bold = Main text
Chapter grey = Comment text
1 1| even in the case of their good deeds. They repent of good
2 1| good deeds. They repent of good faith, of love, of simple-heartedness,
3 1| own selves for having done good; and that species chiefly
4 1| remember never again to do a good turn. On repentance for
5 2| to speak, be ever laid on good deeds or thoughts. 11 For
6 2| sanction to the reprobation of good deeds, inasmuch as they
7 2| attaches repentance even to good works; let their gratitude
8 2| small is your gain if you do good to a grateful man! or your
9 2| loss if to an ungrateful! A good deed has God as its debtor,
10 3| is some great essence of good, of course nothing but evil
11 3| would be displeasing to good; in that, between things
12 3| if you eagerly desired a good thing, you would have been
13 3| else have not fulfilled good.~ ~
14 4| Only, Nor Chiefly, for the Good It Brings, But Because God
15 4| minds.~ ~To reckon up the good, of repentance, the subject-matter
16 4| that what God enjoins is good and best. I hold it audacity
17 4| audacity to dispute about the "good" of a divine precept; for,
18 4| not the fact that it is good which binds us to obey,
19 4| of him who serves. "Is it good to repent, or no? "Why do
20 5| understanding of things good and evil, often an affront
21 7| temerity. Let no one be less good because God is more so,
22 7| solicitude which at all events is good, to make trial a second
23 8| Ho! you sinner, be of good cheer! you see where it
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