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1 pref| ALTHOUGH the books of the Divine Institutions which we wrote
2 1 | I. OF THE DIVINE PROVIDENCE.~First a question
3 6 | they deserved to obtain divine hon-ours after death; and
4 24 | institution of new forms of divine worship.~
5 25 | cannot be preferred to the divine; and as God is the parent
6 28 | that they believe that a divine power is present in images
7 31 | defined it, the knowledge of divine and human things. Now if
8 31 | to profess that he knows divine and human things? I say
9 31 | they are connected with divine, yet, since they belong
10 31 | Certainly he cannot know divine things by himself, since
11 31 | he who knows them must be divine, and therefore God. But
12 31 | God. But man is neither divine nor God. Man, therefore,
13 31 | cannot thoroughly know divine things by himself. No one,
14 31 | that is, acquainted with divine and human things. Knowledge,
15 34 | wisdom is the knowledge of divine and human affairs. For it
16 36 | you have taken away the divine providence and care, it
17 36 | Sibyls, and lastly, by the divine voices of the prophets themselves;
18 39 | murder, according to the divine right and law. For it was
19 39 | asunder the bonds of the divine workmanship, he endeavours
20 40 | us follow that which is divine, and let us give thanks
21 40 | ourselves, that through the divine bounty we possess the truth
22 41 | immortality. This is a true and divine mystery. But among those,
23 42 | own eternity, and from the divine and everlasting Spirit,
24 42 | with the inspiration of the Divine Spirit, proclaimed; of whom
25 42 | his father, the writer of divine hymns--both most renowned
26 43 | prophets filled with the Divine Spirit, to upbraid them
27 60 | and we might choose the divine law, which unites human
28 60 | prescribed by that same divine law which teaches that whatever
29 67 | reasons, or issues of this divine work and design, so as to
30 70 | are eternal, when we have divine testimonies? For the sacred
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