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infliction
1. Knowing my cause, knowing it's infliction
2. unanimously by the generals in the several cities, with such stern and pitiless feeling, that the exceptional nature of the infliction
3. punish the Jews of our realm in a body, with the infliction of a monstrous punishment
4. They shall not be swept away, either by the fierce waves of worldly temptations or by the waves of infliction
5. 3 What home or city or place at all inhabited or what streets were there which their condition did not fill with wailing and lamentatione 4 They were sent out unanimously by the generals in the several cities with such stern and pitiless feeling that the exceptional nature of the infliction moved even some of their enemies
6. 3 Certain of our friends did of malice vehemently urge us to punish the Jews of our realm in a body with the infliction of a monstrous punishment
7. Blueblood rode into the scene and was about to render a serious infliction to Torvald’s flank when he parried the attack just in time
8. 5… That all military actions of Zulimistan in foreign lands causing infliction of cruelties and killings of thousands persons, and acts of terrorism in the name of fight against terrorism in foreign countries including Karaq, Kafaghanistan and Kaveitnam should be part of judicial trials and fully justified in the higher courts
9. How strange it is that when Zulimistan attacked Karaq and massacred innocent Karaqi people, no country in the world prevented it from playing havoc and instead helped him in infliction of cruelties
10. They spared no effort in infliction of atrocities on Muslims
11. An act of torture can be infliction of pain, abuse, ill treatment,
12. could not have done such a horrid infliction upon herself as cutting herself and drying up her
13. Gravity can’t be mass infliction because what comes from a star when things go wrong is heat escaping
14. But in stark contradiction to these messages inciting fear, pain and suffering through the infliction of physical maiming and the command for revenge and equitable retribution, we read in the gospel of Matthew Jesus’ definitive redefining of past religious rules and laws espoused throughout the writings of the Old Testament;
15. You may be wondering how God’s love can be unconditional if the Creator doesn’t receive our love back in return, and/or if we choose to transgress against Self and others through the infliction of the burden of pain imposed from a personal attitude of vitriol, vindictiveness, destructiveness and hatred
16. THE NATURE OF THE INFLICTION TO BE EXECUTEE
17. the hundreds of instances where the infliction of death was the penalty for crimes
18. The dictionary tells us it is the infliction of penalty
19. as a retaliation for offence, never defines the nature of the infliction to be executes
20. instances where the infliction of death was the penalty for crimes
21. the infliction of PENALTY for an offence
22. NATURE OF THE INFLICTION TO BE EXECUTEE
23. where the infliction of death was the penalty for crimes
24. tells us it is the infliction of PENALTY for an offence
25. for the hundreds of instances where the infliction of death was the penalty for crimes
26. The dictionary tells us it is the infliction of penalty for an offence
27. If it is a recompense of the some nature, what is the nature, how severe? The term punishment as a retaliation for offence, never defines the nature of the infliction to be executes
28. I challenge the reader to search the Old Testament for the hundreds of instances where the infliction of death was the penalty for crimes
29. If any man admits it, I shall hold him to the inevitable conclusion that the phrase “everlasting punishment” means nothing more nor less than the everlasting infliction of a penalty for an offence, as demanded by law, but does not state what the penalty shall be
30. It merely states the infliction of a penal of recompense as justly “due,” but does not state the nature of it
31. Why not? Jest one reason—punishment does not carry with it an essential idea of misery, but means the infliction of a penalty prescribed by the law for a crime
32. Is it not an infliction for crime, meted out to the offender by a duly qualified officer? Absolutely correct
33. But my opponents argue that death will be going on forever, and that it will be a living death and eternal infliction, yet they admit there will be no more death, while their eyes are fixed on the mighty hordes of humanity struggling—dying and never dead; and always dead, and still alive
34. If the Dictionary had said, punishment means any infliction of pain, and such had been it accustomed use, then all controversy would have to close, provide it be shown to be free from corruptions
