How to Use deliverance in a Sentence
deliverance
noun- She prayed for deliverance as the famine got worse.
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Per Luke 24:7, on the third-day post deliverance into the hands of the sinful, the child of God must rise again.
— Olivia Crandall, Vulture, 7 Nov. 2021 -
Spann thanked God for deliverance and for the health of those who survived.
— Holly Meyer, USA TODAY, 26 Sep. 2017 -
Advent is a time of waiting for the hope of deliverance.
— Michael Brendan Dougherty, National Review, 18 Dec. 2020 -
But then there’s the satiny tenderness in her voice, the sense of real joy, the subtle hint of deliverance.
— New York Times, 20 July 2019 -
At the time of his deliverance, Repp was sick with typhus and weighed 69 pounds, and most of his family was no longer alive.
— Robert Wilonsky, Dallas News, 14 Jan. 2020 -
The well-being of the victim and deliverance of justice are paramount, of course.
— Jon Wilner, The Mercury News, 3 Mar. 2017 -
Then, on Tuesday, came what appeared to be an out-of-the-blue act of deliverance from Denver.
— Reid J. Epstein, New York Times, 21 Dec. 2023 -
For many Americans, the right to travel can be a kind of deliverance.
— Mary Ziegler, CNN, 7 Apr. 2023 -
Part of him almost seeks that deliverance of death to get out of this existence.
— David Marchese, New York Times, 29 Nov. 2021 -
Bauerlein had hailed Trump’s rise as a deliverance from the status quo.
— Isaac Chotiner, Slate Magazine, 8 Feb. 2017 -
A rest night in December could lead to great deliverance in June.
— Mark Whicker, Orange County Register, 4 Jan. 2017 -
Anna seeks a deliverance of sorts through her own act of refusal.
— Thomas Page, CNN, 16 Nov. 2022 -
The tracks performed touch on such themes as faith, love, loss, and a longing for peace or deliverance, for change and renewal.
— David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter, 12 Feb. 2022 -
The tears are his person, his being, and his deliverance.
— Jessica Winter, The New Yorker, 22 June 2023 -
For the men in the Colombian safe house, the arrival of the muscular American felt like deliverance.
— Anchorage Daily News, 11 May 2020 -
For those who are fasting, iftar is a daily deliverance after the long hours of hunger and thirst.
— New York Times, 28 Apr. 2022 -
Even her sadder songs have curls of last-minute deliverance.
— Elizabeth Barber, Harper's Magazine, 2 Feb. 2024 -
The first few episodes are painful viewing, cycling June through hoping for deliverance to seeing those hopes dashed and back again in record time.
— Kate Knibbs, Wired, 4 May 2021 -
To Franco, however, the sight of his water truck is deliverance, proof that God is good.
— John Muyskens, Washington Post, 18 Nov. 2022 -
For right-wing voters, this was a deliverance from the Oslo debacle.
— Ruth Margalit, New York Times, 27 Sep. 2023 -
But Chelsea Fields, who has performed at more than 50 major league sporting events, is adamant about standing proud throughout the deliverance of the song.
— Nicole Pajer, Billboard, 1 Oct. 2017 -
A while after that, Josh Manson had the puck in the very same position, with the clock disappearing and deliverance on his stick.
— Mark Whicker, Orange County Register, 10 May 2017 -
His deliverance from this nightmare flew less than two hundred feet above him.
— Cassidy Randall, Time, 27 Dec. 2020 -
Make Space for Relief and Joy The same teenagers who feel deeply upset about missing school and their peers in one moment may express delight and deliverance in the next.
— Lisa Damour, New York Times, 19 Mar. 2020 -
But one man, Nahshon, walked into the waves up to his nose, believing deliverance would follow.
— Los Angeles Times, 8 Apr. 2020 -
With Joe Biden’s poll numbers holding strong, my wife and I cautiously look forward to Nov. 3 as a day of deliverance.
— Ron Grossman, Star Tribune, 29 Oct. 2020 -
During this long passage about writing, Proust is, step-by-step, forging the original soul of his book and, at the same time, his own deliverance.
— William Benton, The New Yorker, 8 Feb. 2023 -
Thompson united the Christian image of the cross, a place of unspeakable suffering on the road to deliverance, with the gruesome specter of the lynching tree.
— Christopher Knight, Los Angeles Times, 12 Oct. 2022 -
Set in Edo-period Japan, Mizu lives a life in disguise seeking the deliverance of revenge.
— Breanna Bell, Variety, 11 Dec. 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'deliverance.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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