After all,
every religious voice I heard in my youth - whether it was from the pulpit or in the news - told me that I was evil and that there was something wrong with me.
Not exact matches
It does concern me a bit when our politicians vow their
religious zeal over and over... what does ol Obama
hear when he listens to the «
voice»?
Why is it that if someone
hears voices other than» from god» he or she is a candidate for psychoanalysis or psychotropic drugs, but
religious people are given a pass?
I don't feel the need to cater to the religiously naive and uneducated by acting like there's a difference especially when these same
religious folk would surely deem a person of an opposing religion / view that
heard voices crazy.
But a
religious person needs him as much as the secular person, because the modern Protestant or Catholic or Jew has plenty of trouble
hearing God's
voice.
My
religious views (or lack thereof) should not preclude me from having my
voice heard just like any other citizen.
Those with any moral clarity at all have
heard a better
voice in this campaign: no
religious test shall ever be required as a qualification, but the test of values and integrity, and a president who respects family and rights of faith is better than one who, like you, claims a
religious label but then opposes family and faith.
«We've been clear that people need to be able to feel strong in their
religious identities and are making sure that the
voices of people of faith are
heard in Government.»
Please stand up for your
religious freedom and let your
voice be
heard.»
Paul Knitter in his One Earth, Many Religions emphasizes the priority of «the dialogue of action» in response «to the widespread human and ecological suffering and injustice that are threatening our species and our planet» but he recognizes that «unless the
voices of the mystic and the scholar are also
heard, the conversation will lose its
religious content or it will be turned into a tool for purposes that can only discredit all the participants.»
Raised a churchgoer in deeply
religious Lancaster County, where churches far outnumber bars, Monville said she always enjoyed a close relationship with God,
hearing his
voice call to her, feeling his embrace during prayer and worship.
The larger worry for Lammers» and it is a worry worth pondering» is that
religious voices in public may be
heard simply as another «interest group.»
Well, someone who is very
religious and thus «
hears voices» would be very dangerous as president, in my view.
«When all my hopes in [the
religious leaders] and in men were gone, so that I had nothing outwardly to help me, nor could I tell what to do, then, oh then, I
heard a
voice.»
Now figure out when we
hear that
voice from the new world messiah who would be speaking from space to all of the sane people of the earth who might give instructions to zealots and
religious fanatics, we would see hysteria and social mayhem on a scale never witnessed before on this planet.
Seeing with our own eyes the sun swirling around in the sky or
hearing Mary's
voice vindicates our long - held
religious beliefs and makes our deepest doubts disappear.
He told me of
hearing voices and having some feelings of their
religious significance.
For good or ill, religion is now a major factor in this country and it's important that
religious voices should be
heard in both the Commons and the Lords.
Some patients, when their temporal lobes were stimulated, reported
hearing voices and seeing apparitions — not overtly
religious experiences, necessarily, but certainly mysterious ones.