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3005 II, 30, 3 | what rains, or frosts, or snows, each suited to the season,
3006 I, 25, 4 | his liberated soul should soar upwards to that God who
3007 V, 20 | BE AVOIDED. WE MUST THINK SOBERLY WITH REGARD TO THE MYSTERIES
3008 II, 8, 3 | figment, then, [in what way soever viewed,] has been proved
3009 IV, 39, 2 | Offer to Him thy heart in a soft and tractable state, and
3010 III, 23, 4 | perpetrated. And he was not softened even by this, nor did he
3011 II, 25, 2 | notes, to attend to the softness of others, to catch the
3012 III, 14, 1 | and for what period they sojourned at Rome. As Luke was present
3013 II, 17, 2 | produced them, even as the solar rays are with the sun; or
3014 I, 7, 4 | For I also am one having soldiers and servants under my authority;
3015 IV, pref, 4 | advanced with the utmost solemnity, they come to this at last,
3016 II, 10, 3 | substance from her smile, all solid substance from her sadness,
3017 II, 19, 6 | seed [referred to] is here solidified and formed into a definite
3018 II, 10, 1 | For no question can be solved by means of another which
3019 II, 10, 2 | They are not in the way of solving the questions [which they
3020 III, 23, 2 | children among them; and somebody, compassionating those who
3021 | somewhere
3022 III, 12, 7 | through the blood of His Son--He whom also Cornelius worshipped;
3023 IV, 9, 1 | Sing unto the LORD a new song;" and Esaias, "Sing unto
3024 V, 20, 2 | blasphemous and impudent sophist. Now, such are all the heretics,
3025 I, 23, 1 | had driven them mad by his sorceries." This Simon, then--who
3026 II, 30, 8 | suffer much bodily pain, sorely against their will.~9.
3027 IV, 33, 11 | weaknesses, and bear our sorrows,"--[all these] proclaimed
3028 II, 35, 3 | receives an initial guttural sound--thus Addonai--[it signifies], "
3029 III, 12, 3 | hath given him this perfect soundness in the presence of you all.
3030 IV, 40, 3 | his own accord stealthily sow the tares, that is, him
3031 V, 7, 1 | declares, "That which thou sowest cannot be quickened, unless
3032 I, 13, 2 | thee her own knowledge, by sowing the grain of mustard seed
3033 I, 10, 2 | different, nor do those in Spain, nor those in Gaul, nor
3034 III, 14, 2 | wolves come to you, not sparing the flock. Also of your
3035 V, 22, 2 | Father in heaven not even a sparrow falls to the ground, it
3036 V, 15, 2 | Wherefore also the Lord spat on the ground and made clay,
3037 IV, 41, 2 | according to creation, so to speak--we are all sons of God,
3038 IV, 29, 1 | when they asked Him, "Why speakest Thou unto them in parables?"--"
3039 IV, 34, 4 | ploughshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks, and
3040 IV, 34, 3 | these things properly and specifically took place. For all indeed
3041 III, 20, 4 | of the sea." And again, specifying the place of His advent,
3042 II, 25, 2 | exhibited in the whole work and [specimen of] wisdom. Those, too,
3043 I, 8, 2 | the following are some specimens of what they attempt to
3044 I, pref, 1 | are therein. By means of specious and plausible words, they
3045 I, 6, 3 | keep away from that bloody spectacle hateful both to God and
3046 II, 30, 7 | so that those should be spectators of them who, like the apostle,
3047 III, 12, 9 | preach God with freedom of speech--he said to them: "God, who
3048 IV, 36, 5 | wedding garment? But he was speechless. Then said the king to his
3049 IV, 20, 12 | nevertheless receive the three spies, who were spying out all
3050 V, 15, 1 | Come from the four winds (spiritibus), and breathe upon these
3051 I, 2, 6 | as Aletheia, and Zoe, and Spiritus, and Ecclesia. Everything,
3052 II, 24, 4 | the liver, the lungs, the spleen, and the kidneys. Moreover,
3053 IV, 2, 4 | and delighted himself with splendid feasts."~Of such persons,
3054 II, 4, 2 | is in a circle, or as a spot is in a garment,--then,
3055 IV, 36, 6 | righteous, and pure, and spotless, will endure nothing evil,
3056 IV, 19, 2 | which, by its own measure, spreads out the measure of the heavens,
3057 I, 30, 3 | towards and clung to that sprinkling of light, and begin it all
3058 IV, 37, 1 | the good, and as it were spuing it out, they shall all deservedly
3059 V, 21, 2 | him for the third time, He spurned him from Him finally as
3060 IV, 20, 12 | the three spies, who were spying out all the land, and hid
3061 III, 17, 2 | human race, saying, "And stablish me with Thine all-governing
3062 II, 24, 3 | manner, [was compounded] of stacte, onycha, galbanum, mint,
3063 II, 17 | FATHER HIMSELF WOULD BE STAINED WITH IGNORANCE.~1.
3064 IV, 27, 4 | not well pleased in many stances towards those who sinned,
3065 IV, 27, 3 | let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall."~
3066 III, 15, 2 | demand explanations, or start objections to them, they
3067 III, 23, 8 | is that, man who first started this idea, or rather, this
