Chapter
1 1 | The flesh," saith (the apostle), "lusteth against the Spirit,
2 3 | virgin; to whom looking, the apostle also--himself too for this
3 5 | present day separate. The apostle, too, writing to the Ephesians,
4 5 | Eve, which (figure) the apostle interprets of that great
5 6 | Abraham as his "sons" (as the apostle teaches, saying to the Galatians, "
6 6 | uncircumcision. You bare the apostle: learn (of him), together
7 6 | Abraham portends, the same apostle fully teaches, the interpreter
8 7 | and multiply," since the apostle superinduces (another command), "
9 7 | established between the apostle and the Law (which he is
10 8 | in the sequel, where the apostle could better have named
11 10| challenged by an appeal to the apostle; for the more easy apprehension
12 11| Psychics will have it the apostle approved, or else totally
13 11| But the sense in which the apostle did write will be apparent,
14 11| the others, than that an apostle should seem to have taught (
15 11| subject-matter which led the apostle to write such (words)? The
16 11| are intelligible from (the apostle's) rescripts, when he says: "
17 11| calling," were consulting (the apostle) on the subject of those (
18 11| advice and practice of the apostle himself: for nothing is
19 12| our opponents), "that the apostle has permitted the iteration
20 12| question in hand (when the apostle was writing), was with reference
21 12| churches; insulting the apostle, of course: at all events,
22 14| HARD-HEARTEDNESS.~Now, if the apostle had even absolutely permitted
23 14| suffering us to render to the apostle the (obedience) which he "
24 15| but unlawful marriage? The apostle sets a brand upon those
25 16| have (the support of) an apostle's authority, but of some
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