Luther did indeed set out with the idea of reforming the church, but reformation quickly turned into revolution. |
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The key to our reformation will be a positive and receptive attitude toward the totality of the human experience. |
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The reformation of our political culture should begin with self-reform within the media. |
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They want some radical reformation of government to reflect their viewpoint of the world. |
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A reformation of manners will present fewer drug-related problems both for individuals and for society. |
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There is no doubt that the immigration system of America needs drastic reformation. |
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From the sounds of it, his return to faith is absolutely sincere, and his reformation is the real deal. |
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Trusting God means trusting God even in the midst of the fear and upheaval that reformation brings. |
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We want to see another reformation in the church and so we are calling the church back to the Word of God, starting with the very first verse. |
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Evangelical Protestants sought the reformation of society as well as individuals. |
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One chronologer, the Huguenot scholar Joseph Justus Scaliger, won renown for his reformation of the traditional approach to chronology. |
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It was on his return to Uyaynah that he first began to preach his revolutionary ideas of religious reformation on fundamentalist lines. |
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This has led to religious decline, but it has also led to religious reformation with churches accommodating change in diverse ways. |
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The extent to which the tenth-century monastic reformation in England transformed the church should not be exaggerated. |
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Many of them are committed Reformed Baptists, but even more are men at various stages in the process of reformation. |
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The typology hermeneutic ties us into the concept of an ongoing reformation within the church. |
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The museum claimed to serve the cause of moral reformation, but it really worked on base emotions and bodily appetites. |
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Korean Buddhist thought devoted itself to philosophical reformation and the overcoming of fixed concepts from the beginning. |
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He forced through his reformation by terror, against the wills of almost all his subjects, by savagely suppressing dissent. |
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Even then, long after the defeat of the saints, the myth of the coming catastrophe and reformation is never dead and forgotten. |
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The Soul's annihilation leads to her reformation as that which she was before she was in the divine ground of a living and fruitful Godhead. |
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The penitentiary system shall comprise treatment of prisoners the essential aim of which shall be their reformation and social rehabilitation. |
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Through a continous reformation process the churches have been trying to bring about more homogeneousness in their worship. |
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Led by the Ancient, the candidate arrives at the sacred place of his ordination, of his reformation. |
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If time has been slipping away from you, the first step in reformation is an honest and thorough examination of the condition to be reformed. |
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Iconoclasm on the occasion of the reformation in 1529 caused irreversible damage to the stone sculptures at the main portal. |
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A historic hike in the village of Capdenac, since the prehistory until the reformation. |
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Use of a fast temperature quench and other known processes are necessary to prevent reformation. |
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The workshop showed that it is not possible to identify the single controlling factors in the reformation of dioxins. |
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This relates to structural reformation in risk management, more transparency and better rules for financial supervision. |
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In other words, the reformation of national governance will not be possible except by way of a reformation of global governance and vice versa. |
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These not-so-very-dark ages fostered intellectual and cultural forces that themselves led to the reformation. |
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The greatest miracle of love is the reformation of a coquet. |
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With his belief in humanity as a state to be attained rather than granted, Overton considers political reformation crucial for regaining our prelapsarian humanness. |
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If an infamous rakehell like Lord Braunfield could undergo such a remarkable and genuine reformation, surely there was hope for the likes of Lord Ashbourne? |
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For him, the Kirk is in dire need of reformation and reviving. |
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The current white paper only suggests reformation of tax law. |
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He is relaxed, meanwhile, about the possibility of any reformation. |
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I'm not sure how long this reformation of the gamer stereotype will take. |
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But reformation must start with the basic unit in society, the individual. |
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The old Moluccan Church has gone through a profound reformation. |
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This, added to his real concern for the physical and spiritual welfare of Valene and Coleman, propels him to take drastic steps to secure their penitence and reformation. |
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The person who came up with the idea is thought to have been Martin Luther, father of the reformation. |
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He thought it no policy to distaste the English or Irish by a course of reformation, but sought to please them. |
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At the same time, Holbein worked for Thomas Cromwell as he masterminded Henry VIII's reformation. |
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These years mark the beginning of his interest in a possible reformation of society. |
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Big news for riot girls as Sleater Kinney have announced a reformation and a new album. |
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All of which leads journalists such as the director of RÃodoce to conclude that the Sinaloa cartel is well on the way to completing its reformation for the post-Chapo era. |
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In standard SRNG and POX processes, the reformation reaction is catalysed chemically. |
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Puritans went on the defensive, some pressing for further reformation of the Church. |
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The first of April 2005, Scott Ian announces the reformation of the old line up from the Among the Living Era, and therefore the return of Joey Belladonna. |