3068 IV, 15, 1 | Ezekiel the prophet, when stating the reasons for the giving
3069 V, 20, 2 | religious man, even in a private station, than a blasphemous and
3070 I, 8, 4 | wandering itself denotes her stay outside of the Pleroma in
3071 II, 33, 1 | connection with which she stayed during so long a time, even
3072 I, 24, 4 | compelled, bore the cross in his stead; so that this latter being
3073 IV, 6, 1 | my faith towards Him is steadfast, and my love to the Father
3074 V, 8, 4 | make their way by faith steadily towards the Father and the
3075 V, 8, 4 | for this is denoted by the steadiness of those which divide the
3076 II, 27, 2 | with the brightness of a steady light, is classed among
3077 IV, 12, 5 | adultery, do not kill, do not steal, do not bear false witness,
3078 IV, 40, 3 | who did of his own accord stealthily sow the tares, that is,
3079 I, 23, 2 | undertaken; for whose sake also Stesichorus was struck blind, because
3080 IV, 26, 5 | then shall be a faithful steward (actor), good and wise,
3081 I, 9, 4 | Eurystheus, the son of Sthenelus, descended from Perseus."3~"
3082 IV, 15, 1 | thee, because thou art a stiff-necked people."~2.
3083 V, 9, 2 | Spirit to be, as it were, a stimulus to the infirmity of the
3084 V, 17, 2 | who is God, He did both stir up the incredulous by the
3085 II, 14, 4 | Stoics from the portico (stoa), and indeed all that are
3086 III, 5, 3 | that they should leave vain stocks and stones, which they imagined
3087 II, 14, 4 | both those who are named Stoics from the portico (stoa),
3088 IV, 10, 2 | creeping ivy. He shall wash His stole in wine, and His upper garment
3089 III, 21, 7 | men who are accustomed to stone-cutting; that is, Joseph taking
3090 IV, 36, 8 | killest the prophets, and stonest those that are sent unto
3091 III, 18, 2 | Father, becoming incarnate, stooping low, even to death, and
3092 I, 3, 3 | which she participated]. She stopped short, however, and ceased
3093 II, 28, 2 | things; of tell as to the storehouses of snow, hail, and other
3094 V, 34, 3 | of turbulence, suffer the storm of blasphemies, exist as
3095 V, 25, 3 | things, and his look was more stout than his fellows. I was
3096 II, 32, 5 | in a pure, sincere, and straightforward spirit, and calling upon
3097 I, 4, 1 | that is, by Christ--she strained herself to discover that
3098 IV, 35, 1 | of the universe to such straits, as that He should not be
3099 V, 2, 1 | God; not snatching away by stratagem the property of another,
3100 I, 16, 1 | their own AEons, and the straying and recovery of the sheep [
3101 IV, 33, 14 | up in the desert, and the streams of the Holy Spirit in a
3102 III, 5, 3 | did nourish, increase, strengthen, and preserve them in being;
3103 V, 1 | IN ORDER TO RENOVATE US. STRICTURES ON THE CONCEITS OF VALENTINUS
3104 II, 25, 2 | and yet another the tenor strings; but he should hold that
3105 V, 6, 1 | because their flesh has been stripped off and taken away, and
3106 I, 30, 14 | They strove to establish the descent
3107 I, 4, 5 | concretions and corporeal structures, in order that two substances
3108 I, 11, 3 | teacher among them, and who, struggling to reach something more
3109 III, 15, 2 | his angel, he walks with a strutting gait and a supercilious
3110 III, 14, 4 | portions also, then, by studying the perfect Gospel, and
3111 III, 9, 1 | had their mind tinged and stuffed with all manner of evil,
3112 V, 8, 4 | life-giving Word, and walk stupidly after their own lusts: the
3113 I, 5, 4 | arose from her state of stupor; water from the agitation
3114 V, 3, 1 | non aberrare in natura sua). But the being lifted up
3115 V, 21, 3 | who made all things, and subdues him by means of the commandment.
3116 I, 10, 3 | should therefore change the subject-matter [of the faith] itself, and
3117 IV, 41, 4 | But it is necessary to subjoin to this composition, in
3118 II, 17, 9 | sophists, and explorers of the sublimities of the unknown Father, and
3119 V, 3, 1 | should be lifted up by the sublimity of the revelations, there
3120 II, 30, 3 | trees have they adorned this sublunary world? or, what multitude
3121 II, 35, 3 | should not subsequently submerge the land. In like manner
3122 I, 6, 2 | For even as gold, when submersed in filth, loses not on that
3123 II, 28 | MANY QUESTIONS MUST BE SUBMISSIVELY LEFT IN THE HANDS OF GOD.~
3124 I, 14, 7 | be [fully] imitated, are subservient to the Enthymesis of the
3125 IV, 17, 5 | gives us as the means of subsistence the first-fruits of His
3126 V, 18, 1 | creation bare Him, which subsists by the power, the skill,
3127 II, 14, 2 | sort of art it has been substituted [for the old]. Yet it is
3128 III, 15, 2 | For this is the subterfuge of false persons, evil seducers,
3129 IV, 41, 3 | animals they go about in subtilty, and injure others. For
3130 V, 30, 1 | upon him who either adds or subtracts anything from the Scripture,
3131 II, 33, 1 | We may subvert their doctrine as to transmigration
