Sentences with phrase «dying wish of»

The gameplay centers around time travel, as two doctors are tasked with journeying through one man's memories in order to help grant his dying wish of traveling to the moon.
At the core of their confrontations is Kamui, a young man returning to his birthplace to fulfill his mother's dying wish of changing fate as it's been seen.
Jason Bateman, Tina Fey and Adam Driver lead this comedy - drama about an utterly disfunctional group of siblings forced to grant the dying wish of their departed father: to live under the same roof together for a week.
You are Ajay Ghale, returning to the country of your birth, the lush forests and harsh snow capped summits of Kyrat, to fulfill your mother's dying wish of spreading her ashes.
According to him, he only fulfilled the dying wish of Dr Nkrumah's wife, Fathia, and that could not have by any means demeaned his legacy.
This seems like an opportunistic attempt to reverse the dying wish of a family member, in a greedy effort to get at some fast money.

Not exact matches

«Back to the Secret Garden» «Black Books: Series 1 - 3» «Christmas with the Kranks» «Get Rich or Die Tryin»» «Hard Candy» «Hugo» «Ravenous» «The Brothers» «The Legend of Hell House» «The Matrix» «The Matrix Reloaded» «The Matrix Revolutions» «The Newton Boys» «Thomas & Friends: A Very Thomas Christmas» «Thomas & Friends: Holiday Express» «Thomas & Friends: Merry Winter Wish» «Thomas & Friends: The Christmas Engines» «Thomas & Friends: Ultimate Christmas» «Twilight» «V for Vendetta»
Term life may also make sense if you continue to work during retirement, even part - time, to supplement your savings and wish to protect your spouse from the loss of your income when you die, he said.
When his friends stole his body from the LA airport, drove it to Joshua Tree National Park, poured five gallons of gasoline into his open coffin, and lit it with a match, they fulfilled his dying wish to be cremated in the desert.
When you die, I promise you: I will not make the decision to not embalm you I will not make the decision to not show you off to a room full of people surrounded by flowers for 2 days I will not make the decision to not parade you through town with traffic stopping pomp I won't bury you within 24 hours I WILL allow YOUR family to make those decisions for you in respect to what you wish for in your passing.
Generally, it has to do with the wishes of the family and the one who is dying.
Now, as a descendant of BOTH sides of «Americans» (White & Native) I just wish to point out that AMERICA ain't got a pearly clean reputation for not FORCING Christian conversion or die!
If you seek an example of humility, look upon the crucified one, for God wished to be judged by Pontius Pilate and to die.
2nd choice with your free will, love and follow satan's lies and your spirit dies while living on earth, go to paradise, still hate Jesus, Day of the Lord, and you get your wish, perish into the eternal flames, no eternity for you.
if you have faith anything is possible, that's what happen on Monday, the Nation was asking for miracle and we received one, the pope was praying with for us, the peace he always breath, I don't wish anybody's death, but in this case someone had to die, either one of us again or Osama.
I feel like dying inside when I hear this because 90 % of the time I want to see what they do in there and wish to join them!
I just wished Jesus cared for the thousands of children who die every day from abuse, crime and starvation as he cares for football.
From the Christian perspective, do you think she should be granted her wish, or should be be required to run out the length of her disease and die of natural causes?
Not one of your sins surprised Him or made Him wish He had not died for you.
Does a Doctor have the right to deny a patients wish to die, regardless of the condition?
As they seek to communicate the Gospel to their Muslim neighbours and friends, they will have a common linguistic and cultural background in which, and from which, to engage but they will also wish to transmit the uniqueness of God's self revelation in the living, dying, rising again and teaching of Jesus the Messiah.
Yet there is also a wish that dies slowly, a wish that remains with the real sufferer even in the pain of his loss, and that only dies when he dies.
But even if you could so dull yourself that the wish would die out, so that you could sever the wish's painful tie with that happier sense of being a man, of loving to live, of loving to be a happy one, still you would fail to will only one thing.
The mass and majesty of this world, all That carries weight and always weighs the same, Lay in the hands of others; they were small And could not hope for help, and no help came; What their foes liked to do was done; their shame Was all the worst could wish: they lost their pride And died as men before their bodies died.
But I do not wish that these Muslims would die, nor do I think they are representative of all Muslims.
I can understand this feeling on the part of people who have been brought up to accept the conventional notion that heaven will be a place of meeting with those who have died and who wish to have assurance that continuing conscious personal existence after death is guaranteed to us humans.
Bourne wished to live and die as rector of Wonersh (his heart is buried there), but higher office called him.
