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Alphabetical [« »] height 7 heir 3 heirs 4 held 39 helen 1 helicon 1 hell 11 | Frequency [« »] 39 different 39 effect 39 et 39 held 39 lived 39 worshippers 38 hope | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances held |
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1 I, 5 | confess that all things are held together and governed by 2 I, 5 | with perception, were to be held and worshipped as gods.~ 3 I, 12| Nature of the Gods. They held, he says, that the highest 4 I, 15| more weighty, because he held the priesthood of the augurs, 5 I, 15| venerate their shrines, held in the greatest honour in 6 I, 15| down, even those who are held in the highest rank as gods 7 I, 20| religion and worship is to be held but that of the one God. 8 I, 21| to a deed foul, and to be held in detestation by the human 9 II, 3 | greater error than they who held a religion which was false. 10 II, 4 | CONTEMPT IN WHICH THEY ARE HELD EVEN BY THE HEATHENS THEMSELVES.~ 11 II, 4 | little images which were held in the extended hands of 12 II, 9 | Socrates and Plato, it was held as an acknowledged and undoubted 13 II, 9 | because it is shut in and held as it were in custody by 14 II, 10| should be surrounded and held together by water. But He 15 II, 12| truth, yet, inasmuch as he held the image of wisdom, understood 16 III, 4 | necessity be better which is held by great numbers, than that 17 III, 4 | numbers, than that which is held by one only. For no one 18 III, 11| seek something which is held forth to all. Is it virtue? 19 III, 12| proposed to each, and victory held forth to each from the contest: 20 III, 13| philosophers; nor have they who held true opinions respecting 21 III, 18| saying beforehand that he was held by error and wretched ignorance 22 III, 24| anything but round, which was held enclosed by that which was 23 III, 30| permitted, that the philosophers held a course widely deviating 24 IV, 3 | Therefore the truth cannot be held where the same man is subject 25 IV, 5 | succeeded by Joshua, who held the chief place twenty-seven 26 IV, 26| announced that wisdom would be held in hatred. For the vinegar 27 IV, 26| which they gave Him to eat, held forth hardships and severities 28 IV, 27| worshipped and what to be held in execration; whether they 29 V, 12| that disputation which is held by Furius against justice: " 30 V, 18| Whose virtue would not be held in such glory, when one 31 VI, 6 | advantageous, but that which can be held b the hand; and this alone 32 VI, 6 | and this alone cannot be held, because it may be snatched 33 VII, 3 | and that all things are held together by it, not however 34 VII, 3 | that Plato, and those who held the same opinion, should 35 VII, 14| fashioning of the earthly man held forth to the future the 36 VII, 15| judgment of God, because it held His name in hatred; and 37 VII, 21| earthly body, by which it is held, and smoke intermingled, 38 VII, 22| follow God are not only held in hatred, but are harassed 39 VII, 27| by which we were formerly held while we served frail things,