Sentences with phrase «whole books from»

I can't remember the name, but not so long ago, they found that some «literary» darling had copied almost in whole books from a «hack» romance writer.
You couldn't fail to be inspired by what you were watching and listening too, but I also found it daunting because it seemed a lifetime away before I could imagine writing a first draft in a month let alone a whole book from start to finish!.
After the discoveries you make in your scenarios, you may even decide to rewrite the whole book from the beginning.

Not exact matches

There are roughly a million books that claim to help you do just that, from classics of productivity and persuasion, to a whole industry of «get more done» type manuals.
There's a whole book on his findings if you're looking for a deep dive, but the basic advice boils down to sensible tips you might have already heard from your mom (hat tip to Big Think for the pointer).
«I wish I could memorize the whole book of Proverbs,» says one Amish businessman about the Bible book from which the above verses are taken.
There is a whole industry (books, magazines, articles etc) such as this one from CNBC on how you can be successful by copying what other successful people do.
So, we didn't just write a book, we've created an opportunity for every business owner to take it to a whole new level by working with us, getting inside access to our expertise, and benefiting directly from our many years of successful entrepreneurial experience.
Whole books have been devoted to what Stanford — which Reuters named as the world's most innovative university in 2016 — has contributed to our world, from antibody therapies to data analytics to DSL.
And I am perfectly capable of distinguishing the good lessons in those books from bad ones without forcing me to believe the WHOLE book.
When someone is accused of «cherry - picking» verses from the Bible, it means that they have a particular doctrine or idea they want to teach to others, and rather than considering «the whole counsel of God,» they pick a choose a few select verses from various books of the Bible which seems to prove their point or present their case in the strongest possible way.
Remember that you were created right from the beginning to be a warrior — that's the whole ezer kenegdo thing right there, remember that part of the book?
Nevertheless, when it comes to the water baptism, you know, the outward sign of the internal stuff, I believe there is another answer to the question why Jesus» disciples never immersed «in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit «(as in Mt 28:19), at least is not recorded in the Acts, but «in the name of the Lord Jesus «(as in whole book of Acts, starting from 2:38).
I've written a whole book about embracing change and learning from doubt.
I can't remember ever being away from the tinies for a whole day, but I drove to Idelette «s house, with local peaches riding shotgun in their cardboard basket; the tomatoes, raspberry ice cream, baguette, and honey in my backseat, between the door and my laptop, a few papers and books stuffed in for good measure.
Bloom's counterweight to this dreary reductionism is the Great Tradition of Western letters from Plato to Tolstoy; and most of the book is devoted to individual chapters on such novelists as Rousseau, Austen, Stendahl, and Tolstoy, with a whole section devoted to the romantic comedies and tragedies of Shakespeare, and a concluding fugue on Plato's Symposium.
I already feel a little far away from the things that once took over my whole life, I remember it as if it were a life I lived once upon a time but I've lost touch with that person — remember when I was pregnant with our third and I had two little babies under four and I wrote that first book?
By reading this book, you will see the death of Jesus in a whole new light, and will also have your eyes opened about the plight of humanity and what Jesus came to rescue and deliver us from.
Read the whole surah of The Table Spread, especially from verse 47 up to 51; God is revealing a mighty truth: every group will be judge by its own knowledge (its own revelation; its own book).
Unfortunately, as a former Christian, well acquainted with sin and confession and the whole bloody business of sacrifice to appease Someone who thinks that shows «love,» I question the whole ancient story, all the animals killed, all the trees cut down (for temples and churches and crosses and «holy books») and all the human beings left to feel separated again and again from the universe, Nature, each other and their «gods.»
5 The material in this section as well as in the book as a whole comes from my study of a number of works both by and about Whitehead.
'' I believe the whole thing... I will venture to say there isn't one Bishop here that believes any more than I do and that takes more delight in the worship from that Prayer Book than I do.
This is not the case if it means interpreting the whole from the vantage point of select books in the New Testament (in the manner of Kasemann).
Best swallow the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth — because he who adds or takes away one word from the Book of Life won't be in the Book of Life.
Genesis to Revelations twice, study course that paired readings from OT and NT to get through the whole book in a year once.
I wrote an entire 115 page book trying to defend Christianity (from any perspective) and spent countless hours trying to put myself in God's shoes and the whole thing just fell apart for me.
