To: secret garden; Fierce Allegiance; Jack Deth; K4Harty; miskie; Dutchgirl; cardinal4; MoochPooch; ...
2 posted on
10/06/2011 4:20:04 AM PDT by
secret garden
(Why procrastinate when you can perendinate?)
To: secret garden
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
We're here to put a dent in the universe. -Steve Jobs, entrepreneur and inventor (1955-2011)
RIP
3 posted on
10/06/2011 4:33:40 AM PDT by
secret garden
(Why procrastinate when you can perendinate?)
To: secret garden
“... news writers occasionally employ the word when discussing the unexplainable misfortune or missteps of übercelebrities regarded as immortal gods and goddesses before being felled by their own shortcomings.”
Political. Always political.
Leave 0bama alone!
5 posted on
10/06/2011 4:51:31 AM PDT by
NicknamedBob
(Dick Cheney - "I was born an American; a blessing surely among life's greatest.")
To: secret garden
It's not hard to find the hamartia in Obama - it's hubris, pure and simple!
Lamh Foistenach Abu!
6 posted on
10/06/2011 4:51:31 AM PDT by
ConorMacNessa
(HM/2 USN, 3/5 Marines RVN 1969 - St. Michael the Archangel defend us in Battle!)
To: secret garden
"Hamartia! Hamartia! Hamartia!" was the cry, sibling jealousy her fatal flaw.
To: secret garden
JFK was quite the partier
Clinton, too, but he was naughtier
But Obama don’t play
He’s above all the fray
Being haughty is his hamartia
24 posted on
10/06/2011 6:31:43 AM PDT by
TruthShallSetYouFree
("Nanny Care State" is not a Division 3 football powerhouse.)
To: secret garden
This is the week you and I look forward to all year - texas/ou..... no matter who wins, you and I are guaranteed that one of them LOSES! What a great game.
To: mikrofon; Constitution Day; Tijeras_Slim; Charles Henrickson; Slings and Arrows
To: secret garden; martin_fierro; mikrofon
"Harmartia" arose from the Greek verb "hamartanein," meaning "to miss the mark" or "to err." In the New Testament, which was written in Greek, hamartia is the most common and most general word for "sin." The noun "sin," the adjective "sinful," and the verb "to sin," all come from the same hamart- root.
I have taught New Testament Greek, and I read the NT in Greek all the time, so this word is very familiar to me.
To: secret garden
89 posted on
10/06/2011 8:01:41 PM PDT by
MoochPooch
(I'm a compassionate cynic.)
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