Sentences with phrase «just teach this way»

But Jesus didn't just teach this way in the synagogues.
Training teachers in this performance art is very important because without it, or with just theories for reframing perceptions, teachers will fall back into just teaching the way they were taught!

Not exact matches

Another, and arguably more successful, way to becoming an expert in something is to just strike out on your own and teach yourself.
Walter wanted to create a course that would not only teach entrepreneurs how to do just that but he did it in a way that beginners with no programming experience would feel comfortable.
«It was just a way of teaching myself something,» Frind says.
Just consider the ways in which patients are clamoring for more telemedicine and virtual doctor visit options while medical schools are harnessing virtual reality systems like Microsoft's Hololens to teach anatomy to young surgeons.
First, all SEALs have a sick sense of humor, and second, it was another way to teach us how to think (just in case running around with a boat on our heads wasn't enough) that would eventually mold us into becoming something special.
Joelle Renstrom, who teaches a seminar on robots and artificial intelligence at Boston University, says Andrist's research represents just one way that socially programmed robots have become more advanced in their understanding of people.
«At one point I recognized that Warren Buffett, though he had every advantage in learning from Ben Graham, did not copy Ben Graham, but rather set out on his own path, and ran money his way, by his own rules...» I have just quickly glanced at Bronte Capital's blog post, but I am sure Todd Combs and Ted Weschler were not hired because they lived and died by Buffet's word but rather because they manifested the teachings of value investing in their own styles.
By the way, Atheists don't need to be told what is right and wrong, we know what is and do follow the «Teachings of Jesus» we just don't believe that there is a God, that is just silly.
Wisdom way beyound her years, the professor should spend a few days where she has been, then maybe, just maybe he would start to understand what her experience has taught her.
We should learn from those who are dying that the best way to teach our children about God is by loving each other wholly and forgiving each other fully - just as each of us longs to be loved and forgiven by our mothers and fathers, sons and daughters.
no i just show them how silly it is... laughable really... the same way we knocked back the Bush conservatives... people like John Stewart showed them for the baffoons they were,,, how silly and ridiculous they were... heck I may be teaching your kids tomorrow in the AM
Maybe you have just been taught to think that way?
Pelikan summarized the Protestant way of putting the argument: «If the Holy Trinity was just as holy as the Trinitarian dogma taught, and if original sin was as virulent as the Augustinian tradition said it was, and if Christ was as necessary as the Christological dogma implied, then the only way to treat justification in a manner faithful to the Catholic tradition was to teach justification by faith.»
Now as a Christian I follow the new testament, and so striving to be Christ like as a Christian I accept everyone for who they are, I love them and do not presume to know the right way for them to live their life, instead I simply open my arms to others and know that all people of all faiths are just fine it doesn't matter to me what you do with your life all that matters is the way that you do it... that was my understanding of christs teachings anyways
Just as Jesus taught that the way Sabbath was being practiced was not the way God intended, so also, I believe that the way church is most often practiced, is not the way God intended.
I know the hearts of men, and some will abuse my example and my teaching in just this way.
I just back away the way my daddy taught me.
But because the God I serve — albeit in an often stumbling, up - and - down, sometimes trusting, sometimes doubting, sometimes just totally lost and needing him kind of way — is incredibly gracious and good, He's taught me so much more than that.
In fact, remember, He often taught in a way to turn the crowds away (John 6) because He knew they were just coming for free food and a show.
Cardinal Sarah teaches us silence — being silent with Jesus, true inner stillness, and in just this way he helps us to grasp the word of the Lord anew.
The critical truths that Genesis 1 is actually teaching are way more important than just to provide an historical account of how the world began.
The short version is: I don't think the Exodus did happen in historical time, but that doesn't at all detract from its powerful spiritual truth, or from the ways we've constituted our community through telling this story in the first person plural, and through embracing the teaching that the Exodus didn't just happen then but unfolds even now.
There is only one way it could not be, and that is if you decide that it teaches that nihilism is the truth, revealed here by the pointless failure of Davis's career, so that his having to obtain abortions for women he impregnated is just another absurd, annoying, and energy - sapping aspect of that, his irrational guilt instincts causing him to have to scrounge for money, and so that his learning that one of these abortions didn't occur is just another sort of misfortune, saddling him with sentiments that he will have no way to really act upon (it is unlikely the that the mother of the child wants to see him), and probably causing him to draw some kind of superstitious karmic connection between a random coincidence of having hit a cat that looks just like one he abandoned, and his driving by the town his child may be living in.
For both reasons, we should live the way Jesus taught us — it's just better for us.
if only the thought of change because of the protest and that just gets the thoughts moving fine... but peaceful must be the way, or all we are doing is teaching our children that war is the only way — it is a way but not the way!
«It's not just that sort of historical significance, but also because Catholic social teaching is absolutely crucial in the way we need to go forward.»
