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Enflesh

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En`flesh´
v. t.1.To clothe with flesh.
Vices which are . . . enfleshed in him.
- Florio.


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I perform this act of disarmament to enflesh Isaiah's prophecy of a disarmed world, to follow Christ's example of universal love, and to comply with universally recognized humanitarian law.
In her wounds we see God's refusal to remain aloof from creation--apathetic, unmoved, uncaring--just insofar as God decided to enflesh herself in all of the processes and lifeforms that constitute life as we know it.
Myths," as Warner writes, "written or pictured, enflesh abstractions and, by incarnating imaginary beings, they reproduce the very process they narrate; it is the image and the text which bring the idea to life, although the artist, the mythographer and the sources they are both using, often assume that they are transcribing an ulterior reality.
 
 
 
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