I find, on the contrary, that it is much more difficult today for the knowing person to approach God from history, from
the spiritual side of the world, and from morals; for there we encounter the suffering and evil in the world, which it is difficult to bring into harmony with an all «merciful and almighty God.
This is all mixed in with the supernatural, as the game eventually comes to a head more in
the spiritual side of its world than in the political.
Not exact matches
Again: «The great transitions are due to a coincidence
of forces derived from both
sides of the
world, its physical and its
spiritual natures» (AI 18; cf. 18f, 26f, 44f, 46f, 67 - 69, 70, and 76).
you really have to dig thru some sh-t to get to the gems, modern christians who claim the founding fathers on their
side should keep this in mind, these men where largely liberal intellectuals with a practical bent and where not the judeo / christian zealots that some try and make them out to be, jeffersons take on jesus is wonderful and it is useful in the modern
world where we really need to focus more on the lessons
of jesus than THE RULES in the entire bible, as jesus said ABOVE ALL ELSE love neighbor as yourself, jefferson had a great mind and his approach to
spiritual matters like this is great
To coerce the
spiritual powers, or to square them and get them on our
side, was, during enormous tracts
of time, the one great object in our dealings with the natural
world.
But if all other forms
of communication are closed, as when the person prayed for is on the other
side of the earth with all physical connections cut off, one may still believe that in God's
world spiritual connections are still open.
This is the perfect age to begin nurturing your child's
spiritual side as a way to give her strong moral footing, a sense
of family history, and a connection to her community and the larger
world around her.
Set in 1928, Colin Firth (The Railway Man, The King's Speech) plays Stanley Crawford, a
world - famous British illusionist working in disguise as master Chinese magician Wei Ling Soo, whose knowledge that there's no such thing as magic has him take up a
side career as a debunker
of fraudulent psychics claiming to possess the power to link into the
spiritual world.
If the views
of normal Kyrat begin to drag then never fear because there's even a quest line which transports you to the
spiritual realm
of Shangria La, a
world of reds and golds and white animals where demons roam and a tiger fights by your
side.
Jim Shaw uses figuration to create
worlds and tell stories; Chris Martin revisits a more
spiritual side of art making; and Klaas Kloosterboer questions what a painting is and how it should behave.