Sentences with phrase «loved listening to all of»

I loved listening to all of them!

Not exact matches

«And I love to listen to the reactions and everything like that, and I think this is a great form of communicating, and to me, this is a way where I don't really need the press.
Apple's comment: «For the kind of deep political analysis that goes state by state and stat by stat, we love listening to Nate Silver and crew.»
What I love about Ferriss's show is you feel like a fly on the wall listening to some of the greatest minds (think Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tony Robbins, Vince Vaughn) sharing some of their most amazing insights on business, productivity, and life hacks.
A company blog post explained the new feature, noting «we're really excited that Spotify's 24 million music - loving users can now see merchandise and concerts while listening to their favorite artists, and that we, in turn, can provide additional revenue opportunities for artists of all sizes.»
To all women who love tech but fear the industry is rife with sexual harassers and misogynists, Merline Saintil has a message of encouragement: Don't listen to the haterTo all women who love tech but fear the industry is rife with sexual harassers and misogynists, Merline Saintil has a message of encouragement: Don't listen to the haterto the haters.
I love too many of his songs to listen to anything else today.
Capital sent me a pre-release of Jordan's Sister — her debut record — and for two weeks I listened and fell in love with the voice and music of an 18 - year - old, a prodigy whom I believed was destined to be a star.
The one thing needful, it seems, is to attentively listen to Jesus, and the resulting wisdom is the foundation of the loving serenity that should, most of all, characterize every human life.
preacherlady: you are a wise woman trey: listen to what she says & stop trying to get everyone to accept you Reality check 1: not everyone has to like or love you for you to be happy Reality check 2: as long as it is true for me I am going to say what I believe so I am going to have to let the rest of you do that too, even if I think you are wrong Questions: what part of «love one another» don't you guys understand?
Feel your heart beat and listen to the voice of your love ones and see for yourself that Jesus is real, and that two big rocks colliding in outer space did not and couldn't create you me or anything else on this planet.You see your denial of him will not change his love for you nor his existence.
When I teach Aristophanes THE CLOUDS, I of course dwell on the part when the poet shows us that a guy who loves his family not about to listen to «the case for incest.»
I don't understand how as a chaplain the author will just listen to stories of love and family being told and retold by these people so near to death.
I can and do love and listen to the Buddhist, the Hindu, the Muslim, and the Mormon, but if I do not pray nor challenge them with truth in the long run then I am simply performing an act of contextualization — which is a far cry from the true seed planting of evangelism.
You gave your patients the gift of listening and understanding and allowing them to share their lifes lesson of love.
Offering comfort by listening and allowing the dying to express their understanding of the Divine (God, for me) by talking of family and love is the ultimate expression, in my opinion, of what a real person of God should be like, especially at the end.
Surely you don't think an omnipotent loving god, who controls everything, would require the dying to spend their last precious moments, not bonding with their loved ones and saying their final goodbyes, but instead listening to YOU deliver a religious message they've probably heard countless times, and making the delivery of that message a major condition of their gaining life for eternity.
We believe that «listening» is one of the strongest ways to show love.
If the person wants to talk about family and expressions of love, then the chaplain should have the love and compassion to listen.
This generation loves to listen to the lies of teachers or scientists telling them what they want to hear instead of what they need to hear.
The greatest act of love is, truly, to listen.
You do not need a god to understand love... just look in a young child's eyes when listen to their mother or father.or consider the intense feelings of closeness and harmony between two people in love... young or old.
If they want to talk about the love or lack of love in their lives, then we should listen!
I love how some take the words of one supposed «theologian» to another and then tells everyone not to listen to their pastor who has probably had as much experience (if not more) with biblical interpretation than this author.
I was listening to a podcast this morning from 2012 where Raborn Johnson and Steve Sensenig talked about a Theology Rooted in Love, and they were saying many of the same things as well!
How do you know that the doctrine you're listening to isn't what «your itching ears want to hear,» while the rest of the world pines for a Christ who loved all just as they were, who didn't have his «policies & procedures» in place, where no one would be turned away.
Job went through some intense doubtfulness and God loved and listened to him every step of the way (see Job 42).
He really did touch me and made me really aware of his love, and so I started listening to more teaching... I just felt very strongly; it was... like this overwhelming desire came that someday I am going to do that; I am going to teach the word and go all over the world.
Vatican II, in his view, inaugurated a two - way dialogue in which Catholicism not only listened to the world's hopes and anxieties but also proposed to the world a Christian humanism: the «passionate love of God for all humanity, made visible in... Jesus Christ, crucified and risen,» that same Christ who fully and uniquely reveals to humanity its incomparable dignity and high calling.
