Sentences with phrase «love with a man whose»

She's fallen in love with a man whose rightful seat on the throne was usurped long ago by her parents.

Not exact matches

Tom Hanks solidifies himself as one of the greatest actors of his generation with this look at a man whose life intersects with some of the greatest moments in history while trying to connect with his true love, Jenny.
There was a security, love, and wonder I sensed (at an early age) that only Catholics had ¯ the hushed, steepled churches and the priests; the parish school with veiled nuns whose black habits swept the floors; the picture of the pope on the bedroom wall, a strange man with what looked like an eggshell on his head who gave the sense of a wider world and eternity.
Observer, you can call God «Zeus», if you regard Him as our eternal infinite Holy Creator and Judge, who created all and will continue to create, whose purity requires purity to dwell with Him, whose love within overflowed to create man in His image with free will, who permitted rebellion for the purpose of destroying evil, and who surrendered His Son to allow us to use our free will to glorify Him and enjoy Him forever.
And if my eyes were more filled with tears than those of a repentant woman, and if each tear were more precious than a pardoned woman's many tears; if I could find a place more humble than the place at his feet, and if I could sit there more humbly than a woman whose heart's sole choice was this one thing needful; if I loved him more sincerely than the most loyal of his servants, eager to shed the last drop of his life - blood in his service; if I had found greater favor in his eyes than the purest among women — nevertheless, if I asked him to alter his purpose, to reveal himself differently, to be more lenient with himself, he would doubtless look at me and say: Man, what have I to do with thee?
- The variety of people who shared memories of Uncle Gary at the funeral — a student, a racquetball companion, a son - in - law, a friend, a colleague, my sister, and a handicapped kid whose stories we could barely make out on account of his disability but who clearly had a special connection to this man who treated everyone with equal respect and love
In his teaching and example of unbroken fellowship with God, of love and service to men, of humility and sincerity, of forgiveness toward even his most malicious enemies, of sensitive understanding of the spoken or unspoken needs of the humblest of persons whose lives touched his, we see the kind of living to which we are called.
An ardent person, of singular moral purity and integrity, «for whose love the whole world was too small» — no wonder men loved him in return with a supreme devotion!
The chief general lesson of these studies has been the discovery that Christianity survived throughout the ages because it adjusted itself with remarkable ease to the changing demands of the peoples of whose culture it became an inherent part, while it never surrendered the essentials of its faith in Jesus Christ as the revealer of God the Father and the teacher and example of the love of God and fellow men.
A God who at first glance is comparable to the picture of the Oriental ruler, who governs his people with complete arbitrariness, bound by no rational law; but a God who is conceived as wholly different from an Oriental ruler, since all physical traits are lacking, all tyrannical desires alien; a God who desires justice and righteousness and punishes sin, a God who loves His people as a father his first - born son, a God to whom the religious man ills as to his father, and in whose help he trusts in all situations of life.
When man rejects God's love and revelation of Himself through Jesus, then you are left with a world of people who hate, kill, lie, steal, cheat, and deceive in the name of «God» and yet whose hearts are far from the God they profess to know.
And his God was not the God of Israel only, but the Father whose love with infinite concern for human need embraced all men within its scope.
I do this... as a duty of brotherly love, so that if any misfortune or disaster comes out of this matter, it may not be attributed to me, nor will I be blamed before God and men because of my silence... We have no one on earth to thank for this disastrous rebellion except you princes and lords, and especially you blind bishops and mad priests and monks whose hearts are hardened... The murder - prophets [a reference to Karlstadt, Muntzer and all the Schwarmerei] who hate me as they hate you, have come among these people... for more than three years, and no one has resisted and fought against them except me... I beseech you not to make light of this rebellion... The peasants have just published twelve articles some of which are so fair and just as to take away your reputation in the eyes of God... Because you made light of my To The German Nobility you must now listen to and put up with these selfish articles.
Poems hailed him as a man whose piety and good character meant that even those who disagreed with him politically loved and respected him.
Our member base of country loving men and women are looking for someone who shares the same goals and interests, so whether you're a fan of country music or barbeques or riding western, you'll find someone whose idea of a good time matches with yours.
Shrek the First managed to combine vaudeville and potty humor with a strangely enchanting love story, all while sticking it to the man, the man being Walt Disney, whose animated fairy tales were gleefully deconstructed.
1996's The Darien Gap followed — a feature - length effort about a young man (Lyn Voss, portraying himself) whose persistent dreams of filming the great Patagonian sloth prevent him from sustaining a relationship with the woman he loves (Sandi Carroll).
