Sentences with phrase «meaningful sense»

As the relationship develops, a deeper more meaningful sense of love grows.
The biggest players on the Conservative side aren't British in the most meaningful sense.
He rehabilitated my trust in the exercise of mindful authority to make meaningful sense of life experiences.
It's impossible to write about the relevance of seminary in any truly meaningful sense because, if we're going to be honest, there is no such thing as seminary.
Such a posture would simply not be compatible with love in any humanly meaningful sense of the term.
We welcome you to join the open and affirming TLC community, and invite you to grow, to learn, and to find new friends and a deeply meaningful sense of shared experience by participating in our classes, workshops, private consultations and special free community events.
In contrast, when the scene is upside down or viewed with peripheral vision and the sound off, it is hard for the brain to make meaningful sense out of what the visual centers perceive, so you start to notice the big changes in the physical image.
Dennie Smith, 56, from Caterham, Surrey, is hoping her site will be an antidote to throw - away internet dating culture — by offering a chance for couples to meet in a more meaningful sense.
The action, moreover, is harried and vague, featuring little meaningful sense of geometry or geography.
Stevenson's curriculum development process refers to curriculum in its only meaningful sense: what is taught, as opposed to what some committee writes and pours into a voluminous tome that few teachers will ever refer to or live by.
If gapingvoid stands for anything, it stands for bringing more love, in the most meaningful sense of the word, to the workplace.
What Rubin and Serra's other supporters declined to ask is whether the sculptor really is, in the most meaningful sense of the term, an avant - garde artist.
That's true, but not the point: not all managers are leaders in any meaningful sense.
The government really doesn't «print money» in any meaningful sense.
They will never think, or be a sentient being in any meaningful sense of the word.
So as I see it the Japanese didn't react to Japan's «collapse» with outrage or horror largely because Japan didn't really collapse in any meaningful sense.
Movies are not dead in any meaningful sense of the word, particularly now that they can be richly monetized through television deals, theme parks, and merchandise.
«Improvement, no matter how impressive, in either its own carbon emissions or in Canada's overall emissions performance, will not remedy that vulnerability in any meaningful sense
I don't think that anything happening in the community matters in any meaningful sense, as the rules of consensus are largely immune to politics and drama.
The philosophical significance of his own attitude to transgenderism seems lost on him: Transgenderism raises fundamental questions about the nature of the human person — indeed, about whether one can even speak in terms of human nature anymore in any universal, meaningful sense.
The shooting having long since begun, it was well past the point of arguing that the Americans were acting «legally» in any meaningful sense.
The real problem is that some, and perhaps many, Catholics remain within the canonical boundaries of the Church but are not Catholics in any meaningful sense of conviction or expression.
In other words, there is a meaningful sense in which the classical God does not directly will nonmoral evils.
In 1990, Pope John Paul's constitution Ex corde ecclesiae (from the heart of the Church) provided that, when institutions are no longer Catholic in any meaningful sense of the word, bishops could officially declare that they are not Catholic institutions.
If Scaperlanda's best - case scenario fails to materialize and the migrants, indifferent to our republican heritage, gain the clout to precipitate ruinous policies, and our southwest becomes in essence an extension of the failed country from which their millions flee; if our nation splinters along cultural lines, and we cease to be united in any meaningful sense, what then?
God, McCabe insisted, must in some meaningful sense be personal and capable of personic response.
Obviously, there can not and should not be a return to colonialism in any meaningful sense of the term.
Third, the reason Colin's arguments are ad hominems is because they try to refute religion / Catholicism by * gasp * insulting them, not by showing how and they're wrong in a meaningful sense.
It is certainly the end of continuing to grow in both knowledge and wisdom is any meaningful sense.
If there is to be a God in any meaningful sense of the term, he must transcend at least to some degree human ideals of goodness.
A church which has been over-existentialized for a quarter of a century now, which dotes on «sharing» and «personal growth,» often to the exclusion of any meaningful sense of the corporate, will need to be reminded that such a dimension exists, and that if we do not tell the story of the Confessing Church and the Uganda martyrs, of Selma and Vietnam, we are telling a truncated version.
But this is not true in any meaningful sense.
The clear implication of Hannon's argument is that, because «sexual identity» is socially constructed, it does not exist in any meaningful sense and can therefore be dispensed with.
Chance, in any final, meaningful sense, vanishes.
The salient features of Niebuhr's doctrine of sin, then, are the universality of sin, sin's existence as an objective fact in human experience, sin's tendency to perpetuate and aggravate itself, a meaningful sense in which there is bondage of the will, and the inability of man to extricate himself from the situation of unbelief.
Today as well, any meaningful sense of revelation would occur only to those of us who can share this same sense of promise and the hope that accompanies it.
I acknowledge that I am no longer a «Christian» in any meaningful sense of the word, but I am certainly a follower and lover of Jesus.
Perhaps so, but upholding the claim in any meaningful sense would seem to require repristinating and universalizing the disputes of sixteenth - century Europe that gave definition to the theological shibboleths by which Christians identified their bloody divisions as Catholics, Lutherans, Calvinists, Zwinglians, Anabaptists, and whatever.
«More generally, how can the Church of England remain in any meaningful sense the national legally established church, when it caters for such a small portion of the population?»
Yet one may ask whether God's unconscious primordial valuation of possible situations and their resolution in terms of potential initial aims, while fully determinate in itself can represent a satisfaction for God in any meaningful sense.

Phrases with «meaningful sense»

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