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Alphabetical    [«  »]
greedily 1
greedy 2
greek 40
greeks 153
grew 3
grey 1
grief 3
Frequency    [«  »]
154 first
154 heaven
154 subject
153 greeks
152 give
151 about
151 every
Origenes
Against Celsus

IntraText - Concordances

greeks

    Book, Chapter
1 1, II | the statement, that the Greeks are more skilful than any 2 1, IV | by the Bible in what the Greeks regard as a myth, where 3 1, XI | introducers of sects among the Greeks or Barbarians, why should 4 1, XIII | stumbling-block, and to the Greeks foolishness; but to them 5 1, XIII | are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God, 6 1, XIV | histories of Barbarians and Greeks respecting the antiquity 7 1, XV | he introduced among the Greeks. And there is extant a work 8 1, XVI | Egyptians, and Phoenicians, and Greeks, which testify to their 9 1, XVI | exists the Discourse to the Greeks of Tatian the younger, in 10 1, XIX | men (who lived) among the Greeks and Romans, a spirit which 11 1, XX | old, when he says that the Greeks consider those things as 12 1, XXIII | that are found amongst the Greeks, or among those other nations 13 1, XXIII | fictitious representations of the Greeks, which have the appearance 14 1, XXIII | should the fables of the Greeks regarding the gods be true, 15 1, XXIV | which is current among the Greeks, or by that, e.g., which 16 1, XXV | ancient theologians of the Greeks. For what are the grounds 17 1, XXVI | world, not a few persons, Greeks as well as Barbarians, learned 18 1, XXIX | established observances of the Greeks regarding the Divinity? 19 1, XXXI | accounts current both among Greeks and Barbarians, of persons 20 1, XXXI | Argives, but among all the Greeks and Barbarians alike, and " 21 1, XXXII | far as in him lay, all the Greeks and Barbarians, who were 22 1, XXXII | And I will ask of them as Greeks, and particularly of Celsus, 23 1, XXXVI | the more candid among the Greeks. To these we say that we 24 1, XXXVII | a further answer to the Greeks, who do not believe in the 25 1, XXXVII | common! Nay, according to the Greeks themselves, all men were 26 1, XXXVII | created, as many even of the Greeks are pleased to admit, then 27 1, XXXVII | Grecian histories to answer Greeks, with the view of showing 28 1, XL | and than all the other Greeks, agreeably to his assertion 29 1, XLII | really a war in Ilium between Greeks and Trojans? And suppose, 30 1, LVIII | other names by which the Greeks are accustomed to describe 31 1, LIX | only to Jews, but also to Greeks, and to many of the barbarous 32 1, LIX | partly in answer to the Greeks, and partly to the Jews.~ 33 1, LX | LX.~To the Greeks, then, I have to say that 34 1, LXIV | entangled by them. Now among the Greeks there was only one Phaedo, 35 1, LXVII | which we have to say Let the Greeks show to us, among those 36 1, LXVII | divine descent. But these Greeks can show us nothing regarding 37 1, LXX | who is believed among the Greeks to be a god, viz., the Pythian 38 1, LXX | Didymean is charged by the Greeks with not being a god, nor 39 2, IX | and as, according to the Greeks, he who says, "I know both 40 2, XIII | whole world under heaven to Greeks and Barbarians, wise and 41 2, XX | in the histories of the Greeks. Now, what is called by 42 2, XX | prophecy. And in answer to the Greeks we shall quote the following 43 2, XXXV | to say to those among the Greeks who accept the doctrine 44 2, XXXV | of providence? For as the Greeks would answer such objections, 45 2, XLI | of poor men is among the Greeks, who have given themselves 46 2, XLI | known to many among the Greeks from what is recorded of 47 2, XLV | instances related by the Greeks of the fortitude and courage 48 2, LV | in the histories of the Greeks. An Egyptian, moreover, 49 2, LXXVI | Odysseus, great glory of the Greeks;" ~whereas, if our prophets 50 