Farrell, a vibrant, substantive actor with eyes unfazed by silence, is given plenty of space to establish his Smith as a man not equipped, despite all his sensitivity, for greatness in love or exploit; contrasted against such moodiness, Bale creates a man whose patience is as attractive as Smith's passion.
Her Gerda tells us a story of a woman desperately in love with a man who's vanished, but whose eyes still gaze at her.
Depardieu's performance in Jacques Attali's «The Gates of Heaven» won bravos, but a lot of people walked out, finding the play — about love, death, power and Francois Mitterrand — too long and even a bit boring... President Clinton, whose childhood was troubled by alcohol - fueled abuse, asked Lions Gate for a print of «Affliction,» the acclaimed Nick Nolte movie about a man coping with the results of early years spent with an abusive, alcoholic dad.
It's fitting that filmmakers Stephen Silha and Eric Slade assemble this documentary with as much colourful poetry as they can muster, because the subject matter was a remarkably life - loving man whose impact on the arts...
Django Unchained even brings back Christoph Waltz, who picked up an Academy Award for Basterds, as a man whose virtuosity with verbiage reflects Tarantino's passionate, long - standing love affair with the English language.
He's neither saint nor sinner, just a man whose faith has put him at odds with the people who have always loved and trusted him.
Salma and Laila also face turmoil: Laila has found love with a modern Muslim man whose acceptance proves less than unconditional, and Salma discovers that her Christian family in a northern Galilean village is not as liberal as they claim.
The plot alone has also raised eyebrows: C.K. plays a divorced TV producer whose teenage daughter (Chloe Grace Moretz) falls in love with a much older man (John Malkovich), a celebrated filmmaker with a checkered past and an undeniable fondness for very young women.
The story of a Muslim man, whose parents want him to have an arranged marriage, but he falls in love with a white, non-Muslim girl.
A Fantastic Woman: Another one Academy voters managed to get, Chile's nominee stars Daniela Vega, the nation's first out transgender actress, as Marina, whose loving relationship with a much older man is cut short by his death.
That undercurrent of compassion isn't surprising, since the film was directed and co-written (with Hallie Elizabeth Newton) by Ramin Bahrani, a sensitive soul whose previous moves — Chop Shop, Man Push Cart, and Goodbye, Solo — expressed love and sympathy for mankind.
He played yin to Steve Carrell's yang in Crazy, Stupid, Love., a man whose quiet confidence fills any room he enters, and followed it with an even more taciturn performance as a 21st - century Steve McQueen in Drive.
Ryan Gosling has made a name for himself playing characters who live on the fringes of society: his breakout role as a Nazi - sympathizing Jew in The Believer, a half - baked teacher in Half Nelson, a man in love with a blow - up doll in Lars And The Real Girl, and most recently, a fledgling musician whose temper and lack of ambition prove destructive to his family in Blue Valentine.
Gordon - Levitt plays Neil, a young man growing up in Kansas in the 1980s whose love affair — it's a sickening way to describe it, but there's no other way — with his Little League coach shapes (and nearly destroys) both his life and that of another young man, played by Brady Corbet.
I was far from a fan of bland I Know... starlet Jennifer Love Hewitt, but I'd take her any day over the dreadfully stiff and uncharismatic Witt, whose inept attempts at emoting were often met with laughter; Witt has a perfect foil in her equally presence - challenged leading man, Jared Leto.
Adams's life story encapsulates the history of the founding era, for she defined herself in relation to the people she loved or hated (she was never neutral): her mother, whom she considered terribly overprotective; Benjamin Franklin, who schemed to clip her husband's wings; her sisters, whose dependence upon Abigail's charity strained the family bond; James Lovell, her husband's bawdy congressional colleague, who peppered her with innuendo about John's «rigid patriotism»; her financially naïve husband (Abigail earned money in ways the president considered unsavory, took risks that he wished to avoid — and made him a rich man); Phoebe Abdee, her father's former slave, who lived free in an Adams property but defied Abigail's prohibition against sheltering others even more desperate than herself; and her son John Quincy, who worried her with his tendency to «study out of spight» but who fueled her pride by following his father into public service, rising to the presidency after her death.
Or books about middle - aged women whose husbands have divorced them unexpectedly and now find love with a younger man.
As a young man expected to take part in raids and bloody massacres against the English, he grapples with divided loyalties — between Ragnar, the warrior he loves like a father, and Alfred, whose piety and introspection leave him cold.
Juliet, Naked follows the intertwining stories of Duncan, a college professor in a small English town whose one passion is for the music of Tucker Crowe; Duncan's girlfriend Annie, who is beginning to realize how angry she is that she's just spent 15 years with a man who loves Tucker Crowe more than her; and Tucker Crowe himself, who has been in near - seclusion in rural Pennsylvania since shortly after the release of his greatest album, Juliet, in 1986.
Though the bulk of the volume consists of Luca's observations on the building's tenants — a man whose fear of losing his partner has (oddly) driven him to nudism, a pair of twins involved with the same man, a rather creepy puppet maker who can't let go of his long - lost relationship with an underage lover, and (my favorite of the bunch) a transgender circus performer who finds love with the man upstairs — the book's real love story belongs to Luca and Javi, who I wish had a lot more screen time.
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