Religious
in sentence
2625 examples of Religious in a sentence
Vogal who is a former priest, and a
religious
fanatic happens to walk in on one of their Black Masses.
Like many
religious
movies and TV shorts that the industry makes, the industry seems to be confused in regards to God and His Will.
If the movie or TV industry cannot make a
religious
movie without showing the messengers of God having teenage puberty sex outside of marriage, then they should not make any
religious
movie, because they do not know how to make a
religious
movie.
And in the series, those partially overemphasized
religious
elements sometimes got a little annoying in the otherwise splendid science-fantasy plot.
This video is just another thing to create divisions in the
religious
community and into the whole We're right/You're wrong mindset.
It is the Islamic concept of "God-consciousness".Someone having "taqwa" has the constant awareness of God's omnipresence in his life and he is supposed to be in total submission to God.The movie tells the story of Muharrem,a simple minded,unobtrusive middle-aged man who lives alone.While he runs the errands in the place he works, he spends most of his time in the local dargah(a Sufi shrine built over the grave of a revered
religious
figure)by engaging himself with total abstinence and dhikr(a form of devotion,in which the worshiper is absorbed in the rhythmic repetition of the name of God or his attributes)Muharrem's uneventful life starts to take a bit different course when he is given to duty(by the leader dervish of the
religious
brotherhood)to take care of the financial matters like collecting the monthly rents for the
religious
order.
He finds himself obliged to engage in worldly matters.The more he gets himself into this the more he vacillates because he notices that the
religious
order rented a shop to the men who take alcohol and in another example he oscillates to take the rent from a family who has barely any money.
Religious
brotherhoods surely provide unity among Muslims but most of these brotherhoods seek after only their interests.
Boorman masterfully captures the grandiosity as well as the humanity of the fantasy legend about a young innocent who draws a sword from a stone and inherits the right of kingship, establishes the beautiful city of Camelot and the Knights of the Round Table, who protect the innocent and rid the world of evil, and search endlessly for that most elusive
religious
artifact - the Holy Grail.
"Poe's Law" is usually used to describe the confusion that results from a politician or
religious
leader being so "out there" that it is almost impossible to distinguish him from a parody version of the same type of person.
Religious
intolerance, bigotry and ignorance are the fierce villains of the movie.
And then, somewhere in the late 50's they made this movie to laugh at us and mock our mating rituals as well as our
religious
beliefs.
The
religious
twist caught me completely by surprise and once I got into the first few minutes of this movie I was hooked.
He goes to the church rectory, as his mother was deeply
religious
and, despite living in near poverty, always gave what she could to the parish church.
It goes without saying that this film is a total "Witness" ripoff, except now the tough-guy cop is a woman (Griffith) and the
religious
setting is within the Hasidic Jewish community instead of the Amish.
Amongst them are a
religious
fanatic female military doctor, a drug-addict/rapist, a nymphomaniac, and Corey Feldman as a computer nerd.
Deeply moving documentary with very likable central subjects probably won't change firmly-set, holier-than-thou
religious
minds...and may not even expect to.
The
religious
family lays on the guilt as his father becomes ill, and the girlfriend and Broadway show director lay their side of the argument on heavy as well.
I'm not at all religious, but the
religious
side of the story made the plot more interesting for me.
thanks to this film (my first "christian" horror film), i won't be seeing any other
religious
brainwashing movies aimed at the family market.
At first, Zach (Wil Wheaton sadly of Star Trek: The Next Generation fame) and his sister are the only two people in a very
religious
family that suspect that the meteor that recently fall from the sky is affecting the water in detrimental ways.
Gary decides to look for the donator's mother, Maria Ann McCardle (Saskia Reeves), a very
religious
woman and she becomes obsessed for Gary.
They lay in
religious
parallels like Ullman's character being the 12th apostle who's is supposed to bring them a new sex act to bring them to a glorious climax.
Other
religious
stuff like putting down the 12 step program didn't set well with me.
This movie focus the war from a
religious
point of view, and it shows the Muslims as the good guys and Christian and Jewish as the bad ones.
A kind of
religious
movie...
She's no Clarice (again, very uncanny resemblances in the performances) and throwing in some psychic abilities,
religious
capabilities, doesn't change the fact that it is.
All in all, this movie is hardly worth the effort and only worth it as a study in propaganda, despite the overtly
religious
context of the movie.
Robert Labby (one of the main characters) was trying to do a
religious
activity in the middle of Sadom and Gamora and failed.
What do these people have to gain from trying to start a war, as it isn't a
religious
belief?
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