After doctors warned last May that the two-year-old might not live to see his 10th birthday, they quickly embarked on their own mercy mission. |
|
The chassis was bent and everything was badly corroded because it had been left to the mercy of the elements in an open barn. |
|
Jade the Heartless showed no mercy to any cur of a man who dared to cross her path. |
|
Earlier, more than 2.5 million residents along the Florida coast had evacuated their homes, leaving their possessions to the mercy of the storm. |
|
Rather, every day is a day of mercy to praise Him for any blessing or every good thing He brings our way. |
|
I confessed to knowing nothing about Italian cheese and threw myself on his mercy. |
|
Many couples that park their cars near the graveyard to make out find themselves at the mercy of these ghoulish ghosts. |
|
Some vastation is necessary so that our remains can be safely brought to our assistance through His mercy. |
|
The true stakes of courtship put young men making offers of marriage at the mercy of the women they wooed. |
|
Once the ship has stopped, it is at the mercy of wind and current until steerage way can be restored. |
|
I mean, lord have mercy, I wouldn't even begin to tax my brain trying to think I had to stay in style. |
|
Despite the prevailing situation, Fiwale Rural Health Centre has not relented in its errands of mercy. |
|
In story after story in the gospels, humility and lowliness before the Lord seem to tug at his heart, opening his love and mercy. |
|
A man who hid a quantity of class A drugs in the waistband of his trousers has been shown mercy by a judge. |
|
Those determined to be on the side of evil and determined to be a threat will be shown no mercy. |
|
He has also showed that when there's surplus to requirements at the club, no mercy will be shown. |
|
The pto with no guard shows no mercy and very few who get wound round that shaft live to tell the tale. |
|
But one thing that has disturbed me has been the number of people who, at bottom, don't seem to really believe in grace or mercy. |
|
It took only moments for her to unarm the man and have him kneeling, gasping and begging for mercy. |
|
The prolific Jamie Barrow missed an absolute sitter when he headed over with the goal at his mercy. |
|
|
A DRINK-DRIVER has escaped jail for taking to the road on an errand of mercy in defiance of a driving ban. |
|
Edmund Spenser in his Amoretti sonnets compares his love with a spotted panther who attracts with beauty but shows no mercy and is cruel. |
|
She supposed he was disempowered by having been in prison and at the mercy of the middle class. |
|
Luciano's death, at the end of the film, is shocking because it makes evident that the characters are at the mercy of their own neglectfulness. |
|
God in His infinite mercy gave us the entire month of Elul to repent, but we failed to take advantage of it. |
|
She completely misjudged the bounce of a high ball with the court apparently at her mercy. |
|
Gone are the soulful melodies unleashed by a thousand musicians, who were beseeching the rain god to show mercy. |
|
Front-pointing up endless snow slopes or carrying absurdly heavy loads can leave your calves screaming for mercy. |
|
Pierce Power had a good chance on 10 minutes when he met a cross from Ian Ryan but he blazed the ball across the area with the goal at his mercy. |
|
As prisoners, they were totally at the mercy of their guards, their custodians, who have a responsibility to take care of them. |
|
The thin lips of his closed mouth and his stout body give the impression of majestic mercy. |
|
In typical British tradition, the stands around the ground are uncovered and at the mercy of the sun. |
|
In the meantime, they remain at the mercy of the elements, and on rainy days, their business suffers. |
|
When the clamp-down needs to be enforced the wizards of Oz do it without hesitation or mercy. |
|
He prophesised the end of the era of mercy was, and the awning of the day of vengeance in the inegalitarian society. |
|
If we hope for justice rather than mercy at the Last Judgment, we must have a horribly shallow view of God's holiness and of our unholiness. |
|
Women who are poor and uneducated are often still at the mercy of abusive partners or relatives. |
|
She musters some mercy for me, suggesting for my friend's wife to show her the house, patting my shoulder as she moves from the table. |
|
Show mercy to the obedient, and unflinching resolve and force to the rebellious. |
|
It answered a midnight Mayday from a yacht in distress and altered course to make a mercy dash off the Dorset coast. |
|
|
Now the Reporter is guarding against a penitent man experiencing the mercy of God. |
|
And even the faith with which we believe in the Lord Jesus Christ is God's gracious gift to us in His mercy. |
|
Sensitive to the alleged and often real rebuffs of friends, but also to the demands of ecclesiastical authority, he was often at its mercy. |
|
On a still and empty stage three men appear at the mercy of constant rebuffs. |
