Sentences with phrase «reading out some of your stories»

I have been reading out some of your stories and i must say nice stuff.

Not exact matches

Read enough of these stories — as well as the avalanche of posts and articles out there urging you to up your productivity by getting up early — and you're bound to feel a little guilty if you're not naturally up and at»em at dawn.
«They'd rather have videos of people telling stories about their loved one than maybe a priest just sort of reading just out loud,» he said.
The new service would ask readers to subscribe to the news platform after they read 10 or more articles in a month — or else they would be locked out of viewing additional stories for the remainder of the month.
For anyone who wants to read the best damn feature out there on this debate — and on the epic story of the effort to find a worthy Alzheimer's drug — I recommend this 2015 Fortune classic by my colleague Erika Fry: «Can Biogen Beat The Memory Thief?»
«As we speak,» he says, «eight out of 10 journalists in the nation's capital are chasing a story about the long - form census, and, according to a poll I read this morning, 50 % of Canadians don't care about it.»
Here — for your reading pleasure — is a countdown of the year's most - viewed stories about far - out technologies and the entrepreneurs who are dreaming them up.
Here in Atlanta, the local list was recently published, and as I read some of the company stories, one stood out to me.
I have an email out to JLab support, as an insert in the box explicitly says to contact them and not return to the retailer, however I am now wondering if I should just send these directly back to Amazon after reading some of the return / exchange stories here.
Because of the extreme leverage, the Federal Reserve and Wall Street investment banks had to bail the fund out in order to prevent widespread financial havoc.If you want to read a fantastic story about LTCM, we recommend you check out When Genius Failed.
Read more of her story and find out her tips for someone considering studio ownership themselves.
It's an old story for the security industry that has played out numerous times in the past: a new technology arrives on the back of... Read More»
We've all read the stories of Jesus gathering circles of people to himself as he travelled, calling them out of fishing boats and trees and jobs.
I read this story, and tears just streamed out of my eyes.
Having been raised catholic, I can tell you that there's a cycle of good stories they rotate through every 4 years, leaving out some of the beautiful goodies that would make you think you were reading some kind of bible fan fiction (for bible fan fiction, look up the apocrypha).
Their creepy doctrinesa are another story as is their desire to be out from under the cloud of «cult» status that has existed since Joseph Smith started talking to angels and reading through special goggles to get his Book of Mormon.
It is clear you did not read it with an eye towards finding out the truth of what was written, or you wouldn't have bothered reading all those made up stories only to proclaim you were a christian at a later point.
Holiness for me was found in the mess and labour of giving birth, in birthday parties and community pools, in the battling sweetness of breastfeeding, in the repetition of cleaning, in the step of faith it took to go back to church again, in the hours of chatting that have to precede the real heart - to - heart talks, in the yelling at my kids sometimes, in the crying in restaurants with broken hearted friends, in the uncomfortable silences at our bible study when we're all weighing whether or not to say what we really think, in the arguments inherent to staying in love with each other, in the unwelcome number on the scale, in the sounding out of vowels during bedtime book reading, in the dust and stink and heat of a tent city in Port au Prince, in the beauty of a soccer game in the Haitian dust, in the listening to someone else's story, in the telling of my own brokenness, in the repentance, in the secret telling and the secret keeping, in the suffering and the mourning, in the late nights tending sick babies, in confronting fears, in the all of a life.
I saw that young mother read stories to her infant son, not out of obligation, but because it made her happy to read to her baby boy.
Someone had typed up a few pages to read aloud, another two spoke from the heart, another had written out her story long - hand onto lined papers that she dropped one after another onto the gym floor as she finished another page, a fluttering of falling, stained with tears.
Why don't you read the story of st. Maximilian Kobe and tell me the Catholic Church was out to save Nazi war criminals.
You can also read my story, The Liberation of Sophia... about how I came out theologically, escaped, and became free!
But far from being a drudgery of a read, this exploration of The Great Migration (the movement of African Americans out of the Southern United States to the Midwest, Northeast and West between 1915 and 1970) is a total page - turner, full of fascinating characters, gut - wrenching stories, exciting twists and turns, and a lively elucidation of an epic chapter of American history that few of us have deeply considered and which still affects our world today.
What we don't read but may assume is that the frond flappers of John 12:12 - 19 who go out to meet Jesus move toward the city gate with the 200 - year - old story of Simon Maccabeus vividly in mind.
Anyone who is gay or loves someone who is gay really must read for themselves the story of Justin's coming out to his parents.
But then I started reading some of the comments and had to go back and read this story closer to find out why all the rage towards religion as this story does not bring it up other than mentioning missionary work.
Although I had come prepared to read only one of these interlocking stories, a well - stocked bookseller supplied the other Deptford volumes, as well as some very welcome information: there were seven Davies novels already in print, and another volume was due out shortly.
