«The reality of a resurrection
without flesh and bones, without blood and members, is unintelligible.»
Not exact matches
«They [rulers] must act like a good physician who, when gangrene has set in proceeds
without mercy to cut, saw,
and burn
flesh, veins,
bone,
and marrow.
If a spirit is a being
without a body (See Luke 24:39), why do Mormons teach that God the Father has a body of
flesh and bones?
Such an interpretation, too, would seem inconsistent both with those narratives which speak of a material body of
flesh and bones being seen by the disciples
and also with the insistence of later Christian preaching (e.g. in Luke's speeches in Acts) that the
flesh of Jesus was raised
without having seen corruption (in fulfillment of Psalm 16:10).
Without such bodily restoration, so the narrative in Luke makes clear, only a ghost might return from Sheol — «They were terrified
and affrighted,
and supposed that they beheld a spirit» (Luke 24:37)--
and the one satisfactory proof that the apparition was not a ghost but a resurrected man lay in the evidence of «
flesh and bones.»
christian: A bag of
flesh and bone stumbling around
without a pupose.
Chicken: the clean combination of
flesh and skin with or
without accompanying
bone, derived from the parts or whole carcasses of chicken or a combination thereof, exclusive of feathers, heads, feet
and entrails.
Chicken is defined as the clean combination of
flesh and skin, with or
without accompanying
bone, derived from parts or whole carcasses of chicken or a combination thereof, exclusive of feathers, heads, feet
and entrails.
It's the dry rendered product from a combination of clean chicken
flesh and skin with or
without accompanying
bone, derived from whole carcasses of chicken, exclusive of feathers, heads, feet
and entrails.
AAFCO defines whole chicken as: «the clean combination of
flesh and skin with or
without accompanying
bone, derived from the parts or whole carcasses of chicken or a combination thereof, exclusive of feathers, heads, feet
and entrails.»
Chicken is «the clean combination of
flesh and skin with or
without accompanying
bone, derived from the parts or whole carcasses of chicken or a combination thereof, exclusive of feathers, heads, feet
and entrails.»
Chicken: Defined as clean combination of
flesh and skin with or
without accompanying
bone, exclusive of feathers.
But just as we have learned how to resolve disagreements with each other
and with our dogs in a socially acceptable manner
without tearing
flesh or breaking
bones, so can socialized dogs.
Chicken Meal — The American Association of Feed Control Officials (AAFCO) defines chicken as a combination of clean
flesh and skin, with or
without accompanying
bone, which is derived from whole chicken carcasses.
Chicken meal is «a dry rendered product from a combination of chicken
flesh and skin with
and without accompanying
bone,» most often leftovers from the meat used for human consumption.
9.71 «Poultry Meal is the dry rendered product from a combination of clean
flesh and skin with or
without accompanying
bone, derived from the parts of whole carcasses of poultry or a combination thereof, exclusive of feathers, heads, feet
and entrails»
Chicken meal is the dry rendered product from a combination of clean chicken
flesh and skin with or
without bone.
Poultry Meal: A protein additive derived from the clean combination of poultry
flesh and skin with or
without bone.
Chicken: Chicken is defined by the AAFCO as the clean combination of
flesh and skin with or
without accompanying
bone, exclusive of feathers.
Without doubt, beneath all
flesh, soul,
and social circumstance, what all members of the human race will always have in common (besides a similar
bone structure) is their link to the larger collective, familial relations that connect individuals: each person is also another's mother, father, sister, brother, son, or daughter.