Chapter
1 II | created by God, and given to man for his use, and that they
2 II | due by him; while the wise man does not look with contempt
3 II | is good, and that it is man's by free gift of its Maker.
4 II | provided these things for man's destruction? Nay, He puts
5 II | eyes an offending thing. Man himself, guilty as he is
6 II | beginning the virtue of man, the work and image of God,
7 II | he has entirely changed man's nature--created, like
8 II | very thing whose gift to man, but not to him, had grieved
9 II | grieved him, he might make man guilty in God's eyes, and
10 III | Blessed," he says, "is the man who has not gone into the
11 III | beforehand of that just man, that he took no part in
12 X | with the object of drawing man away from his Lord and binding
13 XV | unuttered movings of the inner man. No one partakes of pleasures
14 XV | foreign to us. Moreover, a man pronounces his own condemnation
15 XVII | the things which defile a man in going out of his mouth,
16 XX | putting on the same level, O man, the criminal and the judge;
17 XXI | strangely happens, that the same man who can scarcely in public
18 XXI | own blood; nay, the very man who comes to the show, because
19 XXI | inspecting near at hand the man whom he wished torn in pieces
20 XXII | thing it is, to blacken a man on account of the very things
21 XXIII| XXIII.~Seeing, then, man's own reflections, even
22 XXIII| especially then the likeness of man who is His own image? The
23 XXIII| it is declared that the man is cursed who attires himself
24 XXIII| to death that very same man on the arena.~
25 XXIV | chief sign to them that a man has adopted the Christian
26 XXIV | possibly retain in regard to a man who does that? When you
27 XXVII| above, and marking every man, who speaks and who listens
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