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    Use "sinner's" in a sentence

    sinner's example sentences

    sinner's


    1. "When the sinner's spirit came before this formidable judge it retained its appearance for some time after leaving its robe of flesh


    2. His earthly form was reflected in the sinner's eyes by a huge mirror set in burning coals akin to the throne of judgement


    3. "When the sinner's soul had suffered all the punishment that was its due, it was dragged once again to the fierce ruler of hell who determined if the spirit was cleaned of sin


    4. necessity of insisting on the sinner's immediate


    5. Morrison's own,--heaven forbid that I should have anything to do with such an expression--and I suppose she meant by it thieving, murder, and other grossnesses that would bring the sinner, as she often told her awe-struck Dorcas class, to infallible gallows, and the sinner's parents' grey hairs to sorrowful graves


    6. In the mental anguish version of Hell for sins after death, Hell is not a place but a state of mind, of anguish caused by separation from God, the sinner punishes himself after death; it is not God that punishes him, but where are all the sinners that are punishing themselves? If they are not in Heaven or Hell, where are they? Alexander Campbell: "The sinner's suffering by mental agony, produced by sin, greater than could be caused by material fire," "Five discourses on Hell" 1848


    7. As the result of the habit of sinning, formed in this life, a tendency to repeat acts of sin is carried on by the sinner into a future world; and every such act repeated in that world not only perpetuates, but increases the tendency to further acts of the same kind: and thus, as by every repeated act the tendency to sin is increased, and as every act also brings with it its own punishment, so, by the laws of man's mental and moral nature, the sinner's progress in both sin and suffering in a future world, is like that of a falling body, which increases its velocity as the square of the distance increase through which it falls


    8. The sense of the verb to die here, however, which is admitted by all, shows what its proper meaning is in relation to other inhabitants of Gehenna; for if a worm’s death in Gehenna would be its ceasing to exist, the same must be true of the sinner's; unless it can be shown that in relation to hell itself the word death has two opposite meanings


    9. said, "The sinner's suffering by mental agony, produced by sin, greater than could be caused by material fire


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