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Book, Chapter, Paragraph grey = Comment text
1 I, 2, 4| possessing some of the natural tendencies of an AEon, but
2 I, 9, 4| have already said, from a natural to a non-natural sense.
3 II, 14, 1| round it, as if by a sort of natural process, changing only the
4 II, 24, 2| letters according to their natural sequence, just as we do,
5 III, 23, 5| flesh (since he had lost his natural disposition and child-like
6 IV, 13 | CHRIST DID NOT ABROGATE THE NATURAL PRECEPTS OF THE LAW, BUT
7 IV, 13, 1| Lord did not abrogate the natural [precepts] of the law, by
8 IV, 13, 4| Inasmuch, then, as all natural precepts are common to us
9 IV, 15 | SUFFICIENT TO INSCRIBE THE NATURAL LAW, OR THE DECALOGUE, UPON
10 IV, 15, 1| warning them by means of natural precepts, which from the
11 IV, 16, 5| widened those laws which are natural, and noble, and common to
12 IV, 27, 2| if [God] spared not the natural branches, [take heed] lest
13 IV, 29, 2| this occurred by merely natural causes (sed naturaliter
14 IV, 31, 3| endures for ever; and by those natural processes which appertain
15 IV, 41, 3| become the heirs of their natural parents; so in the same
16 V, 1, 3| in the old leaven of [the natural] birth, and who do not choose
17 V, 1, 3| in order that as in the natural [Adam] we all were dead,
18 V, 5, 1| in the substance of the [natural] form; thus exhibiting in
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