3132 III, 12, 5 | Marcion, nor the rest of these subverters [of the truth], and their
3133 III, 12, 14 | troubled you with words, subverting your souls, saying, Ye must
3134 III, 21, 3 | and Paul, and the rest successively, as well as their followers,
3135 I, 23, 5 | The successor of this man was Menander,
3136 V, 7, 2 | when they have lost, they succumb to death; then, rising through
3137 II, 20, 2 | the betrayer, [and not the sufferer.] Even they themselves acknowledge
3138 II, 30, 1 | hellebore on earth would not suffice, so that they should get
3139 IV, 34, 1 | of this kind should then suggest itself to you, to say, What
3140 IV, 17, 2 | blindness, and with the view of suggesting to them the true sacrifice,
3141 V, 12, 3 | its company by committing suicide.~4.
3142 II, 24, 5 | parts,--namely, spring, summer, autumn, and winter. And
3143 IV, 35, 1 | time from the Pleroma (a summitate) through means of the seed [
3144 III, 14, 3 | in purple and who fared sumptuously, and the indigent Lazarus;
3145 IV, 37, 3 | Him, and shall cut him in sunder, and appoint his portion
3146 V, 33, 4 | were five books compiled (suntetagmena) by him. And he says in
3147 III, 15, 2 | with a strutting gait and a supercilious countenance, possessing
3148 II, 6, 1 | to them on account of His superiority, but He could by no means
3149 II, 21, 1 | and on this account their superiors, were not thus foreshown;
3150 II, 32, 3 | declare that they exert] supernatural] power; but, bringing forward
3151 I, 2, 4 | from her, along with its supervening passion, she herself certainly
3152 V, 33, 2 | given to the poor, and the suppers for which a return is made?
3153 IV, 21, 3 | called Jacob, that is, the supplanter--one who holds, but is not
3154 I, 4, 5 | them, she turned herself to supplicate the light which had forsaken
3155 I, 2, 3 | particular, presented their supplications along with her. And hence
3156 V, 36, 2 | things belong to God, who supplies all with a suitable dwelling-place;
3157 III, 11, 5 | the Lord had the power to supply wine to those feasting,
3158 IV, pref, 4 | against God our Maker and Supporter, and derogating from the
3159 IV, 12, 1 | pharisaical. In this [law] they suppress certain things, add others,
3160 V, 30, 4 | is: the name, however, is suppressed, because it is not worthy
3161 II, 24, 2 | is expressed by the words sura usser. The word, therefore,
3162 V, 8, 4 | have it divided are more sure-footed, their cleft hoofs succeeding
3163 IV, 39, 1 | good? For there is thus a surer and an undoubted comprehension
3164 IV, 39, 1 | submitted to us than the mere surmise arising from an opinion
3165 V, 30, 3 | prophecy, than to be making surmises, and casting about for any
3166 II, 14, 2 | again, who has also been surnamed "Atheist," gave it as his
3167 V, 28, 2 | magic. And we must not be surprised if, since the demons and
3168 I, 25, 4 | the judge, and the judge surrender thee to the officer, and
3169 V, 5, 2 | impossible that men should survive for such a length of time,
3170 III, 21, 4 | the name Emmanuel, should suspect Him to be God without flesh.~
3171 I, 27, 3 | tempting them, so now they suspected that He was tempting them,
3172 I, 23, 1 | them, namely, Christ Jesus--suspecting that even this was done
3173 II, 31, 1 | Creator, and Maker, and Sustainer, and Lord, nor to ascribe
3174 III, 10, 2 | covenant, the oath which He sware to our father Abraham, that
3175 III, 22, 2 | wept over Lazarus, nor have sweated great drops of blood; nor
3176 V, 29, 2 | deluge came upon the earth, sweeping away the rebellious world,
3177 I, 8, 4 | origin. The woman, again, who sweeps the house and finds the
3178 I, 14, 2 | the multitude of letters swells out into infinitude. You
3179 II, pref, 1 | but had long previously swerved from the truth itself. I
3180 V, 30, 2 | shall hear the voice of his swift horses from Dan; the whole
3181 II, 19, 2 | quality, either of heat, or swiftness, or sweetness, or which
3182 II, 17, 8 | a mother should be ever swimming in the depths of ignorance.~
3183 II, 24, 5 | twelve hours they might symbolize the twelve Aeons; for, in
3184 III, 11, 8 | creature was like a lion," symbolizing His effectual working, His
3185 II, 15, 3 | creation, as if He had thus symmetrically arranged its very essence,
3186 V, 9, 1 | by it, but sometimes it sympathizes with the flesh, and falls
3187 IV, 18, 4 | any of the conventicles (synagogoe) of the heretics [offer
3188 III, 12, 9 | it is said, "Jesus in the synagogues at Damascus, with all freedom
3189 IV, 31, 2 | commixture and unity the two synagogues--that is, the two churches--
3190 II, 13, 1 | things which are simply synonyms for Nous himself. As I have
3191 V, 33, 3 | served his uncle Laban the Syrian for twenty years; and not
3192 I, 14, 2 | letters, viz., D, E, L, T, A: these letters again,
3193 IV, 30, 3 | receive you into eternal tabernacles." For whatsoever we acquired
