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Word: preaching (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...soft and gentle flutter of her wounded wings? Or are you so made of stone and steel no dart of love could pierce the armor of your frozen hearts? Then go, go wave your pretty flags to marching muscles and leave me with those that love me. go preach your hate; but mark me well: the day will surely come when I, in others, shall arise and bring to all of you Love and Peace...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Who Weeps? | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

...people who encounter the Process, including, at times, the police. But Church members consider "donating" as much a process of giving (of giving the people they talk to an increased awareness through the beliefs of the Church), as an act of receiving. "We go out into the streets to preach and to learn how to give.... If we are giving, then we receive also. If we weren't giving, we wouldn't be receiving...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Preparing For the Fiery End: Process | 4/27/1971 | See Source »

...legal even though it caused a commotion in the church. But it was held to be a disturbance of worship for one faction of a congregation to enter a church while another faction was worshipping there and to inform the minister of the rival faction that he could not preach there that day. ( Morris us. State, Alabama, 1887.) Such behavior evidently crossed the line between reasonable interruption and unwarranted disturbance...

Author: By Martin Wishnatsky, | Title: The Sanders Incident and Legal History | 4/21/1971 | See Source »

...sole worry about Elmwood concerns its small capacity for dinner guests, and he plans to enlarge the dinning area. But. he said recently, he hopes the job can be done at a reasonable price; "After all, I can't preach parsimony to the University and be profligate in my own affaires...

Author: By J. ANTHONY Day, | Title: Elmwood: Molasses, Gerrymandering and Derek | 3/24/1971 | See Source »

Gillette and Negre claimed, among other things, that the draft law violates the First Amendment ban against governmental "establishment of religion." It does so, they said, by favoring denominations that preach total pacifism while penalizing others that oppose only unjust wars. Speaking for the court majority, Justice Thurgood Marshall noted that the establishment clause requires that "when government activities touch on the religious sphere, they must be secular in purpose, evenhanded in operation and neutral in primary impact." By exempting objectors to all wars, Marshall held, Congress properly focused on individual consciences, not sectarian affiliations. It also avoided administrative chaos...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: All or Nothing for C.O.s | 3/22/1971 | See Source »

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