She escaped, a circumstance she attributes to dumb luck rather than divine intervention. |
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I wandered about in my swimming costume for a bit hoping for divine intervention. |
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York City's push for back to back wins was unhinged by divine intervention. |
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Yet Tennessee was humbled, the Ravens crowned, and the outcome was clearly divine intervention. |
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But it is true that the Almighty did miss a perfect opportunity for some divine intervention. |
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There are theists in all of these categories, so they all allow for divine intervention of a kind. |
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Others, however, believe the complexity and order revealed by such subjects is a sign of divine intervention. |
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Yola needs divine intervention to become a regional centre for the urgently needed economic growth. |
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We have to clear some little way to enable something to happen in terms of divine intervention. |
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The verb 'to visit' signifies a special divine intervention whether to save or to punish. |
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It is due to the intervention of another principle which, in turn, was the first principle called into existence by divine intervention. |
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In a post-match press conference, the No10 cheekily attributed the goal to divine intervention, labelling it El Mano de Dios, or the Hand of God. |
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How difficult to believe in divine intervention when we have been praying for days and nothing has changed. |
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So that there may be a divine intervention, God must have complete freedom of action. |
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Through divine intervention the friends manage to escape and evil is swept away on a tide of wild, loud carnival music. |
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Instead, there has always been a tendency to pray for deliverance, and be resigned to their fate whilst awaiting such divine intervention. |
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Lottie believed, as an Orthodox Jew, that the next thing that happened was divine intervention. |
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No one, no group of people living presently on this earth can eradicate this plague without a divine intervention. |
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But through chance run-ins with strangers and perhaps some divine intervention, they cross paths and change each other's life forever. |
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A number of local shrines and icons that have survived earthquakes or other natural disasters are revered as evidence of miracles or divine intervention. |
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In what he saw as divine intervention, a gap opened in the crowd and the car gunned through it. |
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But always told that divine intervention could not be given until there was a clear request to do so. |
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And indeed if he does escape it will seem a miracle, and almost a divine intervention, not only to the pursued but to the pursuers. |
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It very quickly became apparent that the trampling of the pilgrims' feet and not divine intervention had, in fact, been essential to protect that particular ecosystem. |
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Mr. Speaker, divine intervention in favour of the truth, I suppose. |
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If we desire to see again the supernatural hand of God over our life, our personal service and our assembly, we must cry out for divine intervention. |
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For a divine intervention to take place, God must be entirely free to act. |
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The ceremony goes back to 1599 when the city pleaded for divine intervention to be freed of the plague, which devastated entire cities at the time. |
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All his victories, especially Agincourt, were attributed to divine intervention. |
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But Newton insisted that divine intervention would eventually be required to reform the system, due to the slow growth of instabilities. |
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David, believing his life had been spared through divine intervention, founded Holyrood Abbey on the spot. |
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This is how Greek culture was defined as many Athenians felt the presence of their gods through divine intervention in significant events in their lives. |
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As a devout Anglican and believer in scriptural authority, Jennens intended to challenge advocates of Deism, who rejected the doctrine of divine intervention in human affairs. |
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It describes the nature of Divine intervention, miracles, and communications. |
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And then of course, someone said that it was a direct result of Divine intervention that he turned himself in. |
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Nature cannot tell beforehand how a Divine intervention is to accomplish its object, for that intervention must be beyond nature, beyond all its findings and experience. |
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