Showing 101 - 120 results of 143 for search '"The Honourable"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 101

    Narratologiese ondersoek na Daniël 1: God beloon getrouheid by M. Nel

    Published 2003-06-01
    “…His people have the responsibility to serve and honour Him even in the strange country of exile. He uses them in that country. and He blesses them there. …”
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  2. 102

    God's omnipotence and human freedom by A. van de Beek

    Published 2002-01-01
    “… It is an honour for me to write an article in this volume for Pieter Potgieter. …”
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  3. 103

    Męczeństwo formą samobójstwa? by Marcin Cholewa

    Published 2012-07-01
    “…The article focuses on key elements of martyrdom (conscious and voluntary acceptance of death, dying for the faith, virtues pertaining to God, bearing witness to truth and love, patient endurance until death, externalised defending the truth of faith, a persecutor as opposed to the martyr, no pursuit of martyrdom, the pursuit of martyrdom not for its glory) and altruistic suicide (conscious and voluntary acceptance of death, death for the sake of others, society, bearing witness to the values, God, honour, friendship, freedom, desire for death without reward, death as a personal act, not harming innocent people, exceptions are acts of terrorism and suicide acts during wars). …”
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  4. 104

    The mirage of a triune rainbow by E.M. Conradie

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…It is written in the form of an “academic letter” that assumes the requisite scholarship, but deliberately engages in a conversation that is appropriate to the exploratory approach that is adopted and honours the correspondent upon his retirement. In a somewhat playful manner, a colourcoding for such discourse is proposed, identifying white, dark purple, light purple, green, brown, black, and grey perspectives on the Trinity. …”
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  5. 105

    FOUR CRITERIA FOR IDENTIFYING THE SOCIALLY MARGINAL IN THE SOCIAL CONTEXT OF EARLY CHRISTIANITY REFLECTED IN THE NEW TESTAMENT by I.C. Berg

    Published 2020-06-01
    “… The social dynamics of the world of early Christianity is characterised by the limit of upward mobility and social disparity between classes in terms of access to both material resources such as lands and funds and nonmaterial resources such as honour and political power. This phenomenon was endemic throughout the imperial Roman world, which was the immediate sociopolitical context of early Christianity. …”
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  6. 106

    Realigning with the slave-like Jesus of Mark: The shorter ending of Mark 16:1-8 as a relecture by S. Joubert

    Published 2024-06-01
    “…It compels the intended readers to realign themselves with the provocative narration of Jesus as the atypical Messiah who challenges the physiognomic stereotypes of an honour-shame-based context. From this hermeneutical perspective, the reference text of Mark provokes a second text, the reception text, but does not replace it. …”
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  7. 107

    Les blousons noirs, amateurs de rock’n’roll et de violence by Sophie Victorien

    Published 2021-05-01
    “…They like to play with knives and to go out with friends, where alcohol and fights are the order of the day during concerts, balls and dance halls, especially when two gangs, each very attached to defending their territory and honour, clash with each other using bicycle chains, knives and headbutts. …”
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  8. 108

    The Falklands War on the British Screen: Plural Memories of an Occulted War by Anne-Lise Marin-Lamellet

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…The memory of the dead is more easily honoured, but it is sometimes taken up by ideologues who confuse patriotism with exacerbated nationalism. …”
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  9. 109

    Daniel 12:2 and the Threat of Shame by Kevin Swartz

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…However, when examined within its original sociological context, this passage can be more accurately understood as reflecting a specific threat of shame deeply embedded in the honour-based society of the ancient Mediterranean during the Second Temple Period. …”
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  10. 110

    The illusion of limitlessness: Engaging Cornel du Toit’s perspective on transhumanism and being by Benson O. Igboin

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…This article, in honour of Cornel du Toit, examines his scholarship, broadly in relation to science and religion, but particularly zeroes in on his idea of the nature of transhumanism and being and implications for religion. …”
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  11. 111

    Estates in Slavonia after World War II: Confiscation of the property of Slavonian nobility after World War II by Gardaš Miro A., Repić Marko A.

    Published 2024-01-01
    “…Sentences ranged from death and imprisonment to a negligible number of sentences involving the loss of national honour or shortterm suspended sentences, which were always combined with the confiscation of all property, which in some cases was vast. …”
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  12. 112

    “This Rude Chivalry of the Wilderness”: Chivalry and Native Americans in Cooper’s and Irving’s American Novels by Pauline Pilote

    Published 2016-01-01
    “…Indeed, Scott’s American contemporaries resort to the medieval apparatus that was brought back into fashion by Ivanhoe – stereotypes of knight-errantry, damsels in distress, code of honour, etc. – to describe the Native Americans that people their narratives. …”
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  13. 113

    Non-verbal agents of theatrical retranslation: Women’s identity and the Spanish classics by Jorge Braga Riera

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…This is most noticeable in the case of Rosaura, who valiantly seeks revenge on Astolfo to restore her honour. To illustrate this, three performance-oriented retranslations staged in the UK and US between 1983 and 2010 will be scrutinised: John Barton and Adrian Mitchell’s Life’s a dream (1983) José Rivera’s Sueño (1998) and Helen Edmundson’s Life is a dream (2009). …”
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  14. 114

    Les Dépravés de Dieu by Romain Simenel

    Published 2015-11-01
    “…To what extent is the relationship with God different according to whether one is a “youth” or a “man of honour”? Discredited and even rejected by Islam, celibacy, especially if it is prolonged, would seem to provide the most relevant perspective for exploring the limits of what constitutes a youth. …”
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  15. 115

    MycoNews 2020: President’s message, news, reports, awards, personalia, book news, and correspondence by David L. Hawksworth

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Reports are presented from the: 1st International Symposium on Tropical African Mycology (Benin 2019); Recent Advances in the Biodiversity, Biology, and Biotechnology of Fungi (Pondicherry 2019); the 4th International Malassezia Workshop (virtual 2020); Dutch Design Week (2020), and UK Fungus Day (2020). An honour awarded to Francis Martin is recorded. Birthday greetings from IMA go to John Walker, José Dianese, Richard Harris, Tomasz Majewski, David Malloch, and John Sheard. …”
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  16. 116
  17. 117

    “Ikwekwe yinja1 (a Boy is a Dog)” by Zukile Ngqeza

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…., Abraham’s decision to sacrifice Isaac, Jephthah’s decision to kill her daughter in honour of his agreement with Yahweh, the killing of the boy children during the time of Pharoah and King Herod exhibit the idea that children are not fully human. …”
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  18. 118

    Sur les traces de John MacCrae, ou l’inscription dans l’espace public du souvenir d’un combattant de 1914-1918 by Emmanuelle Danchin

    Published 2015-09-01
    “…Who is really being honoured ? To what extent is Wimereux different from the other places devoted to his memory ?…”
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  19. 119

    The healing hand: the role of women in ancient medicine by Francois P. Retief, Louise Cilliers

    Published 2005-06-01
    “…The funerary inscriptions of female doctors reveal that they were honoured in the same way as men for exceptional services; medical works were also dedicated to them as colleagues, and those of them who wrote texts of their own were quoted with respect. …”
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  20. 120

    Suicide from a Holistic Point of View by Søren Ventegodt, Joav Merrick

    Published 2005-01-01
    “…Suicide has been honoured and respected in the eastern culture, especially in Japan with the famous tradition of Hara-kiri, or seppuku, while in most western societies suicide has been seen negatively and many contemporary physicians tend to consider suicide the most self-destructive and evil thing a human being can do and something that should be avoided at all cost. …”
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