Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] myself 9 mysteries 12 mysterious 1 mystery 29 mystic 1 mystical 1 n 1 | Frequency [« »] 29 form 29 heat 29 mother 29 mystery 29 obey 29 rightly 29 rule | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances mystery |
Book, Chapter
1 I, 1 | us who have received the mystery of true religion, and since 2 I, 9 | worthy of adoration--what mystery, in short, more to be relied 3 I, 21| I do not meddle with a mystery so odious; nor do I strip 4 I, 21| sacred rites. Moreover, the mystery of his mother also contains 5 II, 3 | which partakes of a divine mystery and a heavenly secret. And 6 II, 16| who are uninitiated in the mystery of truth. But they fear 7 III, 16| a charge of betraying a mystery, he did not venture confidently 8 III, 25| itself wisdom, that its mystery is only made known by the 9 III, 30| righteousness, understand the mystery of his birth, despise human 10 IV, 8 | God, and of the heavenly mystery to be revealed to man: which 11 IV, 10| the origin of the whole mystery is to be related. Our ancestors, 12 IV, 12| under heaven the sacred mystery of the only true God, which 13 IV, 13| entirely ignorant of the mystery of the truth. For he appears 14 IV, 20| been opened; that is, the mystery of God could not have been 15 V, 1 | who are ignorant of the mystery except by his words; inasmuch 16 V, 2 | had assumed, and of the mystery which he had received, unless 17 V, 3 | prophets, and to whom the mystery of God had been assigned, 18 V, 7 | which alone preserves the mystery of a divine religion.~ 19 V, 18| who are ignorant of the mystery of man, and who therefore 20 V, 19| character of folly, that the mystery of truth and of His religion 21 VI, 8 | that is acquainted with the mystery of God could so significantly 22 VII, 1 | ignorant of the heavenly mystery, which is not learned except 23 VII, 3 | business to set forth the mystery of the world and man, of 24 VII, 5 | if they had known all the mystery of man, the Academy would 25 VII, 6 | secret of God, this the mystery of the world, from which 26 VII, 7 | creation belongs to a divine mystery; and because he was unable 27 VII, 8 | the whole of this great mystery, nor had he comprehended 28 VII, 22| the secret of the divine mystery, and mention of a future 29 VII, 26| censuring and jeering. For a mystery ought to be most faithfully