Sentences with phrase «kind of savior»

His attire and pose, with one arm on his hip, help him read as some kind of savior.
As an aspiring nutritionist and with a fiancé who is studying naturopathic medicine, I look up to Dr. Greger as a kind of savior for American society.
It amazes me how quick people here forget last season and look at Meredith or even Wright as some kind of a savior...
In tales with happy endings, the author is a kind of savior - facilitator who rescues the protagonist.

Not exact matches

This kind of internal contradiction seems to run through much traditional theology; it finds explicit expression in Luther's dichotomy between the terrible God, who put him not only in awe but in utter terror, and the tender and loving God whom he knew in Jesus Christ as the savior, the loving friend, and the gracious Father of men.
The Roman government, like all organized forms of human life, disliked two kinds of people outlaws, who were below the level and would not live up to it, and saviors, who were above the level and would not live down to it.
If health is the biggest reason you're opting to become a vegan, this kind of loophole can be a savior in helping the diet outlast a temporary trial and become a lifelong habit.
whose theoretical studies of the human brain's untapped potential make him an information source and then finally a kind of partner - savior to Lucy; the handsome nice - guy Parisian cop (Amr Waked) who assists Lucy during her climactic mission to acquire more of the experimental hormone to ingest and become whatever it is that she's becoming: a 1950s sci - fi monster, probably — the kind that can not be killed because everything you shoot at it makes it stronger and hungrier.
«MADtv» alums turned latter day sketch comedy saviors Keegan - Michael Key and Jordan Peele have sneaked up on the American consciousness in the last few years, but it's a good kind of sneak.
And, predictably, Ned becomes a kind of family savior — the idiot becomes the sage.
CanadianWritings is my savior with any kind of those.
The idea that one individual might be the savior of painting, as Dunham characterizes Murray, is an example of hierarchical thinking, the kind of privileging that was rampant throughout the 1960s and «70s.
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