The queen is more like
a mother than a ruling queen.
Not exact matches
Was the question this: is it better for children to have a
mother at home rather
than a father at home, generally speaking, not a hard and fast
rule?
1 Corinthians 11:14 (Men should not have long hair) 1 Corinthians 14:34 - 35 (Women should remain silent in church) Deuteronomy 13:6 - 16 (Death penalty for Apostasy) Deuteronomy 20:10 - 14 (Attack city, kill all men, keep women, children as spoils of war) Deuteronomy 21:18 - 21 (Death penalty for a rebellious son) Deuteronomy 22:19 - 25 (Kill non - virgin / kill adulterers / rapists) Ecclesiastes 1:18 (Knowledge is bad) Exodus 21:1 - 7 (
Rules for buying slaves) Exodus 35:2 (Death for working on the Sabbath) Ezekiel 9:5 - 6 (Murder women / children) Genesis 1:3,4,5,11,12,16 (God creates light, night and day, plants grow, before creating sun) Genesis 3:16 (Man shall
rule over woman) Jeremiah 19:9 (Cannibalism) John 3:18 (He who believes in Jesus is saved, he that doesn't is condemned) John 5:46 - 47 (Jesus references Old Testament) Leviticus 3:1 - 17 (Procedure for animal sacrifice) Leviticus 19:19 (No mixed fabrics in clothing) Leviticus 19:27 (Don't trim hair or beard) Leviticus 19:28 (No tattoos) Leviticus 20:9 (Death for cursing father or
mother) Leviticus 20:10 (Death for adultery) Leviticus 20:13 (Death for gay men) Leviticus 21:17 - 23 (Ugly people, lame, dwarfs, not welcome on altar) Leviticus 25:45 (Strangers can be bought as slaves) Luke 12:33 (Sell your possessions, and give to the poor) Luke 14:26 (You must hate your family and yourself to follow Jesus) Mark 10:11 - 12 (Leaving your spouse for another is adultery) Mark 10:21 - 22 (Sell your possessions and give to the poor) Mark 10:24 - 25 (Next to impossible for rich to get into heaven) Mark 16:15 - 16 (Those who hear the gospel and don't believe go to hell) Matthew 5:17 - 19 (Jesus says he has come to enforce the laws of the Old Testament) Matthew 6:5 - 6 (Pray in secret) Matthew 6:18 (Fast for Lent in secret) Matthew 9:12 (The healthy don't need a doctor, the sick do) Matthew 10:34 - 37 (Jesus comes with sword, turns families against each other, those that love family more
than him are not worthy) Matthew 12:30 (If you're not with Jesus, you're against him) Matthew 15:4 (Death for not honouring your father and
mother) Matthew 22:29 (Jesus references Old Testament) Matthew 24:37 (Jesus references Old Testament) Numbers 14:18 (Following generations blamed for the sins of previous ones) Psalms 137:9 (Violence against children) Revelation 6:13 (The stars fell to earth like figs) Revelation 21:8 (Unbelievers, among others, go to hell) 1 Timothy 2:11 - 12 (Women subordinate and must remain silent) 1 Timothy 5:8 (If you don't provide for your family, you are an infidel)
A sense of being embattled: a reliance perhaps on
rules rather
than answers to profound questions raised in a rapidly - changing world, a sense of the Church as a fortress rather
than a
Mother and teacher, a bleak landscape for Biblical studies.
Born of a people who never attained greatness as a nation, buffeted by greater and lesser enemies throughout their whole existence, a nation that at its widest period of expansion would have
ruled a region scarcely larger
than Pennsylvania, this book has
mothered three great religions which between them touch very nearly half the entire population of the world.
As I was growing up, my
mother had a
rule that my sister and I were never allowed more
than two cookies in one sitting.
In a unanimous
ruling on Jan. 29, the court upheld the $ 5,000 monthly support payments of Phoenix Suns forward Dennis Scott (who earns $ 3 million a year), less
than half the $ 10,011 sought by the child's
mother.
