Not exact matches
It was only then that «the fundamental and persistent
character of the Messiah, as of one rising from humanity and clothed with power, was displaced by... a heavenly being, who came down
to the
world, sojourned in it, left it, ascended
to heaven and now enters upon the dominion of the
world which originally
belonged to him.»
The Hebrew's
world, however, was sacralized not because of its innate and native
character but because it
belonged to God.
We do wait for the adoption — that will come at the fulfillment of all things, which, however imminent, is still future; but even now we possess the Spirit of adoption, that is, God's miraculous gift of forgiveness and grace, an advance installment, a token payment, a foretaste, a «first - fruits,» of a life which in its full, true
character belongs only
to the
world to come.
Suffice it
to say that the conceptuality which I accept — and accept because it seems
to do justice
to deep analysis of human experience and observation, as well as
to the knowledge we now have of the way «things go» in the
world — lays stress on the dynamic «event»
character of that
world; on the inter-relationships which exist in what is a societal universe, on the inadequacy of «substance» thinking
to describe such a universe of «becoming» and «
belonging», on the place of decisions in freedom by the creatures with the consequences which such decisions bring about, and on the central importance of persuasion rather than coercive force as a clue
to the «going» of things in that universe.
The main players at the paper are its publisher Kay Graham (a very strong Meryl Streep, as a
character finding her place in a
world that doesn't seem
to have one for her), who took over the job after her husband's suicide (The ownership of the paper
belonged to Kay's family, but her father passed on responsibilities
to her husband), and its executive editor Ben Bradlee (an iffy Tom Hanks), a shark in the newspaper
world who's equally revered and feared.
There was a look
to Disney Infinity — an aesthetic that brought all the
characters from different
worlds together while still clearly defining them as
belonging to one
world,
to the land of Disney Infinity itself.
The film mostly succeeds on all fronts, crafting a rich and thoughtful
character study of a man going through a real identity crisis, unsure of which
world he truly
belongs to, if any.
But just as groundbreaking are the film's female
characters, many of whom
belong to the Dora Milaje, a team of Wakandan women trained from birth
to be some of the best fighters in the
world when it comes
to martial arts, hand -
to - hand combat, and weaponry.
What I do believe is that any story that goes out into the
world belongs to everyone and they can perceive the
characters however they please.»
Akira and Sarah Bryant are very fitting
characters to the DOA
world and both control and feel as if they
belonged in the series all along.
The
character and his
world belong to his creators, John and Ste Pickford, and they've brought Plok back in the form of a comic strip that chronicles what the so - called Exploding Man is up
to after all these years.