«Granting public funds for private developers
ought always to be at the total discretion of the governing body.»
Revealing the importance of an effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man, realizing that men
ought always to pray.
Adjustments to data
ought always be explained in an open and transparent manner, especially adjustments to data that become the basis for expensive policy decisions.
For instance, decision making using the Precautionary Principle (PP) in all its forms
ought always be a fallback position, and approached with a colder eye than Gardiner's paper suggests.
Revealing the importance of an effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man, realizing that men
ought always to pray.
Revealing the importance of an effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man, realizing that men
ought always to pray.
They hold flavor, allow balancing of ingredients, and most of all their texture complements rather than competes with the stars of the show, which
ought always to be the fillings.
For if the Holy Spirit is present in the church, the church
ought always to be reforming itself; and the Spirit will establish communication and true understanding in the faithful.
Every believer
ought always to be examining the content of his faith, ought willingly to undergo this test; because it is only the faith that is «unprotected» by some intellectual or sociological reinforcement that is true faith in God in Jesus Christ.
We ought always to pray and not lose heart, says Luke.
Thus, the perceptual response
ought always to correspond to what the stimuli prescribe.
The third principle may be stated as follows: Every morally developed person
ought always to act as he inescapably sees he ought to act on full disinterested consideration of all available knowledge and experience which appear to him to be relevant.
We should, in short, not be content to turn inward defensively but
ought always to reach out to the larger world.
That may be bewildering, but it is where Protestants always are; it is where all Christians
ought always to be.
It is that basic truth which
ought always to be part of ministerial equipment, as we may phrase it.
But
we ought always to give thanks to God for you, brothers beloved by the Lord, because God chose you as the firstfruits to be saved, through sanctification by the Spirit and belief in the truth.
Protestantism
ought always to be conscious of the depth and scope of this Catholic solution of the problem of the Christian life.
This means that the social canons, and therefore the educational canon,
ought always to be put in question.
«A wise man
ought always to follow the paths beaten by great men, and to imitate those who have been supreme, so that...
While an electorate certainly ought to take such things into consideration when they enter the voting booth, that doesn't mean
they ought always to have the final say.
Not exact matches
«He set the standard for how superstars in every sport
ought to be, in the way he has
always signed autographs, in the way he has
always made time for everyone.
The general principle here is that «the people»
ought to have a say, but that their say needn't
always be direct.
But I hold that we blacks
ought not to allow ourselves to become ever - ready doomsayers,
always alert to exploit black suffering by offering it up to more - or-less sympathetic whites as a justification for incremental monetary transfers.
Marney used to say when he was my mentor «You are
always saying, «Bless, bless, bless» when you
ought to be saying.
If, as the Church had
always taught, the Bible contained God's revelation to man, every man (they urged)
ought to be able to read it for himself, and not to be dependent upon what might reach him by indirect channels.
To live a life
always open and responsive to God is what Jesus did, and what every Christian
ought to try to do.
I have
always thought that Oliver Cromwell's plea to certain of his opponents — «I beseech thee in the bowels of Christ, consider that ye may be wrong» —
ought to be directed as much towards oneself as toward one's opponents.
Conceptual feeling is necessarily vectored
always more or less specified, oriented toward an
ought or worth to be fulfilled and an enrichment to be enjoyed by others in the future just as it now enjoys or suffers those in its past.
Precisely in view of the Church's situation the preachers of the gospel
ought not to think themselves condemned to being
always on the defensive.
If we are full of holy impatience, living in faith, hope and love of God and men, if we
always hope against hope, then the Church, too, will become what she
ought to be.
Although the «two by two»
ought not to be taken so literally as home visitation evangelism has often done, it seems symbolic of the fact that any Christian is
always a representative,
always more than himself, and
always checked up on by his brother.
Nor indeed is he
always what he
ought to be.
But they have
always agreed that you
ought not to put yourself first.
I have
always thought that every academic — or wannabe, like me —
ought have one or two hypotheses that are held very loosely, are somewhat defensible but impossible to prove, and just fringe enough to make academic parties interesting.
Reading this dummy's posts about s3x
always makes me think of the set of Victorian «instructional» texts I found in my grandmother's attic: «What a Young Girl
Ought to Know».
And even if someone should, even if he succeeded in enumerating them all and for an instant succeeded in holding them together so that they could not, like true runaways, slip away and assume another role while remaining in essence the same, still one evasion would
always remain behind even if none
ought to be there, even if by repeated inspection a commendable cleverness should be unable to discover that a single ground had been overlooked and hence that a single evasion was still possible.
«How shall I know in a given case what I
ought to do,» he can
always turn to the Church which claims to possess the infallible truth of God and which therefore claims to speak with final authority on every moral situation.
To say one more word about preaching what the world
ought to be like, philosophy arrives
always too late for that.
• Chapter II: «Respect and love
ought to be extended also to those who think or act differently than we do in social, political and even religious matters... it is necessary to distinguish between error, which
always merits repudiation, and the person in error» (28).
Recalling the vision behind the act of integration of the International Missionary Council and the World Council of Churches, and the commitment made in New Delhi, Arias said «we have not
always been faithful to our recognized calling; we have not
always given priority to what
ought to be our priorities; we have not
always been worthy of our predecessors from Edinburgh 1910 to Mexico 1963; and we have not
always fulfilled the hopes which gave rise to the WCC and its merging with the IMC».
This
ought to be a reminder that it discloses what will
always be the world's attitude to the church and what arguments will be used to the end of history in the world's case against it.
Lest someone object that profits
ought not
always be blamed for social decay, then what of the downfall of the socialist regimes of Eastern Europe in 1989 and 1990?
However it seems to me that I
ought to be
always careful, in the light of the apostle's warning that» Knowledge puffs up with pride; whereas love builds up.
Perhaps that
ought to be the case; most certainly it is not
always the case with modern Christian men and women.
At the same time I have
always lived with the certainty that the truth
ought to guide my life, cost what it may.
Change is
always possible, and in fact is
always occurring, at least in small ways, but radical change is the exception and
ought never to be presumed.
I can not escape by distinguishing between visible or invisible church, by appealing to ideals
always yet to be realized, or by suggesting that the theologian's task is to describe what the church
ought to be, not what it is.
Yet modern Christians are
always prone to judge the state and to tell it what it
ought to do — thus tacitly admitting that the state is valid, legitimate, and a priori capable of using force justly.
Finally, the foundation is
always prayer and we
ought to expect conversions, particularly if we change priorities (chapter 12).
But for Newman, a theologian
always recognizes (or at least
ought to recognize) a higher authority to which his discipline is bound.