3194 IV, 2, 4 | accompaniment of] harps, and tablets, and psalteries, and flutes;
3195 I, 13, 7 | ashamed to do this, and in a tacit kind of way, despairing
3196 II, 31, 3 | same kind, will with his tail cause a third part of the
3197 V, 32, 2 | giving for it four hundred talents of silver) from Ephron the
3198 II, 14, 3 | teachers] who had already talked a great deal about a vacuum
3199 IV, 25 | ABRAHAM, AND IN THE LABOUR OF TAMAR; THERE WAS, HOWEVER, BUT
3200 I, 6, 1 | it might be visible and tangible, and capable of enduring
3201 II, 6, 3 | maintain that Bythus lives in Tartarus below the earth, and that
3202 IV, 39, 1 | sweet and bitter by means of tasting, and the eye discriminates
3203 IV, 6, 3 | not be known at all (in tatum), for in that case His advent
3204 I, 14, 3 | Upsilon; her back, Zeta and Tau; her belly, Eta and Sigma;
3205 V, 24, 1 | tribute should be paid to the tax-gatherers for Himself and Peter; because "
3206 II, 21, 2 | Greek language), Aimulious te logous kai epiklopon êthos
3207 III, pref, 1 | second, again, their perverse teachings are cast down and overthrown,
3208 III, 3, 3 | was appointed; after him, Telephorus, who was gloriously martyred;
3209 I, 24, 2 | multitudes by a reigned temperance of this kind. They hold,
3210 IV, 37, 7 | engages in the contest is temperate in all things: now these
3211 V, 18, 3 | His sight, and a strong tempest shall rage round about Him.
3212 IV, 28, 1 | one case indeed typically, temporarily, and more moderately; but
3213 III, 19, 3 | man in order to undergo temptation, so also was He the Word
3214 IV, 39, 1 | what is good, become more tenacious of its preservation, by
3215 II, 12, 4 | themselves maintain that they tend again to unity, and are,
3216 V, 10, 1 | wild olive be carefully tended and grafted, it naturally
3217 V, 21, 3 | possessor, according to the tender mercy of God the Father,
3218 III, 24, 1 | well-grounded system which tends to man's salvation, namely,
3219 V, 30, 1 | that is, the number of tens shall be equal to that of
3220 II, 25, 2 | the artist, to admire the tension of some notes, to attend
3221 IV, 20, 10 | audible voice" (vox aurae tenuis). For by such means was
3222 IV, 4, 2 | originated with Moses, it terminated with John as a necessary
3223 V, 6, 1 | them that are perfect," terming those persons "perfect"
3224 I, 5, 3 | also call Ogdoad, Sophia; Terra, Jerusalem, Holy Spirit,
3225 I, 30, 11 | The [other] powers being terrified by these things, and marveiling
3226 V, 30, 2 | kingdom for himself, and shall terrify those men of whom we have
3227 IV, 16, 5 | maliciousness," but as the means of testing and evidencing faith.~
3228 II, 14, 2 | Oceanus, along with mother Tethys, was the origin of the gods:
3229 III, 17, 4 | invented putative Ogdoads and Tetrads, and imagined subdivisions [
3230 II, 14, 2 | irreligion. For instance, Thales of Miletus affirmed that
3231 IV, 25, 2 | typically by [the history of] Thamar, Judah's daughter-in-law.
3232 I, 20, 3 | crown of their system:--"I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of
3233 II, 14, 1 | everywhere acted in the theatres by comedians with the clearest
3234 IV, 24, 1 | adultery, nor fornication, nor theft, nor fraud; and that whatsoever
3235 IV, 31, 1 | should search for a type [in theme. For not one of those things
3236 I, 21, 4 | knowledge of all things, stand thenceforth in need of nothing else.
3237 II, 14, 1 | comic poets, gives in his Theogony as to the origin of all
3238 II, 22, 6 | system of] error:--~Oi de theoi par Zêni kathêmenoi êgoroônto
3239 I, 24, 7 | mathematicians. For, accepting the theorems of these latter, they have
3240 I, 5, 1 | being secretly impelled thereto by his mother. From this
3241 | thereupon
3242 II, 7, 4 | are many are the images of these--not in this way either will
3243 III, 14, 1 | and is departed unto Thessalonica; Crescens to Galatia, Titus
3244 I, 14, 3 | Eta and Sigma; her thighs, Theta and Rho; her knees, Iota
3245 III, 21, 2 | the Greek language. And they--for at that time they were
3246 IV, 33, 11 | south, and from a mountain thick with foliage," announced
3247 II, 21, 2 | deceit in their minds, and thievish habits," for the purpose
3248 II, 26, 2 | bushy heads of hair, others thin, and others scarcely any
3249 IV, 33, 11 | which He Himself says, "Thinkest thou that when the Son of
3250 IV, 27, 3 | Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest
3251 III, 17, 2 | water, so that she should thirst no more, nor occupy herself
3252 II, 23, 2 | the Aeon who occupies the thirty-eighth place suffered. For if they
3253 V, 36, 2 | that of those who produce thirty-fold: for the first will be taken
3254 I, 17, 1 | Horus, encircling their thirty-named mother. And then, again,
3255 II, 16, 1 | necessity be shut up to this--that they confess that,
3256 II, 29, 2 | powerful enough to bring thither those substances which have
3257 I, 18, 3 | after His resurrection,--Thomas being absent,--represented,