|
We are at the mercy of political animals who will do whatever they think will get them the most votes. |
|
But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruits, impartial and sincere. |
|
We need to cast ourselves upon God's mercy and seek forgiveness through Jesus Christ. |
|
The cross of Jesus Christ reveals that the very heart of God is mercy and forgiveness. |
|
Thailand's forests were logged without mercy following World War II, losing nearly 75 percent of their virgin stands. |
|
The defence argues that the death was instead a form of mercy killing, which would carry a maximum five year sentence. |
|
Once the disease reaches this stage, euthanasia or mercy killing is the only recourse. |
|
Preach to us about our total depravity and God's sovereign electing mercy and grace. |
|
Also last week, the congress rejected a proposal to decriminalise mercy killing in the country. |
|
Euthanasia is mercy killing, and to be sure it is for the good of the one given final rest. |
|
They fear leaving because they will be at the mercy of charity and be transformed into outcasts in their communities. |
|
In only a very few cases have victims reported success in making direct appeals to their captors for mercy. |
|
The two delegates approached the supreme leader on several occasions trying to beg mercy for their fellow reformers. |
|
According to Jesus' interpretation of the law, God's chief attribute is mercy, not holiness. |
|
I feel like a '57 Chevy at the mercy of some greasy auto mechanic who needs some extra cash. |
|
The wind cut sharp over the cracked, coarse and grassless landscape without mercy. |
|
|
Therefore, we must turn around, change direction, and come to God for mercy and forgiveness. |
|
Her supporters have lodged a petition of mercy and are hoping the government will use its royal prerogative to grant clemency and release her. |
|
Glick, who had four months left on his three-year hitch, choked up and sniffled when he read a statement asking for mercy. |
|
And, as with most outdoor performances, the artists are at the mercy of Mother Nature. |
|
You are still almost entirely at the mercy of your employer and their pension fund managers. |
|
However, the people and governments perpetrating these crimes against humanity deserve no mercy. |
|
There and then, he cast himself on the mercy of God, imploring him to forgive his sins and accept his soul for Christ's sake. |
|
It wasn't exertion that left him weak-kneed and trembling, but rather the gut-wrenching horror of Joe's scream and his pleas for mercy. |
|
The people prayed, wept, gnashed their teeth, pulled their hair, imploring the mercy of the Virgin Mary. |
|
We implore God's mercy for ourselves, the church, and the world, because in God's world there is peace for all. |
|
For that, she may well have forfeited her own entitlement to the mercy that a jury might otherwise have accorded her. |
|
Actors are cast as versions of themselves and then left to the mercy of different teams of writers and directors. |
|
And it would certainly be a mercy if signwriters and greengrocers gave up on the apostrophe. |
|
Though most plants are more or less at the mercy of the environment, a few such as the titan arum are able to generate heat. |
|
Experiencing his mercy should humble us, fill us with gratitude, and move us to be merciful toward those around us. |
|
But if we resist God's Spirit of light and mercy, we are promised the rod of correction. |
|
She was apparently on a vain quest to appeal to the man that he once was, trying to beg his soft, weak, cowardly side for mercy. |
|
The birthday of Guanyin, the goddess of mercy, falls between late March and late April and is observed by visiting Taoist temples. |
|
To take one's own life or to terminate the life of another out of mercy is to exercise the most awesome power imaginable. |
|
If he did not withhold his love and mercy from us before we loved him, will he refuse us now? |
|
|
Our allegiance must be to a transcendent God whose righteousness and mercy are both beyond our understanding. |
|
At that time, when they are at the mercy of their enemies, they will be able to give witness of their faith and confidence in God. |
|
The real villains he fingers as the Newfoundlanders, who waded into the auks' domains and ravaged them without mercy. |
|
He has been warned by friends as well as foes against overstaying, at the mercy of events beyond his control. |
|
Women can integrate the contemplative and active connaturally through maternity and the works of mercy that are associated with domestic life. |
|
What is set up as a life and death struggle, a dying father at the mercy of experimental science, is left unresolved. |
|
I'd criticized him for showing mercy and compassion where I would have wreaked a devastating vengeance. |
|
This is indeed the duty of the priest's confessor or spiritual director, the representative of the tribunal of mercy. |
|