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Liberty should be restricted to the least possible degree and follow the principle of minimization of the impact of deprivation of liberty with a view to full reformation and rehabilitation. |
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It is a common practice to adjourn the reformation of their lives to a further time. |
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In the 18th century, some Polish Protestants settled around Poland Street as religious refugees from the counter reformation in Poland. |
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However, adhesiolysis is often followed by adhesion reformation. |
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To many secular rulers the Protestant reformation was a welcome opportunity to expand their wealth and influence. |
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In the west, the European kingdoms and movements were in a movement of reformation and expansion. |
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Some time will be needed before any reformation is accepted. |
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I join with these laws the personal presence of the king's son, as a concurrent cause of this reformation. |
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The Church of England had struggled and heaved at a reformation ever since Wyclif's days. |
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To promote the public support for the reformation of the church, Henry had numerous pamphlets and lectures prepared. |
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Under the leadership of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, a more radical reformation proceeded. |
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The reformation, from 1560 onwards, saw the beginning of a decline in the use of Scots forms. |
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The simple past also shows extensive analogical reformation and simplification in Modern French as compared with Old French. |
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In the sixth century, they were already included in the diocese of Coutances where they remained until reformation. |
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His reputation suffered during the English reformation, probably due to its association with the Franciscans. |
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Simultaneously, religious houses were established with the purpose of providing asylum and encouraging the reformation of prostitution. |
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Climate fluctuation caused the formation, disappearance, and reformation of glaciers which, in turn, caused sea levels to rise and fall. |
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In the church, following the reformation, German was used in the southern part of Schleswig and Danish in the northern part. |
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Keeping with her reformation of the regulation of laws, in 1481 Isabella charged two officials with restoring peace in Galicia. |
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Those who supported reformation loyally followed the Malankara Metropolitan who was legally evicted from the Malankara Syrian Church. |
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Doors were also opened for reformation in other places by ministers who supported him. |
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But those who did not join them continued to follow their own leaders and kept their peculiar identity garnered from reformation. |
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Marthoma Church's evolution from a reformation base only strengthened it to follow best practices of its Syriac traditions. |
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Nevertheless, the legacy was important for the reformation in the Netherlands. |
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This had a huge fireplace that housed a priest hole, where clergy hid during the reformation. |
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Thus, for example, the segregation and treatment of juvenile offenders should be provided for in such a way that it promotes their reformation and social rehabilitation. |
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The goal of the reformation is to develop an effective, well-organized, multi-ethnic, and professional police force that provides the people of Afghanistan a stable rule of law, obviously a laudable goal. |
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Peace Societies, Aborigines Protection Societies, and societies for the reformation of criminals are silent. |
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With the reformation of the Club as Wigan Wasps Football Club, the club returned to Folly Field from 1879 to 1886 when it moved its matches back to Prescott Street. |
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Many in the church were fascinated by the reformation principles. |
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The reformation was an attempt to eliminate certain practices prevalent in the Malankara Church which the reformers believed were brought about after the Synod of Diamper. |
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In 1565, the Polish Brethren appeared as yet another reformation movement. |
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Scots law has continued to change and develop in the 20th century, with the most significant change coming under devolution and the reformation of the Scottish Parliament. |
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For Bacon, this reformation would lead to a great advancement in science and a progeny of new inventions that would relieve mankind's miseries and needs. |
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I have termed that third principle the reformation of form, a reduplicative narrative posture which assumes and revises Du Bois's double consciousness. |
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Since entering office in 2010, they have introduced the Health and Social Care Act, constituting the biggest reformation that the NHS has ever undertaken. |
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Some of the canons continued on at the abbey and there is evidence suggesting that the spire of the abbey church was repaired in the aftermath of the reformation. |
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Wishart travelled throughout Scotland preaching in favour of the reformation and when he arrived in East Lothian, Knox became one of his closest associates. |
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Starting in 1590, as one of the measures that followed the Scottish reformation, each sheriffdom elected commissioners to the Parliament of Scotland. |
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Because, however, Walking Back Home marked the beginning of a new period of reformation and activity for the group, it is a significant album in their catalogue. |
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Neither monks nor friars, the Theatines first, then the Barnabites, Somaschi, Jesuits, and others responded to ecclesial needs in a time of turbulent reformation. |
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Having paid their Annates to the Papacy, the bishops had no reason to step down, and in the 1530s nobody knew how long the reformation would last. |
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The reformation however was cut short by the death of the king. |
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Calvin's recognition of the need to adapt to local conditions became an important characteristic of the reformation movement as it spread across Europe. |
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The purpose of the Westminster Assembly, in which 121 Puritan clergymen participated, was to provide official documents for the reformation of the Church of England. |
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