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29 Sentences With "broken faith"

How to use broken faith in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "broken faith" and check conjugation/comparative form for "broken faith". Mastering all the usages of "broken faith" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Just as Moses couldn't enter the promised land because he had broken faith with God, much of the current House leadership has broken faith with its voters.
They have broken faith with the values that built the United States.
Democratic lawmakers who have become complacent or broken faith with their party by voting with Republicans -- like Texas Democratic Rep.
He's broken faith not just with his own party but with the people sworn to serve our interests abroad, at real personal risk.
"Earmarks have become a symbol of a Congress that has broken faith with the people," then-House Speaker John Boehner said at the time.
READ: Broken Faith: Inside the Catholic Church's plan to quietly pay survivors of abuse There have been at least 22002 allegations of sex abuse in police Explorer programs since it began 22010 years ago.
He had been orphaned by the Nazis and their identification number, A-7713, was tattooed on his arm as a physical manifestation of his broken faith and the nightmares that would haunt him throughout his life.
Read: BROKEN FAITH: Inside the Catholic Church's plan to quietly pay survivors of sexual abuse The legislatures of Montana and Washington, D.C., have also passed similar bills this year, according to the anti-child abuse advocacy group Child USA.
Trump has technically not repealed a narrower Obama policy called DACA, which protected Dreamer children from deportation and allowed them to work legally in the U.S. But the president has broken faith with the promise of DACA publicly enough for the program to be considered in grave danger.
Writing early in the Tony Blair era, Hitchens argued that Britain's rulers had broken faith with the island nation's past, burying its history, customs and traditions, subjecting their people to a misguided European pseudo-empire, and tolerating social decay and disarray as the price of tolerance and progress.
Associated Press reporters Mitch Weiss and Holbrook Mohr wrote the book Broken Faith: Inside the Word of Faith Fellowship, One of America’s Most Dangerous Cults.
Magkaagaw (International title: Broken Faith / ) is a 2019 Philippine drama television series broadcast by GMA Network. The series premiered on the network's Afternoon Prime and Sabado Star Power sa Hapon line up and worldwide on GMA Pinoy TV on October 21, 2019, replacing Hanggang sa Dulo ng Buhay Ko.
Ziba is mentioned in three places. In 2 Samuel 9, David speaks to him and tells him how Mephibosheth will be his master. In 2 Samuel 16, when David flees Jerusalem after Absalom's conspiracy, Ziba comes to David with provisions, and claims that Mephibosheth has broken faith with David. David responds by giving all that belonged to Mephibosheth to Ziba instead.
Bob perfected things that are now standard in independent music > far beyond folk circles. > …Stringband's core audience was the broad political and cultural left, the > folks who built the anti-war movements, the environmental movement, and the > women's movement… Stringband played their benefits and articulated their > vision of the world. The band, and Bob and Marie-Lynn as individual artists, > have never broken faith with these people or their beliefs.
France made peace with Spain, but because the secret clauses of the Triple Alliance were soon made public, Louis XIV felt insulted by the "perfidious" Dutch, who according to him had broken faith. Immediately after the peace agreement, France took steps to isolate the Republic. Sweden and Münster were quickly bribed, but the English public distrusted Louis XIV. The English king, on the other hand, saw war with the Dutch as being in his best interests.
Magkaagaw (International title: Broken Faith / ) is a Philippine television drama series broadcast by GMA Network. Directed by Gil Tejada, Jr., it stars Sheryl Cruz and Sunshine Dizon in the title role. It premiered on October 21, 2019 on the network's Afternoon Prime and Sabado Star Power sa Hapon line up replacing Hanggang sa Dulo ng Buhay Ko. The series marked as the comeback show of Dennis Padilla, Polo Ravales, and Isay Alvarez in the network after two, four, and three years respectively. It is streaming online on YouTube.
