This, they hold, gives the man a chance to atone for any hasty decision he might have taken. |
|
On inquiring, he learned that this man was fasting frequently to atone for his sins. |
|
But the eradication of color and blank skies alone could not atone for the analog indiscriminateness of photography. |
|
Still, an Ashes series has been lost and lost badly, something for which yesterday's win can compensate but not atone. |
|
Nor does he require of us good works to atone for our sins or works of supererogation to atone for the sins of others. |
|
As if to atone, Winslow brought two Acadian families back to Marshfield, where the town temporarily fed and housed them in the school. |
|
Feeling reasonably guilty for my lack of input in our annual dissection, I decided I needed some intellectual nutrition to atone for my sins. |
|
It is patched up but it would be a generous gesture on your part to see her and atone for our collective sins. |
|
In the same way, man must also elect Christ to stand as his representative before God and to atone for his sin. |
|
I will quickly write something intelligent tomorrow to atone for the blithering idiot I am tonight. |
|
He is desperate to be given a chance to atone for the worst experience of his fledgling career. |
|
Is it possible for that family to make amends and atone for its ill-gotten gains? |
|
They may also lie on beds of nails, walk on fire and undertake other penances to build character and atone for sins. |
|
Fantasising about being a saint in the city and obsessing on the prospect of eternal hellfire, Charlie realises he must atone for his sins. |
|
His successors on Chicago's south side have a chance to atone for those sins this week. |
|
He will have one more chance to atone for his failure in the final of the triangular series against Sri Lanka on Tuesday. |
|
To atone for this great sin, Hercules had to perform twelve nearly impossible tasks. |
|
The masochist, in secret contract with the reified order, imposes its sanctions to atone for his or her inadequacy or inferiority or guilt and thereby experiences momentary release from its tyranny. |
|
In the Old Testament, a sacrifice without blemish and the laying on of hands and slaying it to take it's blood are needed to atone sinners. |
|
Heracles goes on his twelve labours, not to better mankind, but to achieve immortality and atone for his own sins. |
|
|
I wondered how many centuries of purgatory it would take to atone for such a sin. |
|
He exists only to atone, a voodoo doll for every woman's righteous indignation over being deceived. |
|
But when the time comes to atone for a blatant theft, why is he abandoning the unemployed? |
|
Perhaps it wants to atone for certain things, or to consider the serious consequences emerging from the report of the roundtables. |
|
Another is that consciously abstaining from food helps to atone for mistakes and sins. |
|
They brought sacrifices to the Temple of God to atone for their wrongdoing. |
|
A sweet landscape must sometimes atone for an indifferent supper, and an interesting ruin charm away the remembrance of a hard bed. |
|
You are not born again yourself, but are trying to atone for your sins through prayers of repentance. |
|
The day when the Israelites used to atone for the year's sins was the tenth day of the seventh month. |
|
If you are trying to atone for your sins by praying and repenting every day, that is a clear testimony that you are not yet born again. |
|
For instance, if in an emotional dream you injured someone intentionally, you could perform a simple penance the next day to atone, such as fasting one meal. |
|
You must atone, apologize, and beg forgiveness for the thousands of LGBT lives you have taken. |
|
Eleven long years later, Langer may have a chance to atone for that miss. |
|
But such countries continue to complain that successive Japanese governments, and notably the one led by Shinzo Abe, the present prime minister, have not done enough to atone and want to rewrite history. |
|
This is a rare and exceptional depiction of Shiva as a mendicant, wandering the world for twelve years to atone for the sin of cutting off the fifth head of Brahmâ. |
|
Rangers, who were trounced 4-1 at Ibrox Park by Sevilla in their last game, have the chance to atone for that performance at home to Romanian new boys Unirea Urziceni. |
|
If a sinner who was not yet redeemed tried to atone for his daily sins according to the words of this passage and confessed his wrongdoing, his sins would not be expiated. |
|
In Book XI of Paradise Lost, Adam tries to atone for his sins by offering to build altars to worship God. |
|
The call from Rahmin will give Amir a chance to atone for his misdeed in a way he never could have imagined, a mission that will bring him back to a greatly changed Afghanistan. |
|
If today you atone for your faults, allow your spirit to purify! Thusly will you be prepared to receive from Me the inheritance that I have destined for each of you. |
|
|
Mr Chu, who ran uncontested, replaces Taiwan's president, Ma Ying-jeou, who resigned from the post of KMT chairman to atone for the electoral losses. |
|
Albertus Pictor, meanwhile, can atone for his defeat at Lingfield at Wolverhampton today. |
|
This is the reason why he proposes to offer a libation, to atone for the abuse of the day by their diversions. |
|
Most ghosts were souls assigned to Purgatory, condemned for a specific period to atone for their transgressions in life. |
|
The concept of vicarious atonement, that one person can atone for the sins of another, is found in many religions. |
|
Also popular for adding a touch of drama to a room or piece are burls and crotches, used atone or as a contrast. |
|
Desiring not to cause a fuss, you sit atone in the rear, watching a re hearsal. |
|
At some point the government will have to atone for its sins. |
|
And Mr. Sheen knows he has plenty to atone for. |
|
They atone for any wrongs that would have incurred the four fearsome death penalties imposed in the age of the old Temple: stoning, burning, beheading and strangulation. |
|
His son, Junior, was anxious to atone, among other things, for the massacre of strikers and their families at a coal mine at Ludlow, Colorado, in which he was a major stockholder. |
|
If you violate an oath, you shall atone by feeding ten poor people from the same food you offer to your own family, or clothing them, or by freeing a slave. |
|
There's Monday blues all round with Bianca angry at Heath, and with Celia failing to atone for her part in their troubles she's getting itchy feet to flee. |
|
Dubai Delegator bids to atone for his disappointment at Glorious Goodwood last month when he contests the Group Two CGA Hungerford Stakes over seven furlongs at Newbury today. |
|
At half-time, Poyet replaced Wes Brown with Liam Bridcutt in the heart of defence and sent out the rest of the players to atone for their first-half mistakes. To no avail. |
|