Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | so-called .Jacobite. Church), Egypt (the Coptic Church), Ethio-~
2 I, 2,2 | Monophysites, par-~ticularly in Egypt and Syria, were subjects
3 I, 2,2 | cultural and national tension. Egypt and Syria, ~both predominantly
4 I, 2,2 | taken Syria, Palestine, and Egypt; within ~fifty years they
5 I, 2,4 | definite institution in Egypt at the start of the fourth
6 I, 2,4 | of which had appeared in Egypt by the year ~350, and all
7 I, 2,4 | himself, Saint Antony of Egypt (251-356). Secondly there
8 I, 2,4 | pioneer was Saint Pachomius of Egypt (286-346), author of a rule
9 I, 2,4 | the semi-eremitic life in Egypt were Nitria and Scetis,
10 I, 2,4 | of Nitria, ~Macarius of Egypt and Macarius of Alexandria,
11 I, 2,4 | monasteries, fourth-century Egypt was regarded as a second
12 I, 2,4 | became a physician to all Egypt. Antony has had many successors,
13 I, 3,1 | east (except possibly in Egypt). Monarchy in the west;
14 I, 3,2 | were originally bound for Egypt, but were persuaded by Alexius,
15 I, 3,3 | attributed to Saint Macarius of Egypt [300?-390], but it is now
16 I, 4,3 | that of Saint Antony of Egypt. In early manhood Sergius
17 I, 6,3 | recalls that of Antony of Egypt ~fifteen centuries before:
18 I, 7,1 | dating back to fourth-century Egypt . the community life, ~the
19 I, 7,3 | majority of Christians in Egypt rejected the Council ~of
20 I, 7,3 | about 10,000 Orthodox in Egypt, and perhaps 150,000-250,
21 II, 1,2 | yourselves,’ said Saint Antony of Egypt. ‘…He who knows himself,
22 II, 1,5 | life of~Saint Macarius of Egypt, it is said that a cherub
23 II, 1,5 | is death,’ said Antony of Egypt. ‘If we win our neighbour
24 II, 2,3 | was rejected by Syria and Egypt — can we say, then, that
25 II, 2,4 | reticence. When Saint Antony of Egypt was~31~once worrying about
26 II, 6,2 | Coptic Monophysite Church of Egypt in 1959, the Patriarch of
|