So why devote my first blog of the New Year to this seemingly irrelevant topic? Because part of me thinks a look live is equivalent to lying to the audience, and journalism is supposed to be about telling the truth.
I took an informal survey of a group of journalists, representing every Canadian network and one local Toronto station, currently at work in a variety of jobs including producing, reporting, and directing, to see how they feel about look lives.
Nate Brooks (MDiv, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary; PhD, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary) is an assistant professor of Christian counseling and the coordinator of the Christian counseling program at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, North Carolina. Nate teaches introductory and specialized counseling courses while guiding students throughout their practicums. He writes frequently for the Biblical Counseling Coalition and is the coauthor of Help! Our Sex Life is Troubled by Past Abuse. Nate lives in South Carolina with his wife, Kate, and their children.
When I look at your preview link it is an Absolute positioned item, which means it will be different for everyone based on their screen size. For my screen, this is what I see:
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As you can see is it further to the center. If you are on a smaller screen laptop, like a 11" or 13" MacBook or MBP the height of the screen is smaller.
I was looking at Webflow Acedemy, have seen 80% of the courses but the responsibility is not clear at all. Is it possible to develop a Website in Webflow for every single device, that works and operates well, looks fine and so on?
The layout could be the culprit here. Not sure what your over design is supposed to look like. But when you are dealing with positioning, nothing is absolute in responsive design, even though the position is set to absolute. When you start resizing, that piece will be set to absolute to the parent that is set to relative. If the absolute see a different parent element as relative that could be a reason why it doesnt show exactly the same on every device.
Just as Moses called the people to recognize that their sins were the cause of the judgment of the fiery serpents, so, the apostle Paul calls the Ephesians to remember their former way of life. We cannot begin to imagine the debauchery, the public wickedness, the religious apostasy, and the horrid penalties in the flesh for such deviant practices.[8] Yet, if we are to look and live, like the Ephesians, like the Israelites in the desert, we must recognize that our state it is one of displeasing God and heaping upon ourselves the venomous consequences of our sins.
We cannot know the good news until we come face-to-face with the bad news. And the bad news is that we have fallen short of the glory of God and that we are in sin. The bite of the serpent is the fall of mankind. The virus of disobedience is passed down from one generation to another so that we are born in the state and we must be born again if we are to live. No good physician or nurse would begin treating without first assessing and diagnosing. This is the case with the apostle Paul. In the assessment of their sins leads him to the diagnosis that they were, in fact, dead in their trespasses and in their sins.
Until you confess that you were dead in your trespasses and sins you cannot be alive in Christ. Jesus Christ said that we must die to ourselves in order to live to him. Have you come face-to-face with the deadly venom of rebellion running through your spiritual veins? Do you believe that there is a way for your healing apart from God? Today is the day to recognize the existence of the otherwise incurable virus that you have, the virus of original sin.
The apostle Paul doubles down on the condition of sin in the world. Not only do individuals have the sin but if they will open their eyes and look around they will see the evidence of human defiance in others. The world is a very beautiful place created by God. But we must recognize that in the fall of mankind all of creation was infected by the fall. This is the teaching of St. Paul in Romans chapter 8 when he says that creation itself is groaning for the redemption that is in the return of Jesus Christ and a new heaven and a new earth. Look around: look around and you will see not only sin but the effects of sin all over the world. You will also see men and women scrambling in the desert, as it were, seeking to find all kind of remedies to take care of the poisonous and ruinous condition. But there is nothing to do. There is no remedy within their grasp. And this is critical for the believer to understand. We will not find our fulfillment from the world around us but from Almighty God within us as we receive him by faith.
What a remarkable couplet of sacred readings today: Numbers 21:4-9; and Ephesians 2:1-10. Together they have demonstrated to us the glorious truth that we can look up and live: by looking back in confessing our sin, by looking around to see that the world is in the same condition and has either no answers or bad answers to our inconsolable condition; then we have seen that the remedy is to look up and live. Look up and see the Lord Jesus Christ by faith and receive him into your life. Then, St. Paul shows us that we can go forward. We can move toward the promised land and eternal life, but we can also move toward being the people God made us to be. These passages are nothing less than absolutely life-transforming.
One of the challenges of this text is that it is just too good to be true. Yet, in the amazing method of salvation, God defies Man and glorifies Himself. I recall a young lady who had lived the life of a prostitute.[16] She had come to Jesus Christ. She had to look back. She had to look around. But, she began to look up. She believed. But she could not look forward. I counseled her from the Scriptures. I showed her that God had not created her for sin, but for a purpose. And she could walk in it. She told me about how as a child she had always been encouraged by her teachers in her studies. She was a gifted student, a conscientious person, who cared for others. I learned that her life had taken a turn due to the pain of abuse. I believe that the devil wanted her to look around and see that she had no choice but live like the world, to make her living off of the base urges unchecked by the Law of God. In doing so she nearly lost her life. But, as a new creature in Christ, she began to see that the old things were passed, behold all things had become new. And this young lady returned to college, in her mid-thirties, and she became a nurse. She was one of the most dedicated nurses one could imagine. She learned that to look up to Christ is to look forward to a new life.
Get a live look around the City of Holland thanks to our MiHollandCAM Network. Hit the play button to see a live feed and you can even change the view on several cameras by clicking 'control' on the bottom left of the image. Select your view and wait a moment as the camera moves to the new position.
In the past decade, Disney has been rolling out a series of live-action versions of its critically acclaimed animated films. From classics like Beauty and the Beast, 101 Dalmations to The Little Mermaid, the next one to look out for is the live-adaptation of Peter Pan.
Titled Peter Pan & Wendy, Disney+ has released a series of character movie posters that give fans a more detailed look at each of the major characters in the film. Fans can see an up-close shot of Jude Law as the villainous Captain Hook and Jim Gaffigan as his trusty sidekick Smee. Other actors include Alexander Molony who plays Peter Pan, Yara Shahidi as Tinker Bell, Ever Gabo Anderson as Wendy Darlin and Alyssa Wapanatahk as Tiger Lily.
Like Reynolds, we, the everyday users of video technologies within our web 2.0 economy (some of us anti-black racism activists, some of us soldiers, some of us unwitting bystanders to atrocity), can be important producers of some of the images of violence and death that saturate our screens. But, it is critical that beyond accounting for our viewing of these images, we also observe, and ask for accountability from the platforms that deliver and re-frame these images for us. Currently, the vast majority of us watch viral, and really almost all video, through platforms owned by corporate entities with for-profit mandates that have little to do with the ethical and political scrutiny that I have been suggesting is core to a media politics in a time of viral black death.
I have four built-in wooden boxes to put my clothes in. I've always lived a minimal lifestyle and traveled a lot for work, so the limited storage space works for me. I didn't have to give away any items.
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