Sentences with phrase «such deep conviction»

With such deep convictions gripping his soul, so all - important to him that he was ready to die for them, it is unlikely that he ever thought much about logical consistency.

Not exact matches

It has recognized the opposition between its deeper convictions and the anthropocentric formulations that have done such damage.
Driven by deep convictions and compassion, such organizations can provide loving forms of assistance and care that government programs can not offer.
But if it is such we must remember always that our Christian ancestors were using what for them was the best available wording to express their, and our, deepest conviction when we are true to the continuing witness of experience of life in Christ.
To say with such conviction that no Democrat will enter Heaven... based on YOUR interpretation of what God's holy nature is... based on a Book (no matter how much instruction and wisdom it may provide... without, it seems to me, using your own intellect to delve deeper into the whole of it... is in my opinion the sign of a Believer with a Giant Sequoia in his eye and teaching with his finger.
Such ideas, however, were there; the possibility of their fruition was rooted in the deep convictions of the prophets concerning them; to change the figure, though the slag of the Book was greater in the mass, diamonds of infinite value had been formed in it.
I'm not talking about the right sort of trouble, such as a deep sense of conviction for the need of justice.
«Making a commitment to acquire works by these artist demographics is a good thing, to be sure; however, the BMA's decision to sell notable works by white men in order to fund such acquisitions is a great, radical thing — it demonstrates a deep conviction to do what it can to right a widespread historical wrong / imbalance.»
Such boldness is often tempered by exacting line work and an attention to surface and texture that reveals deeper convictions about the conceptual processes of painting.
He sees a terrible miscarriage of justice — and he's been notebook - deep in such miscarriages for more than 20 years, first as a research director for the Better Government Association and a contributing editor to Chicago Lawyer magazine, and for the last 11 years as head of the Medill Innocence Project, in which teams of students in his investigative journalism class are sent into the field to reexamine the evidence behind possible wrongful convictions.
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