The benign prerogative of mercy reposed cannot be fettered by any legislative restrictions. |
|
V operates without compunction or mercy, and his brand of enforced anarchy is just as dictatorial as the forces to which he is opposed. |
|
However, our lesson also states showing mercy by giving alms and earnestly praying elicits God's reward. |
|
Still she continued on relentless as I did everything I could to fight back and not beg for mercy. |
|
No more though, they began to cry for mercy as the school collectively recoiled from the piercing sound that had broken the silence. |
|
She laughed until the tears attempted to roll up her appley cheeks and she had to beg for mercy. |
|
Which brings us again to the bishops, who more than anyone should try to govern in accord with divine justice and mercy. |
|
No quarter, no mercy, this was going to be a fight to the finish, one that Scorpio planned to win. |
|
Everyone seems to fall under the mercy of the council except for Van the man. |
|
Could Hashem not find it within His infinite mercy to forgive Moshe's one sin? |
|
In the most profound display of mercy and grace imaginable, He stepped into our shoes as a man, God the Son. |
|
The man in the white coat holding the dart gun looked up as Aidan came down him without mercy and blinded by fury and wrath. |
|
|
In fact, the Prime Minister's compassion and mercy have absolutely nothing to do with his charitable feelings towards her. |
|
There are instances in which Mohammed behaved harshly and unjustly in his dealings with people and without mercy towards his enemies. |
|
The person with the lower voice is in the authority position, in that she is the one causing harm and from whom mercy is begged. |
|
Our boldness should proclaim the mercy of God in Christ, even as it condemns evil in the world around us. |
|
It didn't occur to us to wonder what they thought of us, which might have been a mercy. |
|
Anyone who revolted against his or her superior could be punished without mercy. |
|
As the waves smashed against the pillars of the floating barge, I noticed the driftwood that was totally at the mercy of the current. |
|
It would be a mercy to end its existence, but he left it there, just tethering at the edge of death, wishing for it but not enough to fall over. |
|
In the course of that bitter conflict, Lincoln had been reviled and attacked without mercy. |
|
Finally, the Queen showed a little mercy, allowing the couple to meet once every year on the Silver River. |
|
I guess it's a mercy that I'll be in an eagerly awaited training from 10-noon. |
|
A charity worker has thanked people in Harwich for their support ahead of a mercy mission to Romania. |
|
The unnaturalized alien, the proverbial stranger, operated not only on the margins of society but at the mercy and discretion of others. |
|
An aerial mercy mission answered the prayers of the monks of Caldey Island to watch the televised funeral of the Pope. |
|
Perhaps more to the point, in a country formed by migration, uppity workers are always at the mercy of the next wave of incomers. |
|
A bury optometrist has helped to safeguard the sight of many desperately poor Ugandans during a vital mercy mission with Vision Aid Overseas. |
|
Fooled into thinking John was suffering from an incurable brain tumour, the friend, known as Mark, agreed to the killing as a mercy mission. |
|
Probably the best chance came after 61 minutes when a ball into the area found Nugent unmarked with the goal at his mercy. |
|
A Shipston dad is hoping to build up support for a mercy mission to a tsunami-hit Sri Lankan village. |
|
A family holiday turned into a medical mercy mission as the family met specialists all over the United States to try and find a cure. |
|
|
A doctor from Tameside Hospital is joining a team of physicians on a mercy mission to help earthquake victims. |
|
Yet, the justice system frequently shows mercy and compassion to those responsible. |
|
Littleborough charity worker Glenda is off an a mercy mission to help children affected by the world's worst nuclear disaster. |
|
So you may be charged to transfer the money into the local currency, placing your nest egg at the mercy of exchange rate fluctuations. |
|
You are at the mercy of Mother Nature and toil long, hard hours in the knowledge that you could earn more working in a supermarket. |
|
It was also less prosperous and secure, and more at the mercy of European power politics. |
|
Consumers were left at the mercy of the dishonest conduct in the finance sector. |
|
These policies have left us badly exposed and at the mercy of natural phenomena like drought. |
|
By February the Indian caciques saw the Spaniards were at their mercy and refused to provide any more provisions. |
|
I think human beings in the 21st century are at the mercy of so many things. |
|
She stared up into the face of a man that she had once been at the mercy of and felt her skin begin to crawl again. |
|
Even the excessive amount of time I am spending at the mercy of my employers is not enough to dampen my spirits. |
