Sentences with phrase «grandeur which»

The spa is inline with the level of excellence and grandeur which is apparent throughout Buana Bali Luxury Villas and with only a limited number of rooms and villas, these facilities are never crowded.
All of the services are of a wonderful level and offer a number of brilliant level of interaction and the décor and style of hotel is although modern, very closely linked to the classic and timeless international grandeur which is one of the main aspects of Redtop Hotel & Convention Center which makes it feel so luxurious throughout the hotel.
The style of the hotel is very pleasant with a traditional feel as well as a level grandeur which shows its modern luxurious atmosphere.
Aston Rasuna Jakarta Hotel is a deluxe hotel in Jakarta and is due to only to it being part of the Aston Company or its staggering size which towers above the city at an impressive height; it is also because of the unreal level of service and grandeur which is displayed throughout the hotel and in the grounds.
When the Anglican patristic scholar and Church historian Trevor Jalland concluded his Bampton Lectures at Oxford in 1942 (published in 1944 as The Church and the Papacy: A Historical Study), he spoke of the Roman Church as having «in its long and remarkable history a supernatural grandeur which no mere secular institution has ever attained in equal measure,» and went on to refer to «its strange, almost mystical, faithfulness to type, its marked degree of changelessness, its steadfast clinging to tradition and to precedent.»
David Atkinson's devotional interests come to the fore in the first sentence of, The Message of Genesis 1 - 11: The Dawn of Creation (The Bible Speaks Today Series, Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1990, 190 pp., $ 12.99): «The poem of beauty and grandeur which forms the opening chapter of our Bibles is a hymn of praise ot the majesty of God the Creator.»

