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Alphabetical [« »] leaping 1 leapt 1 learn 36 learned 75 learning 23 learnt 10 least 37 | Frequency [« »] 75 appears 75 christian 75 day 75 learned 75 nation 75 philosophy 75 saviour | Origenes Against Celsus IntraText - Concordances learned |
Book, Chapter
1 1, XII | where the Egyptian savans, learned in their country's literature, 2 1, XII | of the priests, or having learned the mysteries of the Egyptians 3 1, XII | have said regarding the learned and ignorant among the Egyptians, 4 1, XII | rational principles by the learned among them, but understood 5 1, XIV | the ground of their being learned, and condemns others as 6 1, XIV | agreement among all the most learned nations, and cities, and 7 1, XIV | will not call the Jews a learned nation in the same way in 8 1, XVI | among the most ancient and learned nations, and should not 9 1, XVI | Gauls, and the Getae, most learned and ancient tribes, on account 10 1, XVI | making a list of ancient and learned men who have conferred benefits 11 1, XVI | Moses from his catalogue of learned men, while asserting that 12 1, XVII | as are described by your learned poets and philosophers, 13 1, XVIII | speculation. But of your learned poets the very writings 14 1, XX | his opinion, are the most learned of the Egyptians, traces 15 1, XXI | Moses having," he says, "learned the doctrine which is to 16 1, XXIV | of which are used by the learned amongst the Egyptians, or 17 1, XXVI | Greeks as well as Barbarians, learned as well as ignorant, adopted 18 1, XXIX | calumniators admit, had learned nothing great from men-- 19 1, XXXI | which, it is probable, they learned from Jesus in private), 20 1, XXXVI | of the world, as they had learned, and to be without pretexts, 21 1, XL | which is never done by a learned philosopher. For Plato says, 22 1, XLV | certain Jews who were reputed learned men, having employed the 23 1, XLVI | performed only what He had learned among the Egyptians. And 24 1, LII | Egyptian to despise what he had learned from his fathers, so as 25 1, LII | assigned by those who have learned to state them, for their 26 1, LVI | the Jew, who was deemed a learned man, very hard with this 27 1, LX | offerings after they had learned the place of His birth. 28 2, I | of Moses, not having yet learned from Jesus to ascend from 29 2, XI | which the Jew of Celsus learned from the Gospels; calling 30 2, XI | with contempt what he had learned from Jesus. Will Celsus 31 2, XVIII | from his perjury?" Here the learned Celsus did not see the contradiction 32 2, XX | of the assertion of this learned Celsus, that "being a God 33 2, XXXI | Jews who professed to be learned men, I never heard any one 34 2, XLII | from what quarter he has learned that which has induced him 35 2, LII | those of the people who had learned to ask for signs and wonders, 36 2, LV | of a Jew, who is not very learned in the histories of the 37 3, XV | in old times. For we have learned from the Gospel neither 38 3, XVIII | minds of those who have learned these things; that they 39 3, XXXVII | Whereas Christians (who have learned that their eternal life 40 3, XXXVII | He has sent; and who have learned also that all the gods of 41 3, XLVI | he says: "And Moses was learned in all the wisdom of the 42 4, XXI | for we assert that we have learned these things from the sacred 43 4, XXVI | harlot;" and who have already learned that the body of the rational 44 4, XXXIV | And from whom have you learned, or can you learn, the facts 45 4, XXXVI | indeed, this deeply read and learned Celsus, who accuses Jews 46 4, XXXVI | companions, who, having neither learned nor heard of the far older 47 4, XLVIII | account of his numerous and learned treatises, explains a picture 48 4, LXXXVIII| have either discovered or learned from certain demons some 49 4, XCIII | animals, and having either learned from God what was peculiar 50 5, IV | His benefits. Having thus learned to call these beings "angels" 51 5, VIII | these verses, nor having learned their contents from any 52 5, XXI | Council of Areopagus! The learned among the Egyptians, moreover, 53 5, XXIX | possession of Attica. And the learned among the Egyptians can 54 5, XXXIV | presence of these Greeks, who learned what passed through an interpreter, 55 5, XXXV | resemble those who have indeed learned philosophy, but who are 56 5, XLVIII | circumcised. And when Zipporah had learned this, she took a pebble 57 6, IV | Creator." As the wise and learned among the Greeks, then, 58 6, VII | gentle kind; for we have learned that he who presides over 59 6, X | it, inasmuch as we have learned to know "how we ought to 60 6, XIX | account of him;" for we have learned that nobler thoughts than 61 6, XIX | indeed, deny that Plato learned from certain Hebrews the 62 6, XX | promised to all that have truly learned divine things, and have 63 6, XLI | other hand, affirm, and have learned by experience, that they 64 6, XLIII | which not a little might be learned concerning evil, as to the 65 6, LVII | a man who has thoroughly learned the principles of rhetoric, 66 6, LXXIX | Antichrist cometh, and yet have learned that there are many antichrists 67 7, IV | mighty in argument, and most learned in matters of faith.~ 68 7, XXXVI | wise maxims which he had learned from Anaxagoras or some 69 7, XLI | that He gave to the more learned a theology capable of raising 70 7, XLIV | he sees that one who has learned from philosophy such profound 71 7, XLVI | intelligent piety of the learned; seeing that both alike 72 7, XLVI | by the Divine Word, have learned and practised this, "when 73 7, LX | those who are reputed to be learned in the literature of Greece, 74 8, XIV | Christ." We, however, have learned who the Son of God is, and 75 8, XXXIV | heirs of salvation." Let the learned Greeks say that the human