Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 3,3| in seeing that He is invisible, because what we seek lies
2 I, 3,3| it, .fire ~uncreated and invisible, without beginning and immaterial..
3 II, 1,2| of his~heart he saw the invisible God as in a mirror (First
4 II, 2,1| Spirit — is both visible and invisible, both divine~and human.
5 II, 2,1| worshipping here on earth;~it is invisible, for it also includes the
6 II, 2,1| between the visible~and the invisible, between (to use western
7 II, 2,1| the Church visible and invisible,’ insists always~that there
8 II, 2,1| Church into visible and invisible; its unity is, in~reality,
9 II, 2,1| the~Church visible and invisible,’ we so speak only in relation
10 II, 2,1| merely in an ideal Church, invisible~and heavenly. This ‘ideal
11 II, 2,1| and heavenly, visible and invisible, human and divine.~
12 II, 2,2| this~unity merely ideal and invisible; Orthodox theology refuses
13 II, 2,2| refuses to separate the ‘invisible’ and the~‘visible Church,’
14 II, 2,2| between a~‘visible’ and an ‘invisible Church,’ yet there may be
15 II, 3,2| faithful unceasingly of the invisible presence of~the whole company
16 II, 4 | Church, are both visible~and invisible; in every sacrament there
17 II, 6,1| who are not visibly so; invisible bonds may exist despite
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