The government of the fastest growing city in Asia believes providence, and not planning, will help it manage growth. |
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In the past, we could leave that onerous responsibility to fate or providence, and then rail against them when it went wrong. |
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You are well co-ordinated just when providence favours your chances of progressing in your chosen endeavour. |
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Evidently this was the limit imposed by divine providence upon that sort of folly. |
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They were resilient people with strong faith and a firm belief in providence. |
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Further, whatsoever is left to itself cannot be subject to the providence of a governor. |
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Just as providence protects drunks and fools, so it also spares the pseuds who make excuses for the butchers who have killed their neighbours. |
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The storm that stopped the assault was a remarkable interposition of providence. |
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What could these affirmations and disaffirmations mean when examining the doctrine of providence? |
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By eight years of industry and providence, he managed to lay up about six hundred dollars. |
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At one time, God was more than a hypothetical abstraction, and faith in his providence and design buttressed every major discipline of study. |
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The church rejoices with them in the remarkable providence of God in his leading at this time. |
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It is also about the paradoxical tension between human freedom and divine providence. |
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In the overruling providence of God, the troubling may prepare the way for healing. |
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It felt both humbling and a bit nostalgic to lecture, in God's providence to 240 ministerial students in the place I was once called to serve. |
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Suddenly providence tugged at H.E. Crumpled up on the curb lay a ten-dollar bill. |
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Inherent in Augustine's lifelong concern to vindicate providence was his belief that no pain or loss is undeserved. |
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In God's providence he had the opportunity to do something about this that July. |
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It is as if by divine providence that I am supplied educational material just when I need it the most. |
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Delia had a strong religious faith and an inherent belief in providence and that things would work themselves out eventually. |
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It is by the providence of God that to this very day Papal Rome has not succeeded. |
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A weak and dull-witted man sees the hand of providence when he is confronted by a strong and powerful adversary and succumbs to him. |
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And timing of these things are all predetermined by foreknowledge within the providence of God. |
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Has providence a program all set up and dated in advance, or is it all chance? |
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The International Mutual Association has shown that in the sector of health and providence are large number of people worldwide are mutualists. |
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For a pagan Platonist its particularity seemed scandalously incompatible with divine immutability and with a universal operation of providence in the cosmos as a whole. |
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This did not fit in well with ecclesiastical views on divine providence. |
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Man's worship ascends upward, and the Divine providence descends thereby. |
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Perhaps this is because he believes so much in divine providence and God's redemption in Christ, and he refuses to believe that God is capricious. |
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For, while most life is fully dependent upon divine providence, we humans, because of our consciousness, have the potential to participate in the unfolding of each moment. |
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And yet, we have failed to be good caretakers of your providence, even as we sing praises in honour of creation. |
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The other is the gambler, who believes that with the next turn of the cards, providence will deliver the Main Chance. |
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Holy and ever living God, by your providence, you bring us to know your name and your work. |
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Look forward to the day when God will fulfill all His providence, become overjoyed because of Manmin, and give back to you in precious rewards. |
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What roles does affliction, the suffering constrained by the sense of God's palpable absence, play in divine providence, according to Herbert's poetry? |
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I thanked her humbly but promptly assured her that I would never exchange divine providence for a canonry or a benefice. |
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All glory and divine providence is His forever and ever. |
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His life was austere, disciplined and watchful of the hand of providence. |
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We can hardly ever go too far in trusting to His providence. |
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Poverty has nothing to do with providence. |
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The first is creation and providence, which is God's creating and continuing to work in the world. |
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By mere chance in appearance, though underlined with a providence, they had a full light of the infanta. |
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In A SENSE, Maimonides identifies his opinions on divine providence with Epicureanism. |
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The ex-convict mayor of providence, Rhode Island is coming back for more. |
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Do you pledge to be courteous and kind to others, and to use for the glory of God the vehicle God in his divine providence has enabled you to have? |
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Redemption is a grand education by providence, restoring all souls to their original blessedness, for none, not even Satan, is so depraved and has so lost rationality and freedom as to be beyond redemption. |
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Thank providence that such negligence of our cannon fodder wouldn't be tolerated so much with today's compensation culture. |
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Thomas Coke, having been made Superintendent of the Church two years previously in America by Wesley, was travelling to Nova Scotia, but providence forced his ship to Antigua. |
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The divine providence is wont to afford its concourse to such proceeding. |
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Still, we can say that God's providence encompassed the cross, a faith fact made clear by God's creating meaning out of the unintelligibility of the cross event. |
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Throwing themselves absolutely upon God's minutely providence. |
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Wroth cast away his violin, and falling on his knees in the midst of the company, most fervently prayed for the blessing of God upon this alarming providence. |
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