Frei believed that those who develop theology that way, beginning with existential questions arising out of the human situation, will start reading the biblical stories as either historical raw material or timeless truths and moral lessons.
Relying on intelligence dossiers prepared meticulously by his UDR commanders, he prepared intensively, making several dry runs by following the bread delivery van in which Hackett would ultimately die; he blocked out the reality that the target might be a family man with a pregnant wife and child awaiting his return home from work; he avoided reading the papers or listening to TV reports over the next days, because the stories tend to make a real human being out of what had to be thought of only as «the target.»
He responded by relating the parable of the Good Samaritan, one of my personal favorites... bear traps are hidden, and often unseen till bear or human are caught in them... the traps are deliberately placed, they don't just suddenly appear... the answer to the question was the man who had compassion on the man taken by robbers... he was a social and spiritual outcast who had compassion on someone who in normal circumstances would have hated his guts... because his doctrine and «lifestyle» were not acceptable to the religious establishment... I have had life experiences that bear this out, experiencing love and compassion from people whom today's religious establishment demonizes and looks down upon... any reading of the Good Samaritan story should be followed up by a reading of 1 Corinthians 13....
I read the story posted on that blog about the birds being afraid to come in out of the storm because they were afraid of the man.
On Sundays she carries books of Bible stories to read to the nursery kids and an art project in a box, all the pieces cut out to be assembled.
One of the many books I read told the story of when the writer started out writing Christian books, he lived a hand to mouth existence and did not think he should tithe to the Church he attended as he could not afford it.
Reading all the comments, frankly why people should take some mythological figures and ancient history made out in mordern times to hate a section of people, frankly who knows how Jesus was and what exactly the «Jews» did to him 2000 years back, these are just stories made up in the minds of people.
Now, I'm sure that there are a few people who are LDS reading these comments (it's a story by Glenn Beck) who will jump on here and tell me how full of it I am but, there is also a legion out here who will also say «yup».
The first couple of books start out as typical «solve - this - murder» sort of books (without being gory or cruel or gratuitous, it's more about the story and the characters)-- very satisfying Saturday night read — but as the books go forward, the layers and complex storytelling becomes even more clear and right around book three or four you begin to realise that everything is connected and everything means something and something major is unfolding and OMG MUST KEEP READING.
I enjoy reading stories like yours that remind me of my own long, hard journey out of the brainwashing I endured..
I, however, love the story and look forward to reading the rest of the series when they come out.
In one way I've had no need of it as my faith is a simple one and I read the Bible as Gods love story, knowing that I was undeserving of it and taking Gods word as a given and what He dishes out I accept with a thankful heart.
He'll occasionally ask to play alone, at which point he will go to his room, arrange his stuffed animals, and pull out one of his books from Dr. Seuss, Beatrix Potter, or Mo Willems and «read» to them a story he has memorized.
I was kidding, but he liked the idea, so when he came home from work he maintained a cheerful silence (communicating via sign language that he wanted a glass of wine, whereupon his silence grew even more cheerful) and spent some time sketching out a little liturgy involving the reading of the Gospel story, the handing - over of a baby doll, the writing of a note, and the loosing of his tongue to proclaim the Benedictus.
Lewis» Space Trilogy, consisting of the books Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra and That Hideous Strength is a very good allagory on Christianity from a more «adult» viewpoint, without the obvious appeal to the young reader, even though they read like science fiction stories.
For real - life examples of how we live out our faith in our work in Bolivia, you can read the cover story from our president Rich Stearns in the latest World Vision magazine, out this week.
It is like the story of a monk who was reading Scripture, when all of a sudden, he slammed the book shut, walked briskly out of the monastery with the Bible under his arm and took it to the nearest bookseller, where he sold it.
Sometimes, then, we are content to read the story simply for what it adds out of the fullness of her experience and her memory to our penetration into the entity of that ancient people.
I now read the Bible as a living history book not just a book filled with great stories or â $ œMythologyâ $ I believe in a God that can look out into utter darkness and speak the words â $ œlet there be light â $ œ and immediately billions of suns burst into existence (and continue to do so) and, one who knows our every thought.
As I read your story, I can picture you as a child weaving those great tales and enchanting all of your friends... Love it even more to find out that you DO have Irish in you!
There's a reason Green Kitchen Stories is one of the most avidly read blogs out there — their passion for food is palpable, and an instant invitation to tuck in.»
There's a reason Green Kitchen Stories is one of the most avidly read blogs out there - their passion for food is palpable, and an instant invitation to tuck in.
People who live their lives in a rage because guys like Bennett, Jenkins and Kaepernick use their platform to point out institutionalized racism need to read stories like the one above, and be HONEST with themselves about whether 1) this is happening EVERY DAY to people of color in this country, and 2) whether this kind of activity is actually OK for them.
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