Sentences with phrase «reread many»

Some paragraphs I reread 2 - 3 times just appreciating how well the words came together to make up the phrases which formed your sentences.
For you chocoholics avoiding all soy, reread the labels on your Dagoba chocolate products.
Lucky for all of us, we can reread and cook from it for years to come!
I reread your GF blog post, and I've seen you post this on Instagram.
I'll reread my instructions above to make sure that's clear.
I've retested a recipe, reread almost the entire book, and marked up passages and pages with my trusty red pen with hopes of fine tuning this thing into the best it can possibly be.
So opt to read and reread his books.
I reread it and realized it was for snack mix.
I made the mistake of eating it right away, and it was really soupy so I reread the instructions.
Now that I reread the recipe the cilantro, coconut, and scallions should go in after the rice is cooked, this makes sense.
Goodspeed holds the opinion that the letters were carefully kept by the churches to which they were addressed, perhaps read and reread from time to time, but that there was no attempt made at collecting them until after the appearance of Luke's early history of the church, the Acts of the Apostles, and that it was this which gave the impulse to a revival of interest in Paul, and led to a search for and collection of his extant writings.
When you're memorizing long passages, simply read them — and reread them.
Reread the comments again.
So... you read the Koran, and then reread it huh?
We might do well here to reread the locus classicus of Catholic teaching on this: the Decrees of Trent on justification.
Reread the article: the app is used as a study aid, it's no more part of religion than a piece of paper on which we write notes.
My cousins in the UAE, who are vewry religious have only read through it once and need to reread it to remember the meaning of suras.
Now reread the first sentence.
After the years of tear - drying and tissue - passing, the closed - door conferences above reproach and beyond remembrance, he packs files of sermons, reread books, thank - you notes and complaints, receipts from now - broken air conditioners that can't cool this fear that swirls up the unexpected dust of the lives he thought he saved.
By the way, since Hart thinks that «the apostolic Church in Jerusalem adopted an absolute communism of goods,» he needs to reread Acts 5:2.
For just as revisionist historiographers of the Cold War reread the history of the Truman administration through the lens of their own Vietnam passions, the new American Catholic revisionists view the episcopate of John Carroll — the paradigm in the classic story line — through the prism of their own agenda for Catholicism in the 1990s.
Maritain said that he had never fully grasped the centrality of the Jews to human history until he reread, and meditated closely on, St. Paul.
Allow me to offer an example: If you reread Davidâ $ ™ s post above, you find one who is probably as open - minded as is humanly possible, welcoming, non-combative, compassionate, willing to listen... actually listen, and desperately wants to understand.
Patients and family members can reread written materials when they are ready and able to absorb the contents.
During this time Hawthorne and Melville were being reread.
All of which is to say at the very outset of our study of Exodus that through all the centuries of the life of Israel, the people of the Old Covenant (Old Testament), and equally of the life of the Church (the New Israel, the people of the New Covenant), the events and episodes told in the Book of Exodus have been read and reread, told and retold, not so much for their «was - ness» as for their «is - ness.»
Reread what I wrote and perhaps you will understand... or not.
I've reread my favorite Bible promises.
With this kind of statement, amplified by the brief for Texas, it becomes even more illuminating to reread the dissents written in Roe and in the companion case of Doe v. Bolton, by William Rehnquist and Byron White.
And as new generations have encountered more and more of the world and its complexities, each generation has had to reread the stories of the past — not rejecting them, but revising and expanding their meaning to accommodate the new.
I just reread the article.
As I suggested in my earlier comment, I needed to reread and think through the ten movements and I have done so.
I was starting to feel guilty about my comment on your previous post until I went back and reread it.
Go reread Matt 5 - 8 and ask yourself what this reply says about your behaviour.
But Sacks's book is an invitation to these rivals to reread their own founding stories and see their brothers differently.
First this is not an «out of context» misstatement, this was a PUBLISHED article written and published by a Catholic organization, most likely read and reread before being published on the internet.
Don't call me the idiot... the confusion is on your part... I have studied the BIble over 25 years... the NT not being in Hebrew is most basic... so stop your whining and name calling... and reread my posts
Christian theology, on the other hand, begins with Jews like Jesus and Paul and the Gospel - writers reading the same Scriptures Sacks urges us to reread, drawing on the same typologies.
Maybe you should reread the book or see a doctor.
I suggest you reread the New Testament and come to a clearer and more thorough understanding of Who our Savior truly IS.
Mike, carefully reread the post and the comments above.
Reread my comment.
The whole movement back to a commitment to the church started to make more sense when I reread Erik Erikson's discussion of identity as being tied to the discovery of an ideology, a belief system, which gives one a transcendent fix on the meaning and purpose for existence.
YOU: (which is ludicrous since fishon later calls Christianity «individual»)------ You might want to reread that.
Better go back and reread the Romans passage, because you are taking it out of context.
Answer — for my answer to your questions you will have to reread my original answer.
Ben, I reread my comment and realized it sounds a bit harsh.
I have read and reread Ryan Amptmeyer's letter, but can't follow much of what he's trying to say.
Reread the Psalms and you'll find more doubting and questioning God than you'll find praising God.
I reread my comments and noticed how angry they were, and felt later I needed to say sorry to Jesus for judging others so harshly.
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