Sentences with phrase «takes blames for them»

He takes blames for them far too much, that's why they repeat mistakes.
In a June 2016 interview, Buchanon took the blame for the app failure.
No matter how much better we might feel at the onset by keeping our image of a perfect self, taking the blame for our failures is a must on the path toward success.
But while bleating smartphones and constantly chirping social media usually take the blame for derailing productivity, there is a second, perhaps even more insidious, low - tech impediment to actually getting work done: good old - fashioned meetings.
Likewise, taking blame for the bad relationship may feel gracious, but it'll fuel the customer's sense of being wronged.
You're taking the blame for what happened and you want to know how to make it better.»
At the monthly sales meeting, one team leader took the blame for something she could have pinned on a member of her team.
The accounting firm was quick to take the blame for the flubbed Best Picture announcement, but the effects of such a conspicuous failure of protocol will likely linger for some time — not exactly a great thing for a brand that is predicated on a reputation for due process and diligence.
«As with our pension obligations, as with our lack of investment in our urban centers, as with our lack of planning... we all take the blame for 30 years of inactivity.»
Maybe we need some sort of grand coalition, so that politicians can all take the blame for doing the right thing together.
As screwed - up as we are here in the USA, we can't take the blame for this.
Judas was a hero because he was willing to take the blame for Jesus» fall even though God and Jesus both wanted Jesus to die.
The idea of someone taking the blame for someone else is simply wrong.
Also wanting some kind of credit for the good, yet having no guts to take blame for the evil and wrong is a tactic that is used by 3 - year olds.
As for the rest of the event, God allows Himself to take the blame for the death of the firstborn because this disaster happened on His watch and so He bears responsibility for it.
If everyone alive stopped pinning empty hopes on «God» to make everything right, or at least take the blame for everything that's not, the sooner all that wasted energy could be brought to bear on cleaning up all our problems.
In this post, I argue that God didn't kill the Egyptian army Himself, but God did take the blame for this event and bears responsibility for it because it is something that happened on His watch and seemingly by the hand of His prophet, Moses.
But unlike other Jewish preachers, Jesus offered a way of salvation: he would take the blame for those who repent, and thereby save them from hell.
Stephen Fry speaking about atheists: «The glory — anything — we take credit for what is great about man and we take blame for what is dreadful about man, we neither grovel or apologise at the feet of a god, or are so infantile as to project the idea that we once had a father as human beings and we therefore should have a divine one too.
All of these things were going to happen no matter what, but God took the blame for all of them by inspiring the biblical authors to write what they did about Him.
He does not take the blame for our sinful actions.
If you are a christian you can not take credit for the good works of Martin Luthor King any more than you can take blame for the Westboro baptist church.
As a caucasian I can not take the blame for the actions of Ted Bundy or the credit for the works of George Washington.
Seriously, answer the question, should you on your religion take the blame for trying to commit genocide against the jews because hitler tried to kill all of them on ideological grounds?
What matters to Christians is that he is a support system that is able to take the blame for all the bad stuff in your life so that you can move past them and continue living.
But when Israel set out to do these things, God took the blame for their actions by inspiring the biblical authors to lay the guilt fully in His hands.
One person can not take the blame for an entire country's actions.
He / she should pay for the wedding ceremony of this couple He / she should step up to the plate and take the blame for being the racist that is so obvious in this act.
So when I went to New York, I was having difficulty with my name, Ramón Estévez; just getting around and trying to get an apartment, trying to get job interviews and such, because the Puerto Rican community at that time was taking the blame for everything wrong in New York.
Of course, God's action of taking the blame for the sin of His people does not begin with Israel, but with the sin of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden.
But often these passages in the Old Testament will state that the instructions were given by God, and if we read these texts in the light of Jesus, then we understand that although God was not telling them to do such things, He nevertheless inspired them to write what they did so that He could take the blame for their sinful actions.
In my view, of course, God didn't actually do either thing, but also in my view, God is willing to take the blame for that which He does not prevent, so I shouldn't get too upset when people blame God for the evil things that happen in the world.
If God takes the blame for that which He does not prevent, then it is not wrong to blame God for the horrible events which happen in the world which He does not prevent.
I am searching for the right words to say it, but essentially I am trying to say something along the lines that God took the blame for that which He allowed to happen «on his watch.»
But even in Genesis 3:14 - 19, God takes the blame for the evil that comes upon the world as a result of Adam and Eve's sin.
When people see God taking the blame for the violence and evil of His people (sometimes by «commanding» them to do it), they feel that they must somehow justify the violence and explain how it is really «good.»
In Exodus 14:26 - 31, God takes the blame for this event and bears responsibility for it because it is something that happened on His watch and seemingly by the hand of His prophet, Moses.
The command of God to Moses in Exodus 14:26 to allow the waters to fall back upon the heads of the Egyptians can be understood as God taking the blame for that which He did not prevent.
As a result, He gets himself into compromising situations, takes the blame for horrible human events, and gets His hands dirty in the tragedies of life.
When that destruction came, it was not by the hand of God, but He nevertheless took the blame for it by inspiring the biblical author of Genesis 6 — 8 to record that He was sending the flood.
Are we to blame God for punishing evil - doers and that he takes the blame for it?
This is a perfect example of what we have been arguing in this book, that God takes the blame for that which He did not prevent, that God bears responsibility for evil things that occur on His watch.
Robert, I am trying to argue in my book that God takes the blame for the violent actions which are attributed to Him in Scripture.
, never takes the blame for anything bad that happens despite supposedly having the power to stop it, and apparently hasn't bothered to show itself to anyone for several thousand years.
«Go do what ever you want and I'll take the blame for it» just doesn't seem right to me, let along «die».
In other words, it is a governing rule that just as Jesus took the sin of the world upon Himself so that He might bear the sin and shame for all, so also God did this in the Old Testament by taking the blame for the sinful actions and behaviors of the people who lived during that time.
In some instances, God takes the blame for the death and destruction of all that breathes upon the earth, but in other verses, the guilty party is not so clear.
``... God takes the blame for the sinful actions of human beings, and even inspires people to write that He told them to do these things when He really did not...»
Though I have said that God takes the blame for the sinful actions of human beings, and even inspires people to write that He told them to do these things when He really did not, this guiding principle does not explain every evil situation that takes place in the Old Testament, or in the rest of history.
Last time I talked about how I think it's the church's role to equip people to feed themselves, and if we're not doing that, I need to take some blame for a person in our church who isn't being fed.
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