Sentences with phrase «given by this chapter»

C. Any waiver by a consumer of any of the provisions of this chapter shall be deemed void and unenforceable by a credit services business as contrary to public policy of this Commonwealth, and any attempt by a credit services business to have a consumer waive rights given by this chapter shall constitute a violation of this chapter.
Any attempt by a credit services organization to have a buyer waive rights given by this chapter is a violation of this chapter.

Not exact matches

In this chapter, we'll go over the most important online and offline assets for building your personal brand and give you step - by - step instructions for securing and building each up with a strong community.
By stepping away, he's taking the time to heal from his personal tragedy while giving the company room to fully embrace this new chapter in Uber's history.
That, in light of $ 3.1 billion of missing funds outlined in Chapter Eight of the 2013 Spring Report of the Auditor General of Canada, an order of the House do issue for the following documents from 2001 to the present, allowing for redaction based on national security: (a) all Public Security and Anti-Terrorism annual reports submitted to the Treasury Board Secretariat; (b) all Treasury Board submissions made as part of the Initiative; (c) all departmental evaluations of the Initiative; (d) the Treasury Board corporate database established to monitor funding; that these records be provided to the House in both official languages by June 17, 2013; that the Speaker make arrangements for these records to be made available online; and that the Auditor - General be given all necessary resources to perform an in - depth forensic audit until the missing $ 3.1 billion is found and accounted for.
For years, trade and justice activists have proposed renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement to address some of the deal's most damaging features: for example, by removing the anti-democratic investor - state dispute settlement provisions of Chapter 11, linking trade benefits to genuine protections for human and labour rights (all the more important given the deteriorating democratic situation in Mexico), and establishing a continent - wide strategy for auto investment and production. We were always told that renegotiating NAFTA was a pipe dream: it would not be possible to open the text and get all three countries on board with reforms, no matter how legitimate the concerns.
Chapter 19 of Revelations gives a step by step detail of Jesus in spirit form methodically... well you have to read the rest for yourself if you have a Bible, but its all their in print for all to see, because... God give everyone an opportunity to escape a calamity, He always has and He always will.
For example, in my earlier short discussion on the Gospel of John, I lean towards some of the early chapters as having good merit, but then... we are given direct quotes of Jesus beginning in Chapter 14... by people that could not have been there....?
In chapter 9 of book XVIII of THE CITY OF GOD, St. Augustine reports that the enraged men of Athens demanded, to compensate for their city being named by women (who outvoted the men in the assembly by one) for a woman God, that women lose the right of suffrage, that they not be able to give their names to their chldren, and that they were never to be known as citizens of Athens.
If God gave our first parents a cultural mandate in the first chapter of Genesis, we are painfully aware that by the third chapter that they have messed up, claiming the power to become gods.
By chapter 11, even after God has purged the world with a flood, we see righteous Noah's wayward descendants once again impressed with their own God - given ability to shape culture and seeking to replace him with the work of their own hands.
When you read through the Bible chapter for chapter one will get a broader view or the full context about what happened, maybe where it happened why it did happen and for which purpose it happened but: «All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:..»
Fearful of having their books omitted from lists of «acceptable» texts, a number of publishers have acquiesced to creationist demands in various ways: by considerably reducing the space given to discussion of evolution, by referring to evolution as «only a theory,» by including creationist materials, or by placing references to evolution in a final chapter which the teacher could conveniently Omit.
Toward this end, on any given Sabbath, they would have at least seven different sermons based on a verse by verse, chapter by chapter explanation the text.
This member has not been named by the Chapter but is understood to be David Potter, a leading light of the campanology world, who was given an MBE for his services to bell - ringing and has never been convicted of any offences.
Both, we are given to understand, are possessed by the Holy Spirit, and the chapter of The Descent of the Dove that deals with the Reformation is especially strong in its passionate sympathy both for Calvin and for St. Ignatius Loyola.
For instance, Chapter 15 on the laity begins with a broad discussion about how the Church grew, covering the establishment of monasteries and convents, Mass in Latin, the removal of rood screens and the history of the Reformation; while Chapter 16, on Our Lady, goes through the titles given to her, in order to answer criticisms that these titles and honours can not be supported by Scripture.
, summarising the previous five chapters, Pope Benedict writes that the «supremacy of technology tends to prevent people from recognising anything that can not be explained in terms of matter alone,» (77)-LSB-... This] chapter has been given the silent treatment by not only the mass - media, but by professors, theologians, and generally by those who ought to know better.
In this chapter I shall urge them not to give up their persistence in clinging to the distinctiveness of their field of inquiry in spite of the apparent inroads made into it by the physical sciences.
I have a bible study and i was given this chapter over past weeks i had it over and over not getting what it realy means... when i read this sermon i was transformed by it and i got even more revelation thank you.
