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Alphabetical    [«  »]
workman 1
works 6
workshop 1
world 47
world-mass- 1
world-portent 1
worn 1
Frequency    [«  »]
47 case
47 might
47 truth
47 world
46 make
45 also
44 human
Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus
The apology

IntraText - Concordances

world

   Chapter
1 I | into and sift before the world the real truth in regard 2 V | made its entry into the world, having himself received 3 VII | hatred of truth come into our world together. As soon as truth 4 VII | proceedings made known to the world? Nay, by whom could they 5 VII | a settled opinion in the world; so that I confidently appeal 6 XVI | god has been given to the world in that great city: it originated 7 XVII | this entire mass of our world, with all its array of elements, 8 XVIII | sent messengers into the world,--men whose stainless righteousness 9 XVIII | Prometheus who gave order to the world by arranging the seasons 10 XX | far. Your instructors, the world, and the age, and the event, 11 XXI | they roam over the whole world without either a human or 12 XXI | in the last days of the world, God would, out of every 13 XXI | asserted that God made the world, and all which it contains, 14 XXI | which impends over the world, now near its close, in 15 XXI | preach the gospel through the world, He was encompassed with 16 XXI | not been necessary for the world, or if Christians could 17 XXI | also, spreading over the world, did as their Divine Master 18 XXII | single moment; the whole world is as one place to them; 19 XXIII | again, making the whole world shake, filling the earth 20 XXIII | which has existed from the world's beginning, clothing it 21 XXIV | more potent, as it were the world's chief ruler, endowed with 22 XXV | have become masters of the world; and that so certainly divine 23 XXV | rather be the mistress of the world? Would Juno have desired 24 XXVI | who is Lord at once of the world which is ruled, and of man 25 XXVI | before all time, and made the world a body of times; if the 26 XXX | a virtuous people, the world at rest, whatever, as man 27 XXXVII | one spread over all the world! We are but of yesterday, 28 XXXVII | some remote corner of the world, why, the very loss of so 29 XXXVII | that stupor as of a dead world. You would have to seek 30 XXXVIII| all-embracing commonwealth--the world. We renounce all your spectacles, 31 XXXIX | for the welfare of the world, for the prevalence of peace, 32 XL | many calamities befell the world and particular cities before 33 XL | destroying waters over all the world, or, as Plato thought, merely 34 XL | God gave Christians to the world; for from that time virtue 35 XL | put some restraint on the world's wickedness, and men began 36 XLI | eternal judgment at the world's close, does not precipitate 37 XLII | of life. How in all the world can that be the case with 38 XLII | sojourn with you in the world, abjuring neither forum, 39 XLVII | administers the affairs of the world; the Epicureans, on the 40 XLVII | Him as placed outside the world, and whirling round this 41 XLVII | Platonists place Him within the world, as a pilot is in the ship 42 XLVII | in their views about the world itself, whether it is created 43 XLVII | God will one day judge the world. For, like us, the poets 44 XLVII | from the knowledge of this world by that fiery zone as by 45 XLVIII | place this huge body of our world, made out of what had never 46 XLVIII | from the beginning of the world, flows down by a temporal 47 XLVIII | the outward fashion of the world itself--which has been spread


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