Religion
in sentence
1456 examples of Religion in a sentence
I guess thunderbolts will do that to you, but it is almost breathtaking how quickly she jettisons her own beliefs for her new
religion.
Prehistoric society, adventure, romance, true brotherhood, violence, sex, religion; all depicted abundantly..without a single word uttered!!!
The narrator, who is quoting the "daredevil skier, casually remarks that, according to the Sherpa religion, since this man's body cannot be recovered his soul will roam the world forever and never know rest.
In today's age, people get their
religion
from movies instead of Church and reading the Bible.
This is another one of those fundamentalist Christian movies that hit you over the head with
religion
like a sledgehammer.
A movie about
religion
can be entertaining, but not this movie.
Where America has grown in it's acceptance of race, sexual preference, religion, etc... this show seems to argue with that progress.
This is clearly a tryout to destroy a religion, and should be illegal.
I was left with an experience of everything that is wrong with organized
religion
in general and the Russian Orthodox Church's particular shortcomings (mind you this comment comes from a person of faith).
Lots of blood and death far exceeding the violence of today, the western world has had a negative impact on the
religion.
I was very disappointed to see
religion
being thrown into the mix the way that it was.
See it, if you dare to have a disagreeable eye-opening about how sadly deprived we are of true religious leaders, to the extent that a clown like Gurdjieff could inspire such devotion - and be careful to have your blood pressure medicine at hand if you are one of those who still hope for a healthy
religion
to emerge from the ruins of Christianity, as a supreme example of cinematography at the entire service of the premises and pretenses of a dysfunctional cult.
But for me, being Eastern Orthodox, the most egregious thing about this....film.....was the total Romishness of the
religion.
Yes it may highlight how evil people in power especially when it comes to
religion
may be, but to sit down and watch almost 2 hours of this movie can make almost anyone gag.
While studying the differences between
religion
and cult in college, Mindy (Rachel Miner), who is the best student in the class, convinces her schoolmates Cassandra (Taryn Manning), Bailey (Glenn Dunk), Alex (Joel Michaely) and Morgan (Victoria Venegas) to research the massacre of worshipers of Kwan Yin by their leader Owen Quinlin (Robert Berson) twenty years ago in California.
The film takes tame and easy swipes at
religion
when it ought to rip the concept to shreds, indeed the opening church sequence in The Simpsons Movie shakes
religion
harder than Evan Almighty's whole 95 minute run.
Story's simple - two reporters, one (A) is atheist, the other (B) for some sake has abandoned
religion.
B regains his confidence in
religion
and teaches A a lesson - believe in Christ or go to hell.
Maybe an accent on
religion
vs science or on the meaning of life, not just a few lines.
One would think that Karma and the whole eastern
religion
thing is a big enough topic to bring some different and interesting shows, but they only scratch the surface of the subject.
We then go into the theme of the environment and again images of politics and
religion
are shown.
This 1-hour 30-minute inside joke is best understood by Catholics, the number one
religion
of self-medicating comedians the world over.
You can't watch a film like Peter Watkins' "Privilege," a story of the exploitation of a pop music performer by big business, the state, and even organized religion, without thinking of creatively degenerate commodities like Michael Jackson or Britney Spears, who hawk corporate giants like Pepsi or some other poison for money.
He delivers a true and harsh message at the end of the movie when he tells the clarinet player, "its not a religion, devotion is not enough."
I'm a teenage bisexual and the film spoke to me about my predicaments - sex, religion, love, acceptance, etc.
The show takes the viewer all the way through the creation of a sleeper cell to when an attack is attempted, taking in important facets such as faith, religion, funding, means and needs.
Just a brilliant play about many things, foremost being euthanasia, "respectability", religion, and fundamental human relationships.
Shylock is amused and offended that Antonio, who insults him for his religion, now comes to him for money, but he offers it, on the condition that the penalty for defaulting on the loan will be a pound of Antonio's flesh.
Portia, in a scene where the audience is never quite sure where to place its sympathies, deprives Shylock of what should be legally his, and then strips him of his wealth and
religion.
this is one of the finest movies i have ever seen....the stark scenery...the isolation...the ignorant bigoted people hiding behind their religion...a backdrop for some wordliness and sophistication...the acting is completely natural...but for me as a"foodie' the best is the actual choosing and preparation of the feast..i have spent time in paris and know the cuisine well...whether or not the cafe anglais really exists i don't know but i do know of similar establishments and babette's menu and choice of wines are authentic...and of course the end where despite themselves the perfect meal mellows them back to friendship is the only ending there could be..this is a 10 out of 10 film and should be seen by anyone with enough brain and taste to understand it
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