Document, Chapter
1 3,1| did, as Paul says, by the grace of God taste death for every
2 3,3| his own flesh; and by the grace of God he tasted death for
3 3,3| attain incorruption, by the grace of God (as we just now said),
4 3,4| wisdom, and, I might add, in grace, intelligence keeping pace
5 3,4| filled with wisdom, and the grace of God was upon him." And
6 4 | also is the merit and the grace. Therefore rightly and properly
7 4 | to the Lord, as also the grace is from him; and we shall
8 5 | that they might receive grace to speak the word of God
9 5 | than that he would give you grace to preserve that which he
10 6 | assembled in Ephesus, by the grace of God and the command of
11 6 | denying the necessity of grace. Pelagius's doctrines may
12 6 | this there was no need of grace; indeed grace was not possible,
13 6 | no need of grace; indeed grace was not possible, according
14 6 | his teaching. The only "grace," which he would admit the
15 6 | what we may call external grace, e.g. the example of Christ,
16 6 | the activity of internal grace to illumine the intellect,
17 6 | that incarnation and of the grace purchased thereby. ~CANON
18 6,1| saving Symbol of Divine grace would have sufficed to the
19 6,1| Holy Synod which by the grace of God was assembled at
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