Chapter
1 I | is thought to be rather a thing of human planning and foresight,
2 I | command. It were a grievous thing, forsooth, for Christians,
3 II | in His eyes an offending thing. Man himself, guilty as
4 II | Maker, that in the very thing whose gift to man, but not
5 III | bears an this very sort of thing: "Blessed," he says, "is
6 III | scorners. We may understand a thing as spoken generally, even
7 V | when it is certain that the thing springs from idolatry. The
8 VII | proof to whom the whole thing appertains, in the many
9 XIII | and we may hold it as a thing beyond all doubt, that for
10 XVI | love with them is a useless thing, and hatred is unjust. Or
11 XVIII| wrestler's art is a devil's thing. The devil wrestled with,
12 XIX | amphitheatre, what a monstrous thing it is, that, in undergoing
13 XXI | not taught of God, hold a thing evil and good as it suits
14 XXII | artist. What an outrageous thing it is, to blacken a man
15 XXV | modest? Nay, in the whole thing he will meet with no greater
16 XXV | uttered Amen over the Holy Thing, to give witness in a gladiator'
17 XXVII| hellebore: the accursed thing is put into condiments well
|