Someone with
more destiny beliefs may withdraw because they see conflict as proof that the relationship is not destined to work out.
Not exact matches
Thus, the question arises, will they incarnate
more historically than before their own
belief in the «mystical body» of Christ, and the collective
destiny of the fully redeemed or «liberated» human race?
There is the constant innuendo of «the credulous outlook and the primitive
beliefs of those days etc. etc.» The essence of the argument from motives of credibility is going to reduce
more and
more, so it seems to the writer, to the inevitable need to postulate a Divine Environing of human
destiny, and to the manifest gradual unfolding of this potential, without contradiction of the previous essential doctrinal relationships of God to Man, and of Man to God.
These romanticized placeholders may honor the victims of mass trespass and genocide that took place in the colonization of the Great Plains, but
more certainly, they were meant to invoke the romance of Manifest
Destiny — an imperialist notion which had won out over the Whig's
belief that the mission of the United States was perfecting the democratic enterprise.
Although I didn't discuss the results for growth /
destiny in the post, in our data set we found that
destiny had a relatively small association with breakup (higher
destiny beliefs = slightly
more breakup), but growth
beliefs didn't correlate with breakup.
See
more about growth and
destiny beliefs here: http://www.scienceofrelationships.com/home/2011/3/14/do-you-pursue-love-or-does-it-pursue-you.html
However, those with
destiny beliefs are only
more likely to put in the work when their partner matches their idea of a perfect mate.