Sentences with phrase «who know our culture»

Now that he has given enough time to think long and hard before recruiting a new man to his position, for a club like Arsenal youth Academy is very important, we can expect arsenal to recuirt someone who knows the culture of the club and the value we defend.And Arsenal.com claims that Arsenal will discuss with Brady about taking up some other role at the club.
We are people who know our culture, care about others, respect others and treat others the way we would want to be treated.»

Not exact matches

The organizations that do the best job of encouraging a culture of mastery are the ones with leaders humble enough to admit they don't know everything and constantly pursue growth — the ones who openly discuss the books they're reading, the classes they're taking and the areas in which they seek to better themselves.
Do the people who are the living embodiment of your culture know it?
As an employer, if you want to keep an employee who is getting paid lower than the average, you either should have a great company culture or a well - known brand recognition.
And the data demonstrates the payoff of a great workplace culture for everyone, no matter who they are or what they do for the company.
Day, 36, who is known for her work on TV and web shows like Dr. Horrible's Sing - Along Blog, Supernatural, and The Guild, helped define what a successful career in digital culture can look like and, in the process, has been bestowed the title of «queen of the geeks» (an honorific she has resisted).
As a person who implements software, it helps me in advance to know the culture and personalities of the people I'll be intimately working with so I know whether or not to include a bottle — or three — of Jack Daniels in my budget.
A successful head coach in his own right who turned the Houston Texans from a laughingstock to a consistent winner, Kubiak came to the Broncos with the pedigree of a leader who knew how to build a successful culture.
«The Apprentice» made Trump a national pop - culture figure way beyond New York tabloids and glossy magazines, but more importantly, it promoted a different view of Trump: a confident but measured businessman who knew how to spot a good deal and foster success, and when to cut someone loose with a simple, «You're fired.»
They have to work in new ways and with new behaviors to create an outstanding culture for everyone, no matter who they are or what they do for the organization.
«At CIBC the culture was that when somebody becomes the CEO they want to have the people who they know and trust and the ones who helped them achieve their goals.»
Kalanick, who was known to perpetuate a win - at - all - cost culture at Uber, had become frustrated by the progress of the company's self - driving group, according to the sources.
Those who know Khosrowshahi say he's the «adult» that Uber's corporate culture sorely needs.
That one should probably go to some kind of frugal diaries or confessions, but if you know a bit the European culture, it is not that big of a deal, actually many of my cousins who are in their late 20s / early 30s do not even have their driving license!
The struggle is that religion in media can create a barrier between Christian culture and those who do not know about Christ.
All those religion books that were written thousand years ago by people who had no idea about other cultures or how could they make sense one thousand years later are no better than cartoons.
And thanks to accounts like Nate Jackson's riveting football memoir «Slow Getting Up,» we know that the game we love depends on legions of no - name guys who quietly sacrifice their bodies to the NFL's culture of constant pain, only to exit to a road to nowhere.
Any one who knows the long and convoluted, very human process of the integration of the «Yahweh» god, (the god of the armies), into Hebrew culture, could never for a moment take it seriously, as well as the development of the major tenets of Christianity, most of which were not spoken of by the so - called «founder» of that religion, (but instead were developed by his followers), many years later, including the long, and very interesting concoctions of his cult.
In regards to your comment «the fact that you even know about Euhemerus is a product of Christian learning and appreciation of alternate views», we should, indeed, be thankful for early Christian monks who helped preserve the knowledge of prior centuries, but perhaps you are unaware of the contribution of Greek civilization to Western culture and the «Age of Enlightenment» in late 17th century Europe with figures such as Denis Diderot, Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Voltaire, Baruch Spinoza, etc..
The narrative in which you develop your faith is entirely dependent on who you know and the culture in which you live.
Christians who live where bombs fall in the streets and warlords bear weapons into the marketplace know the power of prayer more vividly and practically than most of us who know the securities of an affluent culture.
-- some missionaries may have a lifestyle that is more common to their home culture than appropriate, but I know many others that have made financial and personal commitments that impress me and should not be ignored; I think we should continue to honor that — the reality of the $ 10K that we all would want to invest in local evangelists often is only available after a «loo - see - visit» (or more) from a Western missionary who returns «home» for fundraising; that maybe sad, but is the reality — one serious issue to address in the African churches is the «colonialism» that is imposed -LRB-!)
Throughout history most of what was known about a people came from accounts of travelers or from persons who, though resident within the group, were paid to do some task other than observe its culture.
Tracey Rowland, in Catholic World Report's «round table» discussion (not reported in its print edition) argues that the Pope is affirming that «When cultures no longer serve the deepest needs of human nature and actually narrow the spiritual horizons of people, people don't know who they are and feel depressed.
