I suppose what the phrase denotes is the modern culture which gives great emphasis on human being as a creator of culture and of
history out of nature and which also believes that human being and history require no transcendent reference to a Divine Creator or a Divine Redeemer from self - alienation to bring about the realization of the community of love which is the ultimate destiny of humanity.
Not exact matches
In proposing the «Idea» as the wellspring
of both
nature and
history, working itself
out by converting the inconclusiveness
of time into the universality
of Spirit, the Hegelian project invited the final triumph
of sheer eventuality over rational order.
A prolepsis, as he uses the notion, is simply a claim staked
out in
history, which, when and if
history is fulfilled, will be verified or falsified, and which is
of such a
nature that those who in the meantime have accepted it will all along have been living appropriately to the truth that will at the end be discovered.
This view entails a complete dismantling
of traditional Christian doctrine, including: creation
out of nothing, the finite duration
of history and
nature, miracles as direct divine acts, and the final triumph
of good over evil.
In fact, there have been a large number
of scientists throughout
history who have made major scientific discoveries that have shaped so much
of our knowledge, and they worked
out of desire to learn the truth about the origin and
nature of God's creation.
The church therefore would seem to have much to offer the New Urbanist enterprise
out of its own long intellectual and spiritual traditions — not least a serious and sophisticated view
of human
nature and human community, a pastoral mandate to serve rich and poor, and a long
history of urban and architectural patronage.
God pushes through
nature and
history to that earthly consummation in which spirit and
nature will be unified, the profane sanctified, the kingdom
of God established
out of the kingdom
of man, and all
of time and creation drawn back into eternity.
No doubt the church has been right in acknowledging the deity
of Christ and the Incarnation as the fullest measure
of the divine revelation
of which human
nature is capable; though it should be pointed
out that the church as a rule undertook to stand fast and to hold the ground
of the traditional, historical faith, enshrined in the New Testament, and — as the
histories of dogma make clear - only took over metaphysical definitions which had already been hammered
out on the anvils
of logical and exegetical disputation.
In his significant work Christianity in World
History, a prominent theologian Arend Theodor van Leeuwen has argued that the idea
of separating
out the things
of God from the things
of people in such a way as to deny the divine
nature of kingship was first formulated in ancient Israel and then became a major motif
of Christianity.
The
nature of that price is suggested by a parallel volume, Theological Education in the Evangelical Tradition, edited by D. G. Hart and R. Albert Mohler (Baker, 1996), a
history and interpretation
of counterinstitutions born
out of restiveness with mainline theological teaching.
History, it turns
out, is both the record
of what free individuals or persons do and is a process as impersonal as
nature.
We are so quick to point
out the obvious lies about Jews and Israel that come
out in Egypt — the Sinai Governors claims that the Mossad released a shark into the Red Sea to kill Egyptians, or, as I once read in a newspaper whilst on holiday in Cairo, the tale
of the magnetic belt buckles that Jews were selling cheap in Egypt that would sterilize men on contact — yet we so rarely examine our own misconceptions about the
nature of our
history with the Egyptian nation.
Echoing the Italian philosopher Vico, Marx pointed
out that man was not responsible for evolution
of nature but for his own
history.4
With this background in mind, then, let me spell
out some
of the characteristics
of a biopolitical theology, which seeks to take into account man's total life set within
nature and cosmos as well as within society and
history.
Both grow
out of the
nature of man and
of history as man's creation.
Nothing would be more
out of character with mystery, with
nature and its evolution, or with
history and selfhood, than a drab homogeneity in any phase
of cosmic emergence.
Dr. Bellah clarifies the term «civil religion» and how the principle has worked
out in our
history, and he discusses the confusion about the
nature of the American republic.
The image
of a promising God who meets us
Out of the mysterious future subverts the archaic religious instinct to seek fulfillment in
nature or in the present moment alone, or in an escape from
history into timelessness.
The human transition from
nature into
history has brought us at least part way
out of the ancient enclosure in cycles
of seasons.
History is constituted as such by God's gift
of a future that pulls us
out of the safety
of nature and into a mysterious openness accessible only to hope.
Rather than throw
out what they had — a rich
history that once included romantic love for each other — they shifted the
nature of the relationship and what they were fighting for; instead
of struggling to maintain their intimate relationship, they just focus on raising their child together.