One of the sources, which wished to remain anonymous, told the paper: «Unfortunately, one of the male victims who is asthmatic and diabetic at the same time, died while in captivity as a result of complications from his ailments.
«I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.»
When the Prophet died he left a people who had learned to worship God, who had spiritual knowledge, cleanness of heart, a desire to seek justice, a wish to serve the people, the spirit of self - sacrifice; they were doers of good.
It says: «As leaders of faith communities, we wish to state our joint response to Lord Falconer's Assisted Dying Bill.
Don't the boards / elders realize the younger generations see the Christian caterpillars always eating leaves until they die — and simply do not wish to be part of such a failed biology?
The simple fact that they were disappointed that the world didn't come to an end is the same as saying they wished we had all died... in which case, the majority of us would wind up in hell.
Hence in a sense our age is too tenacious of life to die, for dying is one of the most remarkable leaps, and a little verse of a poet has always attracted me much, because, after having expressed prettily and simply in five or six preceding lines his wish for good things in life, he concludes thus: Ein selige Sprung in die Ewigkeit.)
I have a number of so - called miraculous cures...» As a pediatrician with more than 100 asthmatics in my practice, I wish that Perls had communicated his curative technique to someone before he died.
From the limitation of offering assisted suicide to terminally - ill patients whose prognosis is only six months of life, to the so - called «safeguard» of having two doctors check the patient has a «clear, settled, and voluntary» wish to die (and, er, as we all know, a two doctor requirement was such a powerful safeguard in the Abortion Act!)
And I wish you could have known my friend Evangeline, who earned a master's degree in her 60s and was editing the next volume of a Bible commentary the day she died after a 20 - year fight with cancer.
For years I tried to ignore this debate — feeling some sympathy occasionally for the late Marilyn Monroe, who died wishing that people would either love her or hate her for what she was instead of what she stood for.
But for the moment I wish only to insist that one of the consequences of the «immortality» position, for so long presented as essential to Christian belief, has been precisely the tendency to minimize the reality of death and to make it appear blasphemous for anyone to say, as I did in an earlier paragraph, that not only do we all die but that all of us also dies.
At the age of seven months, he was taken home to Britain to Bath by his mother, who wished to care for her dying mother.
Once, when I visited him in Stockbridge, he told me of his pain and weakness, adding: «If it were not for my loyalty to God and my friends, I'd wish to die
i long with you david... and i myself stumble in my own awkward efforts toward freedom, and as you said, we know the fact is that it is scary to move into freedom... because it is unknown... but i see so many on this newfound road to freedom get trapped in the liminal space of wish - fullfillment community (which actually rather looks like affinity rather than the hard - won community that comes from communitas)... i'm sure this is going to come off the wrong way, but i'm going to say it anyway: many of the comments seem to be «all about me», and truly that is what religion is... but not freedom, not the mission of Jesus where you die to yourself by taking up your cross daily... not being centered on the «other» rather than yourself...
Yet many of them do not wish to make assisted suicide too widely available, and still others worry about financial and social pressures that can subtly coerce the vulnerable into making a «choice» to die.
The part of this that should be realized is that wishing for the rapture is wishing for the rest of humanity to die, and to die in a horrible manner.
The import of this point is to show a tendency in our culture to rationalize the wish to die or the intention to bring death to others as something natural, even noble.
@john m You said: «The part of this that should be realized is that wishing for the rapture is wishing for the rest of humanity to die, and to die in a horrible manner.
Today there are reasons to modify this composite tradition; to differentiate qualities of the «intention to die»; to open up options in medical practice, legal practice and pastoral ministry to understand, allow, perhaps even encourage and help persons who wish to die.
Having faced psycho killers and been willing to fight and die for my beliefs I can honestly say I have been more than willing to die and kill for them If I stand before a crowd of people and they wish to kill me (and they did) for my religius beliefs and I give them the choice to move or die is it wrong to have a weapon?
Good luck next time believers, Maybe you'll eventually get your wish that 98 % of the world's population dies.
It is told of Newman's Roman Catholic diocesan, the straightforward English monk Bishop Ullathorne of Birmingham, that he said something on his deathbed about St. Benedict and the angels, and when asked if he saw them answered, yes he did.56 Frank Weston returned from the plaudits of London crowds to die, as he would have wished to, in his mud and straw «palace» at Hegongo.
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