35. It said punishment is the infliction of a penalty of pain or loss or other retributive burdens by a duly qualified officer, as prescribed by law
36. Test it on its own principle, and let it die with the infliction of its own sword
37. But then the inquiry is naturally suggested, If death, in the case of Adam, signified the dissolution of his compound nature, and after that, the infliction of everlasting suffering upon his soul in hell (a definition which assuredly fixes our attention upon the fate of the spirit; a fate, in comparison of which the mortality of the body was a circumstance unworthy of regard), how could the simple death of an animal, the shedding of its blood, which was the extinction of 'the life thereof,’ convey to his mind the idea of such a destiny? He was not commanded to inflict on the unoffending creature a series of prolonged tortures; much less was he directed to contemplate the condition of its 'spirit’ when the life was gone; but he was ordered to slay it, to kill it, to destroy it, to put it to death
38. 23), 'It shall come to pass that every soul which shall not hear this prophet shall be destroyed from among the people’ (ejxoloqreuqh>setai), shows that the punishment of rejecting Christ is karat or the anathema,—extermination, under 'sorer infliction
39. It is further to be observed that all the terms used in the law of Moses in illustration of the meaning of the death-penalty, which was the generic 'curse of the law,’ signify the same idea; and in no case look forward to the infliction of suffering on a being living forever; and this notwithstanding there is a wide difference in the intensity and duration of the positive inflictions of suffering, by which the ultimate destruction, or extermination, was to be wrought
40. It was here, if anywhere, that the 'wages of sin’ should have been plainly declared, and they are declared in language, which uniformly signifies the infliction of suffering ending in death
41. We conclude, therefore, that the death-penalty of the Law of Moses signified the destruction of life, and that this is the curse, however varied in the details of infliction, from which the Divine Incarnate Life descends on earth to redeem mankind
42. Let it be observed, then, that our Lord never even makes a question of it, but decisively takes it for granted that 'Sodom and Gomorrah,’ which were destroyed once by fire for their sins, have yet to undergo a second and more awful infliction in 'the day of judgment
43. ’ From these words it is evident, in the first place, that there is no such doctrine as 'everlasting wrath’ in the Old Testament: and, secondly, that the holy prophet declares such an intention on God's part as an eternal infliction would necessarily be followed by the 'failure’ or cessation of the souls which He has made
44. If it be asserted that it was the presence of the Godhead within which dispensed with the infliction of endless pains, through the substitution of an Infinite Majesty for the infinitely extended misery of a finite being, we reply, that this is an 'afterthought of theology’ which finds no place in the authoritative record
45. They are entirely right in refusing to entertain the conception of a propitiation for sin founded on the infliction of suffering on an innocent creature
46. But, secondly, I venture to think that the large preponderance of argument is on the side of those who do not rely on this presumptive analogy against survival, but rather on the New Testament Revelation; which compels us to believe that in the death which men now die, the curse is executed in such a manner (in the survival of the soul) as to allow of its reversal by the resurrection of the same man to life, or of its second infliction, under the irremediable condition of extinction of 'both soul and body in hell’ (Matt
47. ’ And by Christ Himself it seems to be distinctly said that men who are thus judged will corporeally appear before God to undergo the infliction
48. It would be extreme folly to allow the rhetorical extravagances of some teachers of endless torment to blind us to the fact,—if the New Testament does really teach it as a fact,—that God’s judgment will be executed by an infliction of fearful severity if of limited duration
49. The effect of the tenet of endless suffering has naturally been to induce its advocates to soften as much as possible the threatening of direct infliction, until at last, in this age, the very defense of the doctrine of endless misery has come to rest on a 'figurative, interpretation of the hell threatened in the Bible
50. On a subject so overpowering I desire to speak with profound caution and reserve; but I acknowledge that the positiveness with which both good and bad men at the present time decide against any retributive infliction, seems to me at variance both with Scripture and the analogies of the world that now is