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Alphabetical    [«  »]
relatives 2
released 1
relief 1
religion 40
religion- 1
religions 1
religious 13
Frequency    [«  »]
42 put
41 can
40 christ
40 religion
39 blood
39 know
39 let
Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus
The apology

IntraText - Concordances

religion

   Chapter
1 II | to be faithful to their religion, forbidding murder, adultery, 2 VI | their base and lascivious religion from spreading. These, you 3 VII | We date the origin of our religion, as we have mentioned before, 4 XIII | is made a source of gain. Religion goes about the taverns begging. 5 XIV | professing a great respect for religion. Nor indeed do either tragic 6 XV | among the votaries of your religion that the perpetrators of 7 XVI | well as the name and the religion of the Jews, he states that 8 XVI | the arcana of the Jewish religion, but found no image there. 9 XVI | of the trophy. The camp religion of the Romans is all through 10 XVI | exhibi-ition of what our religion really is.~ 11 XIX | you, too, it is a kind of religion to demand belief on this 12 XIX | thesaurus of the entire Jewish religion, and therefore too of ours. 13 XXI | having asserted that our religion is supported by the writings 14 XXI | shadow of an illustrious religion, one which has at any rate 15 XXI | give a false account of his religion. For in the very fact that 16 XXI | a man, taught them their religion; against the Greeks we urge 17 XXIV | chiefly against the Roman religion. For if it is certain the 18 XXIV | no existence, there is no religion in the case. If there is 19 XXIV | the case. If there is no religion, because there are no gods, 20 XXIV | guilty of any offence against religion. Instead of that, the charge 21 XXIV | merely by refusing the true religion of the true God, but by 22 XXIV | alone are prevented having a religion of our own. We give offence 23 XXV | their singular homage to religion, the Romans have been raised 24 XXV | still a kingdom, that the religion she professes made its chief 25 XXV | it the case now? Has its religion been the source of the prosperity 26 XXV | superstitious observances, yet religion among the Romans was not 27 XXV | not the result of their religion. Indeed, how could religion 28 XXV | religion. Indeed, how could religion make a people great who 29 XXV | believe that devotion to religion has evidently advanced to 30 XXV | either grown by injuring religion, or have injured religion 31 XXV | religion, or have injured religion by their growth. Those, 32 XXV | empire, were not without religion when their kingdoms were 33 XXVII | of treason against your religion; for we cannot be held to 34 XXXV | men believing in the true religion, they prefer to celebrate 35 XXXV | immoral deeds, and shall religion be regarded as affording 36 XXXVII| to the sword, if in our religion it were not counted better 37 XXXIX | purchase-money, as of a religion that has its price. On the 38 XLIII | interests suffer from the religion we profess, the protection 39 XLVI | those who are not of his religion. If the matter of sincerity 40 XLVII | have been taken from our religion. But if they are taken from


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