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Alphabetical [« »] exempt 1 exemption 1 exercent 1 exercise 28 exercised 6 exercises 3 exercising 3 | Frequency [« »] 28 easy 28 elements 28 enemies 28 exercise 28 find 28 go 28 government | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances exercise |
Book, Chapter
1 II, 2 | understand, that if images could exercise perception and motion, they 2 II, 5 | unintelligible to me with out the exercise of mind, reason, and design; 3 II, 9 | should exist without the exercise of God's power, or against 4 II, 9 | wanting, and which might exercise dominion over the rest. 5 II, 12| courses, fail to begin its exercise together with them. In the 6 II, 17| practices besides these men exercise, either openly or in secret. 7 III, 8 | purpose of being put into exercise; but they are exercised 8 III, 16| sloth, and undertake no exercise of virtue, and pass their 9 III, 17| the sluggish from bodily exercise, the timid from military 10 III, 24| defend falsehoods, as if to exercise or display their talents 11 III, 29| that by his malice he may exercise man to virtue: for unless 12 IV, 26| power did not limit its exercise to this point; but He declared 13 IV, 26| defiled bodies,--no slight exercise of immortal power; but this 14 V, 10| of his was the befitting exercise of piety. He is plainly 15 V, 11| character of their gods, they exercise with violence against the 16 V, 15| by an oratorical kind of exercise of disputing on both sides. 17 V, 22| grievous to them, and they exercise cruelty, with all the violence 18 VI, 11| Sometimes, however, we must exercise bounty in giving: nor is 19 VI, 12| life should be without the exercise of mercy. Nor, however, 20 VI, 12| captives is a great and noble exercise of justice, of which the 21 VI, 13| he is then more bound to exercise justice when he is become 22 VI, 15| restraining of which the exercise of virtue is applied. Where, 23 VI, 15| existence, or not be in exercise, if those things are wanting 24 VII, 4 | and evil things, he may exercise the force of his reason 25 VII, 5 | virtue itself by continual exercise, and might make it perfect 26 VII, 5 | the first man lived in the exercise of good only, or that be 27 VII, 5 | will hereafter live in the exercise of good only? This question 28 VII, 7 | that men were born to the exercise of virtue; we are also reminded