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Page "Pastor" ¶ 13
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use and term
I use this term to mean three things: a search for the human significance of an event or state of affairs, a tendency to look at wholes rather than parts, and a tendency to respond to these events and wholes with feeling.
We use the term `` bio-medicine '' because of the close interrelation between biology and medical research.
The collective by which I address you in the title above is neither patronizing nor jocose but an exact industrial term in use among professional thieves.
He seems to use the term alienation in two different ways.
The only other one I shall mention here is his use of the term capitalism.
Indeed, one school superintendent in a large city objects to the use of the term comprehensive high school for the senior high schools in his city, because these schools do not offer strictly vocational programs.
the first use of the word `` rustler '' was as a synonym for `` hustler '', becomin' an established term for any person who was active, pushin', and bustlin' in any enterprise.
The first use of the term " anthropology " in English to refer to a natural science of humanity was apparently in 1593, the first of the " logies " to be coined.
The term " Hamito-Semitic " remains in use in the academic traditions of some European countries.
Personal Emergency Response Systems ( PERS ), or Telecare ( UK term ), are a particular sort of assistive technology that use electronic sensors connected to an alarm system to help caregivers manage risk and help vulnerable people stay independent at home longer.
The use of multi-defined words requires the author or speaker to clarify their context, and sometimes elaborate on their specific intended meaning ( in which case, a less ambiguous term should have been used ).
The use of this term illustrates a past trend towards referring to the whole continent of Africa by the name Aethiopia.
This article will restrict the use of the term ' asteroid ' to the minor planets of the inner Solar System.
The term " allocution " is generally only in use in jurisdictions in the United States, though there are vaguely similar processes in other common law countries.
Existentialist philosophers use the term " angst " with a different connotation.
The use of the term was first attributed to Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard ( 1813 – 1855 ).
It is thus a term used to describe attempts to use philosophical methods to identify the morally correct course of action in various fields of human life.
Many contemporary Pueblo peoples object to the use of the term Anasazi, although there is still controversy among them on a native alternative.
Some modern descendants of this culture often choose to use the term " Ancestral Pueblo " peoples.
In the 20 years following Bligh's campaign the term " The Ashes " largely disappeared from public use.
In the Roman Catholic Church, abbots continue to be elected by the monks of an abbey to lead them as their religious superior in those orders and monasteries that make use of the term ( some orders of monks, as the Carthusians for instance, have no abbots, only priors ).
The term atomic physics is often associated with nuclear power and nuclear bombs, due to the synonymous use of atomic and nuclear in standard English.
Sign languages exhibit the use of polymorphemic constructions referred to as classifiers ( not all researchers term these constructions classifiers ).
Most often, the term describes those who create within a context of the fine arts or ' high culture ', activities such as drawing, painting, sculpture, acting, dancing, writing, filmmaking, photography, and music — people who use imagination, talent, or skill to create works that may be judged to have an aesthetic value.
In modern English, " Americans " generally refers to residents of the United States, and among native speakers of English this usage is almost universal, with any other use of the term requiring specification of the subject under discussion.

use and pastor
These communities use extemporaneous forms of administration at the discretion of the minister, who need not be a pastor.
Cleveland, the fifth of nine children, was named Stephen Grover in honor of the first pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Caldwell, where his father was pastor at the time, but he did not use the name Stephen in his adult life.
Such use might only be in reference to occupying that position (" she is the pastor ") as opposed to being used as a style (" Pastor Jane ").
Sometimes, the regular minister of a church is called a preacher in a way that other groups would typically use the term pastor.
Other lay leaders of Plymouth Church would summer with him, including Henry Ward Beecher, the church ’ s pastor ; Frederick Hinrichs, whose descendents still live in Woodstock ; the Holt publishing family ; the Tappans ; and Albert Lythgoe, an Egyptologist renowned for pioneering the use of scientific methods in the unearthing of antiquities.
With letter 13 / 2007 of 20 January 2010 the Pontifical Council Ecclesia Dei responded positively to a question whether a parish priest ( pastor ) or another priest may on his own initiative publicly celebrate the extraordinary form, along with the customary regular use of the new form, " so that the faithful, both young and old, can familiarize themselves with the old rites and benefit from their perceptible beauty and transcendence ".
The first use of paper ballots in North America was in 1629 within the Massachusetts Bay Colony to select a pastor for the Salem Church.
The eroticism of Virgil's second eclogue, Formosum pastor Corydon ardebat Alexin (" The shepherd Corydon burned with passion for pretty Alexis ") is entirely homosexual, although the use of that term is anachronistic due to a lack of any idea of sexual identity in the times in which Virgil was writing.
Many Protestants use the term pastor as a title ( e. g., Pastor Smith ) or as a job title ( like Senior Pastor or Worship Pastor ).
United Methodist, for example, ordain to the office of deacon and elder ; each of whom can use the title of pastor depending upon their job description.
The use of the term pastor to refer to the common Protestant title of modern times dates to the days of John Calvin and Huldrych Zwingli.
While pastor ( from 1746 ) at Walddorf near Tübingen, he studied alchemy and made many experiments, his idea being to use his knowledge for symbolic purposes.
The first use of paper ballots to conduct an election appears to have been in Rome in 139 BCE, and the first use of paper ballots in the United States was in 1629 to select a pastor for the Salem Church.
The use of the Lowle Coate of Arms has varied slightly between the generations ; some families omitted the pheon azzure or substituted blunted bolts for the pointed darts ; and one generation, notably a pastor, used an urn in his families crest instead of the stag's head.
The house church movement today also owes much of its networking and exchange of information to the use of the Internet ; HC is generally used as an abbreviation for " House Church " and IC is used to designate " Institutional Church ", which is the generalized term for more traditional church structures, including a church building and / or sermon-centered church services directed by a pastor or minister.
Ironically, Peter Hobart, who served as assistant vicar of St. Edmunds following his graduation from Magdalene College, Cambridge, later left Suffolk for the Puritan Massachusetts Bay Colony, where Hobart became the first pastor of Old Ship Church in Hingham, Massachusetts, the oldest church in continuous use in the United States.
At the behest of the government, his bishop removed him from his post — thereby depriving him of the right to use the apartment to which he was entitled as a pastorand assigned him to be a pastor in the countryside.
In November 2010, Australia's Nine Network, reported that Potter's House in Tasmania, Australia was performing a theater stage-show involving " scenes of suicide and drug use, and ended with a pastor telling the audience that ' the devil's children ' needed to give their lives to God to be saved from Hell.
He wrote that " f pastor has done his job his members will prayerfully and correctly use the standard of God's Word to select the right candidate.
Straton was ordained in 1900 and spent most of his adult life as pastor of several churches in four major cities: Chicago ( 1905 – 1908 ), Baltimore ( 1908 – 1913 ), Norfolk ( 1914-1917 ), and most notably of the Calvary Baptist Church in New York City 1918 – 1929, which was the first church in the country to make regular use of radio to broadcast their services.
*" The pastor ... may also grant permission to use the earlier ritual for the administration of the Sacraments of Baptism, Marriage, Penance, and the Anointing of the Sick, if the good of souls would seem to require it.

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