William Disney briefed John Wildman and Danvers, who was cautious; he may have undertaken to raise the City of London in favour of the Duke of Monmouth. Also involved in the London plotting was Matthew Meade, who lingered in Essex. Then Nathaniel Hooke was sent to London and Danvers, as Monmouth moved into Somerset. At first he said he would not take up arms till the duke was proclaimed king; and when Monmouth had been proclaimed, that republicans were absolved from all engagements to a leader who had broken faith.
Shea, along with his mate Samuel Miller, was killed in November 1872 by "absconding" indentured workers while on an expedition to Mukkine (now Muccanoo Pool on Muccan Station), on the De Grey River to "recover the services of some native divers who had broken faith with him". Shay Gap was a company town, developed by Mount Goldsworthy Mining Associates to service nearby iron ore mines. The town was designed in 1970 by Lawrence Howroyd, for whom it won an Award of Merit in the 1974 Prince Philip Prize for Australian Design. Iron ore production started in January 1973.
In the years that followed the condition of things grew worse. Thousands of lives were lost and large sums expended in extending Ismail's dominions in the Sudan and in futile conflicts with Ethiopia. In 1875, the impoverishment of the fellah had reached such a high point that the ordinary resources of the country no longer sufficed for the most urgent necessities of administration; and the khedive Ismail, having repeatedly broken faith with his creditors, could not raise any more loans on the European market. The taxes were habitually collected many months in advance, and the colossal floating debt was increasing rapidly.
Further weakness on the part of some of our people, broken faith > and make-believe, have postponed the enthronement of the living Republic, > but the proclamation of Easter Week and the declaration of independence > stand and must stand for ever. No man, no matter how far he has fallen away > from his national faith, has dared to repudiate them. They constitute the > rallying centre for the unbought manhood of Ireland in the fight that must > be made to make them effective and to redeem the nation's self-respect that > was abandoned by a section of our people in 1923." > "The time has come to make that fight.
The treaty was widely perceived with indignation by France's former allies like the Dutch, England, Venice, Savoy, and the Grisons. This was best summed up by the Venetians describing it as > "Broken faith, false promises, secret intrigues, plain trickeries, 'Yea' in > the mouth, and 'Nay' in the heart, have between them ended in a > treaty...full of treachery and injury to Venice, Savoy, and the Grisons, > with the sole end of satisfying Spain, since all the advantages are on her > side." They had all been tricked into thinking France was helping them, when France under Richelieu was only interested in itself. Furthermore, the aforementioned parties were angry that they were not included in the negotiations.
When a female archaeologist discovers an ancient skeleton of a man and an Aramaic inscription which reads Melek Yehudayai (King of the Jews), the Israel government invites the Vatican to investigate the matter, as they suspect the body could be that of Jesus Christ. When one of the renowned archaeologist- priests of Vatican committed suicide as a man of broken faith, former soldier and Catholic priest Jim Folan is assigned to continue the investigation. Father Folan arrives in Israel to work with the reluctant archaeologist Sharon Golban, and the mystery deepens with danger and intrigue. Suddenly they find that the Vatican, the United States, the Soviets, Mossad and the Mafia are after the truth.
If I shall do to the contrary, I subject myself thenceforward, > as if it were now, to all the penalties of the law against relapsed > heretics, recusants, seditious offenders, traitors, backbiters, sycophants, > who have been openly convicted, and also to those ordained against > perjurers. I submit myself also to arbitrary correction, whether by the > Archbishop of Trier or by any other magistrates under whom it may befall me > to dwell, and who may he certified of my relapse and of my broken faith, > that they may punish me according to my deserts, in honor and reputation, > property and person. In testimony of all which I have, with my own hand, > signed this my recantation of the aforesaid articles, in presence of notary > and witnesses. (Signed) CORNELIUS LOOSÆUS CALLIDIUS.
The Western Railway was a financial failure, and soon after it went into operation the government had to take it over from its bankrupt owners. Landholders in the railway district felt that the government take-over had changed the relationship between taxpayers and the railway, and that they were "morally exonerated from the principle of local taxation which they had endorsed when the district was polled in 1865. Since that period an entirely new principle had been adopted in the case of the Main Line Railway, and when they hesitated to pay their special rate, they acted on the conviction that it was the Government, and not they, who had broken faith." The landholders launched a tax resistance campaign, forcing the government to capitulate and rescind the tax.
