Sentences with phrase «for watchfulness»

The riders keep up their smiles, for all their watchfulness, and the musicians could pass for a parade.
Matthew (verses 37 - 51) concludes this discourse with advice on need for watchfulness, though the reference in the conclusion may be to the coming crisis in Jesus» own ministry and not to the of the world.

Not exact matches

He speaks, for example, about the need to subordinate our own desires to God's will, and about the importance of watchfulness in place of calculations: «You know not the day nor the hour.»
Finally he is reminded of the extremely critical time in which he lives, which calls for constant watchfulness and lays upon him the most solemn responsibilities.
For every heart, purity demands constant watchfulness, a daily fight against the flesh, and a firm attitude against sin.
That network is usually focused inward, though; nighttime watchfulness would be an odd task for it to take, says Massachusetts General Hospital psychiatry researcher Dara Manoach, who was not involved in the study.
An instant hit for their intelligence, quick action and herding abilities, as well as their watchfulness around the home, Aussies grew in popularity in the land of their namesake and around the world.
They are also extremely useful for people who are away from home all day and simply can't apply the watchfulness necessary to train a cat to use a scratching post.
Its watchfulness makes it an ideal sentinel for your home as well.
They're great for households with small children and are extremely useful for people who are away from home all day and can't exercise the watchfulness necessary to train a cat to use a scratching post.
Watchfulness should be discouraged, as it's best for all concerned if a Mastiff intimidates by his presence alone, rather than by his behavior.
For these things, proposed thus nakedly and plainly, would soon draw on them the eye and hand of the magistrate and awaken all the care of the commonwealth to a watchfulness against the spreading of so dangerous an evil.
Lord Brougham, later Lord Chancellor, praised Erskine extravagantly: «His indefatigable patience, his eternal watchfulness, his unceasing labour of body and of mind... his untameable spirit, a subtlety which the merest pleader might envy, a quickness of intellect which made up for the host he was opposed to, these were the great powers of the man.»
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