Sentences with phrase «far more evil»

Most of these irritating bosses can be beaten purely through skill, but at a certain points in the game you need to face down the main baddie, Shao Khan, and it's at these points that some gamers may just quit altogether as Shao Khan is akin to God, except he's much cooler, far more evil and God would presumably be sportsmanlike enough not to spam the same move over and over.
, a woman far more evil than her surname suggests.
Cotton and the camera crew travel to Louisiana where they are confronted with a situation involving a sweet - looking girl, her wild - eyed father, and strange brother - one that proves to be far more evil than the routine situation they had expected.
It is not merely that this contrast removes us from a fortunate situation; it actually produces a situation far more evil than any formerly known.
Here then is a theology that either means nothing certainly identifiable (without supernatural grace or high genius in the art of reconnecting with experience concepts carefully divested of relation to it) or else means that the world might exactly as well not have existed, or as well have existed with far more evil or less good in it than it actually presents.

Not exact matches

As far as the case for religion being the evil that athiest think it is, history is proof that religion has little to do with evil and more than anything else.
The Catholic church ought to be ashamed of the evil IT has wrought; far more harm has been done by your popes and their minions than has ever been committed by gays.
There are far more people who go through life without doing anything evil than there are people who do do commit evil.
Should they believe that the prophesied evil predictions had in fact arrived, their behavior would become far more difficult to predict.
Not sure i am convinced because how do you explain the verse an eye for an eye in the old testament there have always been consequences for wrong doing and stiill are for sin.If we believe the word then that word is from God not satan.As far as satan is concerned he uses violence as his tools of trade he works on our fears and is limited to robbing stealing and destroying he does nt have anything else.Violence confirms to us that there is a spiritual battle going on both on the earthly plane and in the heavenlys and the battle is over souls.The verse the kingdon of heaven is expanding and violent people take it by force is referring to that spiritual battle and as satan uses violence to expand his dominion so does God use violence to counter him.So what does he mean by that term for me i think it is saying that the the force of evil that satan uses or violence is overcome by a greater violence or force a more powerful one that being the Love of Christ.Through the cross we see that clearly portrayed and in our lives that very same battle is still happening right now for dominion be clear if we walk in the flkesh satan will have dominion over us but if we walk according to the spirit and abide in Christ we have freedom from our old nature.and satan.He can oppose us but he wont be able to influence us if we are in Christ.
This notion of the demonic, especially when it is developed to explain the widespread proclivity of human beings to evil (through being born into cultures more or less dominated by demonic habits, symbols, beliefs, and attitudes), provides a further basis for reconciling God's goodness with the world's evil.
A friend of mine once remarked that, while the redefinition of marriage does have troubling consequences for the continuity of society, what John Paul II has rightly called the «culture of death» is far more sinister, another order of evil entirely.
Whitehead envisions that in the divine life, far more than in the human, there is a redemption of the evil of the world, a redemption which does not remove its evil, but which includes it within a whole to which even human evil can make some positive contribution, however limited.
The existence of religious health resorts since antiquity, the expulsion of «evil spirits» in the Gospel, sacramental prayer over the sick — those practices signify far more than a surpassed stage in the history of medicine.
In fact, it is the consideration of evil which constrains us to make this new move; now, with the consideration of evil, it is the very question, of freedom, of the real freedom evoked by the postulates of the Critique of Practical Reason, which returns; the problematic of evil requires us to tie, more directly than we have so far been able to do, the actual reality of freedom to the regeneration which is the very content of hope.
In fact, I would go further and say that if one person does something evil, and another person does the exact same thing but does it in the name of Jesus Christ, the second action is way more demonic and evil than the first.
As the reform movements sweeping through Eastern Europe are learning, denunciation of evil and corruption is a necessary first step toward social change, but constructing new institutional arrangements is by far the more arduous task.
John Hick has seen far more clearly than most that the ambiguity of the world is part of the problem of evil.
I have far more respect for those that believe in good and evil that don't rely on a set religion, than someone who needs someone else to provide them a reason to behave as if they do.
The document then avoids any further reference to «ridding the world of evil» and proceeds generally in somewhat less emotive and more pragmatic (but nevertheless grandiose) terms to discuss and project foreign - policy objectives.
This euphoria went far beyond the undeniable satisfaction of seeing a great evil overcome, and more than one other wise sober - minded observer was heard to propose that the democratic project — the great carrier of the modern quest for freedom — was now inevitably and irreversibly triumphant.
Any deficiencies or limitations, they consider, are to be overcome by a more appropriate or extended application of further technology: a stance identified by Frederick Ferre as «technolatry,» the belief that «every apparent evil brought on by technique is to be countered by yet greater faith in technique.»
