Word: sinning
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...part on obscure, impoverished, friendless or defective individuals and rarely on the well-to-do and educated. The church believes that each individual is sacred as a child of God, and that to legalize the killing of an offender is to deny the basic Christian doctrines of forgiveness of sin and the power of redemption, and that mercy is a Christian duty...
...correct one in some respects, but in others it did not seem as if it was written by the same person. Why does Mr. Taub feel that he must bring up the "old chestnut" that has long been disproved of Williams being a "country club"? If it is a sin for Williams to have a "lush campus" or for any other college, then why are colleges trying to develop their campuses into spots of beauty? How come Williams has such a high academic standing, which Harvard Graduate Schools will vouch for? It certainly is not because we are living...
...Farrand brings a healthy bounce to the part of Mrs. Pinchwife, the country wife who wants to live like a town lady (i.e. in sin); and Jerry Kilty, as the husband who locks her in her room every time he goes out, mixes a healthy fear of cuckoldry with a humorous appreciation of the same state in others, and even a whimsical resignation to his own eventual fate. Miss Farrand and Mr. Kilty, the former by her expert overplaying and the latter by his half whimsical and half pathetic air, squeeze the most out of two very good parts...
...Pinch of CO2. Coca-Cola has avoided the deadly sin of most modern business enterprises: over-organization and overcentralization. The only thing that Coca-Cola sells, outside of the U.S., is its secretly compounded concentrate. This is the same as it was in the day (1886) of Dr. J. S. Pemberton, who invented Coca-Cola-it was then green and supposed to cure headaches. The raw material is shipped to a dozen Coca-Cola-owned plants around the world, and sold to bottlers...
...telling the boy: "You have just as good a chance with God as I have. You will be with Him soon, and I'll stay with you till you get there." Explains Harkness: "Gone was my previous thinking about the awful justice of God which demanded confession of sin and acceptance of the atonement of Christ on the cross. I only knew that the love of God is broader than the measure of man's mind." He gradually came to feel, he says, that the infallibility of the Scriptures is secondary to their value in the disclosure...