Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,2 | all things visible and invisible,” and among the invisible
2 1,2 | invisible,” and among the invisible are listed the angels, who
3 4,12| from the visible to the invisible, from the material to the
4 8,4 | transcendent, and His essence is invisible and incomprehensible and
5 9,19| Christ is “the image of the invisible God” (Col 1:15). “In Him
6 9,42| they began to forget the invisible true God, the Creator of
7 10,1 | would not cease to be the invisible Shepherd and Pilot of the
8 10,10| Him, united only in some invisible way by that claim. The Church,
9 10,10| Church's unity as ideal and invisible, nor does it separate the “
10 10,10| nor does it separate the “invisible” and “visible” Church, for
11 10,10| the nebulous notion of an “invisible Church” — a theological
12 10,10| still comprise a single “invisible Church,” inasmuch as each
13 10,10| outward character. The term “invisible” can refer only to the Heavenly
14 10,10| even though it has its invisible side, like a ship, a part
15 10,10| hidden in the water and is invisible to the eyes, still remains
16 10,14| later comment concerning an invisible Church membership or its
17 10,14| linked to the Church by “invisible bonds.” The textbook's statements
18 10,14| non-Orthodox notion of an “invisible true Church,” especially
19 10,14| people who are united by 'invisible ties'] is not.” Mr. Barnes
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