In light of a few things that happened of late — the Supreme Court's
ruling on marriage for same - sex couples, the addition of the word cisgender into the Oxford English Dictionary, the rise of the transgender movement, with Germany leading the way for parents to register their baby as something other
than just boy or girl, the increase in stay - at home dads and egalitarian marriages, universities recognizing a third gender, the desire by some to be called they versus he or she, the declaration that 2015 is the year of the gender - neutral baby, it's clear we are moving toward a society that is busting up traditional views of gender and what men and women, husbands and wives, fathers and
mothers look and act like.
That is the way that the companies can get round the
rules, because they are not advertising to
mothers with a baby who is under six months; they are advertising to
mothers with babies who are older
than six months.
That makes stay at home
mothers the exception rather
than the
rule (can't you just hear Beaver looking around and calling out, «Why gosh, Wally... where's Mom?»).
I think people put so many
rules out there for nursing
mothers and babies, that women stop nursing rather
than take the chance that they can be flexible when their babies get older.
I want to share my experience so other
mothers who are worried because their nipples, too, go into their breasts rather
than sticking out of them, can be confident that this need not
rule out breastfeeding.
Just in time for the 25th anniversary DVD edition of «Mommie Dearest,» a study in the June issue of the journal Pediatrics finds that strict disciplinarian
mothers are even more likely to raise chubby kids
than those derelict moms who let their youngsters graze on Pringles and M&M s. Moms who set clear
rules and enforce them with flexibility and respect are least likely to have overweight youngsters.
We're also looking at a lot of bridesmaids dresses at local shops, which seem to be a lot less frumpy
than things labelled «
mother of the bride,» as a general
rule.
There are exceptions to every
rule, but it seems style is more often
than not passed down from
mothers to child.
10
Rules for Dating My Son: A Realist's
mothers of sons can be just as psychotic as fathers of I take this
rule seriously, Rule Seven: As you stand in my front hallway, waiting for my daughter to appear, and more than an hour goes by, do not sigh and fid
rule seriously,
Rule Seven: As you stand in my front hallway, waiting for my daughter to appear, and more than an hour goes by, do not sigh and fid
Rule Seven: As you stand in my front hallway, waiting for my daughter to appear, and more
than an hour goes by, do not sigh and fidget.
In Brave, Merida's family is quite the interesting bunch — her father (King Fergus) would rather joke
than fulfill his obligations; her
mother (Queen Elinor) is the serious one,
ruling over the kingdom from behind - the - scenes; her triplet brothers silently partake in mischief on an endless drive to consume pies and other sweets.
She is definitely more
rule oriented
than her own
mother.
I am however prepared to make an award of costs significantly higher
than the tariff to send a strong message to the
mother that her disregard for the
rules of court and the meticulous timelines set out at the case management conferences and her unilateral decision to fail to appear at the March 1, 2013 Hearing are totally unacceptable.
Most legal commentators have since argued that this decision is more
than likely to be reversed on appeal, primarily in light of the religious underpinnings of the judge's decision, which raise First Amendment concerns (according to the New York Times, the American Civil Liberties Union has offered to appeal the
ruling on behalf of the child's
mother).
As a
mother, I have the experience and patience to work with children and to provide a firm but friendly voice as a referee.I know that being a referee at the junior soccer level takes more
than just knowing the
rules of the game.
Although Bowlby did not
rule out the possibility of other attachment figures for a child, he did believe that there should be a primary bond which was much more important
than any other (usually the
mother).
Other measures used information from earlier sweeps (
mother - infant attachment used sweep 1 information, and supervision used sweep 4 information) while the remainder (joint activities and
rule - setting) drew on information from more
than one sweep.
Similarly, McLanahan and Sandefur (1994) reported that single
mothers exert less control over their children in terms of supervision and establishing
rules than mothers in two - parent families.