“But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves” — James 1:22, NKJV. Our departed brother James offers sound instruction for those of his ...
It matters little whether or not we approve of the message, or the messenger; our “duty” is to hear and recognize God’s word, and to be obedient to it. Our assessment of the sermon may or may not be “good,” but if it is God’s truth that is preached, we are bound by it to be doers of that word. Then to consider whether or not it was a “good” sermon, or one that could have been much better.
Think a page belongs somewhere else in your document? If so, Microsoft Word offers a couple of ways to change the location of your pages.
Place the cursor where you want your content to start, right-click there, and select “Keep Source Formatting.” You can use your trackpad, mouse, or even keyboard to make the selection. In the “Headings” tab, you’ll see all the headings used in your current document. If so, Microsoft Word offers a couple of ways to change the location of your pages. Obviously, for this to work, you must have heading sections in your document. On Word’s left side, you’ll see the “Navigation” pane.
If you want a hyperlink to always work, use absolute and relative hyperlinks appropriately in a Microsoft Word document.
When you want to link to another location in the current document, you’ll use the same interface to add a hyperlink to a heading or bookmark that’s in the same document. Knowing the difference between relative and absolute hyperlinks can prevent failures when linking to documents outside your domain. In fact, you can even force Word to use absolute hyperlinks as follow: If you add or delete pages, the hyperlink knows where the Section Two heading is, and you don’t need to update the hyperlink itself. After adding the hyperlink, you can click it to go to the Section Two heading. - First, enter heading text, Section Two, and apply the Heading 2 style. If you want to change the hyperlink’s text, right-click it and choose Edit Hyperlink from the resulting submenu. Word is smart enough to recognize a URL or email address and responds by formatting the address as a hyperlink. A relative hyperlink contains an address that is relative to the current domain or file location. A hyperlink is specially formatted content that responds to a click by opening a file, a web page or moving the cursor to another location in the same file. This is an absolute link; it will always take you to the same place unless that page no longer exists. Inserting hyperlinks is a simple task, but you can run into trouble when inserting hyperlinks to external files.
June Casagrande shares some of the basic rules of English grammar for school-aged learners.
Want to know the plural of “species”? Look up the word and you’ll see the note: “plural: species.” Not sure if it’s “dreamed” or “dreamt”? Just look up “dream” in the dictionary and you’ll see both are correct. Use “affect” as a verb and “effect” as a noun: Caffeine doesn’t affect me. You use these things perfectly every day in English — for example “I sent him an email” uses the indirect object “him” and the direct object “an email.” Your teacher will give English translations so you’ll see instantly what these terms mean. Don’t write “who’s” when you mean “whose.” With an apostrophe, “who’s” means “who is” or “who has”: Who’s there? (In rare cases, “effect” can be a verb meaning to bring something about: “to effect positive change.” Even rarer, “affect” can be a noun meaning mental state. Instead, use “it’s” only when you mean “it is” or “it has”: It’s raining. Don’t get confused by the metal lead, which is pronounced like “led.” “They’re” with an apostrophe means “they are”: They’re nice. “Whose” deals with possession: Whose car is that? “Their” shows possession: Their grades got better. Don’t write “it’s” in place of “its.” When you want to show possession, as in “The dog wagged its tail,” don’t use an apostrophe.
Judicial originalism, I would argue, is something of a younger cousin to biblical literalism. Adherents to the originalist doctrine expect jurists to follow the ...
They believe the framers of the Constitution themselves would be astonished to find this almost godly devotion to their every utterance. If only more originalists in our day could appropriate the idea of theologian Karl Barth for their own Constitutional work. They know that the great principles of the Constitution, along with its very specific rules, require interpretation for our dynamic and evolving society. We should applaud those who critique a rigid or static view of the written text and prize its intentionally broad and open-ended language. It’s the kind of foundation they believe every family deserves. Critics of the originalist project find it absurd to give exclusive place to text over context.