Theologically, we shall seem to have gone absurdly far in a Pelagian direction; and all the more so if our descendants have been driven the other way by the grief and pressure of events, and have come to remember that this religion of the Resurrection starts with the Cross, has evil and suffering and death as its raw material, its prime subject - matter.
For, if there is no God, then one faces the problem of goodness, beauty, truth, all that is lovely in music and art, all that is admirable in character, and that problem of good seems to me far more important and more difficult to solve than the problem of evil.
Even in such an apocalyptic novel as Love in the Ruins (1971), what fails to happen — a Louisiana version of Armageddon — is far more important than Dr. Thomas More's desperate attempts to stave off Mephistophelian emore important than Dr. Thomas More's desperate attempts to stave off Mephistophelian eMore's desperate attempts to stave off Mephistophelian evil.
The next generation of clergymen will be far more likely to proclaim it to them, just as they will be more likely to preach genuine repentance to the next generation of Kaines and Paul Simons instead of covering their ears every time those supposedly devout Catholics and Lutherans claim to be «personally opposed» to an evil they've consistently worked to perpetuate.»
If we evil folk give good gifts to our children, the heavenly Father will do far more for us.
He pointed out that the general public is further advised to be more vigilant in crowded places as terrorists can disguise in any form to achieve their evil intents including the use of military uniforms.
The more organic / natural foundations I try lately, the further goes away that image of «old school» evil makeup foundation that covers the skin like a vacuum mask, erases my precious freckles and literally don't let me breath.
While the series always has been morally ambiguous, this season tries to push the envelope even more in making the police and atf completely evil and incompetent, while the bikers kill more out of respect and protection of the group, the atf kill in order further career, not to pursue these dangerous criminals.
But he is appalled to find that his new creation Titan (Jonah Hill) is far more interested in playing video games and acquiring shiny new toys than re-igniting the age - old battle between good and evil.
Unlike most Marvel villains, who have little nuance as far as their evil intentions, Killmonger has a rationale for his malevolent acts, and a certain sympathy beyond this, that makes the film more a struggle for political ideas than it is just a black - and - white fight between good guys and bad guys.
The restoration of Lili's guile — as in the U.S. theatrical cut (hereafter TC), she's introduced mischievously pulling down a milkmaid's clothesline, but here she goes a step farther in stealing biscuits from the woman and telling Jack she baked them herself — places the DC in an emotional context removed from that of its forebear: we see her as more susceptible to the forces of evil.
Like Fred Zinnemann's 1948 Czech - lensed post-war classic The Search, 1945 is a reckoning with the evil and horrors of the Holocaust that pushes emotional buttons with a far more oblique approach.
Here's further proof that scatological humor is not a comic evil unto itself, and that it can work if the setup (a hypochondriac) and focus (said hypochondriac's reaction) serve something more than just grossing out the audience.
Seeking safety from the bombs in the remote coastal location, the group instead find themselves facing an evil far more frightening when their arrival awakens the Woman in Black.
He's a rather cut and dry character, playing the cliché scientist when necessary and flipping on the evil switch when in Lizard form, but a few more powerful moments between Peter and the human Dr. Connors could have made the battles between Spider - Man and The Lizard far more tense.
But this time he is meeting with far more resistance and complex circumstances, making the delineation between good and evil much more blurred.
Less antiseptic than the very broad good vs. evil, dark vs. light fantasy - based conflicts of the series, the world of Rogue One is far more complicated, showing us a more realized version of a universe under the thumb of an evil dictatorship and the moral compromises soldiers living and fighting in a war zones might have to make.
In the midst of this conflict, a far more dangerous, ancient evil is awakened.
Rey \'s relationship with Skywalker, Ren \'s continuing conflict between light and dark, and Snoke \'s evil leadership offered far more intriguing plots points.
But while they fight evil at night, by day they must take on something far more dangerous during the day: high school Trailer
But when they stop to investigate, they discover that the grisly reality at the bottom of that pipe is far worse than they could have ever suspected... and that they are now the targets of an evil far more unspeakable — and unstoppable — than they could have ever imagined!»
Four friends set out to find the truth behind rumors of an evil being preying on the village, but what they find is far more horrific than they imagined.
CL: For all practical purposes, it seems to me that central banks» similarities (which The Evil Princes emphasises) are far more important than their differences.
FP is fun, but I find Shatter engages me far more, especially the hardcore gamer in me who seems to lay dormant until some evil time - consuming piece of software comes along and convinces him it's time to play: D
In fact, it's by far the scariest Zombie game even more so than any of the Resident Evil's.
In the midst of this conflict, a far more dangerous, ancient evil is awakened.
Unfortunately, this is an area where I feel Capcom could've pushed it further; they could've made this a must - buy if it looked more like Resident Evil 5.
The point is that the «evil» path in Epic Mickey is far more appealing because it's more mischievous than evil, and that sort of Mickey almost fits better in this world.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z