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| Alphabetical [« »] graven 1 gravity 3 gravity- 1 great 33 greater 11 greatly 6 greatness 9 | Frequency [« »] 34 think 34 whose 33 does 33 great 33 her 33 life 33 others | Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus The apology IntraText - Concordances great |
Chapter
1 I | and their numbers are as great as are laid to our charge. 2 II | witness of our deeds. Oh, how great the glory of the ruler who 3 II | being still annoyed by their great numbers, at last sought 4 VI | counted, of aspiring to be too great, because he had acquired 5 IX | self-impulse--although there is a great difference, as we have said, 6 IX | undigested human viscera, are in great request. And you have men 7 XI | reason than this, that the great God has need of their ministrations 8 XI | needlessly bestow a reward so great. I would have you then consider 9 XIII | hand, the sacredness is great in proportion to the tribute 10 XIV | among people professing a great respect for religion. Nor 11 XVI | given to the world in that great city: it originated with 12 XVII | therefore equally real and great. But that which, in the 13 XVII | hands, so numerous and so great, which both contain you 14 XVII | of the true God. "God is great and good"--"Which may God 15 XXI | faith also, destined to a great reward, might hold its ground 16 XXI | witnesses for Christ. It is a great matter if, to give you faith 17 XXII | given of their work. Their great business is the ruin of 18 XXIV | many, as Plato describes great Jupiter in the heavens, 19 XXIV | divine empire. And yet how great a crime does he commit, 20 XXV | could religion make a people great who have owed their greatness 21 XXV | have become part of the one great whole of the Roman empire, 22 XXX | less than heaven, he is great. For he himself is His to 23 XXXII | we count an oath by it a great oath. But as for demons, 24 XXXIII| emperor. That, too, is a great name of God's giving. To 25 XXXIV | which case will you not give great and unappeasable offence 26 XXXV | to turn the city into one great tavern, to make mud with 27 XXXVII| any single people, however great, inhabiting a distinct territory, 28 XXXIX | administered. For with a great gravity is the work of judging 29 XXXIX | pimps! What wonder if that great love of Christians towards 30 XXXIX | of the Christians alone a great ado is made. Our feast explains 31 XLIV | common weal,--a loss as great as it is real, no one estimates 32 XLV | contemptible; and if it is great, it is not long-continued. 33 XLVI | the purple, with all his great show of gravity, gives way