Sentences with phrase «not hiddenness»

Not exact matches

If this is true, then the complexity, hiddenness, and skepticism inherent in human experience of anything can not be denied, and they can be denied least when the experience in question is that of coming to belief.
Man is not to be «seen through» but «to be perceived ever more completely in his openness and his hiddenness and in the relation of the two to each other.»
Let it, then, be hidden from all men, no matter how its hiddenness might be able to support him, yet he could not hide it from that inner companion, before whom he is most of all ashamed.
I will put Cobb back on the defensive by saying that I fail to see how the model of an all - encompassing, regionally inclusive experience is compatible with the hiddenness of competing drives, aspirations and fears which psychoanalysis reveals in the» «depth» dimension of the psyche,» by which term I mean something broader than the unified experience of the analogue to the «soul,» namely, the restless depths of the complex societies which support the regnant nexus and which have a «life» of their own, which is in some instances incorporated into, melded into the conscious experience of the occasions in the regnant society, and sometimes is not.
And, oh, to my thinking this is one expression the more of the dreadfulness of this most dreadful sickness and misery, namely, its hiddennessnot only that he who suffers from it may wish to hide it and may be able to do so, to the effect that it can so dwell in a man that no one, no one whatever discovers it; no, rather that it can be so hidden in a man that he himself does not know it!
The strangeness of life and the hiddenness of its meaning can not be respoded to appropriately by a life - style of linear power.
For Barth it was axiomatic that true knowledge of God begins not with an act of imagination or creativity but with the knowledge of God's hiddenness.
Not, then, by the dissolution of His hiddenness — but apprehensibly.»
And more: this sign of hiddenness points to the fact that the reality of truth and love, the reality of God himself, is not found in the world of things but beyond it, in the sphere of a new order that this tiny baby was ushering in.
Christian preaching, then, is not the denial of God's or Christ's hiddenness but the means by which God functions from his hiddenness to call people into responsible, authentic existence.
An object such as, for instance, a silver votive vessel comes into being not only by the interplay between the dark hiddenness of the earth and the radiant openness of the heavens — hidden ores brought up to shine in the light of day — but by the reverently poetic approach of mortals toward the gods and by the lordly approach of the gods toward mortals, out of the hidden realm of the divine, announcing themselves in the powers of nature.
«In the proper religious sense of the term,» writes Orthodox bishop Kallistos Ware, ««mystery» signifies not only hiddenness but disclosure....
A popular argument against the existence of God is what some call divine hiddenness: «If God exists, why doesn't he make his existence more obvious, such that it could not be doubted?»
A Course in Miracles teaches, «The hidden can terrify not for what it is, but for its hiddenness
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