It is the whole life of a man from beginning to end, as written in the book of his life, which rises to God for judgment.
... i am discussing the god you claim to worship... even if you believe jesus was god on earth it doesn't matter for if you take what he had to say as law then you should take with equal fervor words and commands given from god itself... it stands as logical to do this and i am confused since most only do what jesus said... the dude was only here for 30 years and god has been here for the whole time — he has added, taken away, and revised everything he has set previous to jesus and after his death... thru the prophets — i base my argument on the book itself.
Sometimes when we read a difficult book, seeking to follow a complicated argument, we come across a luminous sentence from which we can go forward and backward and so attain some understanding of the whole.
In the whole course of the book we can catch hardly a distant echo of the sermon on the Mount... From the Revelation it could never have been gathered that Jesus was compassionate, that he healed the sick and encouraged the helpless and outcast and bore our infirmities, that he was meek and lowly of heart... As we know him from this book, Christ is a great but terrible figure, righteous but implacable, the champion of his people, but breathing destruction on his enemies.&raFrom the Revelation it could never have been gathered that Jesus was compassionate, that he healed the sick and encouraged the helpless and outcast and bore our infirmities, that he was meek and lowly of heart... As we know him from this book, Christ is a great but terrible figure, righteous but implacable, the champion of his people, but breathing destruction on his enemies.&rafrom this book, Christ is a great but terrible figure, righteous but implacable, the champion of his people, but breathing destruction on his enemies.»
Careful reading of Book Z of the Metaphysics, to be sure, makes clear that there are at least two conceptions of substantial form in Aristotle's philosophy: one more Platonic in character whereby the form possesses its own substantial unity and communicates that unity to the material elements (stoicheia) from the outside, so to speak; the other apparently originating with Aristotle himself according to which the substantial form comes into being as it unifies the elements into an organic whole (cf. TKT 67 - 120).
but thats not what i'm talking about... i am discussing the god you claim to worship... even if you believe jesus was god on earth it doesn't matter for if you take what he had to say as law then you should take with equal fervor words and commands given from god itself... it stands as logical to do this and i am confused since most only do what jesus said... the dude was only here for 30 years and god has been here for the whole time — he has added, taken away, and revised everything he has set previous to jesus and after his death... thru the prophets — i base my argument on the book itself, so if you have a counter argument i believe you haven't a full understanding of the book — and that would be my overall point... belief without full understanding of or consideration to real life or consequences for the hereafter is equal to a childs belief in santa which is why we atheists feel it is an equal comparision... and santa is clearly a bs story... based on real events from a real historical person but not a magical being by any means!
Vic Stenger in his book God: The Failed Hypothesis, quotes a private communication with Martin Wagner in which he points out that: «In fact, the whole argument from fine - tuning ultimately makes no sense.
Smithsonian, this is where you are wrong, the book of remembrance, the so called OT, is not a religion, YHWH is not of religion, or Daniel's vision would not have prophesied just what is going on in this time of false religions, and false governments, and those like yourself are suppose to mislead the people this is what this whole spiritual war, of His enemies in Pslams 83, and in Exodus 17:14 - 17, from generation, to generation, it is about the lies of the leaders against YHWH, who has been told, and warned by YHWH, that your knowledge has deceived you, in Isaiah 47, O, daughter of Babylon.
The whole book is a monumental attempt to speak to the condition of men and women suffering from a profound intellectual and spiritual shock.
This complacency, which Cobb acknowledges with his typical candor (supra), was being encouraged by Ford, albeit unconsciously, even before my use of the systematic approach had produced a significantly new interpretation of Whitehead's metaphysics — one gleaned from all of Whitehead's books from The Principles of Natural Knowledge to Modes of Thought, and one which, whatever its merits are finally judged to be, constitutes a strong, thoroughly argued, and well - documented challenge to the whole range of traditional interpretations.
Some of the early liturgies of the Church contain a lengthy recital, summarizing not only the salient facts of the whole Gospel story, but also outstanding episodes of the Old Testament from the Creation onwards, and running to some pages in the service - book.
In this book the whole issue is addressed and provides much more insight from scripture.
