Sentences with phrase «concerns find expression»

He is also dedicated to the location of Hong Kong as an urban landscape in which his thematic concerns find expression.
This concern found expression in the late Old Testament books of Ruth and Jonah, though there were seeds of it in Israel's earliest traditions, such as the divine words spoken to Abraham, «By you all the families of the earth will bless themselves».

Not exact matches

Such complications can mask the effect of other forces that might otherwise find expression in risk premiums or interest rates: forces, for example, associated with the concern about fiscal sustainability in the United States or the sustainability of our external imbalances.
How does the Christian concern for a higher education that prevents the mechanization of life and marginalisation of the weaker people and the destruction of the ecological basis of life by technocracy find expression?
The variety of concerns and issues finding expression in these counter-testimonies contributes each in its own way to chipping away at a crumbling and increasingly uninhabitable edifice, suggesting valuable alternatives that merit consideration as attempts at a new resolution are explored.
But in the meantime the non-religious concerns of the earlier prophets had found new forms of expression in the emerging institution of the synagogue, which pioneered quite a new phase m man's spiritual pilgrimage.
Yet the basic certainties stand sure; they concern the dynamic reality who is God, God's pervasive action in the world, God's self - manifestation through the whole range of creation, God's focal self - expression in Jesus Christ, the effecting of God's purpose through loving activity in the world and in human existence, and the assurance that our human life is not an end in itself but finds its fulfillment through reception into the divine life.
And yet we find ourselves in the strongest agreement with the German scholar, Professor von Rad, whom we have cited before, in his own expressed feeling that after all, legend is not an adequate term, so long as it is commonly understood simply as a mixture of history and unrestrained popular imagination (one part history, nine parts imagination — our comment, not his) We much better understand legend as a combination of history and meditation, and as motivated primarily by a concern to give expression to the meaning of history, as that meaning is conveyed by the faith that God makes himself known therein.12
This divine concern, which finds expression for the Christian in the teaching and activity of Jesus, carries the emphasis contained in the symbol of the Kingdom of God.
Leadership is discovered, not only when a church is bombed in Montgomery, or a woman refuses to go to the back of a bus, but when large numbers of persons are moving to communicate with one another and to find expression for their concerns.
As far as the former is concerned we find a considerable amount of variableness in the nature, intensity, and color of the unifying, basic religious experience, shades or differences in theoretical (belief, myth, doctrine) and practical (worship, activities) expression.
At the same time he was indicating very profoundly what God is «up to» in the continual coming to men and women which finds its climactic expression in the event of Jesus Christ, so far as Christian understanding is concerned, although we dare not be so exclusive or uncharitable as to rule out other ways for other people «who know not the Lord Jesus.»
Creative and dynamic religious forces are finding their expression not in the context of the organized church, but in film, literature, and the arts, and also in some aspects of science and industry, where people are seeking ways to give institutional expression to their basic religious concerns while at the same time rejecting alliances with institutional religion.
No division, then, is deep or wide enough to prevent a sincere expression of our concern for those who have dedicated their lives to the mission of the church and who nowhave to deal with the news of the Vatican finding
Today, it finds its most vital expression in social and economic fairness, concern for others and the vigorous defence of human rights.
cit., p. 84) This universality of love finds its most wonderful expression in the formula of the Buddhist canon concerning the meditation on love, compassion, and mutual joy.
But fortunately for us the Hebrew found God in history, in law, in the folk wisdom of the people and in his flights of poetic inspiration, as well as in his profound questionings concerning the meaning of life; so we have actually preserved for us a veritable wealth of literary variety of expression.
[15] β - synuclein was a protein of particular concern: it exhibits strong sequence homology with AS and a similar expression pattern, and yet it is not found in LB, is not amyloidogenic, and indeed appears inhibit AS aggregation and exhibit other neuroprotective actions.
With a particular focus on painting, this exhibition brings together seminal works that provide an overview of the artistic, socio - economic and political concerns of artists in Germany, during a time period when these artists were reconciling with the trauma of war, finding a national identity, struggling for freedom of expression and constantly pushing the limits of modern and contemporary art.
Some artists focus exclusively upon a narrow set of concerns but manage to find nuanced and varied expressions of them.
Impiglia has never been limited to his signature style, but has consistently found new ways of expression to express his concern about contemporary culture.
Finding: Despite concerns that some of the appointed CCE Panel members were unsuitable, the Committee accepted Russell's vague expressions of hope that they would act in an objective fashion.
If anyone wants to tell me that the expression «climate change» now has a consensual usage beyond its common meaning, I'd ask why people who are supposed to rely on specificity have never shown any interest in finding specific terminology for the very phenomenon which is at the centre of all their concerns.
In the conclusion to the reasons for judgment of Linden J. in Davidson v. Connaught Laboratories et al. (1980), 14 C.C.L.T. 251, there is to be found, in more or less precatory language, an eloquent expression of concern about the requirement of our law that fault exist as a condition precedent to the receipt of compensation in matters of this kind.
Under Article 1 (j) of that regulation, a person's residence is the place where he «habitually resides», an expression which refers to the Member State in which the person concerned habitually resides and where the habitual centre of his interests is to be found.
Perhaps it is just possible that this expression of concern was motivated less by constitutionally founded doubt than by a desire to embarrass the President.
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