Sentences with phrase «cringe all»

at us, and, like the dog beaten when it was a puppy, the mere sight of a stick is often enough to make us cringe or growl.
But the church / cult / family I have broken free of so abused this idea — this terminology — that it still makes me cringe.
We can only cringe when a document announces: «America is at a tipping point where the traditional commitment to our government protecting and advancing the common good is in very real danger of being dismantled for generations.»
Women ministers cringe at such comments because they find them belittling and sexist.
Mention the Crusades, the Inquisition and the Ku Klux Klan to any pastor and see them cringe.
However, I cringe when they call some of these organizations «church» (although they may call it whatever they like), and appeal to the Scripture as a basis for what they are doing.
Sure I see alot of people saying» O» thats sweet and hearfelt» but, wow to actually write as if your God is a pretty big cringe inducing act, even if it is nice.
Costi reflects on these prophecies with a cringe at the insensitivity of the first («a televangelist says «God's gonna» burn them all»:... the whole world should look back and go «yeah.
Sometimes the service suggests a God who is like an oriental monarch demanding that his subjects cringe in fear before him; more often, at least in many American churches, it suggests a God who is foolishly sentimental and entirely undemanding in his loving self - disclosure to men.
Grace's chapter on submission will make egalitarians cringe, but it would take too long to dissect all her arguments here.
Every Monday morning I cringe waiting for the next stream of silliness that will scroll across my screen.
I cringe inside when people say that your job doesn't define you, it's just what you do so you can support your family and do things you enjoy in your off time.
We cringe when we hear Joplin selling herself so short, and yet we are overpowered by the strength she finds in her own weakness.
I am an elder and I wear jeans to church — and yes, I'm sure it makes the older, more traditional members cringe, but I am not there to impress people.
Republicans, especially of late, represent what most women should cringe... they are for women who are subservient to their men, who think that men know best when it comes to their own reproductive system, and who consistently support corporations that underpay women in every equivalent positions as the male counterpart.
I cringe every time I hear someone says «I think God wants us to be happy»... where would anyone get that?
Whenever the topic is mentioned, I cringe inside.
The whole thing makes me cringe.
Oh, and I cringe at what we are teaching in the video.
I cringe to think how long this faternity of pedophilia has gone on.
I cringe when I hear you describe this country, MY country, as a Christian nation.
There are those of us that don't cringe when me face the fact that there isn't a reward for being good people in life or a punishment if we aren't, we chose to be honest people because it's the right thing to do.
However the levity of the video made me cringe a little bit since it might downplay the significance of baptism along with its rich heritage.
One thing that makes me cringe is when people ask me, «Have you accepted Jesus Christ as your personal lord and savior?»
I feel that exact way when I speak to someone who talks about a magical being... I cringe.
One of these issues has been put to me in words like these: «Altogether too much teaching about prayer, particularly in circles that are highly orthodox and consider themselves also highly biblical, amounts to telling us that we must cringe before, imperial majesty, as if we were in the presence of an oriental despot.
I cringe whenever people say, «the odds are too high».
People who are so hurt that they cringe if you mention the Bible or Jesus.
It's a lot like watching a car wreck... you should not watch... but you can't help and watch the explosion of metal and glass take place before your eyes while you cringe!
And cringe at the horror.
He heaped verbal abuse on his opponents that made me cringe.
And, of course, I sometimes cringe when a stony reading of a lively story makes it leaden and deadly.
At first I started to cringe about this article, but I think it does a good job of dispelling some myths that AA is a cult, a religion.
We cringe before power expressed coercively and arbitrarily; we tremble in the presence of rigid moralism, when we do not react against it in wild and desperate efforts to be ourselves; we can only be puzzled by the kind of absolute essence which is without affects from what goes on around and about it.
It's hard not to cringe when someone confidently announces that God «led» her to do something careless or hurtful, and it's hard not to get frustrated when certain specific lifestyle decisions are spoken of as «God's way» when they just might not work for everyone.
We've all seen the people on college campuses who make us cringe at the thought of being associated with them.
II cringe when I see the percentage break down... If that many people believe in «a hope and a prayer»; o) there is no hope for humans... It's 2012!
While you and I cringe at hearing this response, many Christians cringe daily in having such judgmental words spoken directly to them.
Even that word «them» makes me cringe as I speak it, as if my brothers and sisters are somehow other, different from me.
Here's a test: Did you cringe or roll your eyes when you read the first sentence of this answer?
I cringe now at what I taught my own children about a «loving» God who kills out of «love» for his people.
Trump, whose awkward referrals to Jesus as «somebody I can revere in terms of bravery» and communion as «my little wine... and my little cracker» have made evangelicals cringe, describes himself as a Presbyterian who goes to church «when I can.»
What made it cringe - worthy for me was how much it fit into the Strong Black Woman trope.
On the one hand was the beauty of that moment, of those mothers praising God and looking amazing, but it also made me cringe.
I cringe when Glenn or Rush say, «progressives all believe that... (fill in the blank); they are ALWAYS wrong, and self serving in doing so.
I don't know about others, but this sounds not just like some churches I have been to, but some places I have lived and certainly the way I grew up at times - «Look good on the outside and cringe and die a little each day on the inside.»
And if the entire thing doesn't make you cringe with embarrassment, then you probably lack the facial muscles to do so.
It was for different reasons than it made other people cringe, such as the exploitation of black pain — that discounts the women's agency in choosing to be there.
They cringe within but can not articulate the reason for their fear.
It also appears to me that some people find security in guidelines and structure while others (like myself) cringe under the idea of rules and rulebooks.
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