What makes the Bible such a great book is that it shows the truth about humanity, the evil that sin creates and the truth that the devil is a liar and as Jeremy has stated, has always laid the blame on GOD, but, myself being a fairly new Christian, know that we can not pull certain verses or stories from the Bible to try and understand what GOD is doing, (and I also know that you and your readers know this but I'm saying it anyway) it's history, HIS Story, and when taken as a whole we can see HIS plan laid out, from creation to the cross and then throughout eternity, GOD is good and gracious to ALL!!!! (2 Peter 3:8,9).
Initially, the people were skeptical, but over time, more and more people believed, until eventually, the whole town was convinced that this man and his book were from God and had the right to rule and control every element of their lives.
And, I have to confess my enthusiasm in that I was about to publish the first review from a person who had read the whole book.
A big book that tries to take on the whole shebang, so to speak, from the very beginning up to this morning's newspaper.
I assume that they come from privileged Christian homes, that they've been sheltered their whole lives, that they believe whatever their professors and pastors tell them to believe, and that they would judge me the second they knew what books were on my bookshelf.
In his book The Hills Beyond, Thomas Wolfe declared: «The whole conviction of my life now rests upon the belief that loneliness, far from being a rare and curious phenomenon, peculiar to myself and to a few other solitary men, is the central and inevitable fact of human existence.»
Obviously, a whole book could be written on the topic and I'm sure many have, but let's keep this simple and narrowed down to the topic of discussion and say that being saved means having been rescued from the wages of sin which is death.
We love making your recipes from the blog for the whole family & when we have guests, so we will deffo be getting the book.
My whole story is written in the book so you will be able to get lots of information from there.
3 medium striped beets 1 pie crust recipe (this one is from my book and it has quinoa flour and almond flour) 2 tablespoons olive oil 1 medium yellow onion, peeled and sliced 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt 2 eggs 1/2 cup (125 ml) whole milk 1/2 cup (125 ml) unsweetened coconut milk 2 tablespoons finely grated parmesan 1 tablespoon cornstarch 2 ounces (60 g) goat cheese, crumbled
Easy Broccoli & Cheddar Soup from The Little Kitchen Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Peppers from Cook the Story Individual Tortilla Caprese Pizzas from a farmgirl's dabbles Easy Cheesy Potato Corn Chowder from A Little Claireification Slow Cooker Jambalaya from A Spicy Perspective Apricot Chicken from Bombshell Bling Easy Baked Spaghetti from Chocolate & Carrots Cuban Casserole with Whole Grain Mustard Butter Biscuits from Climbing Grier Mountain Freezer - Friendly Quinoa Meatballs from Cooking with Books Baby Boy Subway Art Printable from H2OBungalow Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Banana Cake from Inside BruCrew Life Asparagus And Leek Quiche from Kokocooks Roasted Lemon Parmesan Chicken with Red Potatoes from Life After Empty Nest Yogurt Blueberry and Honey Smoothie from My Sweet Zepol Pesto Parmesan Chicken Salad from Shaken Together Printable Baby Whale Themed Cards and Project Life Mini Album from Simply Kelly Designs Coconut Cookie Butter Sandwich Cookies from Simply Southern Baking Slow Cooker Pot Roast with Garden Vegetables from Sweet Remedy Easy Kofta Kebabs from Tasty Chomps Crock Pot Fajitas with Chicken and Quinoa from The Dinner - Mom Overnight Oatmeal from The Hungry Housewife Honey - Dijon Chicken, Apple & Quinoa Wraps from The Kitchen Prep Slow Cooker Italian Chicken Soup from The Lemon Bowl Slow Cooker Pulled Pork Tacos from The Nifty Foodie DIY Whale Art from While They Snooze One Pot Mexican Chicken and Rice from Yellow Bliss Road
2 small Gala apples, cored and diced into 1 / 2 - inch pieces 3 tablespoons melted butter, plus more for apples and pan 1 vanilla bean, split lengthwise and seeds scraped 8 ounces (225 g) challah bread (I used the gluten - free brioche recipe from my book) cut into 1 / 2 - inch cubes 1/3 cup plus 2 tablespoons (80 g) natural cane sugar 5 egg yolks 1 cup (250 ml) heavy cream 1 cup (250 ml) whole milk 1 1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon 1/3 teaspoon salt 1/3 cup dried cranberries
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