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Page "Daniel Dennett" ¶ 24
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made and preachers
Martin Luther's powerful testimony of faith at the Diet of Worms in 1521 made an indelible impression upon his mind, and the vigorous sermons of evangelical preachers in the pulpits of St. Lawrence and St. Sebald in Nuremberg, during the diet there in 1522, deepened the impression.
He made efforts to secure preachers of the new gospel from Hungary, Silesia, and Franconia, and tried to introduce the church order of Brandenburg-Nuremberg, which had already found acceptance in the Franconian territories.
The Methodist circuit riders and local Baptist preachers made enormous gains ; to a lesser extent the Presbyterians gained members, particularly with the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in frontier areas.
The border stations made money by renting time to Pentecostal preachers and psychics, and by taking 50 percent of the profit from anything sold by mail order.
He hated lecturing, and was bored with the importunities of the fanatical preachers ; and in 1574 he returned to France and made his home for the next twenty years with Chastaigner.
While Luther did not deny the Pope ’ s right to grant pardons for penance imposed by the Church, he made it clear that preachers who claimed indulgences absolved buyers from all punishments and granted them salvation were in error.
While local authorities, preachers and newspapers played up the National Textile Workers ' association with godless communism and its opposition to white supremacy, it is unlikely that this made much difference in the final analysis.
The fiery preachers who made Tories of working women and men.
Hempton concludes that Methodism was an international missionary movement of great spiritual power and organizational capacity ; it energized people of all conditions and backgrounds ; it was fueled by preachers who made severe sacrifices to bring souls to Christ ; it grew with unprecedented speed, especially in America ; it then sailed too complacently into the 20th century.
"< ref name =" EM-B ">< 2006 Speech of Eliza Manningham-Buller Director-General of MI5 on the terrorist threat facing the United Kingdom She said that the video wills of British suicide bombers made it clear that they were motivated by perceived worldwide and long-standing injustices against Muslims ; an extreme and minority interpretation of Islam promoted by some preachers and people of influence ; their interpretation as anti-Muslim of UK foreign policy, in particular the UK ’ s involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Lactantius regretted that there were so few trained preachers, and Gregory, as well as Chrysostom and Augustine, made use of rhetoric in preaching.
The church made extensive use of female preachers.
Heavy fines made it impossible for preachers in poor circumstances to continue without claiming the protection of the Toleration Act, and the meeting-houses had to be registered as dissenting chapels.

made and feel
The word also made him feel hate, sincere hate, for those so labeled.
The last thing in the world that resembled a war was our line of farmers and storekeepers and mechanics perched on top of a stone wall, and this dashing rider made us feel a good deal sharper and more alert to the situation.
Planes made her feel faint, and in Tokyo, where she had gone that summer, she had been given raw fish for breakfast and so she had come straight home.
It made her feel different about Howard.
She had talked to him right there, with the hot sun in his face, which made him sweat and feel ashamed.
This has saved us from constant requests seven days a week and made us feel less brutal to the young `` less fortunate '' than ours.
`` Now '', said Arlene, eventually, making them both sit in formation on a big root of a live oak, the sort of root that divided itself and made their bottoms sag down and feel comfortable.
Indeed, we should say, on the contrary, that the accident of our later discovery made no difference whatever to the badness of the animal's pain, that it would have been every whit as bad whether a chance passer-by happened later to discover the body and feel repugnance or not.
and he could tell, simply by the feel of it, whether it was made of wood, iron, cloth, rubber, and so on.
Did he know something that made him feel sad and sorry for her??
We trust you are not one of the 70,000,000 Americans who do not attend church, but who feel that various forms of recreation are more important than worshipping the God who made our country great.
He passed two brides, both wearing orchids, and they made him feel a little sad.
just listening to him made me feel intelligent.
It made me feel good and knowing that she'd decided, all on her own, to go to college right here in town made me feel good, too.
The next morning a little cognac made me feel better -- but what can you do in Paris on Sunday morning??
She felt, and said, that sympathy only made people feel sorry for themselves ; ;
There was something about private feminine whisperings which always made him feel scabrous and unclean.
Architects in the UK who have made contributions to the profession through design excellence or architectural education, or have in some other way advanced the profession, might until 1971 be elected Fellows of the Royal Institute of British Architects and can write FRIBA after their name if they feel so inclined.
Ironically, it soon became apparent that it had been Lascoe, an old pro ... who had made her feel like an amateur.
In the 1960s V-8 engines began to appear and during the 1969 / 1970 production years, the standard round " porthole "- style windows were replaced with larger rectangular windows which allowed more interior light and made them feel less claustrophobic.
( Science and Health, page 464 ) She also made it clear that people were not to be prevented from seeking whatever help they feel will help them.
At the center of the city rose the giant ziggurat called Etemenanki, " House of the Frontier Between Heaven and Earth ," which lay next to the Temple of Marduk. He also made The Hanging Gardens of Babylon, for his wife from the mountains so that she would feel at home.