John Senior, in The Restoration of Christian Culture, explains the phrase this way — «the lover is the only one who really sees the truth about a person... we can only love what we know because we have first touched, tasted, smelled, heard and seen.»
Most of us were trained to minister to a culture that had a Christian baseline, but we weren't trained how to reach people who don't accept the Bible as true or know about Christ.
For too long, I elevated popular culture's opinion of me over what I know about being fearfully and wonderfully made, over my logic, over my own feminist and theological convictions, over my beliefs about who I am in Christ.
Where Jesus designed an opportunity for a disciple to lean into a new family, learn a new culture, and serve under the head of a household (who best knows his own need), we march in with a plan and the resources to git «er «done — completely missing out on the gift of being «a worker worth his wages».
No doubt there have been and are many people who have come to America simply to transplant their existing culture onto new soil — in fact, you can make the argument that that was how America was founded in the first place.
I don't know the driver and am not free to judge her, but her display did cause me to reflect on how many Christians engage the broader culture, and how disconnected it often seems from the central Gospel message that the God who made us and loves us is about the business of making all things right.
Furthermore, this culture war has presented people like Justin, and people like Cindy — a mom who contacted Justin in a panic after learning her son was gay, knowing that her church was the last place she could turn if she wanted her son to feel loved and supported — with a dangerous false dichotomy: It's gays vs. Christians.
The Council fathers knew, of course, that there would always be differences of social status, talent and national character, but in their view great genuine culture does not presuppose the existence of a large number of men who are poor, socially weak and exploited.
as a non-muslim who knows little about muslim culture (i don't really know any muslims, actually, so beyond what i know about the basics of the religion, i don't know anything about day - to - day life), i've really enjoyed learning new things about people.
Nor is it the timeless and impassible divine being who is known through the mind alone, and who was the keystone of Christian apologetics in its most formative encounter of all — with classical culture.
Additionally, it has been well documented that a monotheistic conception of ultimate reality is indigenous to almost all of traditional African culture, and that it is highly probable that traditional African theism, like Judeo - Christian and Islamic theism, has its historical genesis in the monotheism of a black pharaoh of ancient Egypt — Iknaton ---- who was the first person known to have popularized the religious conviction that there is one, and only one, god.
As with Murray and those who insist that the founders «built better than they knew,» what the founders may have meant is less significant than what they actually gave us and how that gift was destined to be received in an emerging culture infused with voluntaristic, nominalist, and mechanistic assumptions about God and nature.
As musical icon Prince joins a growing list of well known people who have died in 2016, David Robertson asks whether our secular culture is ready to face its own mortality
As musical icon Prince joins a growing list of well known people who have died in 2016, David Robertson asks whether our secular culture is ready to face... More
Jeremy, I realize that your thesis here presents theology as distinctive and «based to some degree on out culture, worldview, and what we have learned / experienced thus far in life» Yet, for those who are living in Christ (and not themselves), this is not (no longer) so.
I don't know enough about evangelical culture to speak for them en masse but I do know many evangelicals who work in slums, garbage dumps and to stop human trafficking to say that it's not always true that only the pretty things are redemptive.
There can be no doubt that even the most cultured modem man who has at his disposal all the technical art of our day, needs to pray; indeed, deep in his heart wants to pray.
Know who the «Adams Family» is in modern American pop culture?
You both hate America or non American hearted... in a multi national culture you can never know who is your enemy but who ever does that is a public enemy of American Unity... so should expect those sick hearted are not writing from the U.S...
In Europe, for example, religious people can no longer ignore the existence of the millions of foreigners with different cultures who are now living there.
Cardinal Pell did not specify who those people are or their alternative suggestions, but my mind turned to those theologians known as «correlationists» who for several decades have been trying to «correlate» and «accommodate» the Catholic faith to trends within secular culture.
No, because the end justify s the means and you have already made up your mind that you are right about Jesus and there can be no other truth, and it's never about learning more about different people and cultures and religions, it's about making sure anyone who is different knows you are a Christian which is the only sensible way to live and anyone who is not like you is either converted, attacked, pitied or dismissed as a fool who awaits eternal damnation.
In those cultures where polygamy was common it was not always the consensual agreement many would like to believe and if you know people who grew up in those households you can here some serious stories of strife.
Every week, she explained, all the junior professors gathered on that night at another professor's house» — this one a well - known youngish professor who wrote about pop culture — «to watch Miami Vice,» the»80s crime show with Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas («Crockett and Tubbs»).
Was this a case of the tribe working together as Christians to survive in a hostile, non Christian culture, or a case of excluding those who don't fit in, those who don't know and follow the rules?
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