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"miseries" Synonyms
sadnesses distresses unhappinesses sorrows despondencies anguishes depressions despairs woes melancholies dejections pains desolations agonies griefs torments gloom wretchednesses gloominesses heartaches misfortunes burdens afflictions loads ordeals trials troubles catastrophes disasters hardships adversities calamities difficulties problemata tribulations blows curses grouches moaners pessimists spoilsports sourpusses complainers dampeners dampers mopes grumps melancholiacs killjoys wowsers party poopers wet blankets prophets of doom doomsters doomsayers Cassandras doom-mongers destitutions wants indigences penuries beggaries needinesses impecuniousness pennilessness privations pauperisms impoverishments needs poverties dire straits pauperdom ruins ruinations deprivations destituteness grumblers grousers whiners curmudgeons cranks growlers crosspatches bears crabs fussers bellyachers murmurers mutterers croakers gripers subjugations suppressions cruelties despotisms authoritarianisms dominations harshnesses subjections severities brutalities persecutions repressions controls maltreatments ruthlessnesses sufferings abuses abusiveness injustices unpleasantnesses nastinesses disagreeablenesses horridnesses badnesses objectionableness obnoxiousnesses repulsivenesses awfulnesses distastefulness foulnesses grimnesses painfulnesses uglinesses dreadfulnesses horriblenesses unacceptabilities atrocities horrors hideousnesses frightfulnesses monstrosities ghastlinesses gruesomenesses grislinesses atrociousness direnesses terriblenesses vilenesses diseases disorders illnesses complaints conditions sicknesses ailments maladies infections infirmities plagues upsets blights bugs indispositions cancers cankers abnormalities twinges stitches throes aches pangs spasms throbs gripes pricks stabs twists twitches bites cramps pinches shoots smarts stings tingles degradations humiliations shames ignominies dishonors(US) dishonours(UK) indignities derogations disgraces abasements discredit mortifications obloquies More

157 Sentences With "miseries"

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

And that's not even considering all the little daily miseries.
Something seems inexorable about the miseries that befall this family.
The inherent virtue of Socialism is the equal sharing of miseries.
The newspaper also pointed out the miseries of being on the road.
The joys and miseries of a creative family in 19th-century Massachusetts.
The long miseries and brief graces of love are Cohen's obsessive subject.
He observes the minute miseries of the individual life that transcend collective traumas.
Though each episode of hyperinflation has its unique miseries, there are common patterns.
Kaufman's gift for quotidian horror remains startling; he's a whiz at minor miseries.
They're still stuck in their miseries, these rock and roll strugglers in Kolkata.
But it would hardly signal the end of the conflict or its miseries.
My correspondent did not gloss over the miseries of her sister's terminal state.
In a world of ceaseless miseries, we need music like this more than ever.
Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries.
Americans are accustomed to regarding the I.R.S. as the source of their tax miseries.
That existence is a cornucopia of delights masquerading as miseries, or perhaps vice versa.
The party owes its power to a revolt fuelled by the miseries of the countryside.
For many, though, this proved to be no more than new forms of old miseries.
Millions more face nutritional insecurity, eviction and other miseries that stem from earning too little.
Mr. Eifman dramatizes their miseries and throws in splashes of historical color amid the anguish.
It was through a post on Instagram that she was alerted to the prisoners' miseries.
Others (an addiction to cosmetic surgery, the miseries of winning the lottery) are silly beyond belief.
They can air all of their miseries to you and be as annoying as they please.
The joys and miseries of a creative family in 21st-century New York and Los Angeles.
There's the banal championing of an "undivided London," which obscures the city's many divisions and miseries.
If things could be dull or hard, at least there weren't too many miseries to contend with.
But rather than hold itself accountable, America reverses roles by blaming the poor for their own miseries.
New York City has been exempted from these miseries because the local economy has been so strong.
Neruda also composes "Canto General," his great, Whitmanesque work on the glories and miseries of Latin America.
So far, neither mass demonstrations nor economic miseries have been able to dislodge the dictatorship of Nicolás Maduro.
This could be a catastrophe to rival Hurricane Katrina or other recent miseries that disproportionately affect the poor.
But it will avoid mass unemployment, cascading waves of bankruptcies, and the other miseries associated with a depression.
