Have you ever seen a news story about a car crashing into
a telephone pole out in the middle of nowhere?
If Christians would spend some time cleaning their own house, rather than correcting everyone else they might demonstrate that they understand Jesus when he says to take
the telephone pole out of your own eye before you take the splinter out of someone elses.
And from your statement «If Christians would spend some time cleaning their own house, rather than correcting everyone else they might demonstrate that they understand Jesus when he says to take
the telephone pole out of your own eye before you take the splinter out of someone elses [sic],» I suspect that you've taken Matthew 7:3 - 5 out of context.
Not exact matches
I heard of a woman today who got attacked by a dog, climbed a
telephone pole, fell
out of a tree, was yelled at by a police officer on a 911 call, got patched in to the State Police in New York, was almost arrested and sent to jail, trespassed on several people's property, hurtled fences and hedges in a mad dash through a neighborhood, and even convinced a former mayor of our town to call in some favors to the local power company.
This one stood
out to me because it was mounted five or six feet up on a
telephone pole with a nail that bordered on spike territory.
The central motif, played gently at first on a harp and then far more disconcertingly on a scratchy, Scandinavian hardanger fiddle, is the perfect accompaniment for the opening of the film: the snow - white screen, on which we gradually make
out a bird in flight, and then the approaching car, framed by vertical
telephone poles (another inverse nod to The Third Man)?
Hammons has, in the past, done all of the following: placed basketball hoops on
telephone poles, covered mirrors in tattered shrouds, denied interviews with the press, made art
out of elephant dung, and sold snowballs as a performance.
Billboards, street posters,
telephone poles, concrete mixers and burned
out factories are some of the environmental imagery and content that weaves itself -LSB-...]
Billboards, street posters,
telephone poles, concrete mixers and burned
out factories are some of the environmental imagery and content that weaves itself into the artwork presented in Abstracting the Seam.
«The show at the Rose Art Museum came
out of a merchant poster on a
telephone pole in South Central Los Angeles.
For most cities - with snarls of wires overhead,
telephone and traffic
poles on the sidewalk and numerous other obstructions - this seems like it would be a difficult concept to actually carry
out.
Every year we stake
out our place in the Canonsburg, Penn., parade route by placing some chairs on the route a couple weeks early and tying them to trees or
telephone poles.
That accident occurred when a tire in the vehicle blew
out, causing the vehicle to crash into a nearby
telephone pole.
Then you hit a
telephone pole while backing
out of a parking space.