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Alphabetical    [«  »]
imaginations 6
imagine 35
imagined 5
imagines 34
imagining 10
imbibed 1
imbued 4
Frequency    [«  »]
34 fact
34 hearers
34 hebrew
34 imagines
34 lay
34 mention
34 moon
Origenes
Against Celsus

IntraText - Concordances

imagines

   Book, Chapter
1 1, XXXVII | tearing in pieces, as he imagines, the fiction of His birth 2 1, XLVIII | very points which Celsus imagines, viz., that Jesus Himself 3 2, X | must be?" And if any one imagines these statements to be inventions 4 2, XVI | in the preceding book. He imagines, moreover, that the whole 5 2, XX | such statements. Celsus imagines that an event, predicted 6 2, XXXIV | ridiculing Jesus, as he imagines, is described as being acquainted 7 2, XL | unphilosophical spirit that Celsus imagines our Lord's pre-eminence 8 2, LIX | LIX.~He imagines also that both the earthquake 9 2, LXI | Jesus accordingly, as Celsus imagines, exhibited after His death 10 2, LXXIV | swords;" but he only so imagines. And when the Jew adds, 11 3, XI | beginning, when, as Celsus imagines, believers were few in number, 12 3, XV | origin, and do not (as Celsus imagines) conceal it, when we impress 13 3, XXXIV | considerable length? He next imagines that, "in worshipping him 14 3, XXXVI | Antinous in Egypt), and imagines that the honour paid to 15 3, LXV | LXV.~He imagines, however, that we utter 16 4, V | will come down to men." He imagines also that it follows from 17 4, V | should be changed, as Celsus imagines when he says, "If you were 18 4, X | nor reverential;" and he imagines that we do these things 19 4, XXI | earth; unless, indeed, he imagines that the so-called confusion 20 4, XXI | from it. Seeing that he imagines, however, that Moses, who 21 4, XXXV | deceive our hearers, as he imagines, while he himself, who boasts 22 4, XXXVI | Greek or Barbarian, since he imagines that Hesiod and the "innumerable" 23 4, XLII | raven" into a "crow," and imagines that Moses so wrote, having 24 4, LI | rational use of what Celsus imagines to be fables in the sacred 25 4, LXIV | ridiculous light, when he imagines that there never has been 26 4, LXXXVII| simple and commonplace, and imagines that those who give them 27 5, LI | tricks of Moses (as Celsus imagines), or even of our own Saviour 28 6, VII | Plato imperfectly, as Celsus imagines. For how was it possible 29 6, XII | ago." And the reason he imagines to be, "our desire to win 30 6, XV | practised among us, and imagines that it is borrowed from 31 6, XXIII | treated, nor, as Celsus imagines, such as calls only for 32 7, XXXII | resurrection is not, as Celsus imagines, derived from anything that 33 7, XL | these fables, and that he imagines the charges which he makes 34 7, XLIV | to them his prayers, or imagines that by gazing upon these


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