Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] investigator 1 invincible 1 invisibility 1 invisible 35 invited 1 invites 2 invocation 4 | Frequency [« »] 35 beginning 35 children 35 hand 35 invisible 35 portion 35 roots 35 speak | Hyppolitus The refutation of all heresies IntraText - Concordances invisible |
Book, Chapter
1 I, 7 | sun and moon, and certain invisible bodies that are carried 2 IV, 41| desires (the skull) to become invisible, he appears as if burning 3 IV, 41| skull is supposed to become invisible.~ 4 V, 2 | affirmed by the Word. "For the invisible things of Him are seen from 5 V, 4 | breasts, and produced his now invisible, and nameless, and ineffable 6 V, 4 | proceeded and was born the Invisible (One), "by whom all things 7 V, 4 | Months, Days, Hours, (and) Invisible Point from which what is 8 V, 9 | distributes the downborne invisible waters, and has been called 9 V, 14| darkness remains isolated, invisible, obscure, impotent, inoperative, ( 10 V, 21| devoid of prescience, and invisible. And the female (principle) 11 VI, 6 | all things are visible and invisible, (and) in like manner resonant 12 VI, 7 | the fire, both visible and invisible, are possessed of perception 13 VI, 13| power, viz., Sige, (who is) invisible (and) incomprehensible. 14 VI, 25| asserts: "The earth was invisible, and unfashioned." This ( 15 VI, 33| was) both unbegotten and invisible, and he styles it a Monad. " 16 VI, 33| which is) fourth (and) invisible, by the following names: 17 VI, 33| Father came forth from the invisible (Aeons), viz., from Thelema, 18 VI, 34| the mightiest power from invisible and unnameable places. And 19 VI, 37| realization in) form of the Invisible One. And the pronunciation 20 VI, 48| they say, are images of the invisible decade that (emanated) from 21 VIII, 5 | an image of that perfect invisible man.~ 22 VIII, 9 | that there existed certain invisible AEons. And he framed a legendary 23 IX, 4 | better), though unknown and invisible to men, he asserts in these 24 IX, 4 | that which is unknown and invisible in regard of its power. 25 IX, 4 | visible to those that are invisible. From such expressions of 26 IX, 5 | position and honour with the invisible, as if what was visible 27 IX, 5 | was visible and what was invisible were confessedly some one 28 IX, 5 | having pre-eminently honoured invisible things. Therefore neither 29 IX, 5 | nevertheless appeared, (though invisible,) to just men of old. For 30 IX, 5 | when He is not seen He is invisible; and He is incomprehensible 31 X, 8 | of the fire, visible and invisible, have been supposed to be 32 X, 11| foreknowledge, and unknown, and invisible, and is called Elohim. The 33 X, 14| says that there are certain invisible AEons, and that by some 34 X, 22| and Father, visible and invisible, begotten and unbegotten, 35 X, 23| when He wished; and He is invisible when He is not seen, but