Like Jesus,
he too saw the sin of self - righteousness as that which keeps us far from God's mercy and love.
Not exact matches
That you and others don't
see it that way
too bad, for you, for obviously there will be no repentance for that
sin.
Since, however, his interpretation set God's power, and will in the very center of history, and since he
saw secular empires as stumbling inexorably through
sin, rather than as representing progressive steps toward modernity, he was regarded until the mid-20th century as
too archaic to be of help.
Christianity teaches that if you willingly defy God, then you're
sinning... I don't
see too many Fat Pride Parades... so, fat people can go to Heaven, and no, Christians are not hypocrites.
Since the doctrine of
sin is the only element known by some of his critics, a common conclusion is that Niebuhr was
too pessimistic about human nature, that he
saw only man's
sin, and that he offered no proximate or ultimate hope.
8:1 f.) The law indeed, as we have
seen, had not only been
too weak to destroy
sin in the flesh; it had actually stirred
sin into activity.
He,
too,
saw in Jesus the one who «taketh away the
sin of the world,» (John 1:29.)
This means that though a child is sinful (
see any Chuck E. Cheese) some are just
too young to understand they are
sinning.
I have
seen a great many men in public life, and one of their besetting
sins is to stay in office
too long.
It would be a
sin against the playful package that is Magic Mike XXL to rationalise
too intensively
too politically but in its own shallow way, the film represents diversity along racial, queer and size lines to an extent that is rarely
seen in mainstream movies.
Even if this lagged or what not CO2 feedback argument is right (it is
too much for my poor little physicist brain, I would need an electronic prototype) we must still have a few hundred years from 1950s when we
sinned and burned and produced CO2, until we
see this glorious lagged or what not feedback operating.