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Alphabetical [« »] streams 7 street 1 streets 1 strength 57 strengthen 4 strengthened 10 strengthening 1 | Frequency [« »] 57 better 57 books 57 race 57 strength 56 fall 56 force 56 happy | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances strength |
Book, Chapter
1 I, 3 | would possess less might and strength. And they who hold that 2 I, 3 | will have less power and strength, since every one must confine 3 I, 9 | weakened and broken by iron and strength. But to conquer the mind, 4 I, 9 | the weakness of their own strength. For no one will deny this, 5 I, 9 | their origin, what is their strength, what their number, what 6 I, 18| foolishly senseless as to judge strength of body to be a divine or 7 I, 18| time appear to have less strength or comeliness than he once 8 II, 8 | the senate, he regained strength of body, and returned to 9 II, 9 | necessarily be of perfect strength, power, and intelligence, 10 II, 9 | strong, and through His strength His power is immense, which 11 II, 9 | exceed the measure of human strength, because you would not know 12 II, 9 | were made not so much by strength as by skill and ingenuity? 13 II, 9 | by skill than his feeble strength would permit, what reason 14 II, 9 | wisdom can have no limit, and strength no measure? His works are 15 II, 11| those which are of great strength He gave, that they might 16 III, 1 | supported as much by the strength of talent as it has weight 17 III, 1 | great to be sustained by my strength; which, however, even if 18 III, 5 | nature of bodies, and the strength of herbs by students of 19 III, 8 | with the utmost exertion of strength, that my valour may procure 20 III, 8 | depend by itself upon its own strength, and to remain stedfast. 21 III, 21| who shall be superior in strength may succeed in obtaining 22 IV, 4 | although they understood the strength and power of the Supreme 23 IV, 6 | Father with such wisdom and strength, that God employed both 24 IV, 12| Him, and will break the strength of kings. I will open before 25 IV, 15| substantial, but by heavenly strength and power, which were foretold 26 IV, 15| God, relying upon heavenly strength and power. Nor was it enough 27 IV, 15| was it enough that He gave strength to the feeble, soundness 28 IV, 18| with all the spirit and strength of his eloquence, pouring 29 IV, 21| endowed them with power and strength, by which the system of 30 IV, 22| why did He not repel by strength, or avoid by His divine 31 IV, 22| He was led as one without strength to trial, was condemned 32 IV, 26| which He performed, the strength and power of which had some 33 IV, 26| the office of walking,--a strength of divine work worthy of 34 IV, 26| immortal power; but this strength prefigured that by the instruction 35 IV, 29| from the mouth, nor the strength or hand from the body. When, 36 IV, 29| prophets as the hand, and strength, and word of God, there 37 IV, 29| and the hand, in which the strength is situated, are inseparable 38 V, 4 | office, that with all the strength of my mind I might refute 39 V, 4 | and soft milk, until, its strength being confirmed, it can 40 V, 6 | much by authority as by strength, or resources, or malice. 41 V, 9 | they fall with all the strength of their butchery, as though 42 V, 18| it needs neither arms nor strength for its protection:--~"He 43 VI, 5 | also have the effort and strength for walking, so truly knowledge 44 VI, 7 | forerunner of that way, whose strength and power are altogether 45 VI, 7 | fountain, one source of strength, one abode--is both simple, 46 VII, 5 | animals; afterwards, when his strength is confirmed, he raises 47 VII, 8 | the subject, have little strength to prove and fill up the 48 VII, 9 | Tullius saw is of sufficient strength: that the immortality of 49 VII, 10| it wished for, loses its strength; likewise the other vices 50 VII, 15| nothing prepared by human strength which cannot equally he 51 VII, 15| equally he destroyed by human strength, since the works of mortals 52 VII, 15| at length with confirmed strength it began to be manly. For 53 VII, 15| now failed, it abused its strength, by which it destroyed itself. 54 VII, 15| old, as though it had no strength to support itself, unless 55 VII, 19| of a tyranny of immense strength, inasmuch as it will press 56 VII, 27| with true religion, the strength and office of which depends 57 VII, 27| is denied who, when the strength of their body now fails,