Not exact matches
Pros
love it too, with Glamour beauty
writer Rachel Nussbaum saying «ever since [I started using CeraVe], I've had baby soft, clear skin with the smallest pores
of my life.»
The movie is a
love letter to the forgotten musical (remember, most
of the Academy voters are on the older side), the creativity
of the story by
writer - director Damien Chazelle is incredible, and the performances by Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone are some
of the best
of the year.
I
love that about the show, but what I also
love is that I get the opportunity to meet great people: Cohosts, contestants, producers and editors and
writers and all the other people that make the show... it's a great group
of people.
The forbidden
love story
of Christian, a
writer, and Satine, a singer / courtesan with big dreams, was nominated for eight Oscars in 2002 and won two: Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design.
Copywriter Salaries Copywriting Examples Start Learning Copy Now Copywriting Tools Consulting As A Side Job How To Become A Copywriter Make a Copywriting Portfolio Copywriting Books and Courses Freelance Writing for Beginners Swipe File Copywriting Guides: The State
of Copywriting 2018 Direct Mail Marketing Guide One Pager Examples Sell Me This Pen Leading Questions Why Use Images vs Text How To Write A Brochure Headlines That Sell Using Ear Plugs To Write Writing Guides Three Tiered Pricing Different Pricing Examples How To Make A PDF Billboard Advertising Guide Write an AirBnB Description How to Write a SWOT Analysis Job Interview Questions How to Write a Memo How to Write a Testimonial Make Money Licensing Music How to Create a Tagline Work From Home Successfully LinkedIn Recommendations Choosing The Right Photos How to Start A Conversation How to Sell Art Online How To Become A Life Coach Best Business Podcasts Tone
of Voice in Copywriting Workplace Communication Skills Power & Trigger Words For Sales Content Marketing Guides: Writing Advertorials Easiest Font to Read How To Write A Follow Up Email Cold Email Like A Boss S&P 500 Company Slogan Effective Sales Letters How to Write a Newsletter How to Write an About Page How to Get Your Posts Seen Making A Content Mill Real Estate Flyers Get First Photography Job Email Open Rate Examples Content Writing vs Copywriting Become A Famous YouTuber Story Arcs for Content Marketing Copywriter Mentality:
Writers Block Copywriting Quotes Psychology
of Marketing Taking a Workcation to Think Health / Wealth /
Love Test How to Interview Someone Get a Job or Start a Business?
Valerie earned a degree in history from the University
of New Mexico, and as a freelance
writer combines her
love of history with her extensive experience in the tourism industry to provide insightful, informative articles about life in Italy.
To some sports
writers, this has not been a good thing and they long for the return
of the dynasty teams to
love or hate.
The fact
of the matter is, Paul nor any other Biblical
writer had any concept
of responsible, monogamous,
loving gay relationships as we do today.
Others, including this
writer, believe that supporting suicide is an abandonment that validates
loved ones» worst fears about themselves — that they are a burden, unworthy
of love, or truly better off dead.
Your opinion
of Gods plan and God for that matter does not match what the
writer clearly states (
Loving God protecting and providing a way for his Chosen Ones).
The
writer of the letter to the Hebrews tells us in chapter 10: «Let us consider how to stir up one another to
love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit
of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.»
• W. H. Mallock, The New Republic: It defies reason that a professional economist should have written one
of the most brilliant satires
of the nineteenth century (it appeared in 1877); a conversation novel, in the manner
of Thomas
Love Peacock, and just about as ingenious as any
of his; a grand and ungracious burlesque
of the Oxonian intellectuals and
writers of the time, many
of them Mallock's friends.
He goes on to give an example
of Agnosticism in action citing «an eminent critic and
writer defending homosexual practices» in terms
of a claim that there are `'» many normalcies
of love»».
As the
writer of Hebrews said, we «stir up one another to
love and good works.»
Because when it comes to enemy -
love and our response to evil, the New Testament
writers race to the life and teaching
of Christ as the pattern for believers to imitate.
Like other anti-euthanasia
writers, Sally Thomas holds no truck with use
of the words unacceptable suffering, release, merciful, or
love.
These two unfinished works both contravene Vita nuova's celebration
of Beatrice as the most valuable teacher
of a fully charitable
love that the
writer could know.
I think Jesus recommended the Samaritan's
loving - kindness, what certain older
writers called «holy living,» simply as a matter
of propriety, for the Samaritan was living in what Jesus understood to be a holy world.
One can still find this emphasis on divine immanence in
writers formed by Pentecostalism like James Baldwin, who equated it with the outworking
of love in human life.
The
writer of Hebrews 13 groups this and other paraenetic points under a broader one: «Let mutual
love continue,» which echoes Jesus» «new command» to his disciples.
while the
writer has little knowledge
of the bible, he is also greatly lacking what he should know to write such a article, the laws give to people
of all walks
of life is the commandments given by moses, religion does not have anything to do with goverments laws or rulings, he told us straight the one law that there is no forgiveness for is murder, rulers and goverments take it upon themselves to make the decision whether to go to war, or if a person should be put to death, as far as jesus and the apostles are concerned thier labours was a work
of love and true humanitarian towards all peoples, races, religions, they never asked for anything for themselves, and they never took from one to give to another.
Yet it does not seem likely that her audience is as uniform as all that; and even those readers who do not share this
writer's commitment to traditional religion may still wonder whether, if we are going to create our own object
of worship, the exchange
of a personal,
loving God for an impersonal, unresponsive Good is an appealing trade.
