Sentences with phrase «reading the written word»

You said you read the written word and attended church services.
Hi Monet, I just love reading your written words here on your lovely blog.
«Who ever anywhere will read these written words
It was only several months later that they learned to read those written words.
Until a child can read written words fluently, meaning can not be reliably derived from text.
So we have a ceaseless and ceaselessly interesting flow of ideas coming from the writers we work with, those who recommend the best elements of their writing, and those who love to read the written word.

Not exact matches

In other words, while the substance remains largely the same, the presentation has been given a considerable makeover: the new policy is considerably shorter, written in English rather than legalese, and reformatted (more space and color) for an easier reading experience.
If you find yourself writing or reading long, complex sentences at work, edit and reedit them so that they express the gist in fewer words.
«A very high bar is set by using the word «Favorite,»» he wrote in a blog post that suggested several changes to Twitter's interface — including pictures and videos that are double - clickable to heart (à la Instagram), receipts when Tweets have been read, and a «Thank you bomb» feature that enables users with lots of followers to send mass gratitude notifications all at once.
As I write these words, I already imagine my next deposition in which I'm asked to read this out loud.
Indeed, The Funded is just one of dozens of insider blogs on venture capital that have sprung up recently, most prominently Pmarca, a site written by Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen, whose «The Truth About Venture Capitalists,» a 4,400 - word essay posted on the site, has become a must - read for any CEO raising capital.
In other words, these were the kind of pieces that are far more gratifying to write than read.
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In an era when Google's search wing has evolved with so many new algorithms like Panda and Penguin, you can not just rank a page with good ol' methods like writing keyword optimized posts content or using backlinks (read my 4000 + worded guide on what are backlinks in SEO with examples to know exactly on what type of backlinks you should be focusing to boost your rankings.
Somehow, this all makes sense if you've never learned to read or write with words.
Mr. Blake, I'm impressed to see you enter the fray here, to try to address the inability of Christian apolgists here who are apparently unable to read and / or comprehend the written word because doing so upsets their world view.
The Bible most Americans know was written on the orders of an English King (James) at a time when few common people could even read... his (not His) word...
Mann's pure German must have been a source for the White Rose's contempt for the German of Hitler, whose Mein Kampf is, in the words of a White Rose writer, «written in the worst German I have ever read
It's cool you've learned to both read and write, the next step is to actually use your brain and give the words you write some meaning!
If you can not write in prose that has some measure of wit, best not to try at all... read some Shakespeare... he was a master of using the written word to express a wide variety of emotion and tone.
Even Grondin, who has read Gadamer deeply (he is the French translator of Truth and Method), has written that in Gadamer's work the word ««ontological» is consistently used as a synonym for «philosophical» and «universal.
If you really read your bible and believe in the word, you would not have wrote this at all.
Blessed is he who reads and those who hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things which are written in it; for the time is near.
I read his post twice, and I wondered why he chose to focus in on a single word like «Sure,» without also telling his readers what I wrote about Mark's personality.
No it has not been proven where did you see that on an alien special on a & e, Read up on it those other religions did not have Jesus as a Savior and did not have men writing 1000s of years apart talking about the same events, and phrophecizing about things that happened in later chapters written hundreds of years later... and in no bok any where was there a man like Jesus, who spoke the words that Jesus spoke and died for people who hated Him like Jesus did, and spoke the parabales and life lessons like Jesus did... look at what Jesus spoke... read it nowhere has there been a better teacher of life then in His woRead up on it those other religions did not have Jesus as a Savior and did not have men writing 1000s of years apart talking about the same events, and phrophecizing about things that happened in later chapters written hundreds of years later... and in no bok any where was there a man like Jesus, who spoke the words that Jesus spoke and died for people who hated Him like Jesus did, and spoke the parabales and life lessons like Jesus did... look at what Jesus spoke... read it nowhere has there been a better teacher of life then in His woread it nowhere has there been a better teacher of life then in His words.
«There are only a handful of authors in the whole world who I try to find and read every last word they've ever written.
During worship the members of the congregation have sat in silence or have read words that someone else has written for them.
I know some Christians that think the decision about who goes where is actually up to God and that God is not limited or constrained by what some people 2000 years ago happened to write down on paper or what more recent people read into those words.
