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Alphabetical    [«  »]
petty 1
petulant 1
phantasy 2
phantom 42
phantoms 1
pharaoh 5
pharisaic 1
Frequency    [«  »]
43 promised
43 view
42 last
42 phantom
42 possibly
42 use
41 accordingly
Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus
Against Marcion

IntraText - Concordances

phantom

                                                   bold = Main text
   Book, Chapter                                   grey = Comment text
1 I, 22 | or rather His shadow or phantom, as we have it in Christ, 2 I, 27 | an imaginary goodness, a phantom of discipline, perfunctory 3 III, 8 | he alleges Christ to be a phantom. Except, indeed, that this 4 III, 8 | have propagated also the phantom of God? Can I believe him 5 III, 8 | not truly suffer; and a phantom could not truly suffer. 6 III, 8 | again, but peradventure in a phantom state, just like Christ.~ 7 III, 9 | with Abraham and Lot in a phantom state, that of merely putative 8 III, 9 | in introducing the mere phantom of that of which he had 9 III, 11 | suffered evasively, as a phantom; evasively, too, might He 10 III, 11 | flesh, and because He is no phantom, it follows that He must 11 III, 15 | if he only assumed the phantom of a name too. But how, 12 III, 24 | without having flesh? O what a phantom from first to last! O hollow 13 IV, 8 | believed to have been a phantom, since it was capable of 14 IV, 9 | could be defiled? For a phantom is not susceptible of defilement. 15 IV, 9 | not be defiled, as being a phantom, will not have an immunity 16 IV, 9 | from the occasion of his phantom nature, not from any display 17 IV, 18 | handled was not an empty phantom, but a really solid body, 18 IV, 20 | it was a body, and not a phantom, which the garment clothed. 19 IV, 40 | body. An empty thing, or phantom, is incapable of a figure. 20 IV, 40 | of Marcion's theory of a phantom body, that bread should 21 IV, 42 | upon the cross), but a phantom of flesh (and a phantom 22 IV, 42 | phantom of flesh (and a phantom is but spirit, and so the 23 IV, 42 | it did so), no doubt the phantom departed, when the spirit 24 IV, 42 | the spirit which was the phantom departed: and so the phantom 25 IV, 42 | phantom departed: and so the phantom and the spirit disappeared 26 IV, 42 | What was there, then? If a phantom Christ was yet there. If 27 IV, 42 | departed, He had taken away the phantom also. The only shift left 28 IV, 42 | what remained there was the phantom of a phantom! But what if 29 IV, 42 | there was the phantom of a phantom! But what if Joseph knew 30 IV, 43conc| CHRIST AFTER DEATH NO MERE PHANTOM. MARCION'S MANIPULATION 31 IV, 43conc| doubting whether He were not a phantom nay, were supposing that 32 IV, 43conc| if He were altogether a phantom, why did He upbraid them 33 IV, 43conc| for supposing Him to be a phantom? But whilst they still believed 34 V, 7 | paid, since Christ was a phantom, nor had He any corporeal 35 V, 8 | opposition to Marcion's phantom; whilst throughout almost 36 V, 14 | seemed to have was but a phantom. For he in a previous verse 37 V, 14 | but it would be called phantom, if it seemed to be that 38 V, 14 | which it is compared). But a phantom, which is merely such and 39 V, 17 | really new, and really man no phantom but new, and newly born 40 V, 20 | there was nothing but a phantom of flesh. For he says of 41 V, 20 | form shall be claimed for a phantom. But since he is truly God, 42 V, 20 | the imaginary process of a phantom, which rather eluded the


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