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Alphabetical    [«  »]
religion 196
religion- 1
religions 22
religious 56
religiously 2
reluctetur 1
rely 1
Frequency    [«  »]
56 force
56 happy
56 pain
56 religious
56 saw
56 understood
55 assuredly
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius
The divine institutes

IntraText - Concordances

religious

                                               bold = Main text
   Book, Chapter                               grey = Comment text
1 I, 6 | of Phenae honour him with religious worship. And although he 2 I, 11| forth the sole object of religious dread to the gods above." 3 I, 11| What is this object of religious dread? Or by whom is it 4 I, 15| their kings. Thus by degrees religious honours began to be paid 5 I, 17| Has she, too, any claim to religious worship, on whose part more 6 I, 21| both among the gods and in religious rites, if no gods were worshipped 7 I, 22| he not only annulled the religious rites which he himself had 8 I, 22| what piety they defended religious institutions, they lessened 9 I, 22| entertainers in conjunction with religious observances. Accordingly 10 II, 1 | the first book that the religious ceremonies of the gods are 11 II, 1 | persuasion persevered in the religious observances which they had 12 II, 3 | tended to the overthrow of religious ceremonies, he said nevertheless 13 II, 3 | of heavenly things. False religious systems, therefore, have 14 II, 3 | philosophers have taken away religious institutions, as I have 15 II, 4 | should be reckoned among religious offerings which was not 16 II, 7 | VII. OF GOD, AND THE RELIGIOUS RITES OF THE FOOLISH; OF 17 II, 7 | men admires. These are the religious institutions handed down 18 II, 7 | reason teaches you that the religious institutions of the gods 19 II, 7 | have entirely uprooted all religious systems. If you prefer reason, 20 II, 7 | foolish, who complied with religious institutions invented contrary 21 II, 10| heaven, nor do they entertain religious sentiments, since the use 22 II, 18| punishment. I have shown that the religious rites of the gods are vain 23 II, 18| spirits which preside over the religious rites themselves, being 24 II, 18| if it appears that these religious rites are vain in so many 25 III, 17| moved him, was the fact that religious men were especially visited 26 III, 28| who created us, and the religious and pious worship of Him; 27 IV, 2 | become acquainted with their religious rites and institutions ( 28 IV, 3 | said, philosophy and the religious system of the gods are separated, 29 IV, 3 | conceive the truth, nor was the religious system of the gods able 30 IV, 3 | treated of. For that system of religious rites is dumb, not only 31 IV, 3 | without virtue. Thus also the religious system of the gods is unchaste 32 IV, 4 | of Him cannot be wise or religious. Thus it comes to pass that 33 IV, 10| often undertaken corrupt religious rites; and God, offended 34 IV, 28| of the gods, were called religious from carefully gathering, 35 IV, 28| which there is in the word religious: thus it has come to pass, 36 IV, 28| names superstitious and religious, the one relates to a fault, 37 IV, 28| of sons is the part of a religious man, but to do the same 38 IV, 28| worship of the gods are called religious from their carefully gathering; 39 IV, 28| in a day lose the name of religious men, when it is plain from 40 IV, 28| imagine themselves to be religious, though they are superstitious, 41 IV, 28| ancient gods they named religious. From which Virgil says:--~" 42 IV, 28| on the other hand, are religious, who make our supplications 43 V, 1 | those who are foolishly religious should take in hand this 44 V, 2 | especially in defending the religious rites of the gods; that 45 V, 5 | while Saturnus reigned, the religious worship of the gods not 46 V, 7 | else than the pious and religious worship of the one God. 47 V, 8 | lust, and the pious and religious contributions of the rich 48 V, 10| because when they seem to be religious and naturally good, they 49 V, 10| who are depraved in their religious worship, punishes them with 50 V, 10| own will, since the most religious worship is to imitate.~ 51 V, 13| punishment make a man more religious, and the faith is always 52 V, 20| anything back. Hence it is that religious observances of this kind 53 V, 21| good. But they who destroy religious systems must be punished. 54 VI, 1 | kinds, think themselves religious if they have stained the 55 VI, 2 | to the earth even by the religious rites to which they are 56 VII, 26| who are alone of all men religious, is any more called irreligious;


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