The Puritans, in particular, were determined that their people should be able to read and write so as to understand the meaning of God's Word.
It's interesting to read the words of people who take the time to write a comment just to say they hate God.
Starting with no grammar or dictionary, indeed not one written word to aid them, missionaries have learned the oral language, often without benefit of any interpreter — definitely the hard way — worked out an alphabet, reduced it to writing, prepared a grammar and dictionary, translated some portions into the newly written tongue, then had to teach the natives to read their own language in order to read the Bible.
When we read a letter or book, it is written word by word, line by line, chapter by chapter and when we get to the end, we hope to have the meaning that the author intended us to have.
And they were able to read it in language written so that anyone, even, as Tyndale wrote, «the boy who driveth the plow,» could understand it.1 The Word became, as Ong says, silent.2 That silence has had profound influence on the way we think about religious language, but it is well to remember that when those translations into the vernacular were made, they were not written down in the language of print.
@Colin, you should read the Bible first, get some more knowledge about Jewish culture / traditions and a better knowledge about the Septuaginta, before writing some nonsense words.
According to the Barna study, the percent of engagement people have with the Bible — from being engaged (reading the Bible at least four times a week), friendly (engaged with the Bible less than four times a week), neutral (read the Bible once a month or less and see the Bible as the inspired word of God, but acknowledge it can have some errors) and skeptical (see the Bible as «just another book of teachings written by men)-- has started to stabilize and return to its normal rates after the rate of skepticism increased by 4 percent to 14 percent and the rate of friendliness dropped 8 percent to 37 percent in 2011.
Then I red something like this, that you wrote almost four years ago and it encourages me, because you were speaking to my heart 4 years ago, and today I am here and reading it, because God saw fit to use you through the written word.
It allows the Word of God to remain alive rather than shrouding it in the binder of the most read, but yet the most misinterpreted book ever written — because many of those who read it, read it through the eyes and mind of an ancient civilization that was only beginning to understand the mysteries of creation.
I use CNN Belief Blog to better myself in my thought awareness and although I may show signs of embitterment and chaos to you who read and do post here, so choose of that which I write and do post and either meditate upon my words or discard them in file 13.
While I admit that I can not read those languages, I have read what the original verses said along with critical analysis of the words in context of the timeframe that they were written in.
He also seems to think that if he can get every word written about it erased from the internet, that everyone will forget what they've read and will go back to applauding him for being Tony Jones.
Understanding how to «read» the Eternal Word and how to distinguish effectively between the Eternal Word made flesh and the written Word of Scripture is difficult.
Hello Jeremy, As I read your carefully worded title to your article I wondered why would your write it in such a way as make to unbelievers comfortable in their sin and Christians leery about using it when discussing issues about their faith.
He writes at Digging the Word, where his purpose is to encourage his readers to read the Bible daily.
@David Hayward... the words you have written on this drawing show how raw we are at the separation and I realize there is a longing in me (and I think in you too) to have fractured relationships mended... I hope I haven't mis - read your intent.
Blessed Lord, who hast caused all holy Scriptures to be written for our learning: Grant that we may in such wise hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them, that by patience and comfort of thy holy Word we may embrace, and ever hold fast, the blessed hope of everlasting life, which thou hast...
AGAIN, you haven't read a damned word I've written, have you?
We are not powerless and fearful, not us: and so I pray and I work; I make coffee in the morning and hot meals to gather around the table at suppertime; I worship and sing out words of promise and praise; I raise children and read good books; I pray for my enemies and write letters and send money and show up to fold clothes and drop off meals with an extra bag of groceries; I advocate with the marginalized and amplify the oppressed and antagonize the Empire with a grin on my face; I will honour those who get after the work of the Kingdom and celebrate; I learn how to listen to those with whom I disagree; I abandon the idea that we can baptize sinful practices in the name of sacred purposes; I will stand in the middle of the field near my house with my face turned up to the rain and consider it a minor baptism.
After that passage which is often read out loud at weddings, Paul writes that someday all of our important and inspired words will end, our praying in tongues will end, our knowledge will end but love will be what lasts forever.
But it was people reading everything this politician wrote and elevating those words to a point of absurdity that has done the world so much harm since.
I read Michael Linton's posting that begins: «R.R. Reno recently wrote here (I tried to come up with another «r» word instead of «h» but got stumped)...» Friend, are ye not Southren?
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