In the same way that Bill says kids should not be taught exclusively creationism, I don't think kids should be taught just evolutionism.
There's just no way, it doesn't sit right with everything else the Bible teaches us about the character of God (grace, love, compassion, etc.).
I'll teach them when something is so wrong against our faith to stand up for it, but to do so in a way that will show others it's the right choice, not by just condemning the other choice available.
When looked at this way, all the parables and teachings from Jesus about the Kingdom of God become much more clear, and we see that as followers of Jesus, we have a much larger role to play on this earth than just sitting around twiddling our thumbs while we wait for the rapture.
well just thinking about these wars in the muslim / mid-east world over religious differences (which may reflect mental states in many ways) in a world where most realize that living in the present moment is best way to happiness and being in the moment in non-strife and awareness through the teachings of masters such as found in the buddhist, taoist, zen, etc., etc., etc. spriritually based practices of religious like thought and teachings, etc. that to ask these scientifically educated populace whom have access to vast amounts of knowledges and understandings on the internet, etc. to believe in past beliefs that perhaps gave basis and inspiration to that which followed — but is not the end all of all times or knowledges — and is thus — non self - sustaining in a belief that does not encompass growth of knowledge and understanding of all truths and being as it is or could be — is to not respect the intelligence and minds and personage of even themselves — not to be disrespected nor disrespectful in any way — only to point out that perhaps too much is asked to put others into the cloak of blind faith and adherance to the past that disregards the realities of the present and the potential of the future... so you try to live in the past — and destroy your present and your future — where is the intelligence in that — and why do people continually fear monger or allow to be fear — mongered into this destructive vision of the future based upon the past?
You have the gift of teaching in a straight forward way just using the word and letting it speak for yourself.
So, for instance, if it is not clear to the readers of my work that my writing is done by an Episcopalian Christian, I will have failed to practice this virtue — which, of course, includes my making clear at which points the materials I study or engage seem to me false, noxious, or incomplete; just as it includes my making clear when and in what ways it seems to me that the materials I engage are true, have taught me something I didn't know before, or may be of use to me and my community in its search to apprehend and incarnate the gospel.
(This is the overall purpose of everything I write and teach, by the way, to rescue Scripture, theology, and the church from these twisted ways of thinking, and to show people that God looks just like Jesus, and Scripture, when properly understood, leads us to love.)
If one believes the Bible to be inspired or a guide for Christian living but doesn't necessarily believe it is inerrant or the literal word of God, that doesn't have to mean we just throw it all out... it doesn't have to shatter your worldview (i.e. it's either all true or all false — fundamentalists love to think this way and teach others to do the same) Use the Episcopal 3 - legged stool model (Scripture, reason, tradition) or the Wesleyan Quadrilateral (Scripture, tradition, reason, experience).
Hopefully some day we can learn to just look the other way (You know, turn the other cheek as Christ taught), or learn that saying other people's beliefs are stupid (atheist's you don't like it when people tell you you're wrong, but you feel you can tell others they're wrong) is detrimental to a civilized society.
The phrase «baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit» may just be another way of saying, «teaching them fully about the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, helping them understand Who God is and live more like God in our lives.»
Religion goes out of it's way to teach their ridiculous beliefs to children at a young age... before they're old enough to realize just how ridiculous those beliefs actually are.
You Said:» Good thing the United States declared its independence from England or else we would have bullsh.it propaganda like this making its way through our home schools trying to teach a lot more than just «creationism».
It was just a spur - of - the - moment rant born of frustration to be honest because even though there is amazing theological basis for this kind of a marriage it never seems to make its way out of the silo of academia or even strong local churches so sometimes it feels like the popular and prolific teaching in the modern Church leans more towards a form of soft patriarchy.
What I like about Jesus is how he teaches us a kinder and more just way of walking through this world.
Even if you don't beleive in the God part, just beleiving on the way it teaches how to treat each other is worth while; and the religions I know of do it once a week to keep it alive and well.
Kim, You may show up here so you can educate / ridicule those of us with a much less rigid conservative viewpoint, but by just condemning people and their ideas in that way, you lose any authority or influence to teach.
There is not one «mandated» way of teaching the Scriptures, and when we preach and teach, none of us just «Preach the Word.»
Jesus taught us a fundamentally different way to live, not just to exist.
I'm gonna just keep on praying the way the Bible taught us to pray, with the words of The Lords Prayer!
The best thing any parent can do is teach the the positive things that virtually all religions teach or just use Aesop's Fables, which is probably the clearest way to learn values.
There just has to be a better way to impart real spiritual truths and teach real Christian living to kids!
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