Not exact matches
To find out the researchers rounded up a group of 500 Swiss and German study subjects and presented them with a series of
questions about how much they worked, how exhausted they felt, and how much
guilt they experienced after indulging in some couch potato time.
People balked at the comparison of gluttony to homosexuality... and I guess my
question was why is one so charged with
guilt and emotion while the other we don't really care so much
about.
you can ask
questions all you want, test it as much as you like but only you can decide to believe.I have studied hell, read my books
about, went to different websites and searched the bible, for a Christian to fear hell is not possible.For one Christ himself said he is the only way to the father.So I think the fear of hell comes from
guilt or their power freaks.
The «
question of God,» for Harrington, is really a
question about God's
guilt.
Historically and theologically we are dealing here with devout yet aberrant forms of faith that are unable to illuminate the more profound problems of human existence, suffering,
guilt and destiny or to answer
questions about human history in its wholeness.
You are concerned with the
question of
guilt and
about this I have much to say.
Augustine's reflections may be more illuminative of the common subject than the later ideas of Thomas Aquinas; Luther may answer more
questions of the modern student
about his puzzling situation in
guilt and anxiety before God than Schleiermacher; Bernard of Clairvaux may clarify the meaning of the love of God and neighbor more than a twentieth - century theologian.
I felt so much
guilt about supplementing and formula - feeding my babies that I rarely left the house, cancelled plans, and fed my babies in private to avoid
questions, looks, comments, and that goddamn overwhelming
guilt.
And it's hard and we
question ourselves and feel
guilt about every little thing because when you are raising another human being, every little thing feels so damned important.
No
question about it,
guilt works.
Today's first
question is
about feeling overwhelmed by exclusively pumping, and dealing with
guilt about needing to cut back.
You may find yourself
questioning your parenting choices, feeling guilty for crying all of the time, or
guilt about the type of mother you are, according to Psychology Today.
It's all
about character and integrity in this race, and so it will be a recurring
question in the campaign because it's like a downright admission of his
guilt.
Forensic science is an important tool for investigating crime and helping to determine
guilt or innocence at trial, but
questions have been raised
about the validity and reliability of many forensic disciplines.
The first
question most people face when they come to terms with their health issue is
about dating new people and deciding how to ethically inform a prospective match without any sense of
guilt, remorse, or awkwardness.
And there's also the
question of whether or not Finkel even cares
about ideas of innocence,
guilt or truth when it comes down to it.
Just
about any film that explores the
question that all of us ponder
about what happens to us after we die already starts with built - in intrigue, and while Flatliners eventually becomes a relatively standard «Twilight Zone» - esque story
about dealing with the
guilt and remorse of one's past to resolve one's future, it's certainly a movie that stands out as quite different in style and, to some extent, subject matter than most anything that Hollywood had churned out before.
Our heroes could now be complex, full of
guilt, filled with
questions about their past, who emerge from fights bruised and battered.
On the one hand, Prisoners is an extremely well - wrought production, boasting a strong cast (also featuring Melissa Leo) and pushing the moral
questions it raises —
about vengeance and vigilantism,
guilt and innocence, the line between victim and perpetrator — well beyond the comfort zone of the typical Hollywood product.
We meet a landlord more interested in the ways of the cosmos than in the individuals towards whom he has duties; a failed priest who harbors an ancient
guilt; a neurosurgeon, self - absorbed yet beset with
questions about the whole universe; and a lepidopterist who finds the rarest butterfly and love when she isn't looking for them.
There many be
questions about Avery's
guilt or innocence in relation to the Halbach case, but one thing is crystal clear: Avery was the victim of a miscarriage of justice in relation to his first conviction when the Wisconsin police supressed evidence, ignored legitimate leads, and engaged in tunnel vision of the most odious kind.