I'm going to move the lens out here and just
talk about chapter transitions for now.
We caught up with Reeves as he was putting the finishing touches on Dawn, the sequel to 2011's Rise of the Planet of the Apes, to
talk about his chapter of a franchise that began more than 50 years ago with a French novel.
Whenever
I talk about this chapter of my book, Finding Spiritual Whitespace, everyone gets very quiet.
Anyway, last week,
we talked about Chapter 2 — «The Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Literature» — in which Enns tackles the difficult question of how to understand the Bible as special and revelatory when Genesis in particular looks so much like other literature from the ancient Near Eastern world.
We'll
talk about Chapters 1 - 5 this week, Chapters 6 - 10 next week, and Chapters 11 - 15 the following week.
This week, we're
talking about Chapters 7 - 11, in which Justin describes how Christians responded to his sexuality.
Last week
we talked about Chapter 2 about sleep.
The first week
we talked about Chapter 1 about praise.
The hosts Vanessa and Casper have this really engaging way of
talking about each chapter.
Before you can start dreaming about it, let's make this clear: we're not
talking about Chapter 51, nor other missions which could be somehow related to the story.
Back on the streets of L.A. in the mid-fifties,
talking about that chapter of American history that rarely gets mention in twentieth century literature; the lives and experiences of black men and women struggling to make it out from under the weight of history.
The answer is usually no, if we're
talking about Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Not exact matches
We
talked about the book, I sent him a
chapter, and he wrote a wonderful testimonial.
While in the same breath he
talks about «Putting America First» - which to some sounds like a return to U.S. isolationism - Trump makes it clear he has big plans to write a whole new
chapter of the nation's war on terrorism, which dates back to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the U.S.
Each of the following
chapters is designed to get partners
talking and thinking
about their financial life together.
In this
chapter, you'll learn how to
talk with your audience and find out what they really think
about what you could offer them — and use that to narrow down your target market even more.
In this first
chapter of Extra Credit, S&P Global Ratings» Managing Directors Robin Prunty and Horacio Aldrete and Senior Director Lisa Schroeer
talk about the relaunch of Extra Credit and what type of credit discussions you can expect for the upcoming year.
For this reason, rather than quote
chapter and verse on the Howey test, I am going to
talk about the «Decentralization Defence» that we're hearing cryptocurrency advocates wheel out in response to Gensler's comments.
The first
chapter talks more
about the historic returns on the market and compares it with periods where investors expected much more during market bubbles.
«Render unto Ceasar the things that are Ceasar's»... I can see that particular
chapter is not
talked about at many tea party
chapter meetings.
After all, the New Testament itself only directly refers to emperors in a few places, even if they do seem to cast a long shadow over some of its proceedings, albeit from the wings, as in Acts (where, in the final
chapters, Nero appears to be something like Godot, often
talked about but never putting in an appearance).
Serendipitously, two weekends ago when he did that, it was a
chapter about how discussions of theology need ordinary people to be involved, how well - educated and well - read and well - travelled scholars also need us low church experiential local folks
talking about how we see and experience and know God,
about how theologians are hiding in every walk of life.
No it has not been proven where did you see that on an alien special on a & e, Read up on it those other religions did not have Jesus as a Savior and did not have men writing 1000s of years apart
talking about the same events, and phrophecizing
about things that happened in later
chapters written hundreds of years later... and in no bok any where was there a man like Jesus, who spoke the words that Jesus spoke and died for people who hated Him like Jesus did, and spoke the parabales and life lessons like Jesus did... look at what Jesus spoke... read it nowhere has there been a better teacher of life then in His words.
Today's excerpts come from «God Things» — one of the most
talked -
about chapters in the book.
Smith wraps up the
chapter by
talking about Karl Barth, who apparently said all of this a while ago.
AGAIN Hebrews
chapter 11
talks about faith in GOD PROMISES >.
In Part 1, Smith spends four
chapters talking about the problems of «biblicism.»
I know that unfortunately, the universal acceptance of gay marriage and pro-abortion laws will come in our days with or without Obama, as we approach to the end of the age Jesus
talks about in Matthew 25 (I wonder if President Obama has read that
chapter too); but we don't have to settle right now for a Mormon Priest and President.
In
Chapter 12 of William P. Young's The Shack, Jesus
talks with the book's protagonist, Mackenzie,
about the inadequacy of institutions in bringing people closer to God.
Wright really picks up the pace with this
chapter, which begins with a reminder to readers of what he means when he
talks about «the authority of scripture.»
Paul
talks more
about our future later in
chapter 2, but for now, this is all he tells us.
In
Chapter 20 of Josephus he
talks about «James, the brother of Jesus».
In brainstorming with the members of the Arizona
chapter of Christians for Biblical Equality, I saw frustration in their faces as they
talked about the seemingly insurmountable popularity of organizations like the Gospel Coalition and Acts 29.
@@@@ Sean p.OK none of your people came on a slave ships the blacks in America are Hebrew Isrealite the song kombiyah is Hebrew not African and you read Deuteronomy
chapter 28:68 its
talking about the transatlantic slave trade not the first physical real Egypt in north Africa look at Washington DC look at the Washington monument that is not European that's from first Egypt USA is second spiritual Egypt
Then there is
chapter 6, which
talks about the genocides in Scripture, all of which were undertaken at God's command.
The
chapter I just finished was on dealing with exactly what you are
talking about.
Paul has spent two
chapters talking about how Jews and Gentiles are now one in Christ, and how they are to get along now.
However almost every other verse makes it crystal clear that this
chapter is referring to a specific event at a specific time such as 9:94 which
talks about how Muhammad is to respond to those who didn't join in on the aforementioned campaign whe he got back etc. etc. etc..
There are many other indicators in this context, as well as the
chapter, that the writer of Hebrews is not
talking about loss of the deliverance from hell to heaven, but loss of the blessings of sanctification and rewards, and the loss of «saving of the life» in vs 39.
This is a great
chapter for all the pastors and church leaders and Christians out there who like to
talk and write and teach a lot
about grace, but don't really show grace in their lives, ministries, and churches.
He begins with a
chapter on Trust, that He alone knows who we are to be, and from there moves into a
chapter which actually
talks about who we are.
You spend a whole
chapter talking about global warming and nuclear disarmament, but you never try to help young people understand the Trinity or the Atonement.
In mulling over these
chapters, I started making a list of certain words I think are worth
talking about more, words that are worth reexamining within Christian dialog.
We will look at Romans 9 — 11 later to see what Paul is
talking about in these famous
chapters.
This excerpt is from a
chapter written by Andy, who
talks about the two voices — his father's and his wife's — that have shaped his own voice in his identity as a preacher and pastor.
We began Section I of this
chapter with the question of whether our common sense today allows for
talk about God at all.
So for the Romans
chapter 1 passage
talking about «natural» well they thought it was «natural» to be straight.
In the first
chapter of my book Through the Moral Maze, * I
talk about the most significant of those periods of great intellectual change in human history, the so - called «Axial Period»
about 2,5 OO years ago, also sometimes called the period of «The Great Awakening.»
Grenz's two
chapters (9 and 10) on singleness
talked a lot
about the sexuality of singleness, even though he devotes little attention to not having sex outside of marriage.
In fact it contradicts itself starting in THE VERY FIRST TWO
CHAPTERS of Genesis when the order of creation is mixed up to having only 2 of the 4 Gospel writers bothering to
talk about the birth of Jesus (and those two accounts conflict with each other while also providing timelines which make it IMPOSSIBLE for Jesus to have been born based on their accounts) to 3 of the 4 Gospel writers not agreeing on what the final words of Jesus were.