3258 II, 7, 7 | identical with and similar to thoseth at belong to the creation [
3259 II, 15, 3 | of that figure vainly and thoughtlessly, and must ascribe to Him
3260 IV, 20, 12 | the sign of the scarlet thread, which meant the passover,
3261 IV, 33, 11 | fire,'' were accustomed to threaten those who were unbelieving,
3262 I, 6 | VI. THE THREEFOLD KIND OF MAN FEIGNED BY THESE
3263 V, 17, 4 | learning what had happened, he threw some wood into the water.
3264 IV, 9, 1 | justified by faith, as well as throws His own inheritance open
3265 II, 26, 3 | struck as it were with a thunderbolt, since indeed he does in
3266 II, 22, 3 | other side of the sea of Tiberias, He there seeing a great
3267 IV, 3 | TO THE CAVILS OF THE GNOS TICS. WE ARE NOT TO SUPPOSE THAT
3268 III, 22, 4 | arisen; s so that the former ties be cancelled by the latter,
3269 IV, 24, 2 | which the Lord confirmed and tiff-filled, in coming such as He had
3270 I, 16, 3 | strength by drawing the bow too tightly, the greater fools do they
3271 III, 21, 10 | sent rain, and man had not tilled the ground"), and was formed
3272 III, 23, 3 | transgression, the toilsome task of tilling the earth, and to eat bread
3273 III, 3, 3 | mention in the Epistles to Timothy. To him succeeded Anacletus;
3274 III, 21, 9 | from the kingdom, failing tinder the curse and rebuke directed
3275 III, 9, 1 | but who had their mind tinged and stuffed with all manner
3276 IV, 9, 1 | the house, who rules the tire house of His Father; and
3277 I, 9, 5 | theories of these men are but a tissue of falsehoods.~
3278 I, 30, 11 | and Daniel, to Adohai; Tobias and Haggai to Eloi; Michaiah
3279 I, 15, 1 | seven. If all these be added together--twice five, and twice seven--
3280 III, 23, 3 | did the woman [receive] toil, and labour, and groans,
3281 V, 32, 1 | very creation in which they toiled or were afflicted, being
3282 III, 23, 3 | of his transgression, the toilsome task of tilling the earth,
3283 II, 5, 4 | fate, while He unwillingly tolerates the things which are done,
3284 IV, 20, 10 | Elias: "Thou shalt go forth tomorrow, and stand in the presence
3285 IV, pref, 2 | superior men to myself, too--were unable, notwithstanding,
3286 II, 30, 5 | and idle, and unemployed tool was superior in nature and
3287 IV, 20, 9 | him face to face on the top of a mountain, Elias being
3288 V, 20, 1 | streets, is preached on the tops of the walls, and speaks
3289 II, 17, 4 | example, torches are from a torch--then they may no doubt differ
3290 II, 34, 1 | come into that place of torment to believe Moses and the
3291 II, 12, 7 | they also declare to be Totum (all things). Now, it is
3292 V, 3, 2 | beginning received the skilful touches of God; so that one part
3293 II, 2, 3 | been made will still be traced to Him who was the Author
3294 III, 22, 3 | that the pedigree which traces the generation of our Lord
3295 III, 12, 9 | means they might be able to track Him out, or find Him, although
3296 IV, 39, 2 | thy heart in a soft and tractable state, and preserve the
3297 IV, 30, 1 | there that carries on a trade, and does not do so that
3298 IV, 36, 8 | hen gathereth her chickens trader her wings, and ye would
3299 IV, 8, 2 | wealth which is procured by trading and by other worldly business;
3300 I, 6, 1 | animal substance had need of training by means of the outward
3301 II, 25, 4 | fully out, but, indulging in trains of reflection opposed to
3302 I, 13, 2 | before all things, and who transcends all knowledge and speech,
3303 III, 4, 2 | into eternal fire those who transform the truth, and despise His
3304 V, 13, 3 | into the earth. Now its transformation [takes place thus], that
3305 I, 11, 4 | respecting the universe be transformed to the primary Tetrad, and
3306 II, 3, 2 | compound, mutable, and transient. Since, then, it is just
3307 III, 21, 3 | desire to make different translations, when we refute them out
3308 V, 14, 2 | truly made [to consist in] a transmission of that thing moulded originally
3309 IV, pref, 1 | By transmitting to thee, my very dear friend,
3310 I, 4, 5 | condense them, so as to transmute them from incorporeal passion
3311 III, 7, 2 | apostle frequently uses a transposed order in his sentences,
3312 III, 7, 1 | many examples, that he uses transposition of words --"In whom God,"
3313 I, 13, 5 | magician, and, for a long time, travelled about with him. At last,
3314 I, 17, 1 | then, again, as the moon travels through her allotted space
3315 II, 20 | FROM THE PARABLES, THE TREACHERY OF JUDAS, AND THE PASSION
3316 IV, 20, 11 | with a rod of iron: and He treadeth the wine-press of the fierceness
3317 V, 24, 4 | confer upon you the power of treading upon serpents and scorpions,
3318 IV, 16, 1 | acquiring or possessing treasures upon earth. Moreover, the
3319 IV, 37, 1 | and impenitent heart, thou treasurest to thyself wrath against
