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Alphabetical [« »] victorious 1 victoriously 1 victory 5 view 103 viewed 1 views 46 vigorous 3 | Frequency [« »] 104 follows 103 part 103 seen 103 view 99 form 98 beings 98 call | Origenes Against Celsus IntraText - Concordances view |
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1 1, II | from a Grecian point of view, to their demonstration, 2 1, IX | could be devised with a view of assisting the multitude, 3 1, XV | among those who hold this view; not showing any reluctance 4 1, XIX | we shall show that this view of ours is the correct one.~ 5 1, XX | that of irrational also!--a view which goes far beyond the 6 1, XXI | XXI.~The following is the view of Celsus and the Epicureans: " 7 1, XXXVII| answer Greeks, with the view of showing that we are not 8 1, XL | the Gospel, and, with the view of assailing it, would. 9 1, LXVIII| would be brought forward to view, affects to grant that those 10 1, LXX | fish; for, according to our view, He assumed a (true) body, 11 2, IX | priestess; so, according to our view, it was the Logos God, and 12 2, IX | formed, who, according to the view of the spirit of prophecy, 13 2, XVI | suffered." But we do not view His sufferings as having 14 2, XX | of a sick man, with the view of sophistically preventing 15 2, XXIV | soundness which he has in view. Moreover, they have not 16 2, XXXI | God, we do not present to view a pure and holy Logos, but 17 2, XLII | pleasure the perfect good,--a view accepted by none of those 18 2, LX | unwilling to admit any such view, will have it that some 19 2, LXIV | to the varying point of view, is clear from this statement, " 20 2, LXIV | which was hidden from the view of the multitude, but with 21 2, LXIX | do not present the whole view of the truth. For each one 22 2, LXIX | Gospels, according to the view of Celsus, that Jesus had 23 2, LXIX | immediately disappeared from view, after He had spoken to 24 3, II | alone, who were taught to view with contempt all those 25 3, XII | of existing things with a view to the regulation of life, 26 3, XVII | objects of reverence in the view of Celsus also, and Jesus 27 3, XIX | the Egyptians present to view many by no means contemptible 28 3, XXII | all; but agreeably to the view of those who think that 29 3, XXVIII| For with what purpose in view did Providence accomplish 30 3, XL | for although a perverted view of things, with the aid 31 3, LIX | keeping both these things in view, at first invite all men 32 3, LXIX | and do everything with a view to please Him with whom 33 3, LXXV | Christians, keeping this in view, deal with the simple-minded, 34 3, LXXXI | which, according to our view, shall be bestowed, by the 35 4, XVII | agreeably to another and higher view of things. And he would 36 4, XVIII | lunatic friends, with a view to their cure, or in that 37 4, XVIII | by the physician with a view to the good of his health 38 4, XXI | event does not on such a view appear to have taken place 39 4, XXIV | standard. For, on such a view, vultures and elephants 40 4, XXX | that they have obtained a view of those things which cannot 41 4, XXXIX | formed a secret plot, with a view of freeing herself from 42 4, XLIV | in order to present to view more important truths, which 43 4, XLVII | although I know not with what view, or what absurdity he can 44 4, L | narratives keep expressly in view the multitude of simpler 45 4, LIII | all our actions with the view of pleasing Him in everything 46 4, LVI | elements, against which view both the Platonists and 47 4, LX | also who hold the opposite view will endeavour to show, 48 4, LXI | which is agreeable to the view of those who say that the 49 4, LXIII | that as, according to the view of those who hold the indestructibility 50 4, LXIII | present themselves openly to view, suffering and committing 51 4, LXIV | their ability, must keep in view this estimate of evils, 52 4, LXVI | accuracy, nothing else in our view that is evil. I am aware, 53 4, LXVII | Celsus, in answer to such a view, that "if the course of 54 4, LXVII | which (according to this view) he has done not once, but 55 4, LXVIII| with the purpose we have in view to expatiate on these points.~ 56 4, LXXI | anthropopathic point of view, ridicules those passages 57 4, LXXII | discipline; and that such a view is agreeable to Scripture, 58 4, LXXII | have no other object in view than to free as far as they 59 4, LXXVI | animals, and yet all with a view to his advantage. For the 60 4, LXXVII| which is opposed to his view, and, joining issue with 61 4, LXXXI | rational beings, perhaps with a view of putting rational beings 62 4, LXXXIX| that as, according to the view of Celsus, they instruct 63 4, XC | tend to establish either view are not to be despised. 64 4, XCVII | means of signs, with the view of having men deceived by 65 5, VII | Now, according to this view, animals, as flies, and 66 5, XI | light. Nor is it with a view to depreciate these great 67 5, XVI | these sufferings with a view to an end which it is suitable 68 5, XXI | in the world. From this view it necessarily follows, 69 5, XXIV | them, as assenting to his view that "He is the God, not 70 5, XXIV | power," but the "will." In view, therefore, of these considerations, 71 5, XXIV | while according to our view it is His Son, of whom we 72 5, XXVI | to chance; and yet such a view is absurd, and destructive 73 5, XXVII | follow, according to his view, that piety is not divine 74 5, XXVIII| conveying a mystical and secret view respecting the original 75 5, XXXVI | follows, according to his view, that the Scythians commit 76 5, XXXIX | these things are in our view the Son of God, as His genuine 77 5, XLVII | one thing according to the view of Epicurus; and another 78 6, II | practical manner, and with a view to the wants of the multitude. 79 6, XIX | the first to present to view the "super-celestial" place; 80 6, XIX | David long ago brought to view the profundity and multitude 81 6, XX | apostle manifestly presents to view "things which are the objects 82 6, XXI | vision was presented to the view of our prophet Jacob,--a 83 6, XXI | truths which Plato had in view, or to something greater 84 6, XXVII | appears to have had in view in employing these expressions, 85 6, XXVIII| some such object as this in view does Celsus seem to have 86 6, XXXVI | transmigration of souls to that view of things. And it is not 87 6, XXXIX | yet, perhaps, having in view some who do employ such 88 6, XLII | accounts contain a higher view of things, while our accounts 89 6, XLIV | the "living" bread with a view to his own preservation. 90 6, XLIX | with no serious object in view, but in the spirit of the 91 6, LVI | would be no absurdity in the view, nor would "evils come down 92 6, LVI | by their enemies with a view to their conversion; nor 93 6, LVII | calleth you." Such also is the view indicated by these words: " 94 6, LXXIII| however, according to the view of Celsus, the body of Jesus 95 6, LXXIII| be induced to accept this view, by (regarding) the heavenly 96 7, VIII | beforehand. He adds, with the view of casting a slight upon 97 7, XXXV | to the will of God, as in view of being hereafter judged 98 7, XLIII | presence, which was open to the view of all; otherwise all those 99 7, XLIX | lead them to a rational view of religion, have not gone 100 8, IV | therefore, with this in view, goes on to say, "But to 101 8, XIII | it follows that, in our view, not only God, but also 102 8, XXXI | brings forward against this view, we have already seen. In 103 8, XXXIX | many men to God is in our view no demon, but God the Word,