And with it, a sober but bracing way to meet the headwinds and miseries that await in 2017.
WHEN AMERICA took a protectionist turn two years ago, it provoked dark warnings about the miseries of the 21990s.
Whatever miseries Israel and its accomplices are visiting upon the people of Gaza, they are visiting primarily upon children.
The film closes with a feast that feels earned; it had, theretofore, been an unrelenting onslaught of hypothetical miseries.
Several international attempts to stabilize the country ended in abject failure, and its people have suffered seemingly endless miseries.
It is a bit harder to uncover causation for the Sabres' miseries, or the tribulations of the old Braves.
And of course, all the miseries in which we are, on all continents, are caused by us, by humans.
Yet in pursuit of their own war on drugs, the United States has never been short on home-grown miseries.
My father tells me this kind of humour was "a vaccine against the miseries" of a generation marred with terrorism.
More confusing is the way Red describes her miseries as a Tethered to Adelaide when they confront each other in adulthood.
In places it reads as if the miseries of the euro zone stem from sinister corporate forces and not misplaced idealism.
Sometimes, though, patients are the ones demanding a pill to end a cold's miseries, even when there is no such pill.
These repellents can also protect against tick bites, which in this country and elsewhere can carry Lyme disease, among other miseries.
Rates of childhood stunting, mothers dying in childbirth, and the miseries wrought by rare tropical diseases all have gone steadily down.
The result left with the Knicks with a 16-14 record, which is not bad given the miseries of recent seasons.
This lamentable phrase the pursuit of happiness is responsible for a good part of the ills and miseries of the modern world.
People feel as if they're on a runaway train to an unknown destination and, for good reason, want back to familiar miseries.
Opinion Columnist This week, Americans will endure flight delays, traffic jams and other logistical miseries to spend time with family and friends.
As a result, we have come to think that data lives in a parallel realm, untouched by the miseries of the material world.
After 10 years as a mixed martial arts fan my heart has become hardened to the miseries that can result from a fight.
Sadness, on the other hand, is a natural and reasonable reaction to the miseries of the world, some of them personal, some universal.
It&aposs miseries in your house and there&aposs a little guy breaking your ankles and making you - I mean, they are all sad.
I signed because I wanted to see if a new approach might save me from the miseries of standard treatments that had proven inefficacious.
TikTok's rather disorienting lack of timestamps, non-chronological feed, and hidden comments section have mostly kept the app free of those first two miseries.
Opening slaughter houses in America would save horses currently being shipped to their deaths in Canada and Mexico from the miseries of the journey.
"All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone," the French philosopher Blaise Pascal wrote in the 17th century.
Iran: President Hassan Rouhani in a speech compared the country's economic distress under hardening American sanctions to the miseries Iran endured during its worst war.
However intense the miseries of life inside her house, they were, in the end, less vivid to her than the imagined horrors lurking outside it.
The thrumming pain of eating scorchingly spicy foods acts as a distraction to one's anxieties and miseries and releases feel-good endorphins throughout the body.
"Maybe I can persuade you to recall the miseries of grilling on oppressive thick August afternoons," she wrote in her "Eat" column for The Times.
But while the film aspires to a clipped complexity, it comes across as gimmicky and amateurish — a chain of miseries passed off as tough truths.
Between Mr. Giuliani and Mr. Trump, their marriages outnumber the Clintons' six to one, with no shortage of the miseries that go along with domestic wreckage.
Even worse, tariffs on steel and aluminum will bring similar cost-inducing miseries to the private infrastructure projects President Trump hopes to bolster under his plan.
The game "redirected teenage miseries and energies that might have been put to more destructive uses," Jon Michaud wrote in The New Yorker two years ago.
Where the show struggles, though, is that Stella's path is not conventional — the miseries and indignities of a devastating disease are not whimsical study-abroad programs.
The mosquitoes that were left began breeding — and quickly overran the Americas again, spreading dengue, yellow fever, and other assorted miseries: Today, things are worse than ever.
Climate change is creeping onto the list of airport miseries, with rising seas and storm surges threatening some of the nation's busiest runways over the next century.
The mosquitoes that still remained began breeding — and quickly overran the Americas again, spreading dengue, yellow fever, and other assorted miseries: Today, things are worse than ever.
