His theory does not adequately account for the dual powers of divine conflagration and divine grace. |
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In forests that by nature burn lightly and frequently, putting out every fire can leave tinder to build up and fuel a much greater conflagration. |
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Two fuzees and a gallon of fuel oil turn it into a thundering conflagration towering 40 feet over our heads. |
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They feared that a conflagration would quickly follow, devouring cities and killing millions. |
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None of them ever believed that they were at risk of getting into the middle of a nuclear conflagration. |
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The heat and concussive force of the airbursts produced the expected results, instantly engulfing the rebel base in an apocalyptic conflagration. |
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The real macher in the conflagration over forest fires is Mark Rey, the Agriculture Department undersecretary. |
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Like a meltdown in a nuclear power plant, the conflagration now threatens to take the whole examination system down with it. |
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In the divine realm, fire symbolizes the universal conflagration of the apocalypse which will destroy men's sinful bodies. |
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But, filled with misplaced bravado, I decided this was the right time for a proper conflagration. |
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While the fire is still burning, fire crews attending the scene have brought the conflagration under control. |
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That spot caught fire and the conflagration that resulted caused major damage to the building. |
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The kitchen shop on the high street went up in flames and so great was the conflagration that the entire building collapsed. |
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I trust this was done, as I myself observed the licking flames of the conflagration. |
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The conflagration in Congress is spreading to singe, if not consume, critical decisions across the board. |
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To forestall a democratic counter-attack, the oligarchs set fire to the buildings around the agora, causing massive loss of property and risking a general conflagration. |
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People treated at the program come from more than 100 countries, the newer refugees arriving from the most recent conflagration. |
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Then, on October 23, a combination of a changed wind direction and an unusually dry summer combined to turn a local brush fire into a devastating conflagration. |
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This House should not underestimate the risk of a wider conflagration in the Middle East. |
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Because the risk is looming of an all-out conflagration we have to do whatever we can. |
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We know full well that the notion of collective guilt has led to universal conflagration and to the extermination and prostration of peoples. |
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It is, however, equally crucial to address the legitimate grievances which, if ignored, are likely to fuel the next conflagration. |
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A fire of straw and dry wood blazed up like a conflagration not thirty feet distant from the young commander. |
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One may also worry about the war not provoking conflagration in other regions of Sudan. |
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Once that point is reached, however, it is usually too late to avoid a serious breakdown or conflagration. |
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A similar conflagration erupted in New Orleans when that city became the first in the Deep South to desegregate. |
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I may not have mentioned my pyromaniac tendencies before, but one thing leads to another and so soon we had built not so much a bonfire as a conflagration. |
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That fire can become a huge conflagration, or it can be quickly put out. |
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You can feel the heat of this conflagration over one hundred yards away and it burns all night to the sound of local teens puking up over the side of the fairground twister. |
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A full-blown military attack, on the other hand, would spark a regional conflagration and possibly a new world war. |
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If we succeed, Mr Chairman, the results will be invisible, because no conflagration will break out. |
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The risk of a major conflagration was already colossal, and they were successful, at the time, in damping things down. |
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On the contrary, whether we like it or not, it will only intensify the conflagration in our region. |
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They lead to an explosion of all kinds of contradictions, which are often glossed over for fear of a more generalised conflagration. |
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Reprisals and counter-reprisals followed and the whole country soon was caught up in the conflagration. |
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By articulating their fears, Powell's notorious speech may have given them a mainstream voice, thereby averting a greater conflagration. |
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Gobbets of incandescent material were flung out as the great central mass vibrated and convulsed in the agony of the new conflagration. |
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The fires that corporate America lit have now become a conflagration beyond its control. |
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A century ago, miscalculation was greatly to blame for thrusting Europe into a conflagration. |
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The Boston Marathon bombings reminded the world how quickly a celebration can turn into a conflagration. |
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On the other hand, the new government may perhaps by tempted to rein in its aspirations ''for change'' in order to avoid a new conflagration. |
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The First World War, then, caused some Atlanticists pause as they tried to explain what had led to the conflagration. |
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There eventually evolved an international balance of power that held at bay a great conflagration until years later. |
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From deep within this conflagration of tony, occasionally insightful, arch, pompous, mournful, supercilious, generous, salivating verbalism, the single consistent sound to emerge is a howl of revulsion. |
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Fed by ideology, opportunity and the ready availability of frustrated young men holding their lives cheap the conflagration shows no signs of abating or lessening in its depravity. |
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The embers of revolt have been smouldering beneath the foundations for several years now and the independence campaign gave them the oxygen to become a full conflagration. |
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The black ticker tape was the perfect conclusion to a triumphant set which showed that Li's slow-burning pop-noir has now ignited into a full conflagration. |
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The Committee of the Regions would reiterate that the EU is a peace process, born out of the world conflagration which was extinguished nearly 60 years ago and which threatened to destroy the very soul of Europe. |
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But with its informal configuration, it has remained a passive witness, overly dependent on the ups and downs of international events, and hostage to the conflagration in the Middle East. |
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What we need is the willingness not only to aim for peace but to achieve it, and in fact before the hatred built up over decades escalates further and unleashes a conflagration. |
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He conceived of an international organization that would effectively ensure collective security and avert the prospects of another global conflagration. |
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It is not about whether we send troops into a conflagration. |
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The worst nightmare would be that American pressures provoke an uncontrollable regional conflagration whose consequences they would be the first to feel. |
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According to a scientific expert cited in the French daily Le Monde on March 21, 2002: 'The impact occurred with such force that it caused the disintegration of the aircraft and an immediate conflagration. |
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All those nation states could be involved in the larger conflagration. |
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Escalator is the backfire of the hindbrain against the conflagration of reason. |
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Samuel Pepys observed the conflagration from the Tower of London and recorded great concern for friends living on the bridge. |
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He recorded in his diary that the eastern gale had turned it into a conflagration. |
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Working to a plan at last, James's firefighters had also created a large firebreak to the north of the conflagration. |
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In the resulting conflagration both Houses of Parliament were destroyed, along with most of the other buildings in the palace complex. |
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The conflagration lasted six days, till the whole of the dwellings were reduced to ashes or smoking ruins. |
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The sculpture, carved around 1630, is the only one to have survived the conflagration of 1666 intact. |
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The Worms Cathedral was among the buildings set afire in the resulting conflagration. |
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Some of these settlements were permanently abandoned after the conflagration. |
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The canisters, McMahon said, are to blame for the conflagration. |
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The treaty is the latest attempt to resolve the ten-year conflagration. |
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A Tradition...concerning the Apocatastasis of the World...partly by Inundation and partly by Conflagration. |
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