3320 IV, 19, 2 | comprehend them. For the heavenly treasuries are indeed great: God cannot
3321 IV, 18, 2 | all her living into the treasury of God.~3.
3322 I, 11, 1 | how they do not agree in treating the same points, but alike,
3323 II, 25, 2 | that one person fitted the treble, another the bass, and yet
3324 II, 6, 2 | at whose invocation they trembled, as there does tremble every
3325 IV, 17, 3 | humble, and meek, and who trembles at My words." "For the fat
3326 III, 24, 1 | cisterns out of earthly trenches, and drink putrid water
3327 I, 15, 6 | black arts of magic,~Ever by tricks such as these confirming
3328 II, 12, 1 | Bythus, they reckon up the Tricontad to Sophia, whom they describe
3329 IV, 33, 15 | spiritual man) sifts and tries them all, but he himself
3330 IV, 19, 2 | are under the heavens, and trieth the reins and the hearts,
3331 I, 1, 3 | spiritual Pleroma of theirs is tripartite, being divided into an Ogdoad,
3332 V, 8, 1 | into a continuous hymn of triumph, glorifying Him who raised
3333 IV, 40, 3 | made man from a woman, and trod upon his [the serpent's]
3334 III, 23, 7 | all his might should be trodden down. Now Adam had been
3335 I, 23, 2 | Helen on whose account the Trojan war was undertaken; for
3336 IV, 20, 12 | the sounding of the seven trumpets, Rahab the harlot was preserved,
3337 IV, 9, 2 | LORD God, in whom we have trusted, and we have rejoiced in
3338 IV, 13 | MIGHT SERVE GOD WITH THAT TRUSTFUL PIETY WHICH BECOMETH SONS.~
3339 V, 22, 2 | we should not, either by trusting to works of righteousness,
3340 V, 26, 1 | and the interpretation trustworthy."~2.
3341 II, 13, 10 | production--as being, in fact, truth-like--that the Word was produced
3342 I, pref, 3 | spirit write to thee simply, truthfully, and in my own homely way;
3343 IV, 38, 4 | men," setting forth both truths--the kindness of His free
3344 IV, 17, 3 | blood (domesticos seminis tui). Then shall thy morning
3345 II, 18, 1 | she was involved in such a tumult of passion. For even a vigorous
3346 III, 23, 5 | had not clothed them with tunics of skins instead of fig-leaves.
3347 V, 34, 3 | established in the midst of turbulence, suffer the storm of blasphemies,
3348 V, 16, 1 | eat thy bread, until thou turnest again to the dust from whence
3349 V, 29, 1 | from a sink, and as the turning-weight of a balance--in fact, as
3350 III, 10, 4 | law of the Lord, a pair of turtle-doves, or two young pigeons:"
3351 IV, 13, 3 | go] a mile, go with him twain;" so that thou mayest not
3352 IV, 21, 3 | country, to generate the twelve-pillared foundation of the Church.
3353 II, 12, 1 | but these then become only twenty-nine.~2.
3354 I, 16, 2 | that number, the sum of twenty-two is reached. Next, Eta being
3355 V, 33, 3 | twigs, and in each true twig ten thousand shoots, and
3356 IV, 25, 2 | For when she had conceived twins, one of them put forth his
3357 I, 9, 4 | there [in Scripture], they twist them, as we have already
3358 I, 30, 5 | This son is Nous himself, twisted into the form of a serpent;
3359 V, 9, 1 | that which is between these two--that is the soul, which
3360 IV, 20, 11 | of His mouth went a sharp two-edged sword; and His countenance
3361 I, 16, 1 | advancing from itself [by twos] up to six--two, and four,
3362 V, 24, 2 | impiously, and illegally, and tyrannically, in these things shall they
3363 V, 30, 3 | further, a name belonging to a tyrant. Inasmuch, then, as this
3364 I, 23, 2 | redeemed from slavery at Tyre, a city of Phoenicia, a
3365 IV, 30, 2 | should be thought, when he ultimately obtains some support, to
3366 IV, 20, 12 | preserved, when all was over [in ultimis], together with all her
3367 IV, 37, 7 | its own accord (sed non ultro coalitam). And the harder
3368 I, 9, 4 | some of them were spoken of Ulysses, others of Hercules himself,
3369 IV, 3, 1 | contain. And they are also unacquainted with [the meaning of] the
3370 II, 22, 3 | Gospel; otherwise [this unanswerable question forces itself upon
3371 I, 7, 4 | self-excitement), or to [mere unassisted] man, or that it was simply
3372 III, 3, 2 | perverse opinion, assemble in unauthorized meetings; [we do this, I
3373 IV, 36, 6 | His Son, because nothing unbecoming or evil pleases Him. This
3374 I, 27, 4 | mutilate the Scriptures, and unblushingly above all others to inveigh
3375 I, 25, 4 | So unbridled is their madness, that they
3376 II, 25, 2 | notes, gives rise to one unbroken melody, through means of
3377 IV, 37, 7 | incorruptible. But I so run, not as uncertainty; I fight, not as One beating
3378 II, 28, 3 | respect to our Master, endures unchangeably, assuring us that there
3379 II, 24, 2 | being the more ancient and unchanging, ought to uphold the reckoning
3380 IV, 16, 2 | pleasing God, although he was uncircumcised, receive the dimensions [
3381 V, 33, 3 | from his home], served his uncle Laban the Syrian for twenty
3382 IV, 36, 6 | Not for that we would be unclothed, but clothed upon, that
