In Exodus for example, the story of manna offers the depiction of God raining food from the heavens, enough for everyone. |
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The citation is from the story of the manna that transformed the wilderness into abundance. |
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The people were constantly griping about eating manna and their situation in the desert. |
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But, not a drop of empyrean manna falls on my parched lips to assuage the thirst of aeons. |
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Open Source technology is manna from heaven to application development engineers. |
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When tired, out of money and luck, a travel companion is manna from heaven. |
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The pictures were manna from heaven for any political leader going into an election. |
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But to a player with Huckerby's speed a situation like that is manna from Heaven. |
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At lower altitudes, there are several tree species such as hollies, Lobelius maple, manna ashes and cornel trees. |
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Cans of soft drink and doughnuts will be manna from heaven for tennis fans queuing for tickets for Wimbledon tennis fortnight next week. |
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That defies belief, and it is certainly manna from heaven for the incoming National candidate, who will clearly win that seat. |
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With a cap on what charities could get, however, any further increase in betting limits became manna from heaven for the private casino industry. |
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For farmers in a region with no irrigation projects, this is manna from heaven. |
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For hardcore British fans, denied the chance to catch their heroes in the flesh, it will no doubt come as manna from heaven. |
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I haven't seen the film, but it seems to be manna from heaven for the over-50 set. |
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Joburg's balmy weather is manna from heaven for many plants that thrive here all year round. |
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The trail continues downhill for a brief stretch among chestnut trees, manna ashes and maple trees before reaching plain ground again. |
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Beams of ash and oak were split along the grain by wedges, and they rolled great manna ashes down from the mountains. |
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When the share price was rising like a rocket, the match was treated like manna from heaven. |
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Interestingly the manna did not fall on Sabbath, but the shewbread was renewed each Sabbath. |
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As far as vegetation is concerned, there are interesting woods of larches, downy oaks, manna ashes, and beeches. |
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Trees include manna ashes, Cornelian cherry, oriental hornbeam and silver lime. |
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Can we translate full-gospel preaching, both manna and mercy, into the language of the Web? |
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The underwood is well developed, with manna ashes, little oaks and blackthorns. |
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When you get back, you can eat wild locusts and honey and manna from heaven. |
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Firstly they disguise egg white, that inedible devil's gloop, as the most delicious manna from heaven. |
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Year after year, they say that integrating Thailand into the global economy will bring manna to all. |
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When our message is that God is mercy for outcasts and sinners and manna for everyone, how can we not preach? |
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Recall from Exodus 16 that the miracle of manna came in response to the Israelites' complaints for bread. |
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They celebrate the Passover, another marker of their identity as God's people, and they no longer have to eat the manna of the wilderness. |
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Rather, on Friday a double portion of manna fell which was to become the food for Shabbat. |
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He did not witness God's power in parting the Red Sea or giving the people manna in the desert. |
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The manna that succored the Israelites in the wilderness was gathered in baskets, which thus formed part of a divine act of national salvation. |
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Like manna in the desert and the Eucharist, the psalm evokes the joyful knowing of God with our physical hunger. |
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The Lord's providing manna to the Israelites is one of the most well-known events of the Scriptures. |
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Moses and the Hebrews learned that they had to gather manna each morning, that they had to look to God each day. |
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The Lord provides manna in the desert, loaves and fishes for the multitude, our daily bread, his presence in communion. |
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This presidium, supported by the regional authority of Sicily, brings together growers of manna ash for the purpose of improving collection techniques. |
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The draw was manna from heaven and the games certainly sped up our recovery. |
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When China begins to respect these rights, it will be like manna from heaven for Europe. |
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When we hoard them, they will rot, just like the manna that was given free of charge to the Israelites in the desert. |
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Last year the global economy again benefited from the manna of globalization. |
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The package of funds proclaimed is proving to be ashes rather than gold for the workers and manna from heaven for big business. |