Not exact matches

After God had created the animals, all the essential roles had been filled, but «the Divine Artificer still longed for some creature which might comprehend the meaning of so vast an achievement, which might be moved with love at its beauty and smitten with awe at its grandeur
The «theos» points to the «other» from which human dignity and grandeur (and responsibility!)
Recognize, on the other hand, that within the domain of our experience man is at the head of one of the two greatest waves into which, for us, tangible reality is divided, and that therefore he holds in his hands the fortunes of the universe: and immediately you cause him to turn his face towards the grandeur of a new sunrise.
Transformism as well as, if not better than, the theory of «fixed types» can give to the universe that grandeur and depth and unity which are the natural atmosphere for Christian faith.
The Catholic Christian Church requires itself a principle of cosmic unity that will bind in one whole all wisdom natural and revealed; a principle which will give to Christianity a grandeur and a truth that will far outshine its rivals, and give to man with its deeper truth, the humility, charity and promise ofmercy that comes only of subjection to God, a subjection for which the heart of man cries out.
The quotidian lacks grandeur - which is precisely the point of Christian worship.
These films were in stark contrast from Scorsese's work at the time, the character study of a live - at - home, celebrity - obsessed comedian with delusions of grandeur in King of Comedy and the «one crazy night in Soho» comedy After Hours — both of which met tepid results.
The grandeurs of life are like the flowers in color and in fate; the beauty of these remains so long as their chaste buds gather and store the rich pearls of the dawn and, saving it, drop it in liquid dew; but scarcely has the Cause of All directed upon them the full rays of the sun, when their beauty and glory fail, and the brilliant gay colors which decked forth their pride wither and fade.
(5) There is the dawn of the new day or age — a world in which French grandeur is a bit more evident, in which corporation profits are a little higher; or a world that marks the failure of such ideals and the triumph of other dreams.
In the great rationality of the world we can intuit the creator spirit from which it comes, and in the beauty of creation we can intuit something of the beauty, of the grandeur and also the goodness of God.
But it lost sight of the divine grandeur and purity of this idea, which were always in some way retained even by monasticism.»
Dear friends, much still needs to be learned about the form in which the Church takes her place in the world, helping society to understand that the proclamation of truth is a service which she offers to society, and opening new horizons for the future, horizons of grandeur and dignity....
During much of the time the Papal throne was filled by scions of a family which dominated what was little more than a village housed in the ruins of former imperial grandeur.
It will remember the words in which Barth summed up the grandeur of the Austrian composer: «Mozart teaches us the sovereignty of the true servant.»
These calves, too, are in the hands of the state, which uses them as a religious power to promote ultimately its own grandeur and the effectiveness of its policies.
«The Oneida County Courthouse is not only a monument to the time in which it was built, a time when the spirit of grandeur was part of our public buildings, but it is also a major historical property in downtown Utica.
Similarly, the grandeur of Manchester town hall, which will again play host to events at Labour party conference, seems to recall a time when the city was more certainly in command of its future.
If you want a free date which combines faded grandeur with secluded paths and benches in pristine historic grounds this is the one for you.
And who predicted, back then, that the series — which had a laborious birth under Chris Columbus» directorial midwifing of the first two episodes — would grow in cinematic stature under three other directors and become a cohesive long - form work that nearly rivals Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings trilogy in expertise, intensity and grandeur?
That movie, in all its incompetent grandeur, is «The Room» (2003), which is now considered «the greatest bad movie ever made» because of its DVD popularity and cult following.
But not often, as Tony Kushner's («Angels in America») screenplay — loosely adapted from Doris Kearns Goodwin's «Team of Rivals» — eschews grandeur for quaintness, creating a film which like a play more often than not.
For all the talk of existential ennui and economic security among this cast of characters, the motivations of Icelandic director Baltasar Kormákur ultimately ring clearest: He's shifting his Hollywood aspirations from the grime - crime of Tony Scott («Contraband» and «2 Guns») to the marriage of grandeur and intimacy preferred by Tony's brother, Ridley, in «White Squall,» «Black Hawk Down» or «Gladiator» (which also boasted «Everest» co-writer William Nicholson in its credits).
Sweet Country has the terse, unsentimental grandeur of a John Ford western and memorably evokes a time and attitude of which all Australians should be ashamed.
And the ending which takes things to a level of mad, religious grandeur — in lesser hands likely to drown in cheap theatricality — feels truly immense.
It doesn't so much re-litigate her case — tried in real court and the one of public opinion — as jazz up the juiciest details: the «motivational» maternal shit - talk that Janney performs like a profane comedy routine; the on - the - ice outbursts, sometimes punctuating Gillespie's robustly staged skating sequences; and every twist and turn of Gillooly's hapless criminal conspiracy, which turns the backstretch of the movie into a dimwit caper, dominated by Paul Walter Hauser's broadly farcical take on Eckhardt and his mouth - breathing delusions of grandeur.
The true story behind this movie just about makes up for its oddly flat tone, which never quite captures either the grandeur of the Australian Outback or the deeper emotions of the people on - screen.
by Walter Chaw Bearing no relationship to the Gore Vidal biography with which it shares its name, Steven Spielberg's predictably uneven Lincoln features moments of real grandeur narrated to death by John Williams's inspiring ™ and rousing ™ score.
His Reynolds has a rather tarnished, aging grandeur, with a fragility that's almost infantile; his odd, somehow puckered voice, which seems at times to be emerging from a vintage Bakelite radio, is not so much feminine as somehow ancient, the sound of a mummified soul that could crumble to dust if exposed too brutally to the noise and fuss of the world.
Ultimately, I suppose I'm overpraising Punch - Drunk Love, which certainly lacks the scope and grandeur of Magnolia or Boogie Nights and the edge of Hard Eight, Anderson's virtually unknown debut film.
(And I haven't even mentioned the framing narrative, which features an impossibly wizened Tonto telling his story to a young boy at a carnival in 1933 San Francisco...) Yet there's a certain goofy grandeur to the movie's first half or so.
Peter Suschitzky beautifully captures Dimitri Capuani's rococo furnishings, on which he no doubt spent every dime he was offered; and Alexandre Desplat contributes a sweeping, very Desplatian score that notches up the grandeur further still.
There are genuinely inspired ideas behind some of this material (The Tharks» desert huts and the vague grandeur of Helium notwithstanding), like Zodanga, a mobile city with massive and grinding legs, and the airships, which offer Carter the opportunity to leap from one to another while fighting off hostile forces.
Using a complex matrix that factors in elements like actorly showiness, grating self - importance, middlebrow sense of grandeur, and the varying degrees to which a movie flatters its audience, the machine has consistently outshined professional prognosticators (who, by the way, are evil).
But it was the sheer thematic joy with which Margeson and Jackman wore their John Barry suits that made the first «Secret Service» into a joygasm of lush, 007 - tailored excitement as it breathlessly took down a magnate with dreams of apocalyptic grandeur.
BOTTOM LINE Jackman's powerhouse performance carries this movie, which hits emotional heights but skimps on spectacle and grandeur.
The Korean market Grandeur, which was unveiled recently, should provide a good idea of what the Azera will look like.
At the other end is a fully - optioned Regal GS with AWD ticking in at just under $ 45k, which is still an incredible value compared to other luxury models which offer similar levels of equipment and grandeur.
While the spec.B may not have the panache and grandeur of its German rivals, it offers outstanding performance at a low price, which is quite refreshing in today's market.
Hyundai's Grandeur - which debuted in 1987 - helped move Daewoo off the Korean luxury car throne.
Rondure Global operates in partnership with Grandeur Peak Global, which offers back office and trading support, as well as the opportunity for collegial investment discussions.
A grandeur that, as much as it tries to tempt you to relax and unwind, is also uncovered by getting to know the culture and way of life, which are as refined as they are emblematic.
Enjoy lunch at The Empire, a grand landmark hotel, which hints at the grandeur of Queenstown's past.
Built in an instantly identifiable style, the architecture lends an elegant grandeur to the buildings here, and we discover some of the finest examples on our tour which includes the ever impressive St Bavo's Cathedral and the Belfrey.
Its historic center, which has remained largely unchanged for centuries, is unrivaled in its magnificence and grandeur, while Edinburgh Castle itself appears as if it could withstand any modern - day attack.
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