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sought 60
soul 203
soul- 1
souls 70
sound 20
sounding 1
soundness 1
Frequency    [«  »]
71 folly
71 impious
70 animals
70 souls
69 dead
69 piety
68 never
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius
The divine institutes

IntraText - Concordances

souls

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   Book, Chapter                               grey = Comment text
1 II, 1 | would not subject their souls to the influence of earth-born 2 II, 2 | saying of Persius:--~"O souls bent down to the earth, 3 II, 3 | And they abase their souls with fear of the gods, and 4 II, 3 | right that sublime and lofty souls should be called away and 5 II, 11| and to create innumerable souls, on whom He might bestow 6 II, 13| altogether annihilates the souls of the unrighteous, but 7 II, 13| Death is the condemnation of souls for their deserts to eternal 8 II, 15| diseases, terrify their souls with dreams, harass their 9 II, 18| earth, or make over their souls to unclean spirits, do not 10 III, 12| extinguish the heavenly souls together with the body, 11 III, 12| earthly things overcome, our souls, pure and victorious, may 12 III, 17| argument is false, inasmuch as souls do not perish? But, he says, 13 III, 17| not perish? But, he says, souls do perish; for that which 14 III, 17| not to be dreaded, because souls die after death, and that 15 III, 19| that, on the other hand, souls that were chaste, pure, 16 III, 19| feeding on animals, said that souls passed from the bodies of 17 III, 19| unnecessary to introduce souls that have long existed into 18 III, 26| influence is exerted on the souls of men by the precepts of 19 III, 27| will not perceive it if souls shall perish, or, if he 20 IV, 26| life, and depressing their souls from heaven to earth, run 21 V, 1 | tear away with violence souls dedicated to God from the 22 V, 1 | easily able to ensnare unwary souls by the sweetness of their 23 V, 8 | prepared for the destroyers of souls, who sees through secret 24 V, 20| those who destroy their own souls and the souls of others 25 V, 20| their own souls and the souls of others learn what an 26 V, 21| and they place their own souls to be burned with the very 27 V, 22| of men, and harass their souls, they are adjured by them, 28 V, 24| deserts. Therefore let not the souls of the sacrilegious expect 29 V, 24| tormented just and innocent souls, without the commission 30 VI, 3 | ignorant or in doubt that the souls of men are immortal, estimated 31 VI, 9 | tranquillity. For if our souls are mortal, if virtue is 32 VI, 20| God breathes into their souls for life, and not for death. 33 VI, 20| pollute their hands, deprive souls as yet innocent and simple 34 VI, 20| and madness? For their souls are hurried away to mad 35 VI, 22| enjoyments it captivates their souls; for it knows that pleasure 36 VII, 2 | immediately extinguished, and the souls of the righteous being recalled 37 VII, 5 | Spirit to produce innumerable souls, as He produced the angels, 38 VII, 5 | an infinite multitude of souls, which being at first united 39 VII, 6 | were in mire and mud their souls, which were born for heavenly 40 VII, 6 | which they imagine that souls perish? Assuredly there 41 VII, 6 | wished. Whether, therefore, souls perish or exist for ever, 42 VII, 6 | of men or of gods? Or if souls remain after death, what 43 VII, 6 | them of a treasure-house of souls? From what source do they 44 VII, 7 | and Plato contended that souls were immortal; but this 45 VII, 7 | Democritus, who argued that souls perished with the body and 46 VII, 9 | invented, the immorality of souls can be proved and perceived: 47 VII, 9 | bodies, it must be that human souls exist in the same way, since 48 VII, 9 | alone is a great proof that souls are immortal. For this will 49 VII, 11| temporal life, it follows that souls rise again to everlasting 50 VII, 12| employ, who contended that souls perished with the bodies; 51 VII, 12| Pythagoras, who contends that souls migrate from bodies worn 52 VII, 12| born; and that the same souls are always reproduced at 53 VII, 13| concerning the destruction of souls, in the presence of any 54 VII, 13| magician, who knew that souls are called forth from the 55 VII, 16| watchfulness shall consume the souls of men; they shall deplore 56 VII, 20| by the Stoics: that the souls of men continue to exist, 57 VII, 20| intervention of death: that the souls, moreover, of those who 58 VII, 20| through length of time, souls are given over to its nature, 59 VII, 21| TORMENTS AND PUNISHMENTS OF SOULS.~First of all, therefore, 60 VII, 21| wonder is it, therefore, if souls, though they are immortal, 61 VII, 21| let any one imagine that souls are immediately judged. 62 VII, 22| defilement, He may restore the souls of the righteous to their 63 VII, 22| resurrection, and teach that souls will return to another life, 64 VII, 22| river of oblivion, lest the souls, remembering their labours 65 VII, 22| thought conceive~That happy souls this realm would leave,~ 66 VII, 22| therefore they supposed that souls were born again, and that 67 VII, 22| be known from this that souls are immortal and divine, 68 VII, 23| Pythagoras asserted that souls passed into new bodies; 69 VII, 24| judgment-seat to judge the souls of the quick and dead, and 70 VII, 27| aside, which soothe the souls of men with pernicious sweetness.


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