Another staggering mishandling
of Scripture occurs when Piper claims that the household codes
of the New Testament, wherein the biblical
writers urge wives to submit to their husbands and husbands to
love their wives, are unique to the Bible and that «there's nothing like it in any culture in the world.»
Meaning, completely ignore this
writer who tells
of his disgust
of the religious right then falls in
love with its poster child.
Same - sex acts, sure, but within the confinds
of a
loving and committed relationship would be as alien to the culture and
writers of the bible as a Toyota Prius.
The
writer of this Psalm
loved to worship God, and knew that there was nothing greater that we can do.
Denis de Rougement, a well - known Swiss
writer, is the author
of Love in the Western World and The Devil's Share.
These and scores
of similar stories ought to make us cringe at the ease with which Bible - based diet books (and the
writers of them) are fodder for highbrow derision, as when B. Laurence Moore in Selling God cattily dismisses them as «merchandise in questionable taste» and lumps them indifferently with «
love - making manuals» and «the Christian equivalent
of Harlequin romances.»
If the
writer wrote, «I know you hate me and feel uncomfortable around me, but I
love you anyway because
of how much undeserved
love I've found in Christ,» that would be much more Christian than, «Let me tell you all the ways you annoy me and everything you're doing wrong.»
Enemy -
love is the lifeblood
of Paul's story, and it's the current that connects so many
of the threads director and
writer Andrew Wyatt weaves together.
The
writer, Bill Sakovich, is a professional translator
of Japanese to English who's lived in Japan for two decades or so, who married a Japanese woman, and who just
loves Japanese culture in general — in many
of his cultural posts, for example, he suggests that the more typical Japanese approach to religion, while seemingly shallow, contradictory, and form - obsessed, makes a lot
of sense to him, and indeed, is superior to Western ways.
The same
writer, in the same chapter
of his letter, goes on to say, «Herein is
love, not that we
loved God».
Despite this, Beckett's book remains an important survey and reminder
of what in Western thought is
of value, and why, and demonstrates the truth articulated by both the Second Vatican Council and Saint Julian: «Whatever has been spoken aright by any man... belongs to us Christians; for we worship and
love... the Logos which is from the unbegotten and ineffable God... [and] those
writers were able, through the seed
of the Logos implanted inthem, to see reality darkly» (p. 51).
I remembered Brennan Manning — the man who has translated the
love of God in a way that I could receive it more than probably any other
writer — was addicted to alcohol and I re-read up one
of his last books before he died: «All is Grace: A Ragamuffin Memoir» where he vulnerably writes about what this battle has cost him, even as he experienced the unending and unconditional
love of God in the midst
of it, how he experienced regret and pain and loss alongside
of the
love and tenderness
of God in this dependency.
I'm not a biblical scholar or member
of the clergy... just a
writer with a
love for the Bible and an insatiable interest in how it is read and interpreted.
We search almost in vain for a modern Catholic
writer who can show us that the grace
of God not only redeems nature but
loves and completes it, for one who can imagine a world where God is not simply a specter haunting our consciences from the alleyway, but the author
of all things.
According to the
writer, divine
love may take the form
of a zornige Liebe, a «wrathful
love.»
I have not read any
of Wink's books that I remember, but have read reviews, whose
writers tend to
love his views or hate them.
My friend didn't spill the beans on any specifics, but perhaps that explains why so many Christian songs sound like they maybe started out as a run -
of - the - mill
love song before the
writer realized that by adding a few references to Heaven, this could work as a pretty decent worship song.
My experiences
of God's
love were very clear to me, and I simply assumed, as did most biblical
writers, that God's
love had been made abundantly clear in the miracles
of the Exodus, the words
of the prophets, the work
of Christ.
Most Insightful: Jeff Cook (at Jesus Creed) with «Rob Bell and C.S. Lewis» «There's not one controversial idea in
Love Wins that is not clearly voiced as a real possibility by the most popular evangelical
writer of the last century, CS Lewis.»
The
writer indicates that God's relationship to the church was established when the
love of God was visible for a time in Jesus Christ.
As if to reiterate the sacrificial nature
of the way in which the faithful are to «walk in
love,» the
writer warns
of the forces
of evil ready to deceive Christians with illusions about the fruits
of sin.
Gay marriage was ordained by God the day Jonathan and David called him to witness their covenant
of eternal
love and sanctioned by scripture the day he inspired the
writer to record that with obvious approval.
Some
writers love «life on the road» and thrive on the challenge
of speaking to a new group in a new city every day.
Had not the gospel
writers, particularly Matthew, inserted so often, «that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet,» we might be less inclined to look for exact predictions and be captured rather by the wonder and glory
of God's redeeming
love which Jesus came to bear.
«So many
of the Starched Collar Ministers [these
writers loved capital letters] do n`t bother to help others after they preach their sermon and shake hands.
I
love the way the
writer calls us to embrace our identity in Christ, not the approval or opinion
of others around us.
«We
love, because [God] first
loved us» is the way the
writer of the First Epistle
of John put it (1 John 4:19).
Without an explicit directive from God to exclude and condemn homosexuals, the Christian community's treatment
of gay persons is in clear violation
of what Jesus and the New Testament
writers pointedly identified as the most important commandment from God: to
love one's neighbor as one's self.