Sentences with phrase «on water»

A liberal Christian may be willing to affirm that Jesus literally walked on the water (Matt.
I get where you are coming from though, I read about metal axe heads floating on water, shadows moving while the sun is not, men running faster than horses and fifty armed soldiers falling dead when they come against one of Gods prophets, it goes on and on, an outrageous affront to any human intelligence, I mean come on!!
If we could say Yes to Jesus walking on water or landing on the Mount of Olives, would this actually strengthen our faith that we have a future with God?
Finally one exasperated building contractor blurted out: «Mr. Johnson, did Jesus walk on water or did he not?
Walked on water, turned water to wine, raised people from the dead.
Unless someone being birthed by a virgin, walking on water, raising people from the dead, raising himself from the dead, and magically ascending into the sky as if he had hollywood cables on (Sorry Chris Angel) is somehow normal, now - a-days.
But in short of a man can rise from the dead or walk on water I would never said anything couldn't be literal.
«Dear God, your son walked on water but we know it would have been a lot more fun if he had a surfboard or boogie board,» Rieder said as he splashed holy water onto the boards and their owners.
And as far as I know, none of the accounts of Caesar involve his raising people from the dead, rising after three days in a grave, walking on water, or any other such actions.
A keel taking on water, sail luffing and spilling the wind, tiller awash in tide and wave you have set me adrift in the night where I float without compass anchor or star.
You see, the Bible tells stories of a God who speaks the world into existence, floods an entire earth, makes the sun stand still and walks on water.
We're still a few weeks away from the release of my new book, Inspired: Slaying Giants, Walking on Water, and Loving the Bible Again, but today I wanted to let you know about a generous pre-order incentive offered by my publisher.
And considering you're getting a giant lighthouse on the water in locations ranging from Lake Michigan to the Chesapeake Bay, the price isn't all that bad.
Walking on Water by Madeline L'Engle — If you are a writer or an artist that follows the ways of Jesus, this is your book.
We have made plans for a date night this weekend, we'll drive to the ocean, walk on the pier, watch the sun set on the water.
Before it is killed though it walks on water, turns water into wine, heals lepers and makes a zombie out of a man named Lazarus (funny that there is only one source docu.ment for these spectacular events).
[Did you expect to see him walking on water (w.o.w.) or eggs (w.o.e.)-RSB-
Here's a better idea for this so - called «governor» to consider: Take a look at the research done by your alma mater, Texas A&M, on global warming and the effect it will have on Texas (higher temps and greater stress on water through decreased rainfall and increased evaporation)... then stop poopooing the efforts to mitigate the effect humans are having on climate change.
In the future her esteem guest should wear raincoats and rubber boots — because the next big «Oprah» event will be her «walking on water» impression of Jesus Christ.
I hope most of you realize that their is very little difference between Muslim's who believe in 89 Virgins and Christians who think humans can walk on water and Mormons who toss water on dead people...
Monville calls this her «walk on water» moment, recalling when Jesus challenged the disciples to show their faith by following his footsteps across the Sea of Galilee.
The building of the conditions or the actual act of Jesus walking on the water / sea?
(You might want to look that one up) Horus for example was born of a virgin, walked on water, turned water into wine, had 12 disciples, was crucified, rose on the third day, ascended into heaven, on and on.
But any transformation of the wilderness depends on water.
Isn't this an echo of the Genesis creation where the Creator calls on the water / mineral earth to bring forth organisms (Genesis 1: 11,12)
but if i am the next messiah than walking on water would be fun... as well as the turning water to wine part — i'm shooting for zinfandel!
Walking on water is easy to someone with impulsive boldness, but walking on dry land as a disciple of Jesus Christ is something altogether different.
She pointed out that Peter, the founder of the church, was the same man «who denied Christ three times and couldn't walk on the water by himself» (p. 307).
I will say it was Jesus walking on the water just like I will say the miracle was a admitted rare tornado.
Peter walked on the water to go to Jesus, but he «followed Him at a distance» on dry land (Mark 14:54).
My friend, the way folks pumped up Obama during the election I thought he was going to walk on water.
Jesus supposedly walking on water is in a category quite apart from rare weather occurrences, however there is some evidence that such feats are indeed possible.
I can not believe in magical faeries who walk on water and make fish and split the red sea, it sounds exactly like what it is, TOTAL BS.
Any modern political figure who claimed to be able to raise the dead, walk on water or cast out demons, would rightly be judged mentally unbalanced.
That solves the mystery of why Jesus was out walking on water!
Walking on Water: Reflections on Faith and Art by Madeleine L'Engle - This one is for the creatives — and head's up, that's pretty much most of us.
You've seen humans walk on water?
I would add several authors / books that influenced me outside of Evangelical circles: Alan Jones (Soul Making) Hans Urs von Balthazar (Engagement with God) Frederich Buechner (Telling the Truth) Walker Percy (The Second Coming) Fyodor Dostoyevsky (The Brothers Karamazov) Dante (The Divine Comedy) Madeleine L'Engle (Walking on Water) Anne Lamott (Traveling Mercies)
If you believe that God is real, and he can do all that the Bible says, including MAKE THE WORLD, then it's not hard at all to believe that he can walk on water, or keep a man alive in a whale, or split seas.
I have yet to see how it's at all possible to replicate bread (without machines), walk on water (without a machines) or turn water into wine (need I say it again)?
If God is real, and can do everything the Bible says he can (including make everything), then it's not hard to believe he can part seas, or walk on water, or keep a man alive in a whale.
Yeah, like if they were in Jerusalem when Jesus was doing his miracles, they would do a lot of NOT seeing, like not seeing Jesus walk on water or resurrect or turn water into wine.
In course of time, unusual events were studied as of special significance; and from this into portents of one sort or another the way was easy: earthquakes, ec1ipses, abnormal births, abnormal weather, celestial phenomena, and then ritualistic phenomena, such as the structure of a sacrificed animal, the spread of oil on water, and so on in manifold ramifications.
This present aspect of the kingdom manifested itself in different ways in the person and deeds of the Christ (Wood, 1996:648 - 649): Casting out demons Healing the sick Working of miracles such as turning water into wine, raising Lazarus from the dead and walking on water.
It is the human endeavor to apply the tests of coherence and comprehensiveness in drawing conclusions about the veracity of certain phenomena — that, for example, axheads do not float on water and the sun does not stand still, that conceptions are not immaculate, that corpses do not rise from graves.
Yes now she can babble mindlessly about talking snakes, talking fiery bushes, big boats that held 250,000 species of beetle along with wooly mammoths and snow leopards, guys that floated into the clouds in front of everyone (yet somehow the Jews and Arabs still just don't buy that he was the saviour), parted water / wine to water / walking on water / healing water, food from the sky....
Talking donkeys, burning bushes, walking on water... c'm on
They have been know to make me run on water.
< — Correct He walked on water.
If you noticed, we also need water to live and you'll find that most places are built near or on water sources for that reason, yet when it rains really hard or for other natural occuring events, floods happen.
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