Slowly but surely the judgements of believers, lay and clerical, are being permeated with some sense of historical perspective.
This is the biblical idea of Christianity; man, through Christ, flooded and permeated and interpenetrated with the Holy Spirit of God.
And just as the plant glorifies the sun by turning to, and being permeated and vivified and built up by, the warmth and light of its rays, similarly man must glorify God.
The greenness of the sky was clearing gradually, and becomingpermeated with gold.
Let no one think they did not drink at Jamestown: the whole settlement was permeated with taverns and ale-houses.
It has permeated the elegance of noble boudoirs, and entered the abode of the humble.
The Taoist conception that immortality lay in the eternal change permeated all their modes of thought.
Bolsheviki meetings permeated with the same spirit were organized at Petrograd, Moscow, and other cities.
He began by experimenting with a pump on water placed in a barrel, but found that when the water was drawn off the air permeated the wood.
Its employment altered the whole art of war, and its influence gradually and indirectly permeated and affected the whole fabric of society.
The plays are permeated through and through with Stoicism, and the expression given to certain Stoical doctrines is often almost identical with passages from the philosophical works.
The plays are permeated by a strong vein of Stoicism.
All the Jews of Russia are permeated at the present moment by one thought: that the cruel system of endless restrictions and disabilities undermines the very basis of their existence, that it is impossible to continue such a life.
A large number of these college youths returned home permeated with revolutionary ideas--living witnesses to the sagacity of a Government which saw its reason for existence in the suppression of all revolutionary strivings.
In this wise, the national element gradually permeated even the doctrine of Socialism which, in its essence, had always been opposed to it and had placed in its stead the principle of internationalism and class interests.
The only available fuel was buffalo manure, of which the odor permeated all our food.
Probably as many as fifty were thus inserted, some into the head of the wax model, some into the shoulders, some into the trunk, some upwards through the soles of the feet, till the figure was completely permeated with pins.
He was permeatedwith its scenes, with its substance, and with its odours.
He is permeated by a spirit of adoring reverence, which comes out in every one of his angels and martyrs.
Christ and the Woman of Samaria (with her classical urn) is a subject we have already met with elsewhere: here, it is much permeated by Renaissance feeling.
Time alone will tell whether or not the virus of slavery and injustice has too fully permeated our Southern civilization for a complete recovery.
At the beginning of this war we were not permeated with justice, and so were not ripe for victory.
In a few moments a fire was burning brightly, water was boiling, pots were steaming, the odor of venison permeated the cool air.
A breathing, lonely spirit of solitude permeated the black dell.
Later on in life, when they are thoroughly permeated by these acquired and well-practised feelings, they think it a matter of propriety and decorum to provide a kind of justification for these predilections and aversions.
All things that endure for a long time are little by little so greatlypermeated by reason that their origin in unreason becomes improbable.
Love wishes to spare the other to whom it devotes itself any feeling of strangeness: as a consequence it is permeated with disguise and simulation; it keeps on deceiving continuously, and feigns an equality which in reality does not exist.
Just below the summit was a complete bay of snow, girdled with two sharp peaks of red baked schists and gneiss, strangely contorted, and thrown up at all angles with no prevalent dip or strike, and permeated with veins of granite.
Immense veins of granite permeated the rocks, which were crumpled in the strangest manner: isolated angular blocks of schist had been taken up by the granite in a fluid state, and remained imbedded in it.
The rationalistic liberalism of Unitarianism has largely permeated New England Protestantism.
The Abbe knew it by the sweet influences which permeated him.
Her whole face beamed with radiance, she exhaled a delicious odour, she was full of life; and Serge felt that she permeated him through all his senses.
Now, these mere recollections sufficed to make her all powerful, her influence permeated the church.
Near them there was a large patch of heliotropes, whose vanilla-like breath permeated the air with velvety softness.
He made no effort, he simply fell upon his knees, to receive it in his heart, to be permeated with it to the marrow of his bones in sweetest and most refreshing fulness.
No discomfort came to him from the great travail of love that permeated that splendid morning.
His soul was 'permeated with loveliness,' and asked no fragrance.
At a later age, when the doctrines of this society had permeated all Islam, it seems to have labored very zealously to teach both women and men gratuitously all learning, and give them the freest use of books.
Positive, narrow, over-bearing, he was permeated with the dogmatic egotism of his successful life.
To our forefathers, especially of the German nation, nothing was more sacred than the Christian religion; no people like the German has absorbed it so fully, has been so permeatedwith it.