made and isolated
Costa Rica's distance from the capital in Guatemala, its legal prohibition under Spanish law to trade with its southern neighbors in Panama, then part of the Viceroyalty of New Granada ( i. e., Colombia ), and the lack of resources such as gold and silver, made Costa Rica into a poor, isolated, and sparsely inhabited region within the Spanish Empire.
Although contacts between Cubans and foreign visitors were made legal in 1997, extensive censorship has isolated it from the rest of the world.
The war opened Sartre's eyes to a political reality he had not yet understood until forced into continual engagement with it: " the world itself destroyed Sartre's illusions about isolated self-determining individuals and made clear his own personal stake in the events of the time " ( Aronson 1980: 108 ).
Armed conflict broke out between John and Longchamp, and by October 1191 Longchamp was isolated in the Tower of London with John in control of the city of London, thanks to promises John had made to the citizens in return for recognition as Richard's heir presumptive.
It lay within easy reach of the major European nations and linked the Arab countries of North Africa with those of the Middle East, facts that throughout history had made its urban centres bustling crossroads rather than isolated backwaters without external social influences.
In 18th century Europe, attempts to treat the operations of formal logic in a symbolic or algebraic way had been made by philosophical mathematicians including Leibniz and Lambert, but their labors remained isolated and little known.
The characteristics they shared with many Merovingian female saints may be mentioned: Regenulfa of Incourt, a 7th-century virgin in French-speaking Brabant of the ancestral line of the dukes of Brabant fled from a proposal of marriage to live isolated in the forest, where a curative spring sprang forth at her touch ; Ermelindis of Meldert, a 6th-century virgin related to Pepin I, inhabited several isolated villas ; Begga of Andenne, the mother of Pepin II, founded seven churches in Andenne during her widowhood ; the purely legendary " Oda of Amay " was drawn into the Carolingian line by spurious genealogy in her 13th-century vita, which made her the mother of Arnulf, Bishop of Metz, but she has been identified with the historical Saint Chrodoara ; finally, the widely-venerated Gertrude of Nivelles, sister of Begga in the Carolingian ancestry, was abbess of a nunnery established by her mother.
The team was housed in a relatively isolated part of the Olympic Village, on the ground floor of a small building close to a gate, which Lalkin felt made his team particularly vulnerable to an outside assault.
The use of DNA microarrays that have come into widespread use in the late 1990s and early 2000s is more akin to the reverse procedure, in that they involve the use of isolated DNA fragments affixed to a substrate, and hybridization with a probe made from cellular RNA.
It also had obvious potential for an interesting, developing story arc as the trio made more discoveries about the ship and contacted cultures previously isolated in other biospheres.
Later circuits, after tubes were made with heaters isolated from their cathodes, used cathode biasing, avoiding the need for a separate negative power supply.
While this value of is calculated for an isolated atom, a simple modification can be made to account for matrix effects:
" More accurately, such recordings are made from a film's music track, because they usually consist of the isolated music from a film, not the composite ( sound ) track with dialogue and sound effects.
Although the word hippies made isolated appearances during the late 1950s and early 1960s, the first clearly contemporary use of the term appeared in print on September 5, 1965, in the article, " A New Haven for Beatniks ", by San Francisco journalist Michael Fallon.
Rayleigh had noticed a discrepancy between the density of nitrogen made by chemical synthesis and nitrogen isolated from the air by removal of the other known components.
All this made possible the emergence of a sparsely populated and ill-organized area that isolated the Asturian kingdom from the Moorish assaults and allowed its progressive strengthening.
No move was made by the French, and Frederick thus found himself isolated and exposed to the combined attack of the Austrians and Saxons.
To protect Rynn from being returned to her mother's custody after his death, he moved them to an isolated area and made plans to allow Rynn to live alone.
The family lived in relative poverty after her mother made a bad investment in an isolated property and area of farmland in Cambodia.
Over the years the Birdsville track became one of the country's most isolated and best known stock routes as well as a mail route made famous by outback legend Tom Kruse.
Gracie made a few isolated film appearances on her own, but the team did not return to the cameras until TV beckoned in 1950.
The tower blocks, many of which were located on the periphery of the city, made residents feel isolated and cut off from society.
Mass measurements are almost always made at low temperatures with systems in ground states, and this difference between the mass of a system and the sum of the masses of its isolated parts is called a mass deficit.

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