Six months later, in October 2000, the Appellate Division of New York State Supreme Court, unanimously overturned the lower court's ruling, stating, "There was no evidence of favoritism...There was no evidence that Maximus was afforded unfair access." October 2000- Six state lawmakers in Wisconsin called for the termination of Maximus' W-2 contract, saying the firm has "broken faith with the state and poor people the agency serves in Milwaukee County." June 2001- The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that two Maximus employees filed discrimination complaints against the company. The employees stated that Maximus is so lacking in diversity that the companies minority employees referred to it as "White Castle/" July 2007- Maximus settled a lawsuit brought against it by the United States government for involvement in falsifying Medicaid claims for $30.5 million.
The McMahon–Hussein letter of 24 October 1915. George Antonius – who had been the first to publish the correspondence in full – described this letter as "by far the most important in the whole correspondence, and may perhaps be regarded as the most important international document in the history of the Arab national movement... is still invoked as the main piece of evidence on which the Arabs accuse Great Britain of having broken faith with them." The McMahon–Hussein Correspondence is a series of letters that were exchanged during World War I in which the United Kingdom government agreed to recognize Arab independence after the war in exchange for the Sharif of Mecca launching the Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire. The correspondence had a significant impact on Middle Eastern history during and after the war, and a dispute over Palestine continued thereafter.
It proved impossible to stop his wounds bleeding and gradually the old man's strength ebbed away. Toward midnight the Earl's old comrade Essex had time to understand his condition, and sent some officers to enquire for him, and promise speedy surgical attendance. Lindsey was still full of spirit, and spoke to them so strongly of their broken faith, and of the sin of disloyalty and rebellion, that they slunk away one by one out of the hut, and dissuaded Essex from coming himself to see his old friend, as he had intended. The surgeon, however, arrived, but too late, Lindsey was already so much exhausted by cold and loss of blood, that he died early in the morning of the 24 October 1642, as he was being carried through the gates of Warwick Castle where other Royalist prisoners were being kept.
These covers were returned when the Justice Department chose to take no action, "and whatever happened to them was kept quiet". Among the astronauts interviewed in NASA's investigation was Apollo 13's Jack Swigert, who denied any dealings with envelopes; after he subsequently admitted he had, Low removed him from Apollo-Soyuz. Kraft suspended some fifteen astronauts who "had broken faith with us and ignored a standing order from Deke"; some, having apologized and served their suspensions, flew on Skylab in the mid-1970s. The covers affair resulted in prejudice in the Air Force against former astronauts (all three Apollo 15 astronauts had served there). This deterred Apollo 14's Stu Roosa from returning to the Air Force when he left NASA, leading him to go into business instead. Although Apollo 16's Charles Duke had taken covers to the lunar surface in April 1972, changes to the PPK procedures instituted by NASA meant that none were taken on Apollo 17 that December.
In March Wyndham, hounded by Unionist MPs, fell from office for having broken faith in Unionism. He retired in May 1905 driven into political oblivion by a union of angry loyalists and nationalists, including Dillon, which helped to precipitate a schism which lasted the life of the Home Rule movement. Wyndham's successor Walter Long MP pursued tighter administrative enforcement and MacDonnell was confined to a subordinate role.Maume, Patrick: The long Gestation, Irish Nationalist Life 1891–1918, p.73, Gill & Macmillan (1999) It was a severe blow to the hopes of O’Brien and Dunraven for further advancing the spirit of conciliation. During the “devolution crisis” Ulster Unionists were so outraged that the head of the Civil Service in Dublin Castle, MacDonnell, a Catholic appointed by Wyndham, was involved in the devolution plan to run Ireland through elected councils, that they set up the Ulster Unionist Council, later important in organising unionist resistance to the Government of Ireland Act 1914.

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