Sentences with phrase «point at which»

The Easter Vigil is the highest point at which the Church lives the Paschal Mystery from which she draws her being and life.
Hyung Goo died about six months later, and that prayer service came to seem like the inaugural event of that final trajectory the point at which all these people came together to see us through to the end.
The process of separation, transition, and reintegration occurs in terms of the disruption of a steady state at or near equilibrium, which brings matter increasingly far from equilibrium to a point at which a «decision» is made between alternative possibilities randomly presented by its environment, resulting in its reorganization in novel emergent form.
Yet this is the point at which so many people take evasive action.
Or is this the point at which the «nonprophetic» stance and Schuller's insistence on avoiding controversy would take over?
We have reached a point at which strife between nations and religions could lead to the apocalypse.
The point at which the principle of ontological parity interferes with a creator God is in the context of the idea of existence itself.
That is the point at which this discipline has now arrived.
I pray you will get the chance to know the only one who has the ability to love every cell in your body, soul, and spirit because this is the point at which you will begin living.
The non-Fascist, the anti-Fascist, was approaching a point at which he would have to ask himself whether the parish church was still his church; he was now having to go to mass early in the morning if he wished to avoid the sermon, which too often comprised a full - scale attack on all the democratic, masonic Governments which were opposing the providential plans of the Duce.
Still, not everyone agrees that a zygote or a fetus has a soul, and there is disagreement even among the most ardent pro-life supporters about the exact point at which an unborn child qualifies as a human being.
The impact of Wieman in the American scene has sometimes been compared with that of Barth upon Continental theology, 17 and a parallel does exist at the point at which both men direct attention away from humanity and human values to the work of God which is understood as prior to and sovereign over human endeavors.
Before attempting to determine any point at which I personally find an inescapability of attachment of my sense of obligation to possible modes of behavior, we must recognize that most ethical assertions are more pretentious than those thus far discussed.
In severely conflicted marriages, this is often the point at which the destruction of the husband - wife intimacy begins and the unhealthy intimacy of the mother and child begins.
Nowadays the study of perceptual synthesis, of memory, of ideation, of insightful problem - solving and of the complexities of motivation in animals, has reached a point at which the exact opposite of Morgan's strategy often seems more promising.
Each attempt stands on its own, until the point at which practice predisposes us to recognize and seek excellence in little ways, and to realize that our battles are won in the smallest of details.
Therefore the army is the point at which the issue must be joined.
This brings us to the point at which this study differs decisively from previous studies of Protestant theological education.
He functions as the focal point at which the various currents of the story are concentrated into the lurid fiction of an international Jewish cabal bent on corrupting Christendom and ruling the world.
Soren Kierkegaard's critical witness against «Christendom» in mid-nineteenth century Europe was coterminous with what Sydney Mead identified as the point at which Christianity and Americanism became merged into a unified sort of spirituality.
It is the point at which the concept of final causation becomes relevant.
That was the point at which the imagination that had been a river below the surface in me started bubbling up and I thought, «There's something happening in this poetry, and I wonder what it is».»
This is the point at which such men as Northrop, Whitehead, and Hartshorne may be helpful to some, for not only have they laid a foundation for belief in God as real and existing, but they have done so within the framework of a modern world view.
But others, seeing what was happening would quickly move into competition, bringing the price down to the lowest point at which that product could be profitably made.
It's the point at which the babies could survive outside of the mother's womb.
The general theme of abiding in the highest good is the greatest contribution neo-Confucianism has to contemporary philosophy, because it is the point at which an axiological theory of experience is put forward.
Here is the first point at which Wilson's book will be misunderstood.
If love has a history then here is the point at which that history is shaped by a new understanding which claims to have its source in the history of Jesus.
However, even as they admired his catholicity, they still could not find the point at which the shift from transcendence to involvement took place.
You can not really define the meaning of human life other than to find some particular point at which the relief of the sorrows of the human condition is your business.»
And yet, at the point at which he might have been tempted to proclaim his gospel, he finds that the only fitting response is to embrace the victim, blessing him with tears.
This is the point at which I disagree.
This is a good point at which to note what Catholicism has to say on the matter.
This is the point at which he cites the authority of the Buddhist tradition with good results.
Humility is an important Christian virtue, and one point at which even Christian ministers need to exercise it is in passing judgment on services conducted by their brothers in the Lord.
Secondly, this is the point at which Israel's faith becomes truly monotheistic.
The future of the novum ultimum is the point at which the creation encounters God in God's powerful fullness.
Neither attempts to identify the exact point at which such experiences emerged in evolution.
Anyone who has tried to read the Bible cover - to - cover comes to a point at which they say, «No; this can't be right.»
Perhaps his doubts had reached a point at which he was certainly an agnostic, albeit one with a Christian background.
This idea, of the individual at prayer being a point at which things start to happen, enables us to say something about intercession.
Since human existence is a direction taken, rather than a point at which we have already arrived, further movement (together with an awareness of our human identity) will depend largely upon how we respond both to the past and to the impact of the present upon us.
The discussion of the theological propriety of a new quest must naturally begin with the point at which the original quest was seen to be illegitimate.
This is a point at which I believe Altizer has misinterpreted Meister Eckhart.
But is that really the point at which the story begins?
but that has become the point to many and even to me at times — the point at which we, those whom it matters, happened and how it went down — but then there is the shadow of how i saw it happen and go down....
There is literally no point at which confession leaves off and the new life begins.
This is the point at which the disagreement between the physiological and psychological school focuses.
That's the point at which a fertility advantage can really count.
There must be some point at which compassion must give way in the face of a willed refusal to return from one's wanderings.
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