3383 III, 8, 2 | strong man should have been unconquered. But he also subjoined Him
3384 II, 6, 3 | should be so formed ['by the unconscious Demiurge], in honour of
3385 III, 25, 2 | but that another saves, unconsciously taking away the intelligence
3386 III, 15, 2 | of any, and rendered them uncontradicting hearers of their own, they
3387 IV, 35, 3 | herself, a shapeless and undefined being, one cast out of doors
3388 III, 5, 2 | on the contrary, is it by undergoing a great change and reversal
3389 II, 18, 5 | it, she could never have undergone change, since she was consorting
3390 I, 19, 1 | And, "There is none that understandeth, or that seeketh after God:
3391 I, 23, 2 | account the Trojan war was undertaken; for whose sake also Stesichorus
3392 III, pref, 1 | of them. therefore have undertaken--showing that they spring
3393 IV, 23, 1 | the education of Christ, undertaking a journey into Egypt and
3394 IV, 24 | WERE GREATER THAN THOSE WHO UNDERTOOK THE LATTER.~1.
3395 V, 2, 3 | own nature, we may neither undervalue that glory which surrounds
3396 I, 31, 4 | overthrow their wicked and undigested doctrines, and to set forth
3397 IV, 39, 1 | there is thus a surer and an undoubted comprehension of matters
3398 V, 3, 1 | preventing him from forming an undue opinion of his own nature (
3399 II, 30, 5 | this useless, and idle, and unemployed tool was superior in nature
3400 IV, 18, 3 | merely to outward appearance, unexceptionably, in due order, and according
3401 IV, 38, 1 | they unaccustomed to, and unexercised in, perfect discipline.
3402 II, 12, 5 | Logos simply exists within (unexpressed), Sige also will exist within,
3403 IV, 30, 3 | should not pronounce an unfair judgment on the dispensations
3404 III, 21, 3 | But our faith is stedfast, unfeigned, and the only true one,
3405 IV, 27, 4 | from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of those
3406 IV, 17, 5 | themselves neither unfruitful nor ungrateful--He took that created thing,
3407 III, pref, 1 | love of God, being rich and ungrudging, confers upon the suppliant
3408 IV, 38, 3 | who bestows what is good ungrudgingly. For from the very fact
3409 I, 21, 3 | for they assert that this unguent is a type of that sweet
3410 V, 19, 1 | already espoused to a man, was unhappily misled,--was happily announced,
3411 III, 18, 2 | whom [Paul], exhorting us unhesitatingly to believe, again says, "
3412 II, 7, 2 | which are above will be unhonoured; or it will be necessary
3413 V, 5, 2 | furnace men issued forth unhurt, yet they nevertheless did
3414 I, 9, 1 | understood), so as to preserve a uniformity throughout; or if he enumerated
3415 II, 28, 3 | both preserve our faith uninjured, and shall continue without
3416 III, 10, 2 | else is there who can reign uninterruptedly over the house of Jacob
3417 I, 8, 5 | and the Word--he again unites them, that he may exhibit
3418 V, 31, 1 | affecting the whole man (universam reprobant resurrectionem),
3419 I, 21, 3 | the unknown Father of the universe--into truth, the mother of
3420 II, 17, 11 | the beginning, He remained unknown--the cause of ignorance is,
3421 III, 14, 1 | Philippi after the days of unleavened bread, and came to Troas,
3422 II, 26, 1 | belong to the simple and unlettered class, and by means of love
3423 II, 1, 5 | that there are numerous unlimited creators and gods, who begin
3424 V, 19, 1 | dove, those bonds being unloosed by which we had been fast
3425 IV, 16, 1 | unsymbolical, that is, neither unmeaning nor to no purpose, inasmuch
3426 IV, 4, 2 | spake he, who said that the unmeasurable Father was Himself subjected
3427 IV, 4, 2 | and in order; nothing is unmeasured with Him, because nothing
3428 III, 25, 3 | Neither does He show Himself unmercifully just; for His goodness,
3429 I, 4, 5 | incorporeal passion into unorganized matter. He then by this
3430 I, 14, 1 | following terms: When first the unoriginated, inconceivable Father, who
3431 I, 19, 1 | they are together become unprofitable," they maintain to be said
3432 I, 15, 1 | letter, but that which is unpronounceable in Christ contains thirty
3433 IV, 33, 5 | connected with these men is unreal, and nothing [possessed
3434 V, 26, 2 | and likewise for all who unrepentant continue in the apostasy,
3435 III, 23, 3 | by God, nor, by remaining unreprimanded, should be led to despise
3436 I, 26, 3 | apostles. They lead lives of unrestrained indulgence. The character
3437 III, 14 | HAD KNOWN ANY MYSTERIES UNREVEALED TO THE OTHER APOSTLES, LUKE,
3438 IV, 30, 1 | relations, or friends who unrighteously obtained them?--not to mention
3439 IV, 14, 2 | while to those who became unruly in the desert He promulgated
3440 I, 19, 2 | spoken of His greatness unseen and unknown by all; and
3441 II, 12, 2 | there should proceed an unseparated and united production, so
3442 II, 26, 3 | beyond others, styling them unskilful, ignorant, and animal beings,