|
All this we have mentioned can arise from unmercifulness and not out of mercy. |
|
This very fact places the results at the mercy of culturally insensitive marketers. |
|
I was quite literally at the mercy of the Inquisition and was completely unable to tell a lie. |
|
You have the power to order, consume, relax, but you are also incapacitated, at the mercy of the hotel machine. |
|
Once they descended into it they would be at the mercy of whatever hid behind its cloak. |
|
It's a nightmare that I suppose most people have of being naked and at the mercy of some strange power. |
|
They in turn are at the mercy of the power companies for electricity to transmitters and relay stations. |
|
A factory job with all its miseries would be better than being at the mercy of this woman's power over your job and cottage. |
|
|
Ending up bobbing in the ocean at the mercy of what might be a confluence of different currents is another matter entirely. |
|
Try living at the mercy of all that for a bit then see how much big cities turn you off. |
|
So for at least two years an immigrant woman can be at the mercy of whatever her spouse wishes. |
|
A priceless goal midway through the second half was a mercy in this impoverished era for the national side. |
|
O Allah, forgive me, have mercy on me, guide me aright and grant me sustenance. |
|
If God is all forgiving then he will have mercy on us for taking some drastic measures to defend the people. |
|
Let every community set a watch in prayer and uplift each other and may God have mercy upon our souls. |
|
If this is indeed the case, then may God have mercy on all our souls, for the problem is even deeper than I had previously feared. |
|
He begged his god's forgiveness and asked him to have mercy on his children. |
|
Philomena Smyth said the walk was the first fund-raising activity for the mercy mission. |
|
And every mother prays for her son, May God forgive him and have mercy on him. |
|
Under this constitution, rights are left to the mercy of predators such as Howard and expedient windbags like Beazley. |
|
Then they withdrew and left us to the mercy of tens of hooligans who locked us inside. |
|
If we had been left to the mercy of Aer Lingus and their fares we would have had to move to Brussels altogether. |
|
They wander in a dark Machiavellian universe lit only by pinpricks of mercy to light their way. |
|
Old widows in Mathura and Vrindavan are left to the mercy of the public to eke out an existence. |
|
Nor leave the country to the mercy of rape gangs and carjackers and then take the guns away. |
|
However the boom will be a double-edged sword for first-time buyers and those with larger mortgages who are at the mercy of interest rates. |
|
Sleeping on the floor was out of the question and I couldn't go upstairs leaving Doug to the mercy of my parents. |
|
Since Robert left Jonathan to the mercy of the spiders, he has been in a deep depression. |
|
|
His plea for managers to be given clear objectives and left in peace was blamed for leaving banks to the mercy of spiv traders. |
|
Dangerous times call for bold acts of empathy, prophetic visions of justice and mercy. |
|
And you're also a mercy giver, because you wouldn't be involved in the nursing profession in an emergency room. |
|
We have left them to the mercy of extremist groups who have preyed on them at colleges and universities. |
|
And so the masses were left to the mercy of the soup kitchens, which were set up all over Ireland to bring relief. |
|
Vera is so touching that she tears at your heart and clouds your judgment as to whether she is an angel of mercy or an angel of death. |
|
During the riots, the photograph of Ansari's tear-stained face begging for mercy from his assailants moved the nation. |
|
You were called out of spiritual deadness and sinful darkness by mercy, through mercy, and for mercy. |
|
Cases now treated as infanticide often involve extreme emotional disturbance, as do mercy killings, suicide pacts, and cases of duress. |
|
He is physically and financially depleted and at the mercy of health officials who treat him like a criminal. |
|
And such mercy is unconditionally expressed even to the alleged misconceivers and consequential evil-doers. |
|
His record indicates, for instance, that he did not see his role as one of mercy, the traditional reason for clemency. |
|
When our message is that God is mercy for outcasts and sinners and manna for everyone, how can we not preach? |
|
Can we translate full-gospel preaching, both manna and mercy, into the language of the Web? |
|
It was a brutal, vicious and pitiless attack in which you showed your victim no mercy. |
|
His story parallels that of Oliver Twist, trapped in a rigidly stratified society and at the mercy of its caprices. |
|
When the Prison Commission discussed the virtues of parole it invoked ideas of mercy and clemency. |
|
In effect, he argues that indiscriminate clemency for murderers perverts both justice and mercy. |