But he also contends with passionate or existential atheists, rebels who cannot forgive God for the horrors of the world or the miseries of their own natures.
" The despot's rise would be fueled by "disorders and miseries" that would gradually push citizens "to seek security and repose in the absolute power of an individual.
Famously, more than a year after the hurricane had rendered its miseries, not one of the 20,000 applicants who had sought help had seen any work begin.
This response comes at a moment when the country is receiving a long and torturous education about the many miseries inflicted on women by celebrated creative men.
Because his symptoms did not conform to any recognizable diagnosis, many, both in Darwin's day and now, suspected that hypochondria was playing a role in causing Darwin's miseries.
Nothing else could ever bring me such pleasure, such freedom, the power to feel and move and think and imagine, safe from the miseries of my waking conscious.
Surely the end of any art—high, low or grotesque—is to provide either a better means of escape or of consolation for the everyday miseries of life.
Lee suggests that behind the facades of wildly different people lie countless private desires, hopes and miseries, if we have the patience and compassion to look and listen.
The bickering between them is discordant filler, particularly given the miseries — the bullet-pocked buildings, the orphaned, the starving, the desperate and the dead — that surround the aid workers.
But a week later, Lambert showed she has a ready antidote for life's miseries: Just hole up with two of your best girlfriends and write songs — with a vengeance.
Hardship in Iran: President Hassan Rouhani compared the country's economic distress under hardening American sanctions to the miseries that Iran endured during its war against Iraq in the 1980s.
Adding to Manager Casey Stengel's miseries, Roger Craig, the starter and losing pitcher, committed a balk that led to one of two St. Louis runs in the first inning.
Lindsay Trittipoe, majority investor of the second-largest consortium, Illinois Financing Partners LLP, told Reuters his group was performing a vital function rather than exploiting the state's financial miseries.
Also on display are Jacques Callot's illustrations of "The Miseries and Misfortunes of War" (1633), poignant etchings of the human suffering associated with Europe's Thirty Years War (1618-1648).
ERBIL, Iraq — Day after day, the miseries of life pile up in camps for civilians driven from their homes by fighting between Iraqi forces and Islamic State militants in Mosul.
In fact, she was having Christmas dinner with Margaret and her mother when she had to flee because of an asthma attack; flu compounded her miseries, leaving her bed-bound.
As I began hunting for a cute drag queen willing to pass me some sperm, one friend went on at length about the miseries of her friend, a straight, single mom.
Considering the example of Carrol, I bid farewell to my legs and take up arms against a sea of troubles more negotiable than the miseries with which she had to contend.
Last Tuesday, lessons from Atlantic City's miseries were taken to heart by New Jersey voters, who overwhelmingly rejected a proposal to expand casino gambling to more lucrative markets near New York.
It was for people looking to escape the miseries and dangers that have settled over some of the territory where such Facebook pages have been a feature of the arms trade.
Much like the shops and post offices of the past — where people traded stories about their miseries and the microeconomics of their daily lives, the roundabouts provided a physical meeting place.
The local police took to calling the day Black Friday because they had to deal with bad traffic and other miseries connected to the throngs of shoppers heading for the stores.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads If somebody were to write a new Book of Revelation for the 21st century, it would read a lot like the multimedia miseries of Hito Steyerl.
But I think Alexander is right that the filter is also part of life within the most successful social enclaves — especially for chronic miseries that don't fit an easy crisis-resolution arc.
When we meet our main characters, Alison is an aspiring actress in New York City, where she endures the usual ingénue miseries, including dead-end auditions, annoying roommates and a dwindling bank account.
President Coin, the leader of District 13 and the rebellion against the Capital, stands victorious, and Katniss Everdeen is called upon to publicly execute the ousted President Snow, orchestrator of all her miseries.
We stand at the birth of a new millennium, ready to unlock the mysteries of space, to free the Earth from the miseries of disease and harness the energies, industries, and technologies of tomorrow.
As dual scenes of their domestic miseries unfold, Shellie and Dex appear to exchange glances, as if in their mind's eye they are watching each other — or the life they might have had together.
And lately, those miseries have been compounded by fentanyl, which has been blamed for at least 60 deaths nationwide, the National Crime Agency said, and has emerged as a favorite of addicts like Chris.
