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| Alphabetical [« »] divided 2 divination 1 divinations 1 divine 30 diviners 1 divinities 6 divinity 18 | Frequency [« »] 31 both 31 death 31 place 30 divine 30 having 30 himself 30 shall | Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus The apology IntraText - Concordances divine |
Chapter
1 V | present day, with anything of divine and human wisdom in them, 2 VII | man at once, while wrath divine is kept in store for the 3 X | any obligation to render divine homage to them. And punishment 4 X | all worship were indeed divine. But you say, They are gods. 5 X | them, as though it were divine, since even at this day 6 XI | its creator, been awarded divine honours. Wherefore, if the 7 XI | You honour them by giving divine honours to their fellows. 8 XIII | perfect propriety you give divine honours to your departed 9 XVIII | might have faith in their divine authority, we have still 10 XX | offer proof that they are divine. And you may convince yourselves 11 XXI | the world, did as their Divine Master bade them; and after 12 XXIII | goats and tables are made to divine,--how much more likely is 13 XXIII | take and use were really divine. For they would not dare 14 XXIV | prefects, and governors of the divine empire. And yet how great 15 XXV | world; and that so certainly divine are the beings they worship, 16 XXXII | thereby conferring on them divine honour.~ 17 XXXIII| and making it less than divine, I commend him the more 18 XXXIII| he should think himself divine.~ 19 XXXIV | belief in, any other being as divine. Cease also to give the 20 XXXIV | in addressing a man as divine, let it have some dread 21 XXXVII| with the idea of a sect divine avenging itself by human 22 XL | and when we have extorted divine compassion, why, Jupiter 23 XLI | while in yours they are divine punishments. We indeed are 24 XLI | because we recognize in it divine foretellings, which, in 25 XLVI | it is not really a thing divine, but rather a kind of philosophy. 26 XLVI | which go to constitute a divine being, though Plato affirms 27 XLVII | proved antiquity of the divine writings is so far of use 28 XLVII | soul, which some contend is divine and eternal, while others 29 XLVIII| from that which we see in divine judgments, whether striking 30 L | for your sentences. As the divine and human are ever opposed