|
Grace be with you, mercy, and peace, from God the Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father, in truth and love. |
|
This experience knocked the atheism out of John and he cried to God for mercy. |
|
|
He played the song incessantly, ignoring my pleas for mercy and grannyish objections to its author's seditious intent. |
|
The worst-hit were the mentally unsound women who were deserted by their kin and left on the roads to the mercy of anti-social elements. |
|
While generally speaking that's a very good thing indeed, it's a bummer when your personal fortune is placed at the mercy of somebody's greed. |
|
An unwanted actor who had been shamefully tossed aside by Hollywood was simply at the mercy of these young hotties. |
|
The couple went to court in October to plead poverty and beg for financial mercy. |
|
God treats his enemies with justice and teaches his children to deal with others justly and with mercy. |
|
With the new cameras will come no mercy, no human face to wheedle, cajole, or insult. |
|
They simply ripped them limb from limb in the second half with a ferociously determined and hungry display which left Cork begging for mercy. |
|
A woman found dead in a suspected mercy killing had served time for battering a 22-month-old child. |
|
In my best and politest southern British accent, I profusely apologised and prostrated myself at the mercy of these cheeseparing economists. |
|
Toure, with the entire goal at his mercy, thunders the ball against the bar. |
|
The President rejected the mercy petition after consulting legal experts, including Attorney General Milon Banerji. |
|
Taxi drivers at the mercy of drunken passengers on late-night runs sometimes admit to keeping a large spanner under their seat. |
|
Software is at the mercy of users in distant lands with exotic laws and a disregarded and disrespected legal system. |
|
The one small mercy to be thankful for was that this was not a World Cup qualifier. |
|
Ultimately, we are called to love one another in trinities of mercy, love, and forgiveness, as God first loved us. |
|
It was fear of the maternal rage that would surely follow my brother's blabbing that made me plead for mercy. |
|
Offer prayers continuously invoking mercy of God upon your dead father and mother. |
|
To extend mercy to Gollum is to recognize that his potential for evil had ebbed, and that a rough justice had already been visited upon him. |
|
Plagued by demons of hate and angels of mercy, she had become his damsel in distress needing permanent rescuing. |
|
|
Traditionally, the Kyrie is a prayer in which individuals ask God for mercy. |
|
I think that in turn we should be merciful to those who sin against us, without our mercy leading us to neglect our responsibilities to others. |
|
The race sets off from Durisdeer Church, and shows no mercy until the arrival at yet another church for a well-deserved cream tea. |
|
In the case of the dead, we commend them to the mercy of God and ask that he judge them mercifully. |
|
We have been at the mercy of the storm for days, and the cloud cover still prevents me from fixing our location by the stars. |
|
He felt that doctors addressing genuine requests for mercy killing by their patients should not be turned into criminals. |
|
It is important not to confuse nonvoluntary mercy killing with involuntary mercy killing. |
|
Do not allow yourself any capricious acts of whimsy, be precise and calculated, erring on the side of mercy and the greater good. |
|
If passed, the Netherlands will be the first country formally to allow mercy killing. |
|
They were expecting that they would have no choice but to use deadly force because they could expect no mercy or no quarter themselves. |
|
Moreover, Lord Goff specifically rejected the compassionate avoidance of lingering as a defence against mercy killing. |
|
The British paper Scotland on Sunday related yet another hospital mercy killing. |
|
She had told relatives that she wanted to die, but Canadian law forbids mercy killing. |
|
But this, I think, is rather a counsel of perfection than a reason for leaving the purchaser entirely at the mercy of the vendor. |
|
Should we not be told clearly Sikhism's position on mercy killing? assisted suicide? |
|
If at that moment, the swordsman lunges, forcing the lance to the outside, he is safe and the lancer is at his mercy. |
|
The century-old organization used to be at the mercy of the often contentious parties in Italy's coalition governments. |
|
On balance, I think I would have to come down on the side of mercy and forgiveness. |
|
We have conducted debates on issues such as mercy killing and senior citizens remarrying. |
|
Immediately, the young man sprung into action, quickly running to the home in a dash of mercy. |
|
|
She had killed without mercy and used her power and beauty to manipulate people into doing whatever she wanted. |
|
A swarm of dark elves jumped down from the trees and fell upon the humans, slaying them without mercy for harming one of their companions. |