3443 II, 16, 4 | Ogdoad, and because they unskilfully imagine that, immediately
3444 V, 30, 3 | will, after all, remain unsolved. For if there are many names
3445 IV, 30, 2 | labours, as I have observed, unstamped gold and silver in a few
3446 IV, 33, 1 | they pretend, at a time unsuitable [for such conduct], to serve, [
3447 III, 2, 2 | themselves, indubitably, unsulliedly, and purely, have knowledge
3448 IV, 16, 5 | and to follow His word unswervingly, while they abstain not
3449 IV, 16, 1 | but the signs were not unsymbolical, that is, neither unmeaning
3450 III, 21, 10 | had his substance from untilled and as yet virgin soil ("
3451 II, 27, 2 | comes, he who has his lamp untrimmed, and not burning with the
3452 III, 12, 6 | nourishing nor strengthening the untrue opinion of these men regarding
3453 II, 5, 4 | yield to fate, while He unwillingly tolerates the things which
3454 IV, 15, 2 | heart], and because of their unwillingness to be obedient, when, on
3455 IV, 10, 2 | Ye infatuated people, and unwise, do ye thus requite the
3456 II, 24, 5 | Saviour therefore acted unwisely in constituting the month
3457 I, 21, 5 | are greatly agitated, and upbraid their origin and the race
3458 IV, 27, 1 | rest [of the narrative], upbraiding him, and recounting God'
3459 I, 21, 3 | restitution stands thus: Messia, Uphareg, Namempsoeman, Chaldoeaur,
3460 IV, 12, 4 | they had invented, and in upholding which they made the law
3461 II, 18, 6 | met with that Power who upholds all things, she would have
3462 III, 14, 3 | disciples not to aspire to the uppermost rooms; how we should invite
3463 III, 14, 3 | obtain them, because of the urgency of his importunity; how,
3464 I, 31, 2 | abominable actions, and urges them to venture on audacity
3465 IV, 27, 1 | take Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah, the Scripture said concerning
3466 IV, 37, 6 | there is one mind and one usage, working mechanically in
3467 II, 24, 2 | expressed by the words sura usser. The word, therefore, which
3468 I, 20, 1 | teacher saying to Him, as is usual, "Pronounce Alpha," replied [
3469 IV, 27, 2 | entrusted to them, with usury; and from those to whom
3470 V, 13, 3 | even as He is able (ita ut possit) according to the
3471 IV, 37, 1 | to obey the behests (ad utendum sententia) of God voluntarily,
3472 IV, 30, 1 | do they not derive the utensils they employ from the property
3473 IV, 16, 3 | receive food for their souls (uti rationalem acciperent escam);
3474 IV, 41, 4 | us, that they are indeed utterers of falsehood, but that the
3475 V, 20, 1 | in [its] going forth; it uttereth [its voice] faithfully in
3476 II, 8, 3 | of kenoma--that is, of a vacuum--has in all points turned
3477 III, pref, 1 | should bring to light the Valentinian doctrines, concealed, as
3478 II, 20, 3 | our Christ, underwent a valid, and not a merely accidental
3479 III, 9, 1 | paths of our God. Every valley shall be filled, and every
3480 V, 35, 1 | eternal hills, and that the valleys be filled, so that the surface
3481 V, 36, 1 | plantationem), that they vanish not away among non-existent
3482 III, 12, 14 | they do abstain from the vanities of idols, and from fornication,
3483 II, 13, 8 | another, and nothing~at variance with another, but continues
3484 V, 20, 2 | proceeding on their way variously, in harmoniously, and foolishly,
3485 III, 16, 6 | another; for their hypotheses vary, as I have already shown,
3486 I, 19, 2 | made white." Moreover, they vaunt themselves as being the
3487 I, 16, 3 | and in proportion as they vehemently maintain and rejoice in
3488 I, 4, 5 | with reverence, at first veiled herself through modesty,
3489 II, 33, 4 | doubtless retarded in its velocity, just in the exact proportion
3490 IV, 12, 5 | as an ascending series (velut gradus) before those who
3491 II, 7, 1 | side, and to prove them vendors of falsehood; let us say,
3492 I, 9, 1 | according to them, most venerable and would then have annexed
3493 IV, 16, 5 | for sons should have more veneration than slaves, and greater
3494 IV, 20, 11 | and as blowing them away (ventilans ea), and as Himself filling
3495 III, 21, 5 | the fruit of his belly (ventris) an eternal King, is the
3496 V, 30, 1 | their inexperience, have ventured to seek out a name which
3497 III, 3, 4 | had against holding even verbal communication with any corrupters
3498 III, 16, 5 | the disciple of the Lord, verities, saying: "But these are
3499 IV, 33, 5 | imagined being, and not a verity? And how can these men really
3500 III, 21 | AUTHORITY OF THE SEPTUAGINT VERSION. ARGUMENTS IN PROOF THAT
3501 IV, 20, 11 | was the reason why Moses vested the high priest after this
3502 II, 24, 4 | breastplate, and other sacerdotal vestments, were formed out of five
3503 II, 32, 2 | kind of country labour, the veterinary art, pastoral occupations,
3504 IV, 27, 4 | just as then, those who led vicious lives, and put other people
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