Sentences with phrase «institution in command»

There's no single institution in command of the social credit system.

Not exact matches

The counterpart of that reduced multiplier is an increase in the Fed's overall command of the public's savings, for it's the public that ultimately supplies the funds that financial institutions in turn hand over to the Fed, by holding those institutions» IOUs.
A dossier on one of Wall Street's main command centers in the privatization drive, the Cato Institute; what Wall Street intends to gain from privatization; and the 19 financial institutions most actively promoting the looting of Social Security.
You throw around words like institution to cast a grim picture of Followers of Christ who decide to obey God in His command to not forsake the assembling of ourselves.
Besides polluting the free flow of ideas, manipulations such as these are nothing less than subversive: they undermine the United States and its institutions — universities, the press, charitable groups, foundations and the churches — by exploiting the legitimacy they may inherently possess, in order to gain for insidious designs credibility which the CIA would not otherwise be able to command.
Although it does not command the resources in this respect that are possessed by many other institutions, it does offer its own perspective.
Whoever was in command over the dying institution... would take the bull by the horns and kill it: close the church, dissolve the board, sequester its endowments, and sell off its property, putting the proceeds in escrow just in case the corpse ever rises and finds a use for them.
It appears that there is general though only implicit recognition of the fact that a call to the ministry includes at least these four elements (1) the call to be a Christian, which is variously described as the call to discipleship of Jesus Christ, to hearing and doing of the Word of God, to repentance and faith, et cetera; (2) the secret call, namely, that inner persuasion or experience whereby a person feels himself directly summoned or invited by God to take up the work of the ministry; (3) the providential call, which is that invitation and command to assume the work of the ministry which comes through the equipment of a person with the talents necessary for the exercise of the office and through the divine guidance of his life by all its circumstances; (4) the ecclesiastical call, that is, the summons and invitation extended to a man by some community or institution of the Church to engage in the work of the ministry.
The Book of Common Prayer had this meaning in view when it employs, in the course of the Prayer of Consecration in the service of Holy Communion, the words: «Wherefore, O Lord and heavenly Father, according to the institution of thy dearly beloved Son our Savior Jesus Christ, we, thy humble servants, do celebrate and make here, before thy Divine Majesty, with these thy holy gifts, which we now offer unto thee, the memorial thy Son hath commanded us to make; having in remembrance his blessed passion and precious death, his mighty resurrection and glorious ascension; rendering unto thee most hearty thanks for the innumerable benefits procured unto us by the same.»
What the church has to say about the secular institutions follows solely from the preaching of Christ, and the Church possesses no doctrine of her own which is valid in itself with regard to eternal institutions and natural or human rights such as might command acknowledgement even independently of faith in Christ.
Wherefore, O Lord and heavenly Father, according to the institution of thy dearly beloved Son, our Savior Jesus Christ, we thy humble servants do celebrate and make here before thy divine majesty, with these thy holy gifts which we now offer unto thee, the memorial thy Son hath commanded us to make, having in remembrance his blessed Passion and precious Death, his mighty Resurrection and glorious Ascension, rendering unto thee most hearty thanks for the innumerable benefits procured unto us by the same.
To the State security agencies, including the Military high command, the Ghana Police Service and the Office of National Security, the NPP Chairman urged these institutions to conduct full - scale investigations into how and why and under whose authorization their own forces were involved in an attack on the offices of the opposition.
In particular, the new GCSEs will be more academically demanding so that the resulting grades command the confidence of students, employers and the further education institution system.
Each year, more than 400 military installations and command centers, plus 113 financial institutions and 110 organizations participate in Military Saves Week, the last week of February.
Luckily, no less an institution than MoMA is about to give the Angolan artist his first U.S. solo show this month, introducing the work of a commanding provocateur who uses a mix of performance, rap, and video to touch the hottest buttons in Africa - West relations, from comparing Nelson Mandela to Hitler («They were both determined people,» he explains) and announcing that he has bought the United States, but will rule semi-benevolently.
The Museum of Contemporary Art in La Jolla presented a retrospective exhibition of his work in 1981, and he commanded prominent wall space at such institutions as the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago.
However, judicial institutions will not function effectively unless they command the respect of the public, and because of changes in human affairs and imperfections in human institutions, constant efforts must be made to improve the administration of justice and thereby maintain public respect for it.
If our public legal and medical institutions are to command the trust and respect of the public they are supposed to serve, the climate in which the prosecution or local authority is out to win at any cost must be comprehensively altered.
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