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| Alphabetical [« »] boasting 1 bodies 8 bodily 3 body 103 boeotian 1 boiled 1 bold 1 | Frequency [« »] 105 must 105 than 105 were 103 body 103 women 102 instructor 101 its | Titus Flavius Clemens (Alexandrinus) The Instructor IntraText - Concordances body |
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1 I, 1 | of us who are diseased in body a physician is required,
2 I, 2 | heals the diseases of the body; wisdom frees the soul from
3 I, 2 | the Saviour, heals both body and soul. "Rise up," He
4 I, 2 | temperance, and tempered the body with beauty and proportion.
5 I, 5 | health to men--wine for the body, blood for the spirit. And
6 I, 5 | crawling with the whole body about senseless lusts; but,
7 I, 5 | to the edification of the body of Christ, who is the head
8 I, 6 | we all baptized into one body, whether Jews or Greeks,
9 I, 6 | of faith, which is the body, and of hope, which is the
10 I, 6 | child fair and comely, the body of Christ, which nourishes
11 I, 6 | But again in summer, the body, having its pores more open,
12 I, 6 | He says He will deck the body of the Word; as certainly
13 I, 6 | essential principle of the human body is blood. The contents of
14 I, 9 | daughters? attend to their body, and let not thy face brighten
15 I, 9 | and He hath anointed my body. "They shall call Me," He
16 I, 9 | in the letter and in the body, in the Word and in the
17 I, 13| destined end through the body, the soul's consort and
18 II, 1 | himself in respect to his body, or rather how to regulate
19 II, 1 | rather how to regulate the body itself. For whenever any
20 II, 1 | and from attention to the body itself to the mind, acquires
21 II, 1 | digestion and lightness of body, from which come growth,
22 II, 1 | such as a depraved habit of body and disorders of the stomach,
23 II, 1 | for pleasure; since the body derives no advantage from
24 II, 1 | quantity, and treating the body in a healthful way, distributes
25 II, 1 | spirit, and renders his body prone to disease. Besides,
26 II, 1 | spirit, which pervades the body in order to its growth,
27 II, 2 | tonic suitable to a sickly body enfeebled with watery humours;
28 II, 2 | it are sanctified both in body and soul. For the divine
29 II, 2 | of injury appear in their body, the members of lust coming
30 II, 2 | of fornication; and the body compels the wound of the
31 II, 2 | excessive quantity to the body. And if thirst come on,
32 II, 2 | memory active, and their body unmoved and unshaken by
33 II, 2 | the sea, in which when the body has once been sunken like
34 II, 4 | the chords and organ." Our body He calls an organ, and its
35 II, 6 | and exposing parts of the body which we ought not; and
36 II, 8 | any heavy smell from the body, if we require oil for this
37 II, 8 | the princely part of His body, all our iniquities by which
38 II, 8 | stopping effusions from the body; and that from roses is
39 II, 9 | hill on either side of the body. Nor are they suitable for
40 II, 9 | and the ivory on beds, the body having left the soul, is
41 II, 9 | total enervation of the body, but for its relaxation.
42 II, 9 | ceaselessly active. But the body is relieved by being resigned
43 II, 9 | whilst not acting through the body, but exercising intelligence
44 II, 9 | by the affections of the body, and counselling with itself
45 II, 9 | with Him inoculating the body with wakefulness, it raises
46 II, 10| abandoned by the Word as a dead body by the spirit. For what
47 II, 11| into what relates to the body, the soul, and thirdly,
48 II, 11| things on account of the body; and manages the body by
49 II, 11| the body; and manages the body by the soul (psukê), and
50 II, 11| shall eat; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on; for
51 II, 11| more than meat, and the body more than raiment." And
52 II, 11| than the covering of the body, for defence against excess
53 II, 11| they do the shame of the body with a slender veil. For
54 II, 11| conceal the shape of the body, is no more a covering.
55 II, 11| clothing, falling close to the body, takes its form more easily,
56 II, 11| that the whole make of the body is visible to spectators,
57 II, 11| spectators, though not seeing the body itself. Dyeing of clothes
58 II, 11| temple, the soul to the body, and the body to the clothes.
59 II, 11| soul to the body, and the body to the clothes. But now,
60 II, 11| quite the contrary, the body of these ladies, if sold,
61 II, 13| appears through the beautiful body, and blossoms out in the
62 II, 13| for virtue, but claims the body for itself, when the love
63 II, 13| things unsuitable to the body, as if they were suitable,
64 III, 1 | the sacred stole of the body. Since then the soul consists
65 III, 1 | beauty of both soul and body, which He exhibited, which
66 III, 2 | AGAINST EMBELLISHING THE BODY.~ It is not, then, the aspect
67 III, 2 | Has one any part of the body beautiful? She shows it
68 III, 2 | the natural beauty of the body inferior to that of the
69 III, 3 | base passions, whose whole body is made smooth by the violent
70 III, 3 | dispersed hair over man's whole body. Whatever smoothness and
71 III, 3 | and those on the whole body. There must be therefore
72 III, 3 | treat with indignity the body which is of like form with
73 III, 3 | conduct; and the giving of the body to feminine purposes, contrary
74 III, 3 | unlawful for men, whose body is nothing but flesh elaborated
75 III, 3 | Man may, though naked in body, address the Lord. But I
76 III, 4 | stories, and wearing out body and soul with their false
77 III, 4 | unbridled tongue, filthy in body, filthy in language; men
78 III, 5 | wicked. For through the body itself the wantonness of
79 III, 7 | the shoe, so also is the body of what each individual
80 III, 7 | not an ornament to the body. He who climbs to the heavens
81 III, 9 | fainting. For in a way the body drinks, like trees, not
82 III, 9 | but also over the whole body in bathing, by what they
83 III, 9 | being had to the age of the body and the season of the year.
84 III, 9 | cleansing Word (sometimes the body too, on account of the dirt
85 III, 9 | that is to say, of the body, is accomplished by water
86 III, 10| only a healthy habit of body, but courageousness of soul.
87 III, 11| by a transition from the body, we may lay aside the varied
88 III, 11| the heat which is in the body; not that the clothing has
89 III, 11| the heat issuing from the body, and refuses it a passage.
90 III, 11| by it, warms in turn the body. And for this reason it
91 III, 11| nature; for not only does the body maintain its health from
92 III, 11| latter is produced within the body; while the former, blossoming
93 III, 11| blossoming out from the body, exhibits manifest beauty
94 III, 11| practices, by exercising the body, produce true and lasting
95 III, 11| carried off. But when the body is not moved, the food consumed
96 III, 11| is not assimilated by the body, but is flowing out to waste.
97 III, 11| through them. For of the whole body, the eyes are first destroyed. "
98 III, 11| prostitution. "For the light of the body is the eye," says the Scripture,
99 III, 11| or any other part of his body. Let no blot on his manliness,
100 III, 11| nor the members of her body be loose. But let the parts
101 III, 11| parts that hang from the body look as if they were well
102 III, 11| unfeigned love, pure in body, pure in heart, fit to pray
103 III, 12| Jesus, who heals both our body and soul--which are the