Sentences with phrase «punishment for death»

The antiviral spray will cancel this effect if caught in time, but zombification is so short lived you'll often just wait it out until you can resurrect them with fresh health and ammo, which incidentally is as simple as holding a button for a few seconds — hardly a fitting punishment for death.
In Neverending Nightmares, the punishment for death is that you either wake up in the same nightmare (like a checkpoint) or «dying» will transport you to a different branch in our narrative than if you had succeeded.
Despite the difficulty, the punishment for death only sees you waiting a few seconds and losing some money.
The series hasn't lost its ability to draw you in with its bleak tones, but perhaps even bleaker is the game's new punishment for death.
Nowadays most games have lighter penalties, like gear repairs, but the idea of punishment for death is still there.
The problem is that there isn't any real punishment for death and that doesn't force players to learn.
Luckily the punishment for death is quite minimal -LRB--1000 studs), so any penalty resulting from this is easily overlooked.
One of the biggest changes this time around is the punishment for death; harking back to Demon's Souls each death will deduct a small percentage of the player's health bar until eventually you're left with only 50 % of your starting health.

Not exact matches

There are a lot of people who are opposed to the death penalty not because they think no one ever deserves to die for their crimes, but because they think the government shouldn't have the power to hand out such a punishment, even when that punishment is justified.
We know that the government has its reasons for seeking the death penalty, but the continued pursuit of that punishment could bring years of appeals and prolong reliving the most painful day of our lives.
The fear of the great nothing is too much for my mind to bear, and I can sleep at night by convincing myself that the absolute nothing we all face one day will instead be full of happy choirs of angels, reward for any suffering I've endured, punishment of the wicked and evil (it pains me to think those who cause so much evil will not suffer for eternity, so hell is a great comfort too), and that I'll get to see all those I currently miss since the death of friends and family are so painful.
The punishment for not worshipping the true God is DEATH.
I'd heard of him for years and several years ago I heard my own pastor preach a message on him condemning homosexuality... saying that his death from AIDS was God's punishment for his «abomination» and «backsliding».
It makes one pause and consider, due to the extreme violence that surrounds many of them, and the threat of punishment or death for those who dare leave Islam... http://www.charismamag.com/life/women/24959-the-underground-revival-in-the-middle-east-that-might-take-down-islam
I don't know what sorts of «punishment» God might have in store for people after death, but again, using Jesus as the guiding principle, I highly doubt that God is going to torture people for all eternity by burning them in fire.
He loved men so much that, even knowing many would reject his offer, he freely provided the costly atonement for all sin, so that no man need fear punishment and death, but could repent of their wickedness and be restored to loving relationship with God.
It makes sense why an animal had to die in place of a person as a sacrifice, it makes sense as to why Our Lord have himself as a sacrifice for our sins and undeservedly took our punishment (which was a painful and humiliating death)(what a loving Lord we serve!)
«If anyone asserts that Adam's sin affected him alone and not his descendants also, or at least if he declares that it is only the death of the body which is the punishment for sin, and not also that sin, which is the death of the soul, passed through one man to the whole human race, he does injustice to God and contradicts the Apostle, who says, «Therefore as sin came into the world through one man and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all men sinned» (Rom.
The United States currently has more than three thousand inmates on death row because so many citizens are reluctant to be hard - nosed about capital punishment for murderers of the first degree.
I am a believer that the punishment for the wicked is death, which is what God was exercising on the nations that were wicked.
It is amazing how the whole entire bible fits together once you come to the realision that the punishment for the wicked is death.
God nbever punshed children for their parents crimes... death isnot always a punishment... cause the ultimate punishment is eternal life in hell... you are looking at wrong perspective there here and now in a temporary world
* worship God, who has never been, at any time for any reason, a capricious God of death, war, murder, destruction, violence, abuse, vengeance, hate, fear, lies, slavery, systemic injustice, oppression, conditional acceptance, exclusion, segregation, discrimination, shunning, ostracism, eternal condemnation, eternal punishment, retribution, sacrifices, patriarchy, matriarchy, empire, nationalism, only one culture, only one race or portion of the population, parochialism, sectarianism, dogma, creeds, pledges, oaths or censorship — and who has never behaved as a Greco - Roman or narcissistic deity.
No, the majority of them have doctrine or dogma that calls for the punishment, usually by death, or all the non-believers.
He bears vicariously the sin of the world, and by enduring the punishment for sin on our behalf he delivers us from death.
In Holy Scripture, as we have seen, death is regarded as the appropriate punishment for serious transgressions.
