Sentences with phrase «from privation»

After theirjourney into the mine, Onstott and his colleagues appear relieved to beout of the mine, far from the privations of the deep.

Not exact matches

Since sensitive persons are most likely to suffer from spiritual privation, a society's state of mental health is also an index of its spiritual well - being.
If those elements of the population for whom crime is an acceptable alternative grow to any sizable percentage because of economic privation or because of prejudice, or if these alienated groups are prevented from finding a way to work within the system, then the whole society will be reduced very quickly to choosing between living in a police state or living in anarchy.
Christian thought has traditionally, of necessity, defined evil as a privation of the good, possessing no essence or nature of its own, a purely parasitic corruption of reality; hence it can have no positive role to play in God's determination of Himself or purpose for His creatures (even if by economy God can bring good from evil); it can in no way supply any imagined deficiency in God's or creation's goodness.
(John 3:3 [see also marginal translation]-RRB- A divine initiative from above regenerates the man so that he passes from a state of unspiritual darkness, illusion, and privation into the higher realm of being, concerning which John uses three major words — light, life, and love.
According to John, the evil from which Christ saves his people is not so much sin as it is an inner darkness of man's unregenerate nature, a profound privation of true light, true knowledge, and true life.
This limitation is not a privation, but a gift that allows for the discovery of the love that springs from wonder in the face of difference.
Now the gift was to be given, though it became clear to Paul from the daily privations of his missions and the stirrings of his inner spirit that suffering and abuse awaited him in the holy city.
From his survey of research on privation, Rutter proposed that it is likely to lead initially to clinging, dependent behavior, attention - seeking and indiscriminate friendliness, then as the child matures, an inability to keep rules, form lasting relationships, or feel guilt.
Inexorably prisoners are taken from similar places, geographically, culturally and economically and their experience of violence, of absence from parenthood, and of economic privation swiftly contribute to growing structures of nested criminality, resistent to incremental policy solutions and easily feared and reviled by those more fortunately placed.
From Castillion and Schumpeter to Casson many characteristics have been brought together, which can be classified into the generic terms of «ability» (e.g., intelligence, intuition, persistence) and «ambition» (e.g., enthusiasm, thinking of investments, willingness, and readiness for privation).
Harrigan's ace in the hole is broken, conflicted Deke, Pike's former partner, enlisted to hunt his friend down or return to the tortures and privation of Yuma prison, from which Harrigan has sprung him.
In general accounts it was defined by privation and austerity brought on by the personal and economic sacrifices of six years of world war but with a hopeful accompaniment of starting from scratch, of fabricating one's individualized expression out of the rubble.
From his survey of research on privation, Rutter proposed that it is likely to lead initially to clinging, dependent behavior, attention - seeking and indiscriminate friendliness, then as the child matures, an inability to keep rules, form lasting relationships, or feel guilt.
The care provided was of good quality, but carers were discouraged from forming attachments with the children (i.e. privation occurred).
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