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1 1 | their instruction in Divine things, He also raised up in successive
2 10| as we do not deny these things which are written, so do
3 10| written, so do we repudiate things that are not written. That
4 13| its splendor, so that even things that seem trifling and unimportant
5 14| err,"[36] and though many things are said in the Bible which
6 14| of truth" you cannot find things or statements which are
7 17| only those and all those things which He himself bade them
8 17| them conceive; only such things could they faithfully commit
9 19| and that all the rest - things concerning "profane knowledge,"
10 19| a considerable number of things occur in the Bible touching
11 20| deceptive - appearance of things in nature. But the Pontiff'
12 20| merely external appearance of things - of which, of course, we
13 22| had laid down touching the things of nature could be applied
14 22| be applied to historical things as well. Hence they maintain
15 22| writers spoke of physical things according to appearance,
16 24| the Bible, "precisely as things actually took place, but
17 24| giving names to persons or things he followed general custom.
18 24| he first believe that the things written of God's Saints
19 24| believes all these and other things too which are written of
20 27| refuse to allow that the things which Christ said or did
21 27| beautifully says: "These things are true; they are faithfully
22 33| Bernard found no taste in things which did not echo the most
23 43| The hidden and uncertain things of Thy Wisdom Thou hast
24 55| haziness. . .yet explains things, sets out the meaning, clears
25 58| you to live amidst these things. To meditate on them, to
26 61| spot or wrinkle or any such things, but that she might be holy
27 62| of Christ:~The choicest things of all the nations have
28 68| Creator and Conserver of all things! Surely whatever cuts itself
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