Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2,4 | ask some-~one to give you change, he philosophizes about
2 I, 3,1 | Christian faith, a small change of emphasis in Trinitarian
3 I, 3,2 | writers, nowhere has the change been so startling as ~in
4 I, 3,3 | Hebraic idea of the heart. The change of emphasis is significant,
5 I, 5,1 | their financial interests to change the ~Patriarch as frequently
6 I, 6,2 | eyes of simple believers a change in the sym-~bol constituted
7 I, 6,2 | the sym-~bol constituted a change in the faith. The divergence
8 I, 7,6 | Greece during recent years, a change in this system has become
9 II, 0,11| word Tradition. ‘We do~not change the everlasting boundaries
10 II, 0,11| conservatism which suffered no change whatever~in traditions,
11 II, 0,11| changeless (for God does not change), is constantly~assuming
12 II, 4,3 | insisted on the reality of the change, it has never attempted
13 II, 4,3 | explain the manner~of the change: the Eucharistic Prayer
14 II, 4,3 | metaballo,~to ‘turn about,’ ‘change,’ or ‘alter.’ It is true
15 II, 4,3 | consecration in the Mass there is a change of substance, but the accidents
16 II, 4,3 | explanation of the manner of the change, since~this is a mystery
17 II, 4,5 | however, cannot afterwards change their minds and decide~to
18 II, 4,5 | true solution is not to change the present rule that bishops
19 II, 4,7 | intended only for the dying (A change has now been~made here by
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