Sentences with phrase «so under the rubric»

When Jon Sobrino discusses Jesus» approach to prayer, he does so under the rubric of «Jesus Criticism of Contemporary Prayer» (CC 146).

Not exact matches

So much can be discussed under the rubric of economics of sex.
Reflecting on Bonhoeffer in the theological journal dialog, Jean Bethke Elshtain addresses the aesthetic under the rubric of shame: «One of the reasons Dietrich Bonhoeffer was so repulsed by Nazism was precisely because of its aberrant shamelessness.
Whereas the various perspectives discussed so far under the rubric of cultural hermeneutics are distinctively Christian, the same can not be said for feminist biblical hermeneutics.
His program of a thoroughgoing interpretation of the Christian message under the rubrics of history and eschatology looked like another interpretive tour de force, another exercise in killing the Oedipal father (or fathers, in the form of Barth and Bultmann) so that the children are free to pursue their own projects.
If this should be so, then supervening ontic power deserves to be dealt with under some causal rubric of its own.
And herein, in the fact that the relation is spirit, is the self, consists the responsibility under which all despair lies, and so lies every instant it exists, however much and however ingeniously the despairer, deceiving himself and others, may talk of his despair as a misfortune which has befallen him, with a confusion of things different, as in the case of vertigo aforementioned, with which, though it is qualitatively different, despair has much in common, since vertigo is under the rubric soul what despair is under the rubric spirit, and is pregnant with analogies to despair.
So when a Brooklyn politician is arrested for DV / child abuse you would think that would fall under the Speaker's rubric.
We demand that NYS change its education laws so teachers can return to the practice of seeing their students as human beings who are so much more than a test score or a robot that must adhere to absurd requirements under the Danielson Rubric in order for their teacher to be judged «effective» or «highly effective.»
So look out for the emergence of a new Global Cooling / Ice Age (ala the 1970s) scare over the next few years still under the rubric of climate change all in the name of reform.
Health insurance premiums are usually tax - deductible under this rubric, so it would seem to follow that disability insurance is also tax - deductible, in that disability insurance complements health insurance by paying out money for what amount to serious medical issues.
One issue that confounds me, though, is the focus of so many of your articles on the corporate side of real estate the CEOs of giant companies (who may or may not themselves be REALTORS ®); the growth of corporate services, such as mortgage lending, escrow and title, inspections, and relocation, which don't fall under the rubric of what NAR members do; and the «sizing up» of companies by adding more and more associates.
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