In effect, even in
times of peace defeating Israel was very much on the minds of the Syrians, the traditional enemies of Israel.
Not exact matches
I believe that evil was
defeated that day and, its taking humankind
time to make the choices not to do evil but come to a place
of thriving, and
peace for all.
Their thinking was largely affected by Jewish apocalyptic conceptions, according to which history had fallen under the dominion
of demonic powers; when «the fullness
of time» should come, God would engage these powers in battle, would
defeat and destroy them and their human agents, and would inaugurate a new and unimaginable order
of blessedness, righteousness and
peace.
But the film takes a nosedive into overbaked melodramatics when it dusts off the history books and veers in all directions to tell its crooked tale (blurring fact and fiction)
of the iron - clad will
of the strong monarch (voicing that the good fight was for God and country) and how she
defeated the Spanish Armada and brought a long and fruitful
time of peace and prosperity to her country.
Defeat enemies in real -
time combat, explore a variety
of randomly - generated islands and restore
peace to a war - torn world torn apart by «the fracture».
It turned out the night — which had a sub-theme
of «
Defeat is in the mind, resilience is in the soul» — involved four people discussing how they overcame adversity: the first had battled depression and bipolar and considered killing themselves, but found
peace through the right medication, the love
of family and friends and a surfing group called One Wave; the second was in a wheelchair after a diving accident when they were on the brink
of puberty; the third was a bloke who'd technically died a few
times while battling heart issues; the fourth was a man who'd spent most
of his life cross-dressing and finally found the courage to become a woman.