The words have become proverbial and threadbare as a commonplace of Christian feeling.
If you do that thoroughly, you will not need to say, 'I am from another country.
But Scripture, with characteristic reticence, is silent about all but the fact.
Some of us have been called by God's providence to give up the light of our eyes, the joy of our homes, to Him.
And so, if Jesus bears our names upon His heart, that does not express merely representation nor merely intercession, but it expresses also personal regard, individualising knowledge.
Therefore, 'see that ye despise not one of these little ones,' each of whom is held by the divine will in the grasp of an individualising love which nothing can loosen.
There is something, again, wanting in the man who utterly lacks the individualising realism and tenderness of the woman, as in the woman who can show no comprehension of view or bravery of enterprise.
The words to which this applies are mostly such as are more commonly used in the plural, and the en becomes, as Norris calls it, “an individualising particle.
By dropping the syllable en or an from the singular; or rather in this case the singular is formed from a plural, usually more or less collective, by adding the individualising suffix an or en.
It was not enough for him, in his time of need, to stay himself upon a vague universal goodness, but he had to clasp to his burdened heart the individualising thought, 'the God of Israel is my God.
And now, mark, for the carrying out of that divine purpose in regard to us, and for our possession of the proffered mercy, the same individualising and isolating process is needful as was needful for the conviction of the sin.
The thought is remarkable, both in its realisation of God's individualising relation to the soul that trusts Him, and as in some degree favouring the Davidic authorship.
To such lowly offices of continual individualising care will the Master of many legions stoop, reaching out from amid their innumerable myriads to sustain a poor weak man stumbling under a load too great for him.
The same individualising love which is manifested in that mighty universal Atonement, if we rightly understand it, is manifested in all His dealings with us.
There isindividualising love and care, and as the basis of both, individualising knowledge.
Deliverance and security are the results of that individualising care.
It is hard to realise the essentially individualising and isolating character of our relation to Jesus Christ.
But there are two other variations of this thought in the Old Testament even more tenderly suggestive of that individualising care and strong sufficient love than the emblem of my text.
If we trust Him we shall be citizens of the City of God; shall be filled with the life of Christ; shall be objects of an individualising love and care; shall be accepted in that Day; and shall enter in through the gates into the city.
Another idea suggested by this emblem is experience of divine individualising knowledge and care.
He has a clear individualising knowledge of each; each separately has a place in His mind or heart.
And His messages of blessing are as specific and individualising as the love from which they come.
Thus we ascend step by step to the point at which the above-described psychological process caused the individualising of the mythic figures.
This national interpretation of the myth is only another side of the process which resulted in individualising the mythical figures and created personalities of theological significance.
Remembrance of these contests, in the absence of historical names, helped itself out by the mythical appellations which, after the individualising of mythical figures, had obtained significance as personal names.
We have in Christ's words an illustration of His individualising knowledge.
This individualising knowledge and drawing love and authority are all expressed, as I think, in that one word 'Zacchaeus.
It occurs in many of the psalms attributed to him, and may fairly be regarded as a characteristic of his ardent and individualising devotion.
He does not as yet display any particular talent for individualising his clowns.
Note how he has succeeded in individualising this passion.
This poor man" is by most of the older expositors taken to be the psalmist, but by the majority of moderns supposed to be an individualising way of saying, "poor men.
But there are no individualising features in the royal portrait, and it is so idealised, or rather spiritualised, that it is hard to suppose that any single monarch was before the singer's mind.
The individualisingname "My God" occurs in each verse, and the deliverance underlying the theophany is described in terms which prepare for the fuller celebration of victory in the last part of the psalm.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "individualising" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.