The only sin we are punished for is rejecting Christ and the punishment is sin itself and the wages of sin is death!
When Jesus was arrested, sentenced to death for treason, and killed through violent capital punishment, Joanna could have quietly slipped back home.
Do you condemn the punishments mandated by Deuternomy, including death to children for disobeying their parents and for drunkeness?
So just as it would seem to be impossible for any earthly government to exist without a standing military, without violence toward enemies, and without governing rules for order and peace which include death to traitors and some form of capital punishment, so also God had to include such things in the earthly government which He set up in Israel.
Don't rely upon some fairy tale about mystical punishment for all eternity after death.
In the United States, IQ scores of «approximately 70» are generally considered to constitute a level of mental disability severe enough to preclude the death penalty — the idea being that the person in question's mental level is too underdeveloped for execution to constitute a proper «punishment
Heck, virtually every Christian I know, yourself included, believes the most childish of things that they would never contemplate swallowing in their day to day activities — dead men rising, mind reading sky gods, life after death, being under constant supervision for the purposes of reward or punishment in some magic postmortem kingdoms — heaven, hell, purgatory, limbo etc...
For Theodore, on the contrary, Adam was created mortal, death was not a punishment for sin but natural, and concupiscence already lived in Adam as in a mortal beiFor Theodore, on the contrary, Adam was created mortal, death was not a punishment for sin but natural, and concupiscence already lived in Adam as in a mortal beifor sin but natural, and concupiscence already lived in Adam as in a mortal being.
The Catholic doctrine of Purgatory allows for progress beyond death towards God, but has often been seen as a punishment.
There are of course further issues with capital punishment, like the number of innocent people who have been executed by our gov «t. I would think anyone on the «sanct!ty of life» bandwagon would necessarily be against the death penalty for that reason alone.
Voobus notes that Narsai simply absorbed Theodore's theology — that death was natural and therefore not a punishment for Adam's sin carried over to humankind.»
The punishment for leaving Islam is death.
Death is the punishment for sin.
Sometimes the picture of hell has been painted in lurid fashion, with ghastly punishment inflicted upon «lost» persons; more frequently, at least in recent theological writing, this aspect has been muted or denied, and stress has been put on such ideas as persistence after death apart from God's presence — or even in that presence, which for the utterly unworthy man or woman would be horrifying, as when an evil person is compelled to be with someone whom he or she deeply hates.
There are, for example, highly conservative evangelical or fundamentalist Christians, including one ranking member of Pat Robertson's presidential campaign team, who oppose capital punishment on the grounds that responsibility for life and death belongs only to God, and that society should never cut short any person's opportunity to repent or embrace faith.
The punishment for leaving islam is death.
Can someone please explain then, how Leviticus, basically a book of iron age rules for their society (many of which call for stoning to death as punishment), could possibly be meant in any other way than literally?
(CNN)- The death penalty has been part of human society for millennia, understood to be the ultimate punishment for the most serious crimes.
How could explicitly stating that the punishment for working on the Sabbath is being stoned to death, and the punishment for not being a virgin on your wedding day is being stoned to death, etc. could possibly be taken metaphorically?
While there is no room for the idea of Purgatory as punishment — paying off a debt of «satisfaction'that we owe to God — CS Lewis» idea of Purgatory as a time of cleansing and purification after death is a more plausible theory.
Death was both a part of nature taken for granted and a punishment for evil, the result of God's activity.
On the contrary, I feel that there must be a void in the lives of religious people to feel that they need to force themselves to keep believing in these silly myths in order to have a reason to do good things and be good people... that it's not enough for them to be «good» for the sake of goodness, for the sake of our society and our world... that they must believe that there is to be some great reward for themselves or some great punishment after death in order to motivate them to be good.
NOT FOR US TO DECIDE J.H.H. Weiler's «The Trial of Jesus» (June / July 2010) describes very well indeed the story of the disregard of the elite religious for the message of Jesus and of his need for punishment, even unto deaFOR US TO DECIDE J.H.H. Weiler's «The Trial of Jesus» (June / July 2010) describes very well indeed the story of the disregard of the elite religious for the message of Jesus and of his need for punishment, even unto deafor the message of Jesus and of his need for punishment, even unto deafor punishment, even unto death.
Whatever St. Paul was trying to communicate about his own belief, there has been a strain in the Christian tradition which has taken the first of the two meanings and has talked as if death were the punishment inflicted on man for his failure to obey God's commands.
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