2, LXXVI | prophecies, but also among the Greeks, among whom all of those 51 2, LXXVIII | although neither the Jews nor Greeks who disbelieve His word 52 2, LXXVIII | and they, whether Jews or Greeks, who lead astray those that 53 3, XII | science of medicine among the Greeks, and also, I suppose, among 54 3, XII | supposes, but to many among the Greeks who were devoted to literary 55 3, XXII | who are believed by the Greeks to have become gods after 56 3, XXII | immortality, not only by what the Greeks have so well said regarding 57 3, XXIV | great multitude both of Greeks and Barbarians acknowledge 58 3, XXIV | number, as he asserts, of Greeks and Barbarians acknowledge 59 3, XXIV | a countless multitude of Greeks and Barbarians who acknowledge 60 3, XXVI | those verses which by the Greeks are now called Arimaspian, 61 3, XXXV | the same views with the Greeks, and who neither recognises 62 3, XXXV | worships gods as do the Greeks; and let it be shown that 63 3, XXXVIII | among the Egyptians or the Greeks, is, so to speak, unfortunate; 64 3, XXXVIII | who enters human life. The Greeks, moreover, will admit that 65 3, XXXIX | cunning sophistry of the Greeks (which is characterized 66 3, XLI | attend to what is said by the Greeks regarding matter, which, 67 3, XLVII | Corinthians, as being addressed to Greeks who prided themselves greatly 68 3, XLVII | certain wise men among the Greeks, when their statements are 69 3, XLIX | even the wise men among the Greeks would not do. On the other 70 3, LIII | the Corinthians, who were Greeks, and not yet purified in 71 3, LIV | that they are debtors to Greeks and Barbarians, to wise 72 3, LIV | indeed permissible for you, O Greeks, to call youths and slaves 73 3, LXXVII | Who, then, would we ask, O Greeks, are they who in our judgment 74 3, LXXX | not lightly advanced among Greeks and Barbarians, regarding 75 4, III | and on this subject the Greeks have expressed themselves 76 4, X | none that is such, let the Greeks tell, and let Celsus and 77 4, XI | which are current among Greeks or barbarous nations, we 78 4, XVII | ascended to heaven? Or are the Greeks at liberty to refer such 79 4, XX | all things be renewed. The Greeks, moreover, know of the earth' 80 4, XX | said, then, that if the Greeks make such assertions, they 81 4, XX | quoted with approval by the Greeks, they cease to be honourable? 82 4, XXI | invention of letters among the Greeks. Who, then, are the perverters 83 4, XXX | servant of all." And if the Greeks say, "Then sun and moon 84 4, XXXI | is found recorded by the Greeks, we would answer, that if 85 4, XXXVIII | we would say: Are the Greeks alone at liberty to convey 86 4, XXXIX | careful not to offend the Greeks by a complete adoption of 87 4, XLII | peruse the Theogonies of the Greeks, and the stories about the 88 4, XLV | been investigated by the Greeks; and the more successful 89 4, XLV | sound reasoning among the Greeks, and to be commended by 90 4, XLVIII | these absurd stories of the Greeks regarding their gods, which 91 4, L | rather are the stories of the Greeks not only very silly, but 92 4, LI | than of Celsus and other Greeks, because he was willing 93 4, LVI | thing which is called by the Greeks a god, cognisable by the 94 4, LXXXVIII| the most acute of mankind--Greeks and Barbarians--he continues: " 95 4, LXXXVIII| philosophers, not only among the Greeks, but also among the Barbarians, 96 4, LXXXIX | the theologians among the Greeks, for they were only human 97 5, VII | according to the opinions of the Greeks, that if God be a whole, 98 5, VII | gods? But even this the Greeks will not assert. Those, 99 5, VII | Celsus, even according to the Greeks, who hold the doctrine of 100 5, X | those who are called by the Greeks "manifest and visible" divinities, 101 5, XV | held by certain of the Greeks who have treated the subject 102 5, XV | perceiving that, as certain Greeks were of opinion (perhaps 103 5, XXXIV | summoned before him those Greeks who happened to be present 104 5, XXXIV | in the presence of these Greeks, who learned what passed 105 5, XLVII | is the same among all the Greeks; but righteousness is shown 106 5, LVII | beings, is related by the Greeks; and not only by those of 107 5, LVII | accounts are related by the Greeks, and especially by the philosophers 108 6, I | stated much better among the Greeks (than in the Scriptures). 