For the rest of you, who may be frowning at that mercury resting steadfastly in the low 20s, maybe I can persuade you to recall the miseries of grilling on oppressive thick August afternoons.
We stand at the birth of a new millennium, ready to unlock the mysteries of space, to free the earth from the miseries of disease, and to harness the energies, industries and technologies of tomorrow.
We stand at the birth of a new millennium, ready to unlock the mysteries of space, to free the Earth from the miseries of disease, and to harness the energies, industries and technologies of tomorrow.
When they think of all the miseries their forebears survived, it's hard to accept that their latest — and perhaps final — battle is against suburban families who want a pretty place to kayak on the weekend.
The show even took a few moments to wallow in the miseries of the weather, as the wet, shivering contestants reconcile themselves to the next month of their lives at the mercy of the elements.
We stand at the birth of a new millennium, ready to unlock the mysteries of space, to free the Earth from the miseries of disease, and to harness the energies, industries and technologies of tomorrow.
The reminder has led people in the West to realize that one of the great miseries plaguing much of the so-called Arab world, and the Muslim world more generally, is its sick relationship with women.
But since Bandersnatch is in part trying to capture the nightmare of a creative career, it's worth pointing out that the big, messy drama obscures some of the more relatable, meaningful miseries of being a creator.
But its citizens are entitled to the same federal emergency funds and resources that Washington has been funneling to the far more politically powerful and economically resilient states of Texas and Florida in their hurricane miseries.
While it is sure to cause trouble for hundreds of thousands of people whose commute touches the 125th Street station, trains leaving the tracks certainly are not the source of the mounting miseries in the transit system.
Prizes are handed out, bribery is encouraged, and only once the judges have been satisfied are the contestants allowed to go dashing out, booze in hand, on their way toward the next checkpoint with its new, unique miseries.
Yet the more the government argues at home that Brexiteers should avoid the miseries of crashing out by embracing Mrs May's compromise, the more it convinces Brussels that, except as a disastrous accident, "no deal" is not credible.
EditorsNote: rewords second and third grafs Tony Parker and Jeremy Lamb led a balanced attack with 15 points each, and the Charlotte Hornets added to the New York Knicks' miseries with a 101-143 victory on Monday night.
" But it's a mordant evocation, too, of the miseries of any old artist on his deathbed: "He then displayed copies of his books, but as everybody had already read them, not more than a polite interest was generated.
Though the Afghan men who leave for Syria soon face the miseries of another incessant war, they have one advantage over some other Afghan migrants: They are less likely to be deported and forced to return to Afghanistan.
And maybe you weren't feeling all that great about yourself, torn up by life's obstinate miseries, but by the time you had paid the tab and were ready to get back at it, you sure did feel wonderful.
The back is filled with car seats and mommish detritus, signs of a bountiful family life decidedly at odds with that of Cersei, one of the most persecuted (and vindictive) characters on a show known for baroque miseries.
Yet before it was even released, the film was consumed by controversy over the title and by concerns over whether the city's miseries should even be appropriated for cinematic purposes — let alone for ones with a self-critical bent.
Red Sox 6, Yankees 3 BOSTON — A persistent rain might have rescued the Yankees from the ignominy of being no-hit by Rick Porcello, but it could not spare them from the rest of their miseries on Thursday night.
In a year of transit miseries, it has become an unexpected success story in New York City's commuting landscape — the city's nascent ferry fleet, whose ridership has far exceeded expectations, is rapidly becoming an alternative to the beleaguered subway system.
BEIRUT, Lebanon — When Iran's president on Saturday compared the country's economic distress under hardening American sanctions to the miseries Iran endured during its worst war, it was a signal that Iranians are suffering deeply under the Trump administration's tightening financial chokehold.
For example, there is the series "13 Reasons Why," in which a dead girl recounts the miseries that led to her suicide, including witnessing a drunk girl getting raped at a house party by a friend of the boyfriend they shared.
And though he had grown up surrounded by the miseries of rural life, as a fledgling Communist, Mao had been focusing on the urban proletariat until Moscow, realizing that China was different, ordered more attention be paid to the peasantry.
