Jerusalem had seen all what happened to the northern kingdom when Shalmaneser had carried them away, yet she kept right on in her evil course and did not repent of her idolatries, her vile immoralities and wickedness.
The vilest immoralities were linked with all this false worship.
Now Homer was, in a sense, the Bible of the Greeks, and as society improved in morals, and thought was directed more and more fearlessly towards religious questions, the puzzle as to the immoralities of the gods became acute.
On the one hand there are the innumerable immoralities and savageries that are found in all the records of mythology.
While the Papacy has become a secular sovereignty, learning and arts have assumed the sacerdotal habit, and the boldest immoralities of a society comparable to that of the ancient Empire flourish in the petty Courts of ecclesiastical princes.
The crimes and immoralities of Romish priests have long been crying to heaven for vengeance; they now cry for it from every quarter of the globe.
And if so, should we not be lenient to immoralities and crimes committed in darker ages, if the ordinary current of men's lives was lofty and religious?
The high-priests exercised but a feeble influence; and even Eli could not, or did not, restrain the glaring immoralities of his own sons.
Fully realising which facts, he will see that the immoralities of trade are in great part traceable to an immoral public opinion.
No; it seems probable that close inquiry would show few if any classes to be free from immoralities that are as great, relatively to the temptations, as those which we have been exposing.
In England my desire is to ward off this result, to which, I think, our aristocracy are driving fast by uniting their cause with the perfidious immoralities of the Continent.
The mode in which those in power fight to retain the public immoralities proclaims the quality of their motives.
The immoralities of Krishna are discussed and palliated in Mrs. Besant's Magazine for the instruction of young students.
So far as I have been able to learn, there are no positive immoralities connected with Buddhistic worship.
My belief is that such an exposition of public immoralities will do good, by exciting pity for the victims and wholesale indignation against the abettors and perpetrators.
In elegant drawing-rooms they abstain from such utterances, but fill club-room and street with their immoralities of speech.
They dealt with the true nature of God, the conceptions men ought to form of Him, and the immoralities of the pagan deities.
This usage was so deeply rooted among the Romans that, when Augustus destroyed the temple of Mutinus in the Velian ward in consequence of the immoralities to which it gave rise, a dozen others soon rose to take its place.
Our sketch of the immoralities of the French court naturally ends here.
Drunkenness, luxury andimmoralities of the most degrading kind are eating up the very life of Kamouraska to-day.
The drunkenness and other immoralitiesof the clergy, pictured to me by that priest, surpassed all I had ever heard or known.
Even newspapers are always eloquent against the disgusting immoralities of breaking knockers and bonneting policemen.
His scandalous immoralities alienated his duchess from him, and no happiness was to be found amidst the splendors of their home.
The immoralities of the Duke of Orleans were such that it has often been said of him, "Nothing became his life so much as his manner of leaving it.
If,” says Bishop Butler, “a supposed revelation contain clearimmoralities or contradictions, either of these would prove it false.
That during the continuance of slavery, immoralities were rife.
He never felt himself wrong, and the sophistries he used to justify his immoralities are both ludicrous and pitiable.
With the New Learning came also those vices and immoralities that characterized the decline of classical civilization.
The scandalous immoralities of king and courtiers were made attractive by the glitter of superficial accomplishment and by exquisite suavity and polish of manner.
Tacitus dwells with delight upon the simple life of the uncivilized Germans, and sets their virtues in strong contrast with the immoralities of the refined and cultured Romans.
I now return to the State of the Stage, where I left it, about the Year 1697, from whence this Pursuit of its Immoralities has led me farther than I first design'd to have follow'd it.
I have never taken an active part in these discussions, but I have long seen that woman is a victim to the vices, crimes and immoralities of man, with no power to protect and defend herself from these evils.
Here they found the vilest immoralities being practiced; they discovered that the rumors which had induced their appointment were far surpassed by the revolting facts.
Verbally, of course, they assent to the whole code of immoralities connected with future retribution, but "a certain obstinate rationality" in them prevents their translating their faith into practice.
Hence the twin evils of the time—on the one hand the nation’s trust in heathen powers and silly oscillation between Egypt and Assyria; on the other the gross immoralities to which the Baals had seduced its sons.
Moreover, though this may not have been true of all of them, some both in Jerusalem and among the exiles were partakers of other men’s sins; for Jeremiah charges them with the prevailing immoralities of the day—adultery and untruth.
The immoralities consequent upon pilgrimages, about which even the ancient church complained, were also only too apparent in this later age.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "immoralities" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.