you guys have to understand, we as followers of christ (not christians) it is our job to tell you (society) that god exist and that he loves us and is willing to forgive us for the f @ # $ up things we do to each other daily, not prove he exist, b / c he sent prophets through out the ages to do that, some listen (hebrews, muslims) some didn't (pagans, atheis, new agers), then you have those who have had their souls violated (gays) who feel lost and confused.
«Love,» a vital theological word, has lost its meaning; for common conceptions of it, merely flip a radio dial and listen to popular music stations.
Far more inspiring during seminary years was listening to Edward Holloway who linked priestly celibacy directly to Jesus Christ and to priestly loving, making it emerge clearly that celibacy is not something a priest grits his teeth and does, but is more a continual state of being, in relationship to Christ, which has its own specific way of giving and receiving love.
So I Listened to all of his sermons read all of his blogs and than decided to leave my number to see if he would really call as he says on his web site, With in 2 hours I recieved a call and DR. Collins never rushed me off the telephone answered all my questions, And After just that one call you can tell he loves and believes in what he does, He wont be for everyone, Because he does talk about damnation and what it takes to get to heaven, And its not from giving ministers our money > I watched the you tube videos of many and he is just for me, everyone has a choice but in listening to his sermons and reading his blogs and than the telephone call this guy is the real deal.
Let us be a group of people who want to listen in love and work out our salvation through faith together.
We let the tinies read the Bible verses and I looked down the table at my father, his once curly red hair now a close - cropped white, holding the Bible open for my son, listening to Joe read about the love of God towards us all.
Holiness for me was found in the mess and labour of giving birth, in birthday parties and community pools, in the battling sweetness of breastfeeding, in the repetition of cleaning, in the step of faith it took to go back to church again, in the hours of chatting that have to precede the real heart - to - heart talks, in the yelling at my kids sometimes, in the crying in restaurants with broken hearted friends, in the uncomfortable silences at our bible study when we're all weighing whether or not to say what we really think, in the arguments inherent to staying in love with each other, in the unwelcome number on the scale, in the sounding out of vowels during bedtime book reading, in the dust and stink and heat of a tent city in Port au Prince, in the beauty of a soccer game in the Haitian dust, in the listening to someone else's story, in the telling of my own brokenness, in the repentance, in the secret telling and the secret keeping, in the suffering and the mourning, in the late nights tending sick babies, in confronting fears, in the all of a life.
She faithfully listened and always pointed me back to the love and power of Jesus.
I love this verse because it gives us permission to listen to the desires of our hearts, but there is a little twist to the verse:
Jesus wanted people with humble hearts who weren't afraid to turn from their sin and love of the world to follow him, to listen to his commands and become more like him daily.
Only then can we hope to know those wonderful grace - filled moments; times when through prayer and song, listening to and reciting the familiar words of grace and the stories of redemption, our hearts soar; times when we are caught up in the stream of love — when we sing praise to God with all our hearts and minds and souls and strength — which flows from us to God through the ministry of Christ and his people and which we return to God with prayer and praise.
A hand that offers practical support, a listening ear, words of advice when the Spirit guides us to share it, and the revolutionary acts of love that hold people accountable while also letting them know that you are with them through it all are what we should display.
Resting on his breast, listening only to the sound of his heartbeats, we will hear, in proportion to our inner stillness, the depth of his love for us.
Shalom happens when we crucify our love for our rights and listen to the ones who are hurt by our misuse of those «rights».
-- Mt 12:34 (also Lk 6:45) Only then, when we are fit to burst with the love of God through prayer, and are filled with personal compassion through listening, are we able to respond.
We were a group of 20 students at a mission school in Rome and by taking to the streets each week to speak and pray with the people we met, we put into practice what we learnt from the great Catechism of the Catholic Church and various encyclicals on mission and love: to listen and to love.
In his book Life Together, Bonhoeffer theologically grounds the practice of listening to others in God's love for humanity.
On the other hand, these neighbors are watching and listening to our «sermons» of love, are remembering and are asking questions.
Somewhat accidentally we have discovered that people watch, listen to, remember and want to discuss «sermons» of love, «sermons» that indeed proclaim the Gospel.
Thus death will perhaps mean only the quiet patience with which we endure the boring daily round, a request for pardon and its granting; perhaps it means the patience with which we listen to, and bear with another, or the unre - quited faithfulness of love.
I think our response as the Church should be to love and listen to those who are angry, instead of being offended that they dare to challenge something we hold sacred.
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