Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | filled with the Holy Spirit. (Acts ~2:2-4). So the history
2 I, 1 | Saint Luke in the book of Acts; others are preserved in
3 I, 1 | history is described in Acts 15. Attended by the Apostles, ~
4 I, 1 | Holy Ghost, and to us. (Acts ~15:28). Later councils
5 I, 3,3 | Paul.s convert at Athens (Acts 17:34); but they are in
6 I, 7,9 | in a foreign tongue, and acts as a repository for cultural
7 II, 0,12| unless someone guides me?” (Acts 8:30). Orthodox, when they~
8 II, 0,12| in its treatment of the acts of Local Councils: in the
9 II, 1,1 | yet He is also a~God who acts — the God of history, intervening
10 II, 1,1 | Trinitarian. This God who acts is not only a God of energies,~
11 II, 1,2 | we are God’s ‘offspring’ (Acts~27:28), His kin; it means
12 II, 1,2 | that~after the fall grace acts on man from the outside,
13 II, 2,3 | Spirit, in virtue~of which he acts as a teacher of the faith.
14 II, 4 | expressed in a great variety of acts, some performed but once
15 II, 4,3 | issued a translation of the Acts of Jerusalem, while retaining
16 II, 4,4 | Baptism.’~The sacrament acts at the same time as a cure
17 II, 5,2 | invocation~of this Divine Name acts ‘as an effective sign of
18 II, 6,1 | judgment of all creation, she acts and knows only~within her
19 II, 6,3 | example of western Christians acts as an encouragement to them;
20 II, 7,4 | The Turkish period~ The Acts and Decrees of the Synod
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