But if the historical theme park in "CivilWarLand" was a stage for its workers' ludicrous miseries, the war here is a crucible for a heroic American identity: fearful but unflagging; hopeful even in tragedy; staggering, however tentatively, toward a better world.
Act II is largely dance: Mr. Wheeldon takes the fourth of Shakespeare's five acts and expands it into the jubilant, innocent peak of the whole ballet, in contrast with the adult miseries of the first act and the mature resolution of the third.
Mr. Bell's upbringing in Mount Vernon, N.Y., as the son of a prominent musician — his father was the jazz bassist Aaron Bell, who played with Duke Ellington and had a doctorate in education — did not shield him from the miseries of racial inequality.
More remarkable than Douglass's physical prowess was the fact that he lived to write about this at all: In addition to the beatings and other miseries, Douglass endured severe cold that left gashes in his feet pronounced enough to cradle his pen.
Some medical professionals clearly don't know about it — or even recognize B.P.P.V. Frustrated specialists believe that tens of thousands of older adults endure its miseries without learning that there's a safe, accepted, low-cost way to make the world stop twirling around them.
The work in this exhibition inspires viewers to think, as well: about various human and environmental miseries and a haunted landscape, and about how this renegade painter, who turns 84 this year, deploys a passionate brush to bring them to the fore.
By contrast, the scenes depicted in the #FeelYourWay campaign seem to acknowledge the real reason people eat fast food — not always as a celebratory treat or quick bite on the road but sometimes as an immediate consolation for daily miseries and humiliations.
Myrna Ayad, Art Dubai's director, said the event featuring artists from 48 countries does not seek to dwell on the region's miseries, but noted that as Dubai's star has risen in the art world the art on offer cannot flinch from harsh realities.
One of the greatest adventures of my traveling life, this trip on the plain of snakes (as I thought of it) was enlightening and pleasurable, Mexico's splendors vastly outweighing its miseries, and, though I had been warned repeatedly beforehand, I did not die.
Listening to Vaknin's story, I began to think about how perhaps this present wave of interest in narcissism could be a new key in a more sympathetic, rounded understanding of why adults visit the same miseries on their children that were visited on them.
Fleeing Nick, Lisa is helped out by Tom (Nick Zedd), a slickly cynical art-punk, and then by Paul (Richard Hell), a compassionate bohemian, all the while enduring a calvary of miseries, including illness and injury, in her descent from bright promise to flailing desperation.
Potter's film preaches a variant of the "you can't stop what's coming" ethos articulated in "No Country for Old Men" (a Coen brothers' movie for which Bardem won an Oscar), and it insists that whatever joys are in living, its miseries are heartbreaking and potent.
The individual miseries and miscalculations reflect a broader theme of Season 3 so far: As the aftershocks of the 5/9 hack ripple ever outward, the players hoping to shape or capitalize on the chaos are finding it harder to manage than they anticipated.
But when Hurricane Sandy arrived eight years ago, the miseries it delivered seemed to come as a surprise, even though the city's precarious infrastructure and overbuilt waterfront leave New York so obviously vulnerable to the worst outcomes of even relatively minor disruptions of the weather.
But I would like to nominate "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" as song of the year, because if any single tune reflects the miseries of 2016, and the anxious uncertainty with which we greet 19043, it is this 72-year-old holiday chestnut.
Tom Waits' back catalog—currently undergoing an extensive re-release campaign by his latter day label ANTI—might seem a little daunting at first, but exploring his vast, poetic, picaresque songs is one of life's great ongoing pleasures, or indulgent miseries, depending on how you see it.
Editorial Of all Puerto Rico's continuing miseries seven weeks after Hurricane Maria's devastation, the most blatantly unjust is that islanders have been denied the more generous and swifter food relief distributed to storm victims this year in Texas and Florida under the emergency food stamp program.
He'd get mercy benched a few weeks (months?) into the slump, come off the bench to continue it every once in a while, and then the Warriors would cut him loose at the end of his contract, putting them and him out of their respective miseries.
In Peter B. Parker, we face the long-term toll that superhero-ing can take on a person's life, and the disappointing truth that even super-strength and spider-sense can't protect you from the irritations and miseries of ordinary human existence, like death, divorce, and poor financial planning.
