Not exact matches
The spirit of fellowship manifested at a liturgy which is prepared and executed with this
purpose in mind becomes the sign of Christian charity and the motivating cause to carry it beyond the liturgical community to the world at
large.
A few things come to
mind: it's temporal, over against the promise of eternal life; it serves a
purpose in personal sanctification and
in the
larger scheme — the big story that God is orchestrating; and, it's part of the fallen creation and points us to the missing wholeness and beauty we know is lacking
in our experience.
Gaskin presides over a
large multi-faceted business empire comprised of trade, propaganda and lobbying organizations, all with one
purpose in mind: allowing uneducated women like herself to provide substandard medical care to pregnant women while ignoring the growing pile of tiny bodies.
Beatty, who has been using and studying CRS products for more than a decade, acknowledges that the language and
purpose of the question cycle, which he says is «to form habits of
mind and find the limits of knowledge,» sound more ivory tower than AP Bio, but he contrasts the current norm — the quick and shallow recall of facts required of American high school science and math students — with his
larger objective: renouncing the myth of coverage, the idea that what a teacher covers
in class matters.
But if we dismiss from our
minds the modern prejudice against pictures with a «
purpose», we must admit that Watts clothed his ideas
in large and dignified forms, which, impressive
in themselves, are an appropriate vehicle for their moral content.
Local microclimates cause
large differences
in temperature, which is useful to those homogenizing data with a
purpose in mind.
A number of well - written articles chronicle at least some of the history of legal writing
in the law school curriculum.1 However, those articles were written with a different
purpose in mind: the authors sought to employ history to show the pedigree of legal writing and argue for an equal place
in the curriculum with doctrinal courses and an equal position for its teachers with other «case - book» faculty.2 Because of this
purpose, they understandably focused a
large part of their historical narrative on legal writing
in the «modern law - school,» an entity that has existed only since the late 1800s.3 The articles paid considerably less attention to the era that preceded it, beyond brief mentions of the Inns of Court
in England, apprenticeship
in America, and the private law schools and early attempts at law teaching that preceded Langdell's introduction of the case method.4