|
We must find him for ourselves a God of grace, mercy, love and power, for that is what he really is. |
|
In fact, it's apparent that he's an intellectually crippled man who deserves our mercy and compassion rather than our scorn. |
|
The only moral action is kill the terrorist without mercy or regret, and thus protect innocent lives against future acts of terrorism. |
|
Now here he was, being just as free with his mercy as he always told us to be. |
|
All of us afflicted by landlords merely vow to hate them without mercy for the entire day. |
|
I felt like a Roman emperor, looking down on my subject wondering whether to show mercy or cruelty. |
|
Simon is aware, he said, of the hardship and scenes of suffering which he is likely to encounter on his mercy mission. |
|
A retired teacher is preparing to take part in a mercy mission to give poverty-stricken children in Eastern Europe a Christmas to remember. |
|
A school headteacher is to go on a mercy mission to Westminster in a last-ditch attempt to save seven of his pupils from deportation. |
|
This timing may have been a mercy, given the fate that was about to engulf Yugoslavia. |
|
In Britain judges arbitrated on the fate of the convicted during the trial and used their powers of mercy to demonstrate the majesty of the law to a wider populace. |
|
With most of Bradford's other income coming from mortgage broking, estate agency and property surveying, the decent yield really is at the mercy of house prices. |
|
Policy is about wielding power, while mercy is about transcending power by renouncing it. |
|
Canned drinks like mercy contain up 5,000 percent of the daily value of certain vitamins. |
|
Patterson decided that meant they just left the eaglets at the mercy of whatever danger arose. |
|
We have wept that God may show his beneficence his mercy and that his peace may come upon the people of Pakistan. |
|
But I wanted them to realize that mercy without justice is a sickening evil unto itself, one that corrodes the souls of victims and victimizers alike. |
|
Men who practice viciousness and vileness are shown no mercy by the gods. |
|
|
But they also know that if we cut and run, their country would be at the mercy of warring groups which are united only in their distaste for democracy. |
|
But in one part of Yorkshire, it seems the role of Mayor has become a poisoned chalice, which leaves the incumbent at the mercy of rude and disrespectful councillors. |
|
The difference is that you can still make a living from growing and selling Spain's natural produce while Scotland's is at the mercy of the big chains. |
|
He could understand the sad plight of fellow countrymen, their exploitation, poverty, suffering and affliction under the mercy of foreign rule and darkness of ignorance. |
|
On stage, the smartly suited Mixner was both very funny and very serious, and he cried after confessing the mercy killings. |
|
He teased me and wound me up, without mercy, all day, for my grumpiness. |
|
But plants plonked on your window sill really are at the mercy of everything that the weather can throw at them, so they need all the help you can give. |
|
He ministered in mercy to the suffering, ministered healing to the incurable, ministered deliverance to those in bondage, ministered forgiveness to the fallen! |
|
So, the betting must now be that Charles will harried and hounded by sections of the media until he screams for mercy and agrees to do whatever they want, whenever they want. |
|
The team is affiliated with the Seattle Mariners, and exists at the mercy of its major-league benefactor. |
|
Martial law was proclaimed, and robbers were shot down without mercy. |
|
Wise mercy involves the insight that suffering is no respecter of persons. |
|
Such an image of God may also be of our own making, but it at least provides us with a vision of hope and faith in a God of grace, mercy, and compassion. |
|
He must be henceforth treated like a moral leper to satisfy our conviction that endless ongoing punishment without mercy is ours to mete out to him forever. |
|
American Airlines was ridiculously accommodating, and that was a mercy. |
|
They are not killed, as are Easy Rider's dynamic duo, but death would seem a mercy in the face of the fate society seems to have in store for them. |
|
Given the sheer volume of my singing voice, this is a mercy. |
|
With a number of top-notch sides potentially lying in wait for Scotland in next month's play-offs, yesterday's success may yet prove a minuscule mercy. |
|
The modern day Mrs. Claus is embarking on a mercy mission to Romania, to bring a little bit of Christmas spirit into the lives of orphaned children. |
|
The aid worker, who quit the army in 1992 to become a civilian engineering contractor, revealed how he turned down a well-paid job in Portugal to join the mercy mission. |
|
|
One of those taking part in the mercy mission is 17-year-old Sarah. |
|