About a year and a half ago, the former British prime minister Tony Blair made a penetrating, if bleak, observation about the West's 21st-century attempts to deal with the Arab world and the miseries that keep bursting out from its ceaseless contest between corrupt autocrats and Islamist zealots.
No longer can we ignore the link between the miseries of some and the well-being of others, Africans on one side and Europeans on the other, natural resources looted from here and transformed there and then sold back in the form of fetishes to their true owners.
While doctors have kept clear of street demonstrations and confined their opposition to strikes, their status as medical professionals, and their intimate involvement with the daily miseries of life in the capital, has put them at the forefront of the movement calling for Mr. Gnassingbé to be removed from power.
In "Turn Off Your Phone for Thanksgiving," David Leonhardt writes about using Thanksgiving as a time to disconnect from phones, tablets and computers and to focus on connecting with others: This week, Americans will endure flight delays, traffic jams and other logistical miseries to spend time with family and friends.
" The chaos of a dysfunctional democracy, compounded by relentless party warfare, Washington warned, could erode faith in self-governance and open the door to demagogues with authoritarian ambitions: "The disorders and miseries which result gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute power of an individual.
While most of the 24 million people of North Korea bear the costs and suffer the miseries inflicted by Pyongyang's totalitarian regime, Kim himself has accomplished the transition of power from his late father, Kim Jong Il, who died in 2012, and is building an arsenal his forebears could only dream of.
In a game teeming with an amalgam of nostalgia, good and bad, Chase Utley wrote another horror tale in his library of Mets miseries Friday night, but a walk-off home run by Curtis Granderson saved an atypical ninth inning by Jeurys Familia, granting the Mets a 6-5 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
After it was announced that UFC lightweight Ross Pearson's opponent at this weekend's UFC Fight Night event in Brisbane, Australia, Abel Trujillo, had been replaced by Canadian Chad Laprise, Pearson contacted Laprise on Twitter to make a request: What say you and I forget about weight-cutting, with all its depleting miseries and perilous superstitions, and just fight?
While many economists argue that the country's economic miseries, including triple-digit inflation and chronic scarcities of the most basic goods, stem from economic mismanagement and low oil prices, the government and its left-leaning economic planners point to business people who they say unfairly raise prices and hoard basic goods in an attempt to destabilize the country.
In his intellectual memoir, whose English title was "The Wind Spirit" (1988), he wrote that World War II came as a relief from his miseries and satisfied his adolescent "desire for disorder and disaster," which the family got more than its share of when 22 German soldiers were billeted at their house in the suburb of Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
All the history in this series, the accumulated miseries and the battered hopefulness on each side, is present around the edge of every incident, a reminder not just of how long we have waited for whatever moment is coming next, but of how precious—how rare and how fleeting and how strange—it will be whenever it finally gets here.
But what makes "Tinder Live With Lane Moore" — a hit monthly comedy show that next plays at Littlefield in Gowanus, Brooklyn, on June 24 — truly addictive entertainment is that it not only captures all these elements of the treacherous world of online dating, but also evokes the delirious kick of chortling with friends about past miseries deep into the night.
" Washington was worried that, "The disorders and miseries which result gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute power of an individual; and sooner or later the chief of some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate than his competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of his own elevation, on the ruins of public liberty.
The policies of mandatory detention and, now, pushing asylum seekers to wait in Mexico, or forcing them to apply for asylum first in a country without a functioning asylum system and where they remain in danger, are meant to force asylum seekers to weigh two competing miseries: the present fear of death, or the long slog through a punitive immigration detention system with slim chances of relief.
But for the U.S., the only responsible option by now is to forsake the procedural wrangles, diplomatic deadlocks and often perverse fictions of the UN. There is no magic solution to all the miseries that bedevil Syria, but it has become, at the very least, imperative to stop the attacks with which Syria's Assad has for years now been engaged in the monstrous business of normalizing the use of chemical weapons.
After all, the New Testament's condemnations of personal wealth are fairly unremitting and remarkably stark: Matthew 6:19-20, for instance ("Do not store up treasures for yourself on the earth"), or Luke 6:24-25 ("But alas for you who are rich, for you have your comfort") or James 5:1-6 ("Come now, you who are rich, weep, howling out at the miseries that are coming for you").

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