The full answer to that question can only be given by looking at the next two chapters on judgment and the end of the world.
In the third chapter of John's Gospel we read of a man named Nicodemus, a Pharisee and a ruler of the Jews, who came to Jesus by night with a searching and uneasy sense that Jesus could give him something that he needed greatly.
There are entire chapters that we subsequently discover are wrongheaded (like the speeches made by Job's three friends, for example; at the end of the book, God gives them all a good telling off).
In that chapter Paul gives an account of how Christ appeared to, or was seen by (the Greek word may be translated either way), first Peter, then the Twelve, and so on, until «last of all» he was «seen by,» or «appeared to,» Paul himself.
These chapters contain discourses given by Jesus to his disciples that prepare them for what is to follow.
The definition of sin which was given in the preceding chapter therefore still needs to be completed: sin is, after having been informed by a revelation from God what sin is, then before God in despair not to will to be oneself, or before God in despair to will to be oneself.
In the last chapter we explained that the «resurrection of the dead» expresses the hope that the whole of a man's life from beginning to end will be raised before the divine Judgment Seat and be accepted by God as possessing something of value which will give it an eternal meaning.
The chapter seems to give very obvious examples of predestination and tells us sternly to not question the matter by saying «Who are you, a mere human being, to argue with God?»
And if given a glimpse of how much we have been forgiven, we will show it by our love for Christ — like the woman in chapter 7 — like the leper here in Luke 17.
The seventh chapter is a modified version of a presidential address given by me before the Society for Philosophy of Religion at its 1978 meeting in Charleston, South Carolina.
It will be useful to begin this chapter by giving due consideration to this broad fact about us and to see our human sexuality, in its deepest sense, as having much to do with how we respond.
Above all, that is why in Jesus himself — who (as we argued in the preceding chapter) is best conceived as that human existence where the divine Action was incarnate, given adequate expression, in human life — it could be said that «it is not by measure that [God] gives the Spirit.»
The discourses put in Jesus» mouth by the Fourth Evangelist and the remarkable summary found in the fourth chapter of the first Johannine epistle are very pointed here — love is seen both in its wonder of identification and its mutuality in giving and receiving and also in its strange inexorability.
One chapter on shifting religious voting blocs by Lyman Kellstedt and colleagues gives greater detail in support of their article in these pages, «It's the Culture, Stupid!
In closing the present chapter, let me say, very briefly, what seem to me some of the obvious values in that older scheme which most of us have by now given up.
While Genesis is not a scientific treatise, the early chapters of Genesis give hints that the earth may have been surrounded by a thick canopy of vapor.
Chapter three would urge the church to give its wealth away to the needy; clergy should live on free - will offerings or support themselves by secular work.
It has been the contention of this chapter that the removal of race prejudice is a duty laid upon us by God, and if it is God's business we are engaged in, we must give God an opening in our souls.
In the next three chapters, every time he gives us more instruction, he introduces it by telling us to walk in a certain way.
All of those rules together, by the way, are given later in the chapter as the main reasons why God was punishing, pushing out, and destroying the previous peoples of the Holy Land.
In this chapter we have given what can be considered a working definition of alcoholism: A person is an alcoholic if one or more of his major adjustments in living — health, vocational, social, or marital — is periodically or continuously hampered by drinking.
Blumhardt's Life by Zundel (5th edition, Zurich, 1887) gives in chapters ix., x., xi., and xvii.
While the first day was dedicated to updates by HIA national and chapter leadership, the next day entailed a bus field trip first to the University of Kentucky's nearby hemp test plots, where researchers gave poster presentations followed by lunch, and then to visit two companies heavily engaged in growing the hemp industry in KY, Atalo Holdings and GenCanna.
Grigg (1988, 1997) has argued that the qualities of kangaroo meat, coupled with its comparatively short supply (limited ultimately by quotas, see Chapter 4) give it a potential to achieve high prices on the world market as a speciality game meat (Chapter 8).
As he looks forward to the second chapter of his story with Chelsea, Essien has seemingly given his seal of approval on the move, although there are many who have questioned the sense in the transfer and are surprised by Antonio Conte's decision.
But you can make this new chapter of your lives as happy and supportive as possible by communicating your needs and giving each other space to come into your own as parents.
The founder of the Hip Mama Ezine and author of several books conducts a bit of a play - by - play with her daughter in give - it - to - you - straight - and - funny chapters on standardized tests, yo - yo diets, and media scare tactics.
Policy Exchange wants Britain to open a dangerous new chapter of its trading life by pre-emptively giving up all of its strategic advantage.
Mdzough U Tiv, Kaduna State Chapter, has observed that there is a grand plan by Fulani herdsmen to exterminate Tiv people from their God given land...
In view of the order given by the Kogi State governor, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, banning the operations of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, Kogi State University chapter, the management of the state owned institution has ordered lecturers to resume work tomorrow Monday 24 July, 2017 or be ready to face the consequences.
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