Chapter
1 2 | which God sowed it; that is, man's salvation. For God-after
2 2 | after the condemnation of man, together with the dowry
3 2(6) | i.e., man.~
4 2 | contamination in the heart of man ignorance had engendered,
5 2 | mercy. What is profitable to man does service to God. The
6 2(10)| i.e., man's salvation.~
7 2 | you do good to a grateful man! or your loss if to an ungrateful!
8 3 | some spiritual. For since man is composed of this combination
9 3 | incumbent on either part of man, if in anything it have
10 3 | He defines not only the man who had actually invaded
11 4 | embrace, as a shipwrecked man the protection24 of some
12 5 | despised when known? Now, that man does despise Him, who, after
13 5 | ungrateful.~ ~Besides, that man commits no light sin against
14 6 | who will grant to you, a man of so faithless repentance,
15 7 | their fear.~ ~Moreover, man's fear64 is an honour to
16 7 | when he fully feels that a man is freed from his clutches;
17 7 | many works of death65 in man have been overthrown, so
18 8 | are there, are glad at a man's repentance. 78 Ho! you
19 9 | exomologesis is a discipline for man's prostration and humiliation,
20 9 | Therefore, while it abases the man, it raises him; while it
21 10 | in some son exhorts the man, saying, "Respect not me;
22 10 | of insulters, where one man raises himself on his neighbour'
23 10 | somewhat from the knowledge of man, shall we equally conceal
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