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This did not fall like manna from heaven: we achieved it in the Conciliation Committee. |
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As a matter of fact, we have to keep in mind that development projects often stand as manna from heaven for developing countries. |
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Like manna from heaven, just the right people show up at just the right time every year at the Clinic. |
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For disabled activists, the decision was manna, reining in what they saw as an increasingly permissive attitude toward mercy killing. |
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Then came manna from heaven: unconfined national rejoicing in the startling news that the prime minister's wife, at 45, was once again pregnant. |
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The manna in the desert is a gift of God, not to be hoarded, nor even fully understood. |
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The Israelites gathered manna, ground it between two millstones or beat it in a mortar, and then ate it. |
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The manna taught the Israelites to overcome their belief that they had to compete with one another-and to trust that there would be enough for everyone. |
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In today's economy, innovation, however, is not manna from heaven. |
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But when Daniels performed for the Armed Forces it was manna from heaven. |
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God is not only mercy for sinners and outcasts but manna for everyone. |
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These lobbyists are like bagmen spreading manna from media heaven. |
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Reduced gas prices are manna for common Ukrainians, who once paid more for Russian gas than did Western Europeans. |
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Unsurprisingly, the junior senator from Texas is manna to talk-radio warriors. |
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For the body withering under the polluted skies of the City, with all the energies drained by the daily rigmarole of life, this is manna from heaven! |
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An eyewitness told me that when the Canadian Charter was passed, the Charter's sponsor, a government minister who was also a lawyer, informed his fellow members of the Bar of the manna from heaven that awaited them. |
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However, manna is not fruit of a certain plant on this earth. |
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He nevertheless deplored that this manna of raw materials, instead of being a development factor for countries that naturally possessed it, was more often than not a curse. |
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The answer to the first question is, it would appear, no: Turkey will always refuse to give up a large part of its territory and it would be bad for Iraq to lose the oil manna in the depths of the earth under Iraqi Kurdistan. |
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Even if the gift is rotting away like weekday morning manna in the breadbox where we keep it. |
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Nobody anticipated the weight and the enormity of the wealth of energy sources in Russia, the financial manna that they would give rise to, and the potential action that would result from it. |
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If you have time, perhaps you could alk about the specific use of youth and actions of youth towards gaining what we've all learned is the manna of criminal activity and of organized crime especially: money. |
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God provided them with manna as food for their journey. |
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Is the abolished professional tax the manna going to narrow as shagreen? |
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There, among the manna and swamp gums, several folk and world-music groups performed. |
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For Romney, a three-way tie for first place in Iowa is manna from heaven. |
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It was more inclined to attack President Bouteflika than Khalifa because it feared losing the advertising manna which a great number of titles depended on for their survival. |
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She was there, tumbling the marvelous cucumiform weights down upon a chest which looked as though it would cave in under such manna. |
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The icing on the cake was made from manna, which was gathered under the manna gums. Manna mixed with milk made a splendid icing. |
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Black cockatoos screeched and scratched at the bark of a big old manna gum as if they couldn't wait to see it done for. |
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The pain and sickness caused by manna are the effects of its operation on the stomach. |
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It is a question of remaining lucid: manna in the form of Western financial aid, part of which, as per usual, will end up in private bank accounts, will not be enough to curb the epidemic. |
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While it may not have been manna from heaven, for Windows bashers, it was clearly a welcome sight, a sure sign that Linux has hit the big time. |
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The forty-spotted pardalote is the first Australian bird found to encourage trees to release manna, a sugary crystallised sap. |
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In our present avaricious society, it is difficult to make people understand that the interest received on a savings account is not a heavenly manna. |
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For example, in the Russian computer shops hung banners with the dinosaurs, who sit at computers with the old Microsoft Office and waiting for manna from heaven in the form of 2007 version. |
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So this cracking feature is manna from heaven. |
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A goal, when it comes, is like manna from heaven for a striker. |
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The tree, a manna ash, should blossom in the NAC's showground in May. |
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