Sentences with phrase «wrathful at»

Not exact matches

The cross is certainly a many - sided event and symbol, and contexts alter meanings; but in our context at least, I believe, it should be seen primarily, not as a divinely managed human sacrifice to a righteously wrathful God but as God's own solidarity with the creature and the decisive statement of One who would be «with us» unreservedly.
The apologetics of a vengeful, wrathful Hitler or a Hitler that allows terrible things are exhausting and at the end there are few points where I really just don't get it or how it fits into the overall picture of a loving Hitler.
The apologetics of a vengeful, wrathful God or a God that allows terrible things are exhausting and at the end there are few points where I really just don't get it or how it fits into the overall picture of a loving God.
We must always remember that God is not somewhat merciful and somewhat wrathful but He is both in their complete form at the same time.
If you look at things from that perspective God doesn't seem quite as wrathful but more merciful toward His creation.
Sometimes they talk about God's wrathful judgment in ways that I don't find revealed in Jesus at all.
As Jeremy has said in his books look at scripture through the lens of Christ and you will start to see a different God to what the Church has painted ie A angry wrathful God demanding a sacrifice, where as Christ portrays love, forgiveness, compassion.......
When an act of God is on display, we marvel at what we suspect (perhaps hope) is His sovereignty at work, wrathful and terrible though it may be.
Looking sternly down at him, he said in a loud, distinct and wrathful voice: «Noise is not necessarily a manifestation of spirit.»
Terence Stamp (at his somber best) stars as an aging, wrathful and freshly - paroled Welsh tough who has come to L.A. to avenge the death of his daughter — a street - smart aspiring actress he's positive was murdered when she perished in a fiery car crash while he was in prison in Britain.
The wrathful Achilles, the stalwart Agamemnon «mowing columns down in blood,» and «the two called Ajax, Great and Little» are all characters from the imagination of a blind poet who gave us bloodshed at its literary best.
In his search for a beginning, Sanders tells the life stories of Teresa Butz and Jennifer Hopper, two women from different parts of the country who eventually found each other — first in Seattle and, ultimately, at the blade's edge of Kalebu's wrathful mania.
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