Sentences with phrase «mourn together»

Students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School mourn together during a candlelight vigil at Pines Trail Park.
We're a team... We win together, we lose together, we celebrate and we mourn together.
An open letter to the Facing History community as we all mourn together over the recent tragedy in Orlando.
We mourn together for all of the people who have died and who are now suffering.
We must delight in each other, make others» conditions our own, rejoice together, mourn together, labor and suffer together.
So tell me, because I really don't know: how should the body of Christ mourn together?
He enjoined his shipmates to «delight in each other, make others» conditions our own, rejoice together, mourn together, labor and suffer together, always having before our eyes our... community... as members of the same body.»
We must delight in each other, make others» conditions our own, rejoice together; mourn together, labor and suffer together, always having before our eyes our commission and community in the work, our community as members of the same body...
To the PC party, to his caucus, to all MLAs who have served with him, and for all staff who came into contact with Manmeet during his incredible time as a public servant, we mourn together
And in that moment we were one, and we achieved community, and we were there for each other... We cried together and we mourned together and then we got up and rebuilt together.
Meeting once a week to plot their protests, ACT UP's activities range from wreaking havoc at a pharmaceutical headquarters, raving at Paris nightclubs, to, inevitably, mourning together when one of them dies.
We watched together, mourned together, gained strength and resolve from one another.
We're mourning together
As we mourned together the great loss, We became one family.

Not exact matches

It is better that employees openly mourn a failed project or a layoff together than whisper and tremble while managers pretend nothing happened.
Together as a community, we grieved and mourned.
In the aftermath of the mass shootings at Sandy Hook, Columbine and Virginia Tech, among others, our community always came together to globally mourn as though we had lost members of our own family.
I'm not saying that our existence isn't already strange enough, that God couldn't exist, I just think it's offense to not allow people to mourn because we have to be conditioned into saying that senseless deaths are the necessary catalyst, to bring communities together in the praise of God.
It reminds me of stories of folks letting people stay in their apartments in New York at the time of 9/11 and how the community came together in mourning ant the Clutha helicopter disaster in Glasgow.
Our problem is now before us, and we invite the poet, unless he is already engaged elsewhere, or belongs to the number of those who must be driven out from the house of mourning, together with the flute - players and the other noise - makers, before gladness can enter in.
It's normal and healthy for you and your friends to mourn your former lives together, but with honest conversation and a willingness to compromise eventually you'll find your new groove.
We have Facebook walls, but no Wailing Wall — where can we gather to listen and mourn, and then to heal together, to break bread together, and to serve the broken together?
There are two possibilities: either the disciples, in their mourning, conspired together to put one over on the world, or else they really believed that Jesus of Nazareth had been raised from the dead.
Ecclesiastes 3:1 ¶ To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: 2 A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; 3 A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up; 4 A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance; 5 A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing; 6 A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast away; 7 A time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak; 8 A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.
Hard conversations are coming, perhaps legislation, around gun control, about hatred, racism, religion, about our culture's glorification of violence, our nationalism, and the divisions between us, yes, those conversations need to happen, but not just now: now is the time for grieving, now is the time for loving, for burying, for mourning with those who mourn, for gathering humanity together, and for compassion.
When MASH broadcast its final episode, parties were held across the US to bring friends of MASH together to mourn its passing.
We have mourned our friends and lovers together and we have stitched an extraordinary quilt of memory together... I think that the coming together of Jewish and Christian, lesbian and gay and straight congregants is an important part of this.
The Earth mourns and withers the world languishes and withers, the heavens languish together with the earth.
Our guests come here for many reasons, some come to celebrate birthdays and anniversaries, some come to reunite with friends and family, others come to mourn the loss of a loved one, and some come to begin life together as a married couple.
A time to build up, a time to break down A time to dance, a time to mourn A time to cast away stones, a time to gather stones together
We can come together in solidarity and mourn the sleep - filled nights we're convinced we'll never experience again.
Today, we all come together to mourn one of New York's Finest.»
Crying as she mourned her friend, Rodriguez, 27, said the two met through mutual friends in Hempstead and used to go out together when they were younger.
By Rockland County Executive Ed Day We saw Rockland County come together this week to mourn the tragic loss of one our own, a young Marine from Pomona who was killed in a military plane crash.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo attended the wake later in the afternoon and spoke briefly with reporters afterward, urging New Yorkers to set aside their differences and join together to mourn Liu and Ramos.
We have worked together, compromised, supported each other, forthrightly exchanged ideas, weathered storms, celebrated successes and mourned losses together.
«Together as one borough of families, we mourn the loss of lives taken by senseless gun violence that has spared no home, not even the neighborhoods here in the «World's Borough»,» said Borough President KATZ.
We saw Rockland County come together this week to mourn the tragic loss of one our own, a young Marine from Pomona who was killed in a military plane crash.
Historically, it was gradually realized that such concepts as anxiety, antagonism, exhaustion, frustration, distress, despair, overwork, pre-menstrual tension, over-focusing, confusion, mourning, and fear could all come together in a general broad term, stress.
On December 1, people around the globe who come together to recognize World AIDS Day will have much to mourn and also much to celebrate.
Lost former husband after 30 year's together mourned long enough want to find true love again.
Toronto doctor Helen Matthews, mourning the death of her husband, retreats to the isolated island cabin where they'd spent some of their most cherished moments together.
«Hostiles» is the story of how the soldier and the warrior find common ground over the course of their journey and together mourn the passing of a people; it's pitched at a pace that wants to be stately but becomes funereal.
The cast works great together and the violence is definitely effective when it needs to be, but the main flaw is that I honestly couldn't tell if I was supposed to be laughing or mourning throughout certain moments.
Template dysfunctional parents that they are, it takes a tragedy to bring the Weston family together: daughters Barbara (Roberts), Ivy (Nicholson) and Karen (Lewis) and extended family members sister Mattie (Margo Martindale), nephew Little Charles (Cumberbatch, here for his buzz and quite miscast), and brother - in - law Charlie (Cooper) arrive to mourn the departed and tend to a severely addled matriarch.
While Putty Hill expounded the aftermath of a death by focusing on a community coming together through mourning, I Used To Be Darker works with a decidedly smaller aim — which is, of course, a family rapidly disintegrating in the wake of a divorce.
Together, they're mourning the death of their art.
Anne attempts to hold the family together as one while mourning the eventual loss of her husband («What happens when there's no us,» she asks).
Thankfully, Hoffman and Harwood forgo predictable tropes (not to give anything away, but mourning will not be a recurring theme) as they get these four together to do what they do best.
A president mourns: A photo on the front page shows Bill Clinton and first lady Hillary Clinton walking together at the White House before they headed back to Arkansas for the funeral for the president's mother, Virginia Kelley.
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