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| Alphabetical [« »] errant 1 erred 1 erring 1 error 34 errors 6 errs 1 esau 2 | Frequency [« »] 35 might 34 church 34 done 34 error 34 first 34 where 33 9 | St. Augustine Enchiridion IntraText - Concordances error |
Chapter
1 5| The Kinds and Degrees of Error~~ 2 5| misery does not distract, nor error mislead. If it~is a good 3 5| Although we should beware of error wherever possible, not only 4 5| follow that~one falls into error out of ignorance alone. 5 5| actually false, this then is error, in the proper sense of 6 5| question involved in the error, for in one and the same 7 5| there is sometimes profit in error - but on a~journey, not 8 5| gave thanks to God for our error. ~Who would doubt, in such 9 5| I was undone, ~and fatal error swept me away,"~31~~for 10 5| certainly false. ~This sort of error in the mind is deforming 11 5| not to be entirely lost, error is ~unavoidable. It is different 12 5| falsehood, and naturally avoids error as much as it can, so that 13 6| someone into the former error than to be led by someone 14 6| escapes an ~injury through an error, as I mentioned before happened 15 6| thereby,~I am not saying that error is not a bad thing, nor 16 6| did happen, through the error, which was not~caused by 17 6| which was not~caused by the error itself but which came out 18 6| but which came out of it. Error, in itself and by itself, 19 6| itself, whether a ~great error in great matters or a small 20 6| great matters or a small error in small affairs, is always 21 6| thing. For who,~except in error, denies that it is bad to 22 6| actually ~bad - this is an error. It is quite another thing 23 6| another thing that,~from this error - which is a bad thing - 24 7| poet speaks of "a~pleasant error for parents"~37 - I say 25 7| lest he be involved in the error of affirming as true what 26 7| one to. Among them every error is deemed a sin, and this 27 7| Indeed they say it is an error if ~someone believes in 28 7| ward off the appearance of error in themselves, yet they 29 7| whatever kind or how much of an error these miscues may~be, it 30 7| was not abandoned in that error so dear to parents concerning 31 8| without death, truth without error, happiness without anxiety -~ 32 8| them, as their~companions, error and misery. When these two 33 8| it fails to recognize the error of its ways - it falls victim 34 16| we believe him good, the error is neither dangerous nor