 - 30) a singularly bold assertion.
Bob, georgia, and ttwp, nowhere in the
so called OT, (the obvious truth book), and truly was named
by YHWH, «the book of remembrance» in Malachi 3v16, does it say jesus, nor does it tell of his story, and in all of those scriptures in the
chapters that are in Isaiah 40, 41, 42, 43, and 44, are speaking of the servant, the elect, from the «seed» of David, as the future prophecy in Jeremiah 23 vs.1 - 8, and Jeremiah 33 vs.14 - 21 of the righteous BRANCH, named «The Lord (YHWH) Our Righteousness», and not just one person here, and again there is no name of jc here either, and this is taught to us, in Jeremiah 33 vs. 22 that there will be a great number of David's seed to be on the throne.
It is with this type of worship that we are concerned in this
chapter — and appropriately
so, because it is the type of worship which provides the best setting for the preaching of the gospel or Word of God, while at the same time it is the type of worship which best delivers the body of believers from complete dependence upon the minister to whom is committed
by the Church both the preaching of the gospel and the conduct of the divine service itself.
In the beautiful departure speech in the 14th
chapter of John, we hear, «In nay Father's house there are many dwelling places,» and at the end of the Gospel, John brings his witness to a close
by noting that in addition to the things he has told us, there is
so much more that if it were all reduced to writing, there wouldn't be enough space in the world to contain the number of books that would be required.
I think Kushner has captured the spirit of the Whiteheadian approach, though his book displays no explicit familiarity with it; and
so it is fitting that we end this
chapter by quoting from the conclusion to his book:
So by a long route we have arrived at the subject of this
chapter.
The «temerity» of the book is furthered
by the editorial choice to mimic the structure and genres of Scripture, including the
chapter - and - verse format, and
so provide a «secular alternative to the King James Bible.»
No cogent evidence had
so far been produced to cause any widespread questioning of these
chapters, and since they had long been regarded
by the church as divinely delivered to Moses, this account of origins was accepted as sufficient and final.
But wasn't this
chapter, I inquired, really more informed
by the Catholic writings and thinkers he mentioned
so frequently elsewhere in the book — the papal encyclicals, Newman, Gilson and, above all, Thomas Aquinas?
This is why I have always been
so intrigued
by the «many mansions» Jesus speaks of in John 14:2, as well as
by John 14:6: «1 am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but
by me,» These verses stand only a few lines away from each other in the same
chapter of the same Gospel.
This is also indicated
by the aim of IM as enunciated in
chapter one: «The object of the following
chapters is not
so much to teach mathematics, but to enable the students from the very beginning of their course to know what the science is about, and why it is necessarily the foundation of exact thought as applied to natural phenomena» (IM 2).
Third, direct help of the children,
by pastoral counseling, Alateen group participation, and the other means described in the last
chapter can enhance their mental health and thus make them less vulnerable to alcoholism a decade or
so hence.
In this
chapter Paul compares the church to a body, and just as each part of a body has its own unique function,
so also our gifting
by the Holy Spirit provides each of us a unique purpose within the church, which is the Body of Christ (12:27).
I was delighted to see a
chapter on Vegetarian choices, and I am really intrigued
by those spaghetti squash tacos (I have 5 spaghetti squash from my mum's garden sitting in my garage until I decide what to do with them,
so thanks for the option!).
«This book features meticulously researched and written
chapters by more than 50 Culinology professionals on topics including the principles of food science, food safety and spoilage, shelf life extensions, packaging, nutritious food product development, commercialization and
so much more,» RCA Executive Director Suzanne Bohle described.
The
chapters are broken down
by time, with recipes that can be prepared in under 15, 20, 30, and 40 minutes,
so no matter how busy you are, you can get dinner on the table, whether it be smoky pepper and white bean quesadilla, butternut squash and sweet leek hash, or chickpea pasta with simple tomato sauce.
I started The Yiddish Policeman's Union
by Michael Chabon last Sunday,
so far I've read one
chapter and the rest of the time just stared at it on my nightstand for a minute or two before I pass out at night.
«Simply Vibrant is not divided into
chapters by seasons or time of the day, but into type of recipe: morning porridges and pancakes, wrap and rolls, fritters and veggie burgers, and
so on.
It is similarly divided into
chapters by grain and has lots of information and inventive recipes (I love the quinoa tortillas, the buckwheat wild rice pancakes, the masa biscuits...) and
so far none have disappointed.
Noelle Stam, 7, of Durham was
so inspired
by the idea of helping sick, abused and neglected horses that she dedicated her most recent birthday party to the Triangle
Chapter of U.S. Equine Rescue League.
As a twin mommy, I'm gonna go with pretty much the entire twin
chapters of every book written
by so - called experts who don't have twins themselves.
Ultimately we all gathered on our favourite coloured chairs to enjoy a story selected
by Chapters staff... Everyone loved the story
so much that 1 story turned into 3!!
The
chapter explains how the book is divided up: building connections
so that your child works with you because they want to; knowing yourself and your child
by understanding temperament triggers, stress, and medical factors — all impacts behavior; and lastly emotional development.
The books are organized loosely
by subject: Poetry,
Chapter Books, Picture Books, Science & Nature, People & History, Health & Wellness, Art, Craft & Music and
so on and
so forth.
Every
chapter has been reviewed
by world - class experts in the field,
so it can be used with confidence.
«No free man [homo liber] shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do
so, except
by the lawful judgment of his equals or
by the law of the land,» says
Chapter 39 of Magna Carta.
But, as we learn from the
chapters by Anastasia Piliavsky, David Gilmartin, and Lisa Bjorkman, they are not
so naïve as to believe that these leaders are their political equals.