Scenic Caves
Nature Adventures, located in Collingwood, Ontario, provides individuals
of all ages a rich
history and educational experience in a unique, natural environment that encourages learning and stepping
out of your comfort zone.
In his latest role as a lawyer for Trump, Giuliani (who, like his client, is volatile by
nature) appears to have made an abrupt change
of course in his
history of stridently defending the country's crime - fighting class and fiercely lashing
out at those who attack it.
Horner says 2014 could be the lowest rate
of voter turn
out in the state's
history, and he blames the «toxic
nature of politics», with no positive vision.
The root cause
of mental health issues is part physical imbalance (e.g., chronic inflammation, thyroid dysfunction, autoimmunity, hormone imbalance, blood sugar dysregulation, chronic sleep deprivation), and part psychospiritual (e.g.,
history of trauma, cognitive distortions, social isolation, chronic stress, living
out of alignment with the way human beings evolved to thrive — eating real food, moving their bodies, sleeping in darkness, breathing fresh air, drinking clean water, seeing the sun, connected to
nature, and deeply rooted in community).
I'm a huge fan
of all music, cultures and
history and when I get
out in the sun, I garden, bike, hike, camp and just enjoy
nature.
Some
of the best museums that you need to check
out are the Chicago
History Museum, the DuSable Museum
of African American
History, the Museum
of Contemporary Art, the Art Institute
of Chicago, the Field Museum, and the Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum.
Check
out these top tourist places to visit in Bangalore for a mix
of history, spirituality, architecture, culture and
nature.
I began making films [
out of] a deep need... to come to terms with my family's
history and suffering, to make sense
of the past and to explore my own personal terrors, both mental and spiritual, and to examine the destructive
nature of Catholicism.
Cohen is a remarkable writer who not only gives us the
history of the banana we never knew we always wanted, but lays
out the binary
nature of America as both land
of opportunity and imperialistic behemoth.
Watch this video
of us helping
out at a
Nature and Me storytime at the San Diego Natural
History Museum
The tailored educational and
nature outings could include the island's evolution, medicinal and cultural plants (with sampling
of fruit and other edibles), language,
history, legends, and hidden temples and sacred sites.
My photographs point
out the constructed
nature of such presentations, which reveal much about how
history gets written.
Labyrinths, Devin Borden Hiram Butler Gallery, Houston, Texas Burning Desires: Acquisitions 1997 - 2001, El Paso Museum
of Art, El Paso, Texas Escape from the Vault: The Contemporary Museum's Collection Breaks
Out, The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, Hawaii New Directions in Contemporary Art, Eisentrager - Howard Gallery, Department
of Art and Art
History, University
of Nebraska - Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska Made in U.S.A., Devin Borden Hiram Butler Gallery, Houston, Texas Monochrome, Mostly, Arlington Museum
of Art, Arlington, Texas Line, Devin Borden Hiram Butler Gallery, Houston, Texas Domestic: Artists Transforming the Everyday, Arlington Museum
of Art, Arlington, Texas Systems Order
Nature, Devin Borden Hiram Butler Gallery, Houston, Texas 110 Years: The Permanent Collection at the Modern Museum
of Fort Worth, The Modern Art Museum
of Fort Worth, Fort Worth, Texas
Starling's works draw
out an array
of ideas, revealing previously hidden relationships between art,
nature, economics,
history, and place.
Through these techniques as well as the use
of actual film to take pictures, at times
out of focus, the artist imbues the works with a haziness that speaks to the indistinct
nature of history and «fact» and a surface that The New York Times describes as «clouds
of scintillation.»
What seemed to them, in a cloud
of missionary zeal, like a good idea (frankly, they could not be reasoned with, nor were they interested in evidence,
history, human
nature, or logic) turned
out to a harmful, failed philosophy that, if adopted, would have wreaked incalculable harm, not only on their own nations, but on the whole World.
In the landmark case
of Hunter v Southam, [1984] 2 SCR 145 Justice Brian Dickson, writing for a unanimous court, said this about the different paths
of Canadian and American
history, at p. 6 (QL): «The American courts have had the advantage
of a number
of specific prerequisites articulated in the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, as well as a
history of colonial opposition to certain Crown investigatory practices from which to draw
out the
nature of the interests protected by that Amendment and the kinds
of conduct it proscribes.