Sentences with phrase «questions like»

The Daily News did not ask him the obvious questions about whether or not he saw a pot of gold at the base of the falls or if he started singing «Somewhere Under the Rainbow» or any hard - hitting journalistic questions like that.
As I've spent the past few years struggling with doubt and grasping for faith, I've found that being ready with an answer does not do justice to the seriousness of questions like, why does God allow innocent children to starve to death?
For example, why are you and I, who do not believe in a deity, so driven to explore the questions like «What is the energy we call life?»
We answer questions like that with science, and given the role of government funding scientific research you should know that.
Have you ever been asked questions like these?
Until «science» can answer questions like WHERE did the universe come from and how matter created itself, I won't give much authority to the «proving of» evolution and science and its claims.
If he is running for office I think the voters have a right to know how competent he is and asking basic questions like how old the earth is helps define competency.
Questions like, «Slave or free, Roman or Jew, male or female... these questions do not matter... does the person have faith, and is that faith showing its presence through love?»
Questions like these led to the development of various theological positions — that, for instance, which was to be dominant in the West during the Middle Ages (so - called political Augustinianism), or that which triumphed at Byzantium.
I would then be practically ignoring questions like «is he gay?
You said: «Until «science» can answer questions like WHERE did the universe come from and how matter created itself, I won't give much authority to the «proving of» evolution and science and its claims.»
But on the flipside, I enjoy discussions and questions like this.
Questions like these raised by constitutions and decrees of Vatican II are of particular interest to me; I was for 25 years a member of a Hindu monastic order before returning to Christianity and thus feel a deep concern for interreligious encounter.
There is another compelling reason for such a course of action: survivors are a vanishing breed, but questions like those quoted will be around for a long time to come.
Perhaps the greatest merit of the Reformed catholic project is that by making a strong case for the compatibility of a Reformed identity with the catholic tradition, it has highlighted questions like these and provided excellent materials for reflecting on them.
My favorite of course is ask most mainstream christians some simple questions like, «So you believe that the earth was created in seven days», «so noah gathered every animal on earth and stuck them inside a small boat for 40 days without fresh water and food to feed everything and you think this actually happened?»
You really should educate yourself just a little bit about the theory of evolution before posting totally ignorant questions like this.
Consider asking open - ended questions like: «What was the best part of your day today?»
I read the bible and asked questions like «If God is all powerful and all knowing, and he created us, our mental capabilities and our environment, how can we have free will?»
Christians, Judaism, Islam, and Athiests are beliefs systems aka ideologies / hope therefore, it is almost like a theory, none of these groups can prove the truth because there are always questions like «Is there a God or not?»
In the second video, Lopez goes into the river with two priests who ask him questions like, «Do you believe in Jesus Christ?»
Those who are willing to base their argument permitting abortions entirely on the plurality - of - views doctrine should ask themselves questions like the following: Suppose some people thought it permissible for mothers to kill their disobedient five - year - olds (cf. Deut.
Questions like these are indeed inescapable; even if most of us do not spend a great deal of time thinking about them, the implicit, unspoken, assumed answers are determinative of how we think and act.
One of those Vatican - ordered investigations, which are now nearing completion, involves a two - part questionnaire consisting of 120 detailed questions like: What is the process for responding to sisters who dissent publicly from Church teaching...?
They were questions no one had asked these young people before — questions like: Did you feel like a different person with each of your parents?
Much of Paul's writing is devoted to helping them figure it out by answering difficult questions like, «Do Gentiles now have to assimilate to Jewish culture?»
You could look at wider questions like the value of suffering in Christian spirituality, and the role of the devil in Christ's own suffering.
My inbox is cluttered with questions like «Which Disney princess are you?»
As for religion... why is it okay for Christians to corner atheists and question their lack of faith... but if I corner a christian and ask questions like «So... two of every animal on a boat, and that's how the world was saved... wow.
Questions like: «Where could we go where you don't see us?
It is questions like these that have provoked the simple answer in much of the university today, not only in the United States but in Europe and Asia as well: Drop the idea of a core education altogether, especially when we know that what we really need to be studying is science, technology, and economics.
At that point in time anyone who had questions like we do now was a person to stay away from and pray for.
In our Lutheran church we are constantly asking questions like that (and a million others), and then discussing them.
It asks historical questions like what challenges were they facing and what questions were they asking.
If he is, then it brings up another whole host of questions like, how could god forsake jesus if he is jesus?
More important, such political agendas might eventually incorporate economic questions like taxes, business regulation, and free trade.
Questions like these: What is the worth of this thing fantasy?
If you can't answer simple questions like this about your faith, it makes me think you're not actually a Christian but a troll who's trying to make Christians look like ranting lunatics.
Don't think I'm gonna be referencing you for philosophical questions like the existence of a god, hun.
They asked questions like «What are the limits of our hospitality?»
When we talk about peacemaking and the «third way of Jesus,» people inevitably ask bizarre situational questions like, «If someone broke into your house and was raping your grandmother, what would you do?»
But apparently it's a country where good moral people can be manipulated by self - serving politicians into being distracted from the larger issues by high - school debate questions like «when does life begin» or «should gays marry,» or even «is being gay a choice.»
Questions like that are less invasive than but a little more uncomfortable.
Because God's design is a unity we can ask questions like «How does this feature of the universe serve God's plan?»
They often include questions like «How many people were on Noah's ark?
-- They are glued to their phone — They ask questions like «Who's playing again?»
Especially with questions like «what is Church» and a myraid of other issues... It seems that our back grounds form a lot of our traditions and beliefs.
Many have been trained to ask questions like, «If you died tonight, would you go to heaven?»
If we take proportional diligence with questions like these, it suffices for us to paraphrase Augustine in saying, «Love, and watch what you will.»
He says it with the certainty that I reserve for answers to questions like, «Did you bring your lunch?»
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