Sentences with phrase «social reconstruction»

And this observation will undoubtedly be important for social reconstruction in the years to come.
They emphasized the concrete, material poverty of the poor and asserted that this poverty had to be overcome now, in this world, through dramatic social reconstruction.
I am opposed to social reconstruction which demands that I use my taxes to pay a massive overhead of running social systems which have already demonstrated themselves to have failed, when my gifts could do 10x's as much on a local level, with no overhead, and allows me to make the choice at this local level — who can, and who can not benefit.
Nuclear holocaust did not ensue, the cold war thawed, Israel lost the ear of the president, and the U.S. government continued to spend hundreds of billions on social reconstruction.
Consumer co-operatives are least suited to act as cells for social reconstruction because common purchasing «brings people together with only a minimal and highly impersonal part of their being.»
The recognition that love must bear the burdens of the common life, that what appears as personal holiness may mask an irresponsible attitude toward social injustice, and that the task of love includes social reconstruction marks an advance in Christian maturity.
It may be that, chagrined over recent developments, liberation theologians have indeed moved from radical social reconstruction to Christian spirituality.
Perhaps more fundamental to the tension is the fact that basically the Bible does not advocate social reconstruction as such.
Social reconstructions of Europe, for example, did indeed work to limit Christian violence after the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.
What must not be overlooked is that the authors» separation of Jesus from futurist eschatology, the secularized reduction of his message and mission to (peasant) class protest and social reconstruction, and the refusal to acknowledge the positive and formative influence of Jewish piety on Jesus are all of a piece.
Stanley (2005) described three foundational philosophies of social studies education — John Dewey's pragmatism, George Count's social reconstruction, and Walter Lippman's conservativism.
Many of Dewey's more overtly political followers have therefore emphasized the importance of «social reconstruction» or «social responsibility» as primary goals of education.
... I want to talk about how the leaders of the Fitzroy Valley in the Kimberley are working together to create a pathway of hope and community vitality and resilience... if our journey of social reconstruction could be measured as a one kilometre track, we have only travelled the first metre.
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