109 6, I | intelligent as well as simple--not Greeks only, but also Barbarians ( 110 6, II | doctrines are found among the Greeks as in our own Scriptures, 111 6, IV | wise and learned among the Greeks, then, commit errors in 112 6, VII | invention of letters among the Greeks, passages worthy of the 113 6, VIII | general assembly of the Greeks, showed his ivory thigh, 114 6, XVI | literature--not merely that of the Greeks, but not even that of the 115 6, XXI | of those bodies which the Greeks call "planets," or something 116 6, XXII | be more famous among the Greeks than those of Eleusis, or 117 6, XXXIX | names of demons among the Greeks are different from what 118 6, XXXIX | understand the same thing as the Greeks, in what relates to those 119 6, XXXIX | the other names, for the Greeks took occasion from different 120 6, XLII | moreover, the fictions of the Greeks, he continues to heap against 121 6, XLVII | of God" long before the Greeks and those men of ancient 122 6, LIII | there have been among the Greeks many sects who differ as 123 6, LXXI | from the Stoics among the Greeks, who maintain that "God 124 6, LXXIX | despatching Mercury to the Greeks; but the Word, knowing that 125 7, III | show that even among the Greeks themselves there were some 126 7, V | by many others among the Greeks and Barbarians, that the 127 7, V | Apollo were a god, as the Greeks suppose, would he not rather 128 7, VI | so much admired among the Greeks, judged no wise man, nay, 129 7, VI | daughter Chryseis, so that the Greeks were driven by a pestilence 130 7, VI | afterwards sent upon the Greeks, are proofs that Homer knew 131 7, XXX | from Plato or any of the Greeks, but that they rather--living 132 7, XXXV | desires in prisons, which the Greeks call temples of the gods, 133 7, XXXIX | he has borrowed from the Greeks, was in use among our own 134 7, XLII | Plato or any other of the Greeks had found God. they would 135 7, XLIX | sound doctrines held even by Greeks, but with the desire of 136 7, LIV | Anaxarchus known to the Greeks; and although, on the strength 137 7, LV | all that was said by the Greeks when beset by calamity. 138 7, LIX | things were said by the Greeks, our answer is, that if 139 7, LIX | it was, made known to the Greeks by Plato or any of the wise 140 7, LIX | things were also said by the Greeks, especially if it be proved 141 7, LIX | older than those of the Greeks. And further, we are not 142 7, LX | and the wise men among the Greeks, in the beautiful things 143 7, LX | for a Barbarian among the Greeks, by speaking as the Egyptians 144 7, LXII | conjecture, they do not, like the Greeks, suppose the gods to be 145 7, LXIX | which is supposed among the Greeks to be rendered to gods at 146 8, VI | ruler among Persians, or Greeks or Egyptians, or of any 147 8, XXXIV | salvation." Let the learned Greeks say that the human soul 148 8, XXXVII | applies to God; but the Greeks use Greek names, the Romans 149 8, XLVII | XLVII.~But the Greeks Will say that these accounts 150 8, XLVII | consider the accounts of fife Greeks as fabulous rather than 151 8, XLVII | wonders mentioned by the Greeks were performed by certain 152 8, LXXII | Asia, Europe, and Libya, Greeks and Barbarians, all to the 153 8, LXXII | Europe, and Libya, as well Greeks as Barbarians, was impossible.


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