Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, Intro | emotions such as sympathy, mercy, generosity, and what not.
2 1, 4, 1 | known as having boundless mercy and fathomless wisdom whom
3 1, 4, 12| sympathy, loyalty, benevolence, mercy, humanity, are observed
4 1, 4, 17| profound wisdom and boundless mercy, who loves all beings as
5 1, 4, 17| gives them all the milk of mercy."2 Some people named Him
6 1, 4, 17| all light, all hope, all mercy, and all wisdom; some, Heaven,
7 1, 4, 18| profound~wisdom and boundless mercy; this, nevertheless, does
8 1, 5, 18| Buddha, whose boundless mercy ever besets us, for the
9 1, 5, 22| 22. The Buddha of Mercy.~Milton says:~"Virtue may
10 1, 5, 22| will worship the Buddha of Mercy, accept His doctrine, and
11 1, 6, 7 | impartial love, humanity, and mercy, the measure of all things.
12 1, 6, 12| He is not. He is at the mercy of our thought. How much
13 1, 7, 9 | of ours. It is the great mercy of His that, however sinful,
14 1, 7, 12| of Buddha, are put at the mercy of petty troubles, or intended
15 1, 8, 2 | Buddha never puts us at the mercy of natural forces; that
16 1, 8, 15| men," says Gu-do,2 "her mercy is great. Every blossom
17 1, 8, 16| fragrant rose of Divine mercy among the thorns of worldly
18 Appen, 1 | heavenly flat, and are at the mercy of Time and Providence.
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