Today very nearly featured a mercy mission to the local hospital, until the patient in question had the nerve to be discharged before Lisa and I could turn up with the grapes. |
|
I do not wish to sit in any accommodation at the mercy of a driver. |
|
They are not simply private businesses at the mercy of businessmen. |
|
But all that is about to change, as Paul must lie at the mercy of a nurse. |
|
And may he have mercy on us all, especially victims and abusers. |
|
May Allah forgive all living and all dead and have mercy upon us all. |
|
Directly on the other side of the stream were two very rundown thatched, whitewashed cottages that also looked as if they had been left to the mercy of the elements. |
|
Our entire security set-up is VIP oriented and huge amount is being spent annually to provide security cover to the selected few leaving the common people to the mercy of God. |
|
Although, the Power Development Department has changed the electric poles in other parts of Srinagar city, but they have left this area to the mercy of God. |
|
I left my customers to the mercy of an extremely stoned and paranoid Benji, plagued by imaginary ringing bells, and sneaked off to the bar next door. |
|
If mercy is not preached by a national figure we take seriously, our battles over policy power will grow ever more merciless. |
|
God is not only mercy for sinners and outcasts but manna for everyone. |
|
Putting the tensive principles of justice and mercy into practice moves us forward in the transformation of a world founded on injustice and lack of compassion. |
|
Newman seems to refute the idea that we're mere meat puppets, whether it be God jerking our strings or, more contemporarily, we're at the mercy of our genes and hormones. |
|
So, at seventeen, Andersen found himself in a classroom with eleven-year-olds, again an outsider and at the mercy of a mean-spirited, manipulative headmaster. |
|
A terminally bored family throws itself at the mercy of a slick parasite, Leo, who is making love to both mother and daughter while fleecing them in the bargain. |
|
With no natural protection from the sea, apart from a narrow coral reef, the atoll was at the mercy of massive waves that crashed over its 30-metre high seaward cliffs. |
|
Be merciful to the other creations so the Creator will have mercy on you. |
|
Euthanasia, mercy killing or call it what you will is helping someone to die when they wish it, without falling foul of the law and being prosecuted. |
|
|
Quite simply, my book contends that most Americans now believe that legalizing either assisted suicide or actual mercy killing would be bad public policy. |
|
They fundamentally disapprove of mercy killing on religious grounds, and may believe that suffering is God's will and that God alone should determine when life ends. |
|
There were the sounds of punching and kicking, objects being broken, grown-ups begging for mercy, children crying, chickens clucking, dogs yelping and pigs squealing. |
|
When I am put into a position of control by a social phenomenon like the Sims, where I get insane pleasure from killing without mercy, well, I begin to wonder. |
|
According to her some of the most important aspects that an individual needs to possess in life are love, passion, affection, mercy and compassion for the poor. |
|
Noreen took her 10-year-old grand-daughter on the mercy mission. |
|
With a sigh of defeat she left Will to the mercy of Bastian. |
|
I prayed to Jesus to help me many times and threw myself on his mercy. |
|
I buzzed on the salon door, was let inside, and threw myself on his mercy. |
|
Rather than anticipating lazy, hazy days spent relaxing after the stress of study, this week she was busy making the final preparation for her mission of mercy. |
|
Let us say that on a rare, windy day in Waterloo, someone leaves a copy of our beloved Imprint on a bench outside, completely at the mercy of the fickle, capricious wind. |
|
Then again, if he did spare the soldiers they would show him no mercy. |
|
Alleged informers and monarchist sympathizers are shown little mercy. |
|
First of all, we are at the mercy of stockers who shelf us in the same category as New Agers, TMers, and a host of other groups with which we may or may not wish to associate. |
|
Any country that would even seriously consider such a monstrous act certainly isn't going to be shown mercy when war is brought to its civilian population. |
|
On the turnover, it was Tallow who made the impressive start as Colm Geary raced in only to blaze the ball over the bar with the goal at his mercy. |
|
I would practice kickoffs and onside kicks, but when it came time to practice field goals, you're at the mercy of how much time the holder and snapper can give you. |
|
He gives no mercy and can kill anyone with a flick of his finger. |
|
He pointed out my character flaws without mercy or compassion. |
|
The canal network depends upon the availability of river water ponded